Month: March 2003

  • Slashdot Roundup

    A few notable Slashdot articles today:

    Mozilla 1.3 has shipped.  Grab it here.

    Mandrake will release Corporate Server 2.1 (based on Mandrake 9) with x86-64 support.  The press release is here.

    Also, Red Hat announced several enterprise-level operating systems, including AS (advanced server), ES (entry level), and WS (workstation).

  • Sick

    Long story, but I’m not feeling too well today.  Hopefully things will improve.

  • Welcome Feedster

    Feedster!Scott announced the official launch of feedster, the RSS search engine formerly known as Roogle.

    I miss the voyeur tab, though I’m sure it screamed for abuse.  I’d be really interested in a periodic summary of metadata ala the Google Zeitgeist, as I’m still curious about what people are searching for and how much data from RSS feeds are being indexed.

  • Opteron Model Numbers

    CNet:

    The chipmaker on Thursday announced a new matrix of model numbers for its forthcoming 64-bit chips for workstations and servers. Instead of using a four-digit model number, similar to the scheme for its Athlon XP processor for PCs, the company chose to identify the new chips with a three-digit model number–resulting in models such as the AMD Opteron 140 Series–as a way to depict each particular chip’s capabilities.

    Dude, does your box have a Hemi?

  • Looking Into BitTorrent

    Roger got me interested in BitTorrent this evening.  I was curious about the anatomy of a .torrent file, so I dug into bencode.py from the BitTorrent source distro.  It’s all in python (with wxPython for GUI), so I felt pretty comefortable.  I put together a tiny little script that pretty much uses bencode to grab a .torrent file, analyze it, and print it to the screen:

    C:/py/torrent>python btinfo.py http://www.turok.info/bt/a.u.s.a.s01e06.walters.first.law.suit-ftv.torrent
    Connecting to http://www.turok.info/bt/a.u.s.a.s01e06.walters.first.law.suit-ftv.torrent
    Announce: http://tracker.powerpuffgrrlz.com:9696/announce
    Name: a.u.s.a.s01e06.walters.first.law.suit-ftv
    Piece length: 262144
    File Info:
     Path: ['AUSA-1x06_-_get_the_latest_episodes.txt']
     Length: 342
     Path: ['a.u.s.a.s01e06.walters.first.law.suit-ftv.mpg']
     Length: 220427748

    Here’s btinfo.py, released under the MIT license, which is the same license as BitTorrent itself.  It requires bencode.py from the source distro to be in the same directory as btinfo.  It’s a few dozen lines of code and is dumb simple to use:

    Usage: C:/py/torrentbtinfo.py url.
    Example: C:/py/torrent/btinfo.py http://url.com/file.torrent

    I’m planning to play around with BitTorrent a little more in the future, stay tuned.

  • The Sony Z1

    Sony Z1Steve Makofsky:

    Could it be? A PC manufacturer designed a cool looking laptop, with all the bells and whistles? A Powerbook-like laptop for PC users!? Check out the new Sony Z1 laptop:

    Based on Intel Centrino, 1.3ghz
    4.7 lbs, 40gig, 256MB-1024MB RAM
    14.1″ screen at 1400×1050!!!
    Slim built in CDRW/DVD
    Built in 802.11b, 10/100BT Network, Modem
    Built in VGA connector
    PC Card slot, 1394, USB 2.0
    6 hr battery life (12hrs w/ double capacity battery)

    The Sony Japan site indicates it has Bluetooth aswell. There’s even a teaser video now available.

    Im drooling. I think I just found my next laptop.

    I caught some teasage the other day, but it’s nice to see some specs.  It’s also nice to finally see ultralight ultrathin notebooks that don’t run Pentium III 800’s.

  • AMD’s Answer to Centrino

    Slashdot:

    AMD now offers three categories of processor for notebooks grouped under the Athlon XP-M brand. It labels them “desktop replacement,” “standard,” and the new “low-voltage”. AMD plans to make a desktop replacement in the notebook computer market using the Barton Core, a technology designed to double the CPU Cache.

  • Bezos Survives Crash

    Rael reports that Jeff Bezos survived a helicopter crash.

  • I Want My Bluetooth

    Gizmodo:

    Bluetooth’s just barely gotten a foothold in the world of technology, and already Intel, Sony, Philips, Texas Instruments, Samsung and others are working on a new wireless standard to replace it. There’s no catchy name for it yet (just the designation 802.15.3a) but it’ll use ultra wideband and be 100 times faster than Bluetooth.

    I object on the grounds that I haven’t been able to purchase ANYTHING that is bluetooth enabled yet.  No phones, PCs, cameras, nothing.  I know they are out there.  I could pick up a T68i and a bluetooth USB adapter.  I’m sure there are a handful of other bluetooh-enabled devices out there.  I’m a fairly gatget-aware person, perhaps my budget is the problem.

    Bluetooth hasn’t frickin’ penetrated the marketplace yet.  Let’s replace it.

    Not.

    (Aparently some things have to scroll by twice before they register with me)

  • Mobloggolas

    MobloggolasI don’t speak Hungarian, but Mobloggolas looks like it covers the basics of the Wired/CNet/Slashdot piece that was floating around.  It was published March 1, though somehow I had not noticed it in my logs until now.

    I was happy to see that they used one of my screenshots later in the article.

  • Send in the Centrinos

    CentrinoCNet has a roundup of Intel Centrino and Pentium M laptops:

    From the start, notebook vendors have raced to speed up their notebooks but almost always at the expense of battery life: faster processors meant limited time away from an outlet. Thankfully, times change. Rather than throwing more megahertz at computing tasks, Intel’s new Pentium M processor, which makes its long-awaited debut today, significantly increases notebook battery life. One notebook we tested–IBM’s ThinkPad T40–hit the seven-hour mark.

    There are also seperate reviews of the seven models.  The first three are Centrinos, they run Pentium M’s with the 855 chipset, and they have Intel’s wireless pro (802.11b) chipset:

    • Toshiba Tecra M1: 1.6 Pentim M, 60 gig hard drive, DVD burner, bluetooth, 5 hour battery life.
    • Acer TravelMate 803LCi: 1.6, 60 gigs, 512 megs RAM, 64 meg video card, 15 inch screen.
    • Gateway 450: 1.6GHz PM, 60gigs, 256megs,32 megs ATI M7.  It’s light, thin and sexy.  They have an entry level model for $1499

    The rest of the pack runs Pentium M but not one of Intel’s other required components.  Consider this corporate BS more than anything else.  Anything that runs Pentium M should have pretty swet battery life:

    • Compaq Evo N620c: 1.5GHz PM, 40 gigs, 512megs, 32 megs ATI Mobility Radeon 7500.
    • Dell Inspiron 600m: 1.6GHz PM, 40 gigs, 512megs, 64 megs ATI Mobility Radeon 9000.
    • Dell Latitude D600: 1.6GHz PM, 40 gigs, 512megs,  32 megs ATI Mobility Radeon 9000.
    • IBM Thinkpad T40: 1.6GHz PM, 80 gigs (4200RPM drive tho), 512 megs, 32 megs ATI Mobility Radeon 9000. 

    There is also a product comparison chart that does a really good job at not actually comparing the models.  Also, if you click on the ‘specs‘ tab of the review, you don’t actually get any specs.  You just get a few disclaimers.  Haha, joke is on you.

    Overall I was quite dissapointed with CNet.  I had major user interface issues and the complete lack of any information beyond superficial oohs and aahs pissed me off to no end.  In order to find out basic specs on these machines, I had to scroll down to the bottom of the ‘battery life’ page of several reviews.  Blegh.

    It looks like the Pentium M computers will be $300-500 more expensive than their P4m counterparts.  That’s okay though.  If I can get 5-7 hours on a standard battery with a small sleek laptop, I think it’s worth a few extra bucks.  I would definately like to see a more detailed roundup done by one of the more hardware oriented sites.  How it looks is only a portion of what is important.

  • Where to Draw the Line?

    John Burkhardt on Mitch Kapor’s exit from Groove:

    It is a tough issue and one that I’ve struggled with personally.  I have no details, nor will I, of what exactly Poindexter is doing with Groove.  But I don’t quite see it as the same moral dilema as that of creating the atom bomb.  From our perspective we are building collaboration software.  What people end up collaborating about is their business – not ours.  Maybe that’s niave.  Its hard for me to know where to draw the line.  Should Bjarne worry that the project uses c++?  Should Tim Berners Lee worry that it uses html?  What if it uses email?  The telephone?  SQL?  Groove provides a secure and decentralized communications infrastructure.  It doesn’t specifically help the government spy on us.

  • Jabberlogging

    Every time I chat with Kenneth Hunt, it’s like a realtime weblogging linkfest experience.

    Kenneth jogged my memory about LinuxWorld Expo.  I spoke to a couple of Sun guys pimping JXTA software, and they showed me a really slick Groove-like collab app.  It’s called Momentum by InView Software.  It’s not quite as portable as the Sun guys led me to believe, it’s currently only available for Windows, though a Linux version is due out soon.  Theoretically it should run on any platform with a decent JRE.  It could even run on OSX in theory.

    When I really get serious about learning Japanese, Kenneth suggests Pimsleur.

    He also motivated me into playing around with speex and speexdec.  Pretty amazing for the crazy compression rates.

  • Mail.app

    Brent:

    Spymac reports that Mail.app is going metal. It’s a rumor, of course.

    Where do I sign the ‘Metal Sucks!’ petition?

  • Red Bull and Struts from Scratch

    I agree with Matt Raible:

    Red Bull at lunch and I feel like I got a full night’s sleep!

    Also worth checking out is Struts from Scratch by Kevin Bedell, which covers a struts install from zero to productive.

  • Topology

    Sam Ruby nudges us gently with his new essay, Topology.

  • Lessig Breaks the Silence

    Lessig:

    So as the cruel master of fate would have it, on the day that the Eldred case officially ended, I was at Disney World. I was tricked into going to Disney World. I thought the conference was “in Orlando.” But Orlando has apparently morphed into Disney World, and so when yesterday the Court refused a request to rehear the case (totally expected), I learned the news while drinking coffee from a Mickey mug.

    I still believe that nobody could have argued the Eldred case better than Lawrence Lessig.  Hopefully we’ll be hearing more from him in the near future.

  • Office 2003 and the Google SOAP API

    This just came down the .netwire:

    Chris Kunicki discusses how to build a research library, a cool new feature of Microsoft Office 2003 that allows the easy research of external resources from within Office.

    Here’s the MSDN article.  I’m not sure if the final version of Office 2003 will be as ugly as these screenshots, but I hope not.  It looks like the Easter Bunny got in a fight with Office 2003 and Office 2003 lost.

  • On the Borderline of Chaos

    Juha Haataja is working on an essay about the weblogging community:

    Currently there are three classes of bloggers: A, B and C class. The ‘A-class’ gathers most of the page-reads and referrals. There are perhaps 10-50 bloggers in this class. The ‘B-class’ consist of bloggers who once in a while get wider notice, perhaps thanks to the attention of an ‘A-class’ blogger. There may be 100-1000 bloggers in this category. And the ‘C-class’ contains therefore about 999000 bloggers (if the estimate of a million bloggers is correct).

    Yes.

  • mod_mono 0.3.6

    Via Freshmeat, mod_mono:

    mod_mono is a module that interfaces Apache with Mono and allows running ASP.NET pages on Unix and Unix-like systems.

    This release was updated to work with Mono 0.23. A bug that forced all Apache requests to be served through mod_mono was fixed.