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CryptoBox
Friday, June 18, 2004
 
If this works it will be my first post via a WAP browser through http://wap.ubique.ch/wapblogger/

Wednesday, June 09, 2004
 
liquid cooled macs
Liquid Cooled Macs


I've worked with some guys who say they used to maintain water-cooled
mainframes. Now Mac has a new G5 like that.
The mainframes used to sport what the old guys called a "de-ionized
loop" which circulated chilled water in and warm water out to some kind
of evaporator or condenser. Sort of like the primitive air conditioner
I once made for my car seat...until I spilled 5 gallons of ice water in
the car.

Saturday, June 05, 2004
 
I'm heart-broken that Smarty Jones did not win at Belmont. What a bummer.


 
Ronald Reagan


The end of an era: Reagan has died at 93. It makes me think of what a powerful symbol he was during my youth. As a young punk-rocker in the early 80's I made a spray-paint stencil of Wasted Youth's album cover featuring Reagan's face and painted it on the back of my jacket. That kids saw him as such a perfect icon to rebel against underscores what a perfect icon Reagan was for that era. One thing that I think all will agree upon about Reagan is that he was a real visionary who saw the moment when the Soviets were on their back and saw a way to end the cold war with honor for both sides. He and Gorbachev had a long summit, which at times was just the two of them and thier translators and nobody else, where they discussed nuclear disarmament. The amazing thing was that Reagan actually wanted to destroy ALL nuclear weapons on both sides and totally eliminate them as a weapon altogether. Unfortunately the compromise they came to did not destroy all of them. However, I think it is a real testament to what kind of statesmanship and leadership he was capable of. Eventually, of course, the two leaders signed the INF treaty, beginning the reduction of nuclear arms. Can you imagine Bush doing that?


Thursday, June 03, 2004
 
Free Culture


I just began reading Lawrence Lessig's book, Free Culture, which just came out a couple of months ago. So far it is a very well articulated study of a concept that has been bouncing around in my head for several years now: Corporations are gaining too much control over our culture and are litigating and lobbying to control how culture is created and consumed and that this threatens the very foundations of many of our cultural traditions.
He was one of the speakers at the Harvard Law program I went to recently.


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