Things I am interested in…

Andrew Turbott's personal blog
  • New Zealand Holidays
  • Blog
    • Main Page
    • Body
  • Archives
    • Awesome rock videos
    • Banner
  • About me
    • Baby Pics
    • My musical preferences
    • RRC
    • My Top 10 Software
    • turbott.net
  • Login

Get Thee Behind Me, Satan!

28 09 2007

Bad Vista!

Just the other day a friend of mine made a comment in an email about how his computer was not running all that well under Windows Vista, to which I replied:

“Windows Vista is the spawn of the devil!”

He responded by asking me what I had “against” Vista.  He had only had a few minor problems with it (italics mine), such as several items of software not working, including video drivers I would imagine.  He is a keen audiophile, and mentioned that for him the most annoying thing was the time when iTunes would not function.

Here is my reply to his question (which I believe he had already answered in part):

I don’t like Vista because it is built on the premise that everyone who uses it is a potential thief (whether they are or not). There are parts of Vista that the person who has bought the computer hardware, and has also bought the computer software (including Vista), has no control over – Microsoft does.

In the future you, and everyone else using Vista, may find yourself locked out of your own computer because Microsoft find something you are doing objectionable (most likely because you haven’t paid them enough to do it, on a repeating basis).  Or another scenario is that the overzealous and oversensitive “protection” system ( e.g., “tilt bits”) produces a false positive and shuts you down even though you are doing something totally legitimate.

For an interesting (and controversial) analysis of this see the article referred to in my April blog post – http://turbott.net/blog/2007/04/22/the-longest-corporate-suicide-note-in-history/ .

Copy protection doesn’t work – it merely makes things harder and more cumbersome for the average honest user.  Pirates have been able to hack past every single copy protection system yet devised, including that for BluRay, HDDVD, and the protection on the iPhone.  The average time that passes between a piece of (DRM protected) music appearing on iTunes, and the same piece of music appearing stripped of copy protection on some peer to peer site is around five minutes.  Once an item has been hacked, anyone with access to the internet and a search engine is able to find a copy (hassle free, that will run on any computer system with ease – except Vista) by entering “{item x} torrent” into the search engine…

I will never deliberately purchase Windows Vista until such time as I have no choice.  This will only be when the majority of games I am interested in playing will not run on anything else.  Even then, I will probably keep a seperate games’ machine, tainted with Vista.  The rest of my network will continue using operating systems that I have legitimately purchased, and therefore can expect to retain control over, instead of Microsoft or any other third party…

Here endeth the rant!

Share/Save
Date : 28 September 2007 at 10:40
Comments : 1 Comment »
Categories : Windows

“The longest suicide note in history…”

22 04 2007

Here are a couple of interesting articles about Windows Vista, or “Windows Me II” as some irreverant wags are calling it:

  • Dell brings back XP
  • Another article, with some comment on Vista sales thrown in

Here is the original Peter Gutmann article talking about the problems with Vista…

I’m not planning to install any version of Vista anytime in the near future!

Share/Save
Date : 22 April 2007 at 13:16
Comments : No Comments »
Categories : Uncategorized

The wonderful world of podcasts!

9 04 2007

(or other uses for your iPod besides listening to that awful music)

What is a podcast you ask? The term is derived from iPOD broadCAST, and further defined here. As the iPod dominates the portable MP3 player market (~85% at the present time), the name has stuck, although it is generic, and most podcasts can be listened to on any player (they are just MP3s, or the equivalent, when you get right down to it).

Podcasts are great. I listen to podcasts a lot, on a variety of subjects.

In no particular order, here is a selection:

  • This Week in Tech (TWiT) – fairly prototypical, and often very amusing. It is generally about tech news, though the panel has been known to digress from time to time (make that, invariably digresses!) Run by Leo Laporte, who is somewhat of a podcasting personality, and very active in the field. Here is his home page.
  • Cory Doctorow’s podcasts – from craphound.com and BoingBoing.net. At the moment he is one of the people I find most interesting to listen to, about copyright, DRM, etc… He also writes some good sf.
  • Science information – the best of these is the weekly Scientific American podcast. The host, Steve Mirsky, is from the Bronx, and is also often wryly amusing. I’ve learnt more about beavers and turkeys than I ever thought I’d need to know. Others on my playlist include Digital Planet (more IT technology) from the BBC World Service, and the New Scientist podcast, though the brash intro music is somewhat off-putting.
  • Movie and entertainment news – until the end of last year I was a keen listener to Ebert & Roeper‘s podcast, but this seems to have gone on hold (I guess while Roger Ebert continues to recover from his recent surgery). However, I have found a worthy alternative to take its place. Mark Kermode is witty, opinionated, and often quite scathing in his pithy reviews. Another excellent offering from the BBC.

There are a lot more, but this is something to be getting on with… Now I have to go to the gym.

Share/Save
Date : 9 April 2007 at 9:04
Comments : No Comments »
Categories : Uncategorized

Interesting Thoughts…

14 02 2007

On “the continuing controversy over online file sharing”, and non-scarce resources:

  •  Piracy Is Progressive Taxation by Tim O’Rielly.
  •  Giving It Away and Ebooks: Neither E, Nor Books by Cory Doctorow.

It will be interesting to see how this pans out.  It looks to me like the entertainment and media companies are getting pretty worried, but they do punch above their weight with the legislative bodies in the good old US of A.

Share/Save
Date : 14 February 2007 at 16:14
Comments : No Comments »
Categories : Uncategorized

YouTube & Facebook

Andrew Turbott
Andrew Turbott
Create your badge

FreakAngels

Other Locations

Facebook
Twitter
PicasaWeb
Del.icio.us
FriendFeed
YouTube
Flickr
andrew.turbott
attobrute
andrew.turbott
turbotta
attobrute
turbotta
andrew.turbott

Search Blog

Recent Posts

  • Holidaying in Tasmania
  • Travelling in Australia…
  • Am I a geek or a nerd?!
  • Am I a nerd or a geek?!
  • All my geek memes satisfied at once!
  • My Family…
  • Lachie and the Hairy Coo
  • Best Vietnamese restaurant…
  • End days of summer…
  • Gimme the phone daddy!
  • Y I not No bout dis?!
  • Homeopathy complete bollocks
  • Lachie & Nellie Mae
  • Ice cream madness!!
  • Trolling with my iPhone

Recent Comments

  • toschtr on Gravatar Test
  • cartman on Gravatar Test
  • MultiFailX on Gravatar Test
  • MonsterSays on Gravatar Test
  • Tim on Gravatar Test

Calendar

May 2012
M T W T F S S
« Apr    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Archive


rss Comments rss valid xhtml 1.1 design by jide powered by Wordpress get firefox