Linkpost 5-7-08

Neat stuff during a busy time.

  • GUIs, compared. See the history of the GUI unfolding before your eyes, and pick the features you’d put in your dream GUI.

  • New Copyright Wrinkle. You must load a program into RAM to run it. Technically, this is copying, although some will point out that the program manages its own loading sequence in most cases.

    Blizzard is fighting against a company that sells a bot program for use with World of WarCraft, but is doing so in a novel, and scary way: using your RAM to play games is copyright infringement, until Blizzard tells you it isn’t.

  • Actually, Vista works. When you remove the crapware, get the right drivers, and set up the system like a sane person, it’s zippy. Caveat: you need newer hardware and 2-4gb of RAM.

    Today’s conventional wisdom, based on more than a year’s worth of relentless negative publicity, says Vista is hopelessly broken. In fact, my experience says the exact opposite is true. I proved the point in the first installment of this series, where I restored a sluggish $2500 Sony Vaio notebook to peak performance in a few hours. And I think anyone with a modicum of PC smarts can do the same.

  • Editor wants to end anonymous commenting. He says it leads to unproductive debate. I’m not sure I disagree or agree. It really depends on who is talking, and how much background they have in logic and debate.

    “I think part of the problem is that people aren’t held accountable on the Web,” Brady said. “People say things online they would never say when disagreeing with someone at the dinner table. I think heated debate is fine, but when there are (flame wars), many people won’t take part for fear they will be attacked and bashed over the head with the (Internet-equivalent) of a steel pipe.”

  • Wi-Fi is the new TV. To be ad-supported, free, through private effort and not government in most cities.

    Travelers want to log on everywhere at no charge, while hotels, airports and coffee shops are looking for a way to pay for their Wi-Fi networks as visitors increasingly use greater amounts of bandwidth.

    The compromise that is emerging is to offer both free and paid options, with the free services increasingly requiring something in return, like viewing an advertisement or signing up for a loyalty program.

    Sounds like TV and cable, respectively, to me.

  • Non-profit projects help you learn vital skills. For most things, people need a justification to do it and then they feel justified and can go ahead. Non-profit, or Open Source, programming (or any other type of activity) gives them that excuse to feel good enough to just go out there, play like a simian and have a good time, and thus, to learn.

    can remember thinking at the time that I would be able to sell these, along with the SDK, to clients who wanted sophisticated and easy-to-use windowing components all over the globe, and then be able to retire and ride my bike forever more. It didn’t quite work out like that. I was smart enough (but only after I’d spent all the effort) to realise the daunting challenge it would be to control installation and version, handle environmental issues and bug reports, and manage the trade-offs between protecting intellectual property and hindering users. And then there’s the hassles of the financial side and the daunting nature of the warranties. Long story short is that the controls were never commercialised. They see action in various bespoke projects for clients from time to time, as well as in several of my internal / free tools. But all that effort has never seen a direct payoff. The payoff in learning was immense, however, and I’m very glad for it.

  • Making complex interpretations visual reduces electorate’s dependence on interpreters and commentators. Sounds good, if nothing else to cut the number of talking heads in the world.

    By distilling climate policy choices down to the most key, and letting you rate them all for reasonableness, — these being the ones to which the accepted econometric models are generally most ’sensitive’ — anyone can model the economic impact of climate policy ideas being bandied about by politicians, lobbyists, Think Tank “experts” and newspaper editors. You don’t have to be an mathematician or economist to work the scenarios.

    The effect, we hope, will be to “disintermediate” the pundits and paid experts who so dominate American political life.

  • Selling music through video games, direct. Soon every part of reality will not only be covered in advertising, but have a “buy it now” button. Ick.

    It’s been well established how TV shows, ads and videogames are growing areas of music discovery and promotion. But until “GTA IV,” there’s been no construct that allows for the immediate identification and purchase of those songs from videogames. “GTA IV” has added that “buy” button, and record labels welcome the innovation.

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