like toothpaste and breakfast cereal

Apple – Switch

Who cares if 30,000 programs are available for Windows, if the five you want most are available only on the Mac?

I don’t even care if they’re Mac-only, so long as they play nicely with the other children. How many programs do you use in a given day? Five? Ten? Anywhere near a hundred? Or a thousand?

30,000 programs is about as useful as the plethora of choices in the breakfast food aisle: demand creation, to make you buy stuff you wouldn’t otherwise bother with, and brand dilution, as more varieties of the products you like appear on the market, each more like a competing product than the one(s) they share a brand name with.

Conan the Librarian’s not-so-little sister?

Thwart not the Librarian!

People become librarians because they know too much. Their knowledge extends beyond mere categories. They cannot be confined to disciplines. Librarians are all-knowing and all-seeing. They bring order to chaos. They bring wisdom and culture to the masses. They preserve every aspect of human knowledge. Librarians rule. And they will kick the crap out of anyone who says otherwise.

From Jenny

new feature: related pages/sites

Google Web APIs – Home

Develop Your Own Applications Using Google

With the Google Web APIs service, software developers can query more than 2 billion web documents directly from their own computer programs. Google uses the SOAP and WSDL standards so a developer can program in his or her favorite environment – such as Java, Perl, or Visual Studio .NET.

I added a list of pages similar to this one, as defined by Google, on the righthand column. I used the Google API, but this is just a static include for now. When I get more time, I’ll work on something dynamic. And ideally, it would use SOAP instead of java to fetch the data and perl to prep it for display as I do now. That will come later, as well. I just installed the SOAP stuff. That’s as far as I am going tonight.

national service: need it be military service?

10/11/2002: Mandatory military service in the US?

HR 3598, the Universal Military Training and Service Act of 2001 (Introduced in House), would, if passed: “… require the induction into the Armed Forces of young men registered under the Military Selective Service Act, and to authorize young women to volunteer, to receive basic military training and education for a period of up to one year.”
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King George and Saint Jimmy

Yesterday, we held a coronation of our current president, granting him the powers of a king, to make war at his discretion against the enemy of his choosing.

The Seattle Times: Nation & World

The House and Senate voted overwhelmingly to grant President Bush the power to attack Iraq unilaterally, remove Saddam Hussein from power and abolish that country’s nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs.

At the same time, the Nobel Committee anointed former President Jimmy Carter as a secular saint for his tireless work since leaving office to improve the lives of millions in the developing world and averting war in the developed world.

ajc.com | News | Carter wins Nobel Peace Prize

Jimmy Carter, sometimes described as the greatest ex-president in American history, has won the Nobel Peace Prize.

They couldn’t be more different. One born of privilege, using his name and family connections to enrich himself and those around him, the other raised on a farm in an agricultural state, serving in the Navy, and then advancing his views and himself through local and state politics to achieve the presidency.

For his tireless efforts, Carter has been lauded by the international community and the UN, but vilified at home. I would submit he follows his heart and the example of another historical figure who endures lasting fame but in his time was also vilified and in the end, crucified.

It’s too early to tell how George W. Bush will be regarded by history, but if his father’s example is anything to go by, he’ll be seated with such luminaries as Polk, Pierce, and Fillmore.

The notion that the President is a latter-day JFK with Saddam’s Iraq as his Cuban Missile Crisis neglects to mention two important facts: a) JFK had proof that there were missiles and b) the proximity of Cuba represented a real threat. Bush fils has suspicion, supposition, and hope. There may be weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, but finding them and neutralizing them is a task that requires more sophistication than your average Saturday afternoon western movie.

bsdpak for package/port management

SourceForge.net: Project Info – BSDPak

I was reminded of this tool tonight and was glad to see I had kept a copy of it. It’s similar to portupgrade but it seems to work faster and is less confusing (to me, anyway).

Here’s what it offers:

BSDPak 0.51 - A package management helper for FreeBSD and NetBSD
Copyright (C) 2000-2001 Rodney "meff" Gordon II

Usage: bsdpak-0.51/bsdpak.pl [options]

Where options are one of the below:
--help Help. (What you're reading now.)
--findpackage= Find a package, and its path in ports.
--installpackage= Find a package in ports, and install it.
(IN DEVELEOPMENT)
--upgradepackages Print commands to update your packages to
index versions.
--compare Compare currently installed packages with
the ports index.
Compare options:
--all Print comparison of all packages.
--needupdate Print packages that need updated.
--exceedindex Print packages that exceed the ports index.
--uptodate Print up to date packages.
--index=
Specify a path or url to use for the index file.

By default this program uses /usr/ports/INDEX or /usr/pkgsrc/INDEX
for the index packages, and pkg_info output for current packages.
Current info is not yet customizable (you shouldn't have to change
it.) However, the index path is, by using the previously mentioned
--index option, which may specify a path or URL.

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My first Segway sighting

Segway | Comparisons | Save Time

Using Segway HT instead of walking increases the area you can cover 50-fold — whether you’re working or running errands.

The city bought some of these and I saw one in use by a meter reader today: I stopped to ask if it was as fun as it looked, and he allowed that it was.

The look on the faces of the three elementary schoolboys as they saw it coming was priceless: a flying saucer or jetpack couldn’t have unhinged their jaws more completely.
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