Where is he?
November 2nd, 2007Just in case anyone is looking, some of the conversation continues at: http://www.machelpmaui.com/blog
Other than that, Carmen and I miss ya’ll.
Just in case anyone is looking, some of the conversation continues at: http://www.machelpmaui.com/blog
Other than that, Carmen and I miss ya’ll.
“Da kine go stay go!”

Not really - but Apple doesn’t need us anymore - they’re doing just great. Hawaiian music wins Grammy Awards and fans all over the world every day. Even Microsoft, our old foe has become an embarrass to itself. So after a delightful two-year assault on the patience of over a thousand otherwise sensible listeners we’re going to give it a rest.

I didn’t even bother to read this, it’s so ridiculous. Microsoft must have hired some wonks from the Bush administration for planning. Did you realize that the iPhone doesn’t support OFFIC? Oh my, ya’ll had better wait for the Zune phone then.
The word “clueless comes to mind. Fuck you Bill!
Microsoft slams Apple iPhone as ‘irrelevant’
Apple’s soon-to-be-launched iPhone will be irrelevant to business users because it is a “closed device” and does not support Microsoft Office, a senior executive with the software giant said this week.
Apple grew faster than any other PC maker
Apple… picked up market share in the United States, growing to 5 percent, from 4 percent, as its shipments increased 30 percent, according to Gartner. Apple grew faster than any other PC maker in the United States, Gartner said.
Apple Pugs Security Holes
Apple Inc. on Thursday plugged over two dozen security exploits within the client and server versions of its Mac OS X 10.3 “Panther” and Mac OS X 10.4 “Tiger” operating systems that could potentially expose Mac users to a variety of malicious attacks.
Dell’s personal computer sales decline
Dell’s personal computer sales continued to decline in the first quarter in the United States and across the world, according to analyses of PC sales made public yesterday by IDC and Gartner, two major consulting and market analysis firms.It was a particularly sharp decline given that the overall market grew 10.9 percent.
Dell is bringing XP back.
Amid significant customer demand, the computer maker said on Thursday that it has returned to offering the older Windows version as an option on some of its consumer PCs. …Dell switched nearly entirely to Vista-based systems following Microsoft’s mainstream launch of the operating system in January… “We heard you loud and clear on bringing the Windows XP option back to our Dell consumer PC offerings,”
Microsoft to pay out $180 million to Iowa individuals and businesses
Microsoft agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit in Iowa yesterday, which will involve a payout of up to $180 million. Individuals in Iowa who bought Microsoft software from as early as 1994 through 2006 will be able to make claims for cash, and companies with multiple copies of Microsoft software will be able to receive vouchers.The suit was originally filed in 2000 and alleged that Microsoft’s anticompetitive and monopolistic practices cost Iowans money by forcing them to buy Microsoft products instead of those from the competition. “Microsoft used its illegal monopoly power to raise prices to supra-competitive levels,” reads the original complaint. “As indirect purchasers of the relevant Microsoft software, Plaintiffs and Class members are therefore entitled to recover damages for the difference between a competitive price for the relevant software and monopoly price that they paid for Microsoft’s products and for their injury from the lack of free choice and the denial of benefits of software innovation and for damages for breaches of security by reason of Microsoft’s illegal conduct.”
Whilst Microsoft was bragging about the sales number of their latest OS Windows Vista, few would actually know that they have only managed to sell 244 copies in the whole of China in the first 2 weeks. You heard that right, and that’s the number quoted from the headquarters of the Windows Vista chief (90% national volume) distributor in Beijing.
Tuesday the president of the Maui Apple Users Society (MAUS) asked me to stand in for him at this weeks meeting. The subject of this meeting was to be the new AppleTV, so my part was to take his new one home, figure out how it worked, then present it to the understandably impressed inmates.
MAUS is a pretty mellow group, our membership drive consists of occasionally asking people to join. The meeting attendance varies from a few geeks to a full house depending on the surf conditions and the weather.
The first thing I realised is that nothing I own will plug into an iTV, I mean AppleTV. My stereo will, but that runs off a spare PowerBook or an Airport Express. My ten-year-old analog television on gets turned on by my wife, and only then for Oprah, the Travel Channel, House and the Daily Show. We get the rest of our news and entertainment from the web and these things called books - you’ve heard of them?
I may write more detailed accounts of the AppleTV and there will be a Podcast about it as soon as I can get Carmen back into her chair. - i promise. Until then, I’ll just say that wile I personally can’t imagine buying one - I’m saving up for a $100 book called “Recording the Beatles” - it does everything it says better than you could imagine.
Because I couldn’t set it up at home, I had to go from ignorance to demo in a half-hour as the room filled. The TV in or borrowed our Lab at Maui Community College had all the right parts, and I had uncharacteristically read a few pages in the teensy users manual.
The set-up is about as hard as configuring an iPod and the on-screen menus are brilliant, beautiful and practical. We got three different Macs hooked up with no trouble and the performance was as good as the content.
In short the AppleTV is an iTunes server which makes whatever you can put into that program available on your big screen either over a wireless or an ethernet connection. If you’re into Final Cut Pro, iMovie or torturing your friends with slideshows you’ll be able to justify this as either a terrific way to demo, proof your work or make people leave the room.
If you regularly download iTunes videos and want to see who else may be living in your house and your content is safe for family viewing - you could be a potential user.
If you’re into serious hi-fi and have a drive full of lossless files the optical output circuits Apple uses are said to make this one of the best sounding wireless systems on the market. The Airport express is a less expensive option, but it isn’t as much fun to play with.
Finally, if you loose the remote, you are screwed because that’s the only way to control the device - so but a spare on day one, “pair” it and hide it in a drawer against the inevitable day you lose one.
Bottom line - if you have one of those new wide-screen Tv thingies eating a hole in your brain, you can find some content worth watching and have lots of stuff in iTunes you’ll no doubt want a AppleTV - the $299 price is fair enough and it’s fun to play with.
Not that I would ever want to gloat about what a deviant piece of crap Windows is but it appears that some of the most important dentures, such as the ability to actually recover your files from their backup app are not available unless you buy the much more expensive version.
What’s that word… oh yeah: greedy!
The Vista Backups That You Can’t Have…Even though the Home Basic and Home Premium versions of Vista are backing up all files including user data files, users can’t access the backups of their own data. Want proof that the backups are there? Use Microsoft’s Windows Anytime Upgrade feature to upgrade from Home to Ultimate. When we did that, the Previous Versions tab appeared and revealed changes to data files that were made before the upgrade occurred.
Previous Versions has other problematic behaviors. Vista grabs 15 percent of each drive to archive the combination of user data and system files, with just a cryptic command line interface to change the number. There is no way to selectively add or remove a file or folder from the backup; someone could easily find an old version of a file that you thought you had removed for good. Unfortunately, it’s a package deal; you must take it all or nothing at all. Disabling Previous Versions removes user data backups, but it also disables System Restore and deletes all restore points.
Vista users may have to live with these design tradeoffs, but Microsoft’s decision to intentionally hide backups of user data is just plain wrong. If Vista keeps backups of user data, the user is entitled to see, use, and remove them. Users shouldn’t need an expensive upgrade to Vista Ultimate just to rescue their data backups.
| Apple has sold its 100 millionth iPod. Microsoft announces Zune is rapidly approaching fifteen units sold |
Plug it in, fire it up, Mr. President
The Detroit News
Credit Ford Motor Co. CEO Alan Mulally with saving the leader of the free world from self-immolation.
Mulally told journalists at the New York auto show that he intervened to prevent President Bush from plugging an electrical cord into the hydrogen tank of Ford’s hydrogen-electric plug-in hybrid at the White House last week. Ford wanted to give the Commander-in-Chief an actual demonstration of the innovative vehicle, so the automaker arranged for an electrical outlet to be installed on the South Lawn and ran a charging cord to the hybrid. However, as Mulally followed Bush out to the car, he noticed someone had left the cord lying at the rear of the vehicle, near the fuel tank.
“I just thought, ‘Oh my goodness!’ So, I started walking faster, and the President walked faster and he got to the cord before I did. I violated all the protocols. I touched the President. I grabbed his arm and I moved him up to the front,” Mulally said. “I wanted the president to make sure he plugged into the electricity, not into the hydrogen This is all off the record, right?”
“Microsoft says DRM-free music soon to be available to all 14 Zune owners. Steve Jobs to announce Microsoft’s next move shortly.”
I’ve just successfully performed a brain transplant on my five-year old Pismo PowerBook - moving it’s hard-drive and a few other bits into the chassis that previously housed one gone to meet it’s Philippino maker.
Over the last couple of years, I’ve keep my eyes open and carefully collected a stack of PIsmo parts and two mordant chassis. So, when the screen on my beloved old work-horse could no longer sustain an erection I was somewhat prepared pull these parts together and create my very own Macinstein. Handicap - I didn’t use any manuals!. I’ve been inside of enough iMacs and Pismos over the years to be sorta familiar with what goes where, and while I’d never done a complete part-swap on this level most Apple’s are self-instructive - is you just look you can see how things work. At least these old ones were like that.
You should have seen my bench - parts were strewn from one end to the other. Little “x” marks and discrete piles separated the trash from the treasures as I carefully laid the parts out in anatomical order. Keeping track of everything required a suprising amount of discipline, or at least compulsive attention. Thank you again for your assistance Mr. Ritalin.
Rule #1, never put in the last screw without testing. My first attempt resulted in complete and utter silence on boot and the beginnings of a dangerous frustration. I swapped more parts but after a few hours unplugged everything and went to sleep on it, waking at 5am the next day determined to either get the damn thing working or turn the entire project into jewelry and wall sculpture.
The gods of old Macs smiled though, and after a few chasing a few screws across the room and digging the crud out of a few parts, I now have a 5+ year old mac with two batteries, a great screen and almost all of its pieces happily running OS X 10.4.9. And I never once had to resort to Super Glue or “make a part work.” The old antique may yet have more life in it. Try THAT with a 5-year old PC laptop!
What’s sad though is that the days of a geek user swapping out parts to keep a favorite laptop on the road are coming to an end. No one in their right mind would ever think of cracking a MacBook just for fun. Like shade-tree mechanics, kitchen-table hardware hackers are an endangered species because it’s just to damn hard to break the new devices down and get them back together without a NASA facility and support staff. The only special tool I needed was a teentsy Torx screwdriver - which was easily found online, and more patience than I usually exhibit.
So here’s to Apple’s great design and the deviant Celtic determination to keep a good tool on your belt for no other reason than because you can.
Should you get a new Mac now or wait until the heat death of the universe?
Why are some many people waiting for Leopard? So what if you don’t have the newest Mac on the block. So what if your friends all think you’re a raw newbie? We attempt to peer past the noise of the rumor mill to see what’s in Apple’s near future so that the stress won’t overcome you.
Then, after a few dozen chocolate chip cookies, Pekelo plays the Hoki Poki Hula all around Hana town before we go out with a whimper.

Carmen and I took a “mental health” break from the podcast last week - I hope someone noticed! Apple didn’t seem to be doing anything and the spring weather finally arrived so we went off to smell some flowers.
We’ll be back at the board later today though and if the creek don’t rise
there will be a MacHelp from Maui podcast #91 up later today. If the metaphor does get higher, it’ll be up after I get all those damn animals out of my ark.
Scott
Description: Internal Apple information on the iPhone OSX architecture.
Apple’s iPhone architecture exposed! For those of you who are into such things, here’s a little geek porn - the first known diagram of how the hardware and software of the iPhone work. You can see how they assigned priorities and dependencies to the code and chip bits that underlay the devices features. There’s even a game stack and “touch services” which may be illegal in some states.
And the phone stuff appears to be in the category of “Radio.” Remember radio? Now the word for an entire industry has collapsed into an embedded feature in a thing you will keep in your pocket.
It’s also interesting that the device runs on an updated version of the Newton’s chip, making it even more realistic to call the iPhone Newton II.
Then there is this “Scribd” service where the leaked Apple document is displayed. I like the interface and the concept. Scribd deserves a closer look.
I know he’s trolling for hits again by pissing off Mac users, but some other twit may then take his demented ravings to heart and decide to wait for the ZunePhone. This could bring an end to civilization as we know it.
“Johnny C” - as he is known in the troll escort business - is an otherwise intelligent curmudgeon and tech-journalist who has most recently unfortunately declared that “Apple should pull the plug on the iPhone.”
Now there’s a really stupid idea, and it’s not the first one he’s secreted, but he’ll get all this attention Mac lovers will spray it all over him until something else such as a troop surge gets our attention. Just a few years ago he suggested that Apple drop OSX and switch to Windows!
I hate to quote him too much - you can go read the rest for yourself.
“The problem here is that while Apple can play the fashion game as well as any company, there is no evidence that it can play it fast enough. These phones go in and out of style so fast that unless Apple has half a dozen variants in the pipeline, its phone, even if immediately successful, will be passé within 3 months.There is no likelihood that Apple can be successful in a business this competitive. Even in the business where it is a clear pioneer, the personal computer, it had to compete with Microsoft and can only sustain a 5% market share.
And its survival in the computer business relies on good margins. Those margins cannot exist in the mobile handset business for more than 15 minutes.”
In fact, Apple can move faster than any company in the world. They probably DO have a dozen variants in the pipeline. In three months the price may drop and they will sell even more. Microsoft became the market leader through evil business practices and because Apple gave it to them in the 90s.
Ok, now get ready for this one:
Even Microsoft itself has troubles with its attempts to get into a small sub segment of the handset business with its operating system.
OOh Microsoft couldn’t do it so NO ONE CAN!
(I’m going to be sick)
Enough! Someone get this man a clue or better yet - ignore him.
I haven’t been paying much attention to the Apple TV.
Don’t get me wrong - it appears to be a cool product - but I just don’t ever watch television, so the whole idea goes right over my head which is usually pointed at a computer display or buried in a book.
But something very interesting has happened to this device in the few short weeks since it began shipping - geeks have hacked it. There are a pile of DIGG links to stories of folks who have been running LINUX on it, or have downloaded the “OSxLite” operating system.
Here’s an example:
“Far from being a hack, but useful nonetheless, is confirmation that Apple TV does indeed work with non-HDTVs. All you need is a TV with component inputs.”
This means there is a very real possibility of the AppleTV becoming a $300 computer, or at the very least a very powerful media center PC with greater capabilities than the the original product. Someone even replaced the paltry 40gig drive with a 120gig monster. And there is still a USB 2.0 socket where yet another drive can be hung.
My question is whether anyone has tried to plug in a keyboard and mouse. That would nail down the last plank.
LINKS:
No storms, no gator bait, just bumper cars with cripples
Another exciting tale of reality being warped by sunshine and bad water. BTW: No tips for you!
Valet crashes amputee’s car - then hits himPensacola, Fla. (AP) — A valet accidentally drove an amputee’s specially equipped car through a Pensacola hospital’s front entrance, knocking the car’s owner from his wheelchair.
Police say Adrian Young was bringing the car back to its owner, Harold Towne, yesterday when he apparently confused the car’s special gas pedal for the brake. Young was attempting to come to a stop at the building’s entrance but pressed the wrong pedal, and the car accelerated.
Police say Young swerved to avoid a vehicle and went through a set of outer doors. The car then struck Towne’s wheelchair and went through another set of doors and into the lobby.
Towne was treated and released from Baptist Hospital’s emergency room after the accident.
Young was cited for careless driving.
The hospital entrance was heavily damaged, with glass everywhere.
There was no damage to the car, other than a small dent.
The government should send AppleInsider to Iran or perhaps North Korea - they seem to be able to get the secret scoops on Apple’s weapons of mass construction better than most other rumor sites.
Their latest, to be found here, exposes plans to upgrade the venerable FlatMac iMac design and bring laptops to a new low in size and weight. Both are good ideas. The one-piece iMac case that houses their new Intel-based computers is no more than a hack of the PowerMac container. It’s even less elegant - the power button is no longer right behind the power light and the easy to get at one-piece back was replaced by a tiny door on the bottom. So news of a more sveltish, more elegant design is welcome.
And look, just like I said, there may be a teeny flash-based laptop in our futures! Imagine the battery life of a laptop with no moving parts. If it runs Second Life, I may even get one.
AppleInsider has learned that Apple’s popular line of iMac personal computers are about to undergo a substantial facelift that will showcase striking new industrial designs aimed at leaving both competitors and onlookers smitten.People familiar with the matter say the Cupertino-based Mac maker has called upon its award-winning design chief Jonathan Ive and his team to cut the fat from the the current iMac line and outfit a pair of new Core 2 Duo-based models in a form factor that will be both slimmer and sleeker than today’s offerings…
…As part of an industry-wide shift away from desktops and towards high-powered portables, Apple’s industrial design prowess in 2006 was largely reserved for its notebook lines, which saw cutting-edge design revisions replace aging form factors at both the consumer and professional ends. In turn, those designs and compelling Intel-based underpinnings helped the firm sell nearly 3 million MacBook and MacBook Pros during the 2006 fiscal year, boosting its share of the U.S. notebook market to over 10 percent.
Apple has no plans to relent in its assault on the notebook sector in 2007 and has arranged to boost it 15-inch MacBook Pro models with more vivid L.E.D.-backlit display panels later this Spring and followup with a tiny flash-enabled ultra portable model sometime thereafter. But while 2006 was clearly the year of notebooks for the Mac maker, the electronics firm now has its sights set on high-definition digital media and plans to bring the iMac along for the ride.
At YouTube a Mac PowerBook user closes his computer to show the baby squirrel that has cuddled up underneath. Too freakin’ cute.
From MacOS Hints
(I didn’t know this one!)
Here’s another way to Force Quit an application:
This method allows you to Force Quit (Relaunch) the Finder without
opening the Force Quit application window or using the Finder’s Dock
menu.
Live from Charley’s in Paia - Pekelo!
Get your headphones ready! After we slosh about in the rumor pool, you’ll hear a special binaural recording of Pekelo live at Maui’s best local bar. Almost like being there.
(picture of “Roy” the binaural head and Pekelo pretending this is normal)
Sorry, this isn’t about Macs, but it pisses me off so much that I have to let everyone know about it.
The administration knows what would happen if the started up the draft again, so instead of doing what’s necessary at the cost of perhaps losing the next election, they are willing to risk the lives of wounded soldiers who have already made the penultimate sacrifice.
The Army is ordering injured troops to go to IraqMar. 11, 2007 | “This is not right,” said Master Sgt. Ronald Jenkins, who has been ordered to Iraq even though he has a spine problem that doctors say would be damaged further by heavy Army protective gear. “This whole thing is about taking care of soldiers,” he said angrily. “If you are fit to fight you are fit to fight. If you are not fit to fight, then you are not fit to fight.”
As the military scrambles to pour more soldiers into Iraq, a unit of the Army’s 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Benning, Ga., is deploying troops with serious injuries and other medical problems, including GIs who doctors have said are medically unfit for battle. Some are too injured to wear their body armor, according to medical records.
On Feb. 15, Master Sgt. Jenkins and 74 other soldiers with medical conditions from the 3rd Division’s 3rd Brigade were summoned to a meeting with the division surgeon and brigade surgeon. These are the men responsible for handling each soldier’s “physical profile,” an Army document that lists for commanders an injured soldier’s physical limitations because of medical problems — from being unable to fire a weapon to the inability to move and dive in three-to-five-second increments to avoid enemy fire. Jenkins and other soldiers claim that the division and brigade surgeons summarily downgraded soldiers’ profiles, without even a medical exam, in order to deploy them to Iraq. It is a claim division officials deny…
Oh, there’s more: LINK
Heard about the web: From I, Cringely
The Great Apple Video Encoder Attack of 2007:
Cupertino plans to add H.264 hardware support to its entire line.Now comes the rumor I have heard, that I believe to be a fact, that has simply yet to be confirmed. I have heard that Apple plans to add hardware video decoding to ALL of its new computers beginning fairly soon, certainly this year…
…This will change everything. Soon even the lowliest Mac will be able
to effortlessly record in background one or more video signals while
the user runs TurboTax on the screen. Macs will become superb DVR
machines with TiVo-like functionality yet smaller file sizes than any
TiVo box could ever produce. In a YouTube world, the new Macs will be a
boon to user-produced video, which will, in turn, promote the H.264
standard. By being able to encode in real time, the new Macs will have
that American Idol clip up and running faster than could be done on
almost any other machine. Add in Slingbox-like capability to throw your
home cable signal around the world and it gets even better. Add faster
video performance to the already best-of-league iChat audio/video chat
client, and every new Mac becomes a webcam or a video phone.
Much more at: THIS LINK
On Mar 8, 2007, at 12:22 AM, (lady in distress) wrote:
I am taking a Photoshop Elements class and bought the software
for Elements 4.0. Now when I open iphoto, and right click to open in
external editor, I want it to open in 4.0 but it still opens in 2.o.
Shouldn’t it have automatically transfered whatever was in 2.0 over to
4.o? What to do?
Automatically? hahaha! You kid me. Actually that WOULD happen if you deleted the old version, (which you should do anyway) then carefully put the new one in the same place with the same folder and application name. Then iPhoto wouldn’t even notice the difference
Instead, go into the iPhoto Preferences, and where it says: “Double Click Photo” set “Opens photo with” to the new external application. Best of both worlds.
Leaving it this way will actually be a hassle because you won’t be able to use iPhoto’s wonderful editing features.
So now close Preferences but then immediately reopen it and change it to “Edit View. Now you can select the new program by right-clicking or control-clicking on the picture and then selecting “Edit in external editor” but iPhoto’s editor will still come up when you simply double-click on a photo.
I know this seems arcane, but some of iPhoto’s effects and tools are better and easier to use then Photoshop, so you don’t want to miss out on them.

A little history - with no time left for the music of which we speak.
Our guest/victim this time is David Kapralik, a dear friend and inspiration who takes us back in time, then forward into our future.
Since I’m always recommending LaCie drives for backups and production storage here’s an announcement of the software for your drive.
LaCie Update Tool v1.3.3 is now Mac OS X Tiger (10.4) compatible and adds the latest firmware support for d2 and Design by F.A. Porsche drives with FireWire 400 and 800 and/or USB 2.0 interface.IMPORTANT: Updating drive firmware is a critical task that should be done with attention to the included instructions. While LaCie has taken precautions to prevent data loss, be sure to have a backup copy of any important files or data before attempting to update firmware. Normally, firmware updating will not alter any data on the drive. If there are other unanticipated issues with your more…system, data loss is possible during the update process. Please proceed with caution. Be sure that your operating system is running correctly.
WHAT’S NEW Version 1.4.1: Adds the latest firmware support for d2 and Design by F.A. Porsche drives with FireWire 400 and 800 and/or USB 2.0 interface.
Read all the scary stuff in the info and be sure to back up your important files to a CD or DVD just in case. I’ve seen very few problems with LaCie drives so this would be a least a good reason to back-up your back-ups.
You thought we were safe, a new month, no analog logic bombs from the sunshine state… but this would underestimate the ability of Florida’s citizenry to jump in the deep end with both ends:
Miami developer arrested after using official funds to buy watermelon statueFri Mar 2, 5:16 PM ET
A prominent Miami developer was arrested Friday for allegedly skimming official funds to buy himself a 150,000-dollar sculpture of a giant watermelon slice.
Raul Masvidal turned himself in to authorities after he was charged with organized fraud and grand theft.
Masvidal had obtained millions of dollars from the Miami-Dade county to build new offices for the Housing Agency, but used part of the money to buy the sculpture by artist Julio Larraz, according to an affidavit filed in court.
The sculpture, called “Mars”, portrays a huge watermelon slice that has been bitten. To hide the purchase, he allegedly asked an art broker to write a fake invoice that listed only a sculpture of stacked cups that was to grace the new building, but charged for both artworks.
The Cuban-born Masvidal had gained prominence in Miami as a political advisor, philanthropist and businessman.
“What a great disappointment,” said State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle. “He turned on his community. He turned on his friends.”
So, he tried to hide this fetish by disguising it as a sculpture of “stacked cups!” See when happens when you get addicted to figurative realism - before long you start craving huge fruits and eventually human body parts the size of office buildings. Where will it end. This must be stopped!
“He was also charged with damage to a mini-bar
in the room, but this charge was later dropped when the defendant said
that it was the donkey who caused that damage.”
Podcasting from end to end
Care and feeding of RRS Feeds
How to explain it to your friends
Flowers and Birds
Pekelo live on the old radio
From LifeHacker’s Adam Pash
If you use iTunes on the Mac, you should know about Doug’s AppleScripts for iTunes, a repository of scripts that add tons of useful functionality to Apple’s music player…
Take for instance #10 here:
10. Import iPod Audio Files: This handy little gem lets you grab audio tracks (AAC, MP3, Apple Lossless, AIF WAV, and Audible) from a plugged in iPod and automatically adds the tracks to iTunes.
Here’s what’s boncing about the web right now!
Mac Display Eater kills home filesPR disaster waiting to happen
A MAKER of Mac software has uncovered a “scary” anti-piracy measure in a bit of code called Display Eater.
Display Eater records motion video on your screen which you can then convert to a Quicktime movie.
However writing in his bog here, Karsten Kusche, who works for another Apple software maker Briksoftware, says that if you try to use a pirated serial number with Display Eater, the software will delete your home file, which in Mac land is the same as killing your computer.
Kusche said that while it is not right to pirate software it is a bit drastic to kill a mac user’s home file.
He said that the would be pirates might even buy a licence one day if they like the software or at least talk kindly about it. However if it is the same software that killed their computer they are less likely to say nice things about it. We would have thought they would have sued. µ
The facts:
The developer did this as a “Scare Tactic” to prevent people from stealing his app, but it backfired on him. Either way, it was a very bad idea and he will pay for it.
Public Letter:
I hope the public will read this entire letter.
There has been alot of confusion regarding the copy protection of the program called Display Eater.It is described here in:
There exists two illegal cd-keys that can be used to register the program without paying for it. When Display Eater detects these keys, it would delete your home directory.
However, this is not the case in reality. The whole purpose was to create a scare campaign. You can download, the file linked from the main page, which is now down(the link is still intact here), and check it for yourself. It has been this way since 2/7/07.
It was my hope that by creating a scare campaign, I could stop wasting time writing copy protection routines to be broken over and over. But, I was wrong, it backfired.
People started buying multiple keys, which I never intended, and in the beginning when the protection was in place, people who did not even know they had committed piracy or what piracy was were left in the dark. Legitimate users started fearing the program, which I never imagined.A reporter called me today, and suggested that I make it free, and then have users pay for support. Or open source the program. I will consider all of these. -Reza
Macs and Rumors of Macs
MacSnoop and a few other rumor sites are quoting each other and unnamed sources on the inevitability of new Macs as soon as next month. In addition to inside leaks a case is being made that the Mini, MacBook and MacPro haven’t had a face life since the Paleozoic and those beautiful, flat Apple displays don’t even have like, cameras or anything.
It’s only logical that the elves in cupertino are working nights to come up with new ways to re-ignite lust in the gear-sluts among us who have yet to put an Intel on our payables.
There also seems to be a very real possibility that iLife and iWork ‘07 will finally hit the shelves by tax time.
So save your box-tops and pennies, Steve is after your hard-earned and your heart.
BTW: Microsoft plans to complete the upgrade of Office by the end of the year - we assume they mean this year - but who cares!
I just checked my calendar to make sure that we are living in the 21st century.
So whycome are the citizens of such an otherwise civilized country counting the dots on an airline’s new logo? Don’t they have anything better to do? Get these folks on the internet.
The suprising result was that enough of these idle-brained dolts were so worried that thirteen dots in the damn logo was unlucky that the airline had to change it and add another dot! There, now don’t you feel better.
No wonder there are so many really stupid decisions being made today -people are using the wrong organ! This may also explain Dell’s market share and the voting habits of many large English-speaking countries.
‘Unlucky’ airline logo grounded
A new Belgian carrier, Brussels Airlines, has been forced to change its logo following complaints from superstitious passengers.The 13 dots making up the stylised ‘b’ brought a flood of complaints about the “unlucky” design.
The airline, which formally launches on 25 March, said it was taken aback by the strength of feeling and felt obliged to respond.
It has now altered the design to incorporate an additional dot.
Watches bug me. I have two; one that costs too much and another, cheap calculator/geek watch that I wear when required. But the as soon as I get my shoes off, the watch and wallet follow.
When I forget to wear my watch - which is often - it’s never a problem because my iPod and cell phone know the time. My car knows the time, there are little clocks on just about everything. The last thing I really need is something strapped to my body to do the same thing.
Yet a while back, prescient tech-guru Bill Gates was all atwitter over the possibility of an internet watch to get the news, sports scores, stock numbers and Brittany’s husband count. Microsoft actually introduced an expensive watch that does this, but only a few overpaid gear-sluts bothered with it.
And once again, Bills grasp of the future, like his awareness of the present is called into question and academics and researchers discover that watches have become no more than jewelry for the compulsive.
Watches lose Gorund to Cell Phones
Market researchers say more people are carrying electronic devices that also tell time, whether a phone, an iPod or a BlackBerry. They’re also finding that young people, in particular, are more interested in spending their money on other kinds of accessories, such as shoes and hand bags.In a survey last fall, investment bank Piper Jaffray & Co. found that nearly two-thirds of teens never wear a watch — and only about one in 10 wears one every day.
…while Americans spent more than $5.9 billion on watches in 2006, that figure
was down 17 percent when compared with five years earlier.
This is about more than watches, the lock-step synchronization of the work force is being eroded my technology. As distance disappears on the internet, so does time. The need for every one to be somewhere and be there at the same time has diminished, so the need to have a dedicatedly piece of hardware is also disappearing.
There’s still a pathology about time though that has yet to be beaten down. People all go to lunch at noon then complain about the crowds. The primary reason why traffic is bad in most areas is because everyone is going someplace at the same
Even when holding my cellphone I’ll still look at my wrist when I need to know the time. we have a little ways to go yet to be free of the shackles of time.
Now why didn’t I think of this:
Man calls police after phantom visitor cleans and paints flatFrankfurt (eCanadaNow) - A mystified 45-year-old German called police after he returned to his apartment to discover that the walls had changed colour and someone unknown had cleaned out the refrigerator and polished the mirrors, but left all his valuables untouched.
Wary Frankfurt police wondered Thursday evening if elves had slapped a coat of white paint over the previous yellow, but then discovered a painter’s job ticket lying on the kitchen table … to renovate the next-door apartment.
The landlord had given the wrong key to the painter, who did not notice either that he was in the wrong flat, police said Friday.
Too bad it was an accident and that they found the culprit - this would be an incredible prank. In America the painter would probably be arrested.
Imagine phantom house-cleaning becoming a trend. Covert gangs of no-doubt gay miscreants sneaking into your house to clean the bathroom and make change your towels. Or someone mysteriously mows your lawn and takes out the trash.
Back in Art School days we used to cash the checks from our summer job, drive into town and throw large amounts of cash at panhandlers, people waiting in lines and anyone who looked like they could either use a handout or needed to lighten up. It was hilarious. Even the most decorous crowd would dissolve into chaos under the influence of a hand full of dimes.
But we never thought of sneaking into someone’s house to organize their closet or sort their records by artist. That my dear, is ART!
This morning at BoingBoing.com there was a clipette about how paranoid and clueless the Vancouver CA police have become about WiFi and computers.
Vancouver cops hate WiFiVancouver’s cops have espoused vague, technologically ignorant objections to city-wide WiFi. They argue that the ability to communicate anonymously will help criminals (cough pay-phones cough) and that WiFi is all about people stealing each others’ connectivity. It’s like the Vancouver cops have never even considered the possibility that people might deliberately share their Internet connections with their friends and neighbors just to be neighborly.
Police are concerned that unrestricted wireless access would give criminals an advantage by making it more difficult to track them…
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