a $17.95 lock for a $5000 item?

CNN.com – Arrest makes Segway history – Aug. 20, 2003

Segway.com offers a front-page link for buyers to insure their machines, and a $17.95 lock appears at the top of its list of accessories.

And you have to wonder what someone was thinking to buy a $5000 Segway for $75: “gee, that looks like a good deal. I’m sure this fellow pushing a highly-publicized state of the art invention down the sidewalk is the real owner.”

There’s a more detailed story in Wired that explains how the thief was tricked into meeting a self-styled “Hercule Poirot” who offered to help him hack into the digital key system and get it working. In that story, the price was $800: still nowhere near what one should expect to pay for one of these.

command line goodness

bash-2.05a$ softwareupdate
Software Update Tool
Copyright 2002 Apple Computer, Inc.

Software Update found the following new or updated software:

- AirPortSW-3.1.1
AirPort Software (3.1.1), 7940K - restart required

To install an update, run this tool with the item name as an argument.
e.g. 'softwareupdate <item> ...'

This has been available all this time? I had no idea.

Swiped from Forwarding Address: OS X

assymetry and disproportionally

Ben Hammersley’s Dangerous Precedent: The Blogosphere and its asymmetric discontents

If so many people are doing this, the logic goes, and it is so effective that the only possible response is so strident, and yet they can only punish so few people, the balance of benefit against risk is skewed way over to the little guys. In other words, in an asymmetric conflict, once the monolithic side starts to fight you, it has lost. The only way for the monolith to win the game is not to play at all.

There are two obvious ways to apply this idea: one is to map the RIAA’s strategy of spending their energy prosecuting their customers onto it. It works there. The larger entity fails to see an opportunity and manages transform itself from a benign money machine to the most vilified industry in the West.

But what of the larger, more serious issues? What about Western culture, or more precisely the US, as the monolith under attack from small numbers of terrorists (of whatever stripe: I’m not willing to defame the hundreds of millions of non-violent Muslims by labelling the WTC attacks as being an Islam-endorsed action)? How does the monolith respond and “win”?

I think in both cases, the monolith’s strategy is to treat with the opposition as individuals: what does an individual member of the music-buying public want? I think it’s been established that they want to listen to music they have bought, wherever they are, regardless of format, and they want to be able to buy more in smaller units. They want to hear tracks or songs and program their own entertainment. And it appears obvious they’ll do it, whether the RIAA’s members ever figure out to make money from it or not.

On a much more serious topic, it would make sense to find out what Al Qaeda’s soldiers want, behind the “death to America” chants. A few radical clerics and oppressive governments have combined to focus the energy and discontent of multiple generations on the West, to keep themselves in power. How to go over the heads of those who benefit from the continued hostilities to those who pay for them with their lives should be considered, rather than knocking over suspect foreign governments and occupying them. I have to think we’re doing things the most expensive way, on many levels.

full complement of bikes, or stolen property restored

I got my release letter from Seattle Police today, and promptly went back to the shop to reclaim my wheels. 36 days, not that I’m counting . . . .

And the detective on the case has located the perpetrator . . . . in New Mexico. I have no idea how he tracked him down, but he says from the “interesting” conversation he had, he’s sure it’s the guy. Unlikely he’ll be extradited for a couple of class 2 offenses, so I guess that’s where this story ends.

a pennysworth of prevention

Fast Company | The Dirty Little Secret About Spam

All of this is why there is increasing consensus that spam can be slowed only by addressing its perverted economics: Make senders pay for their messages, and market discipline will rationalize the industry. Today, a marketer can send 10 million messages for free. If the cost per address were even just one penny, “my guess is that most spam would go away,” says Mark Wegman, a researcher at IBM, who with a colleague has come up with theoretical proposals for a cost-based system.

Interesting article. The dirty little secret is that the companies doing the marketing — from the penis enlargement elixir shills to AT&T — are happy with the status quo. The sounds of outrage don’t drown out the jingle of new revenue . . . .yet.

Sales of mobile phone ringtones are set to overtake CD singles


BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Music | Phone tones ‘to beat CD singles’

An estimated £70m USD112,450,207.85 (conversion and emphasis mine) of ringtones will be sold in 2003 – up from £40m in 2002 – according to the MDA, a non-profit trade group.

Music company Universal told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the profit margin for recent Sugababes hit Round Round was larger on the ringtone than the single.

Gee, does anyone still think the kids are interested in buying albums versus individual tracks?

get yours

ISSN for Weblogs (Joe Clark: fawny.org)

With over 60,000 Weblogs in publication today — almost 10% of all the periodicals ever registered — loggers have an unusual opportunity to make their presence known in the only arena that librarians respect: Official enumeration. Remember, as far as librarians are concerned, if it doesn’t have some kind of number, it doesn’t exist.

So get one, already!
I strongly recommend that everyone sign up for an ISSN. In most cases, it’s free, and in many cases, you can apply online and have a number within 48 hours.

My application is filled out and ready to go.

more reasons not to use Windows

Someone asked me for some information I keep in a small FileMaker database, so I exported it as tab-delimited text and sent it over . . . . .

The reply was full of hand-wringing about how they would cope with a file sent as an attachment from a Mac. My reply was perhaps more curt than necessary (“files are files” was the gist of it), but I explained that using File -> Open . . . . as a tab-delimited file would be all that was necessary. (The filename used .tab as the extension, just to be as unambiguous as possible.)

I had forgotten that Windows *still* won’t let you “drag and drop” a file to an application icon for quick access or to get around opening a file that isn’t currently associated with any application. And to make matters worse, once you make an association, correctly or not, you can’t undo it.

I’m trying to recall when this *wasn’t* a feature in Mac OS: I seem to recall it in System 7 which came out in the early to mid 90s. Even if it wasn’t til System 8, that’s a long time . . . .

subverting bureaucracy through weblogs

McGee’s Musings

How would activities at the [Transportation Security Administration] change if they published a daily weblog with real stories of the best and worst of what they had encountered that day? Not likely to happen, but worth thinking about.

This is painful but valuable read: as we seem to slip closer to a universally paranoid society of informers and snoops, Jim McGee raises the idea that if we could see how trivial and mundane the bulk of the work of these new agencies is, it might put the real risks in perspective.