Category Pointers

Hey, where's the GPS support, Google?

Google EarthIt was just brought to my attention that Google Earth Plus for Linux does not have any support for GPS devices whatsoever, despite this being one of its main selling points over the free version. Google advertises the four variants of its Google Earth product range (Free, Plus, Pro and EC) without making any differentiating remarks for the Linux, Mac OS X or Windows ports. There is no mention of this either on the GE product page or its help centre. A potential customer would almost certainly expect this feature to be present in all three versions of the software and as such misled by the product presentation by Google.

Brickfilms

This is a site dedicated to stop-motion animated movies of Lego. Amazing stuff :)

As a company that puts $7bn a year into R&D, we have a fiduciary responsibility to our shareholders

said Sam Ramji, Microsoft's directory of Open platform solutions (what platforms again? oh the irony). $7bn on R&D, out of $12bn (net income). Not bad as a percentage, but what on earth do they do with all that money? It's no secret that most of the things that come out of Microsoft, despite the funds and manpower available to it, are, well, crap. By comparison, the total net income of Apple Inc. for last year was around $2bn and I guess very little of that went into R&D (Of course Apple is not doing any research that matters). Google, the new kid on the block, has a net income of $3bn, but it is also cultivating a research-focused working environment so it's hard to estimate how much really goes to research. Now, IBM, the worlds largest IT company has a net income of $9bn and let's not forget that IBM has very extensive research activities, but I'm certain diverts less than Microsoft to them. So, really, what does Microsoft do with all that money, given their poor record in both research and commercial software output?

The Secret Government

It's fascinating to see how public tolerance of government abuses and downright violation of the law and constitution has increased over the years. Follow the link for the 90 minute PBS documentary from 1987 that deals with how the U.S. sold weapons to Iran, despite its embargo and used the funds to support the 'contras' in Nicaragua (the Iran-Contra Affair) before going over the history of U.S. government abuses and illegal clandestine operations in the name of national security post WWII. Now, compare this to the relatively low public reaction to legislation such as the PATRIOT law (and its equivalents in Europe), the reaction to the Iraq war and the minimal buzz in the European press on the matter of the alleged CIA flights transporting illegally detained muslims post the 11th of September of 2001 from Europe to places where they could be interrogated and indeed tortured. No matter what you think of Moyers and PBS, Reagan and US policy in the 1980s and the 2003 Iraq war one thing is clear: people today seem much more apathetic to the abuses by the 'secret' governments in both the United States and Europe, even when these affect their own rights, privacy and freedoms, not 'just' the fate of some other country or people.

Η Dell στην Ελλάδα

Κάντε μια επίσκεψη στον δικτυακό τόπο της Dell για την Ελλάδα. Δεν είμαι πελάτης της Dell όμως η εν λόγω εταιρία έχει κατα καιρούς παρουσιάσει ιδιαίτερα ελκυστικά προϊόντα (π.χ. οθόνες, PDAs, rackmounted servers) σε πολύ καλές τιμές και κατα συνέπεια τόσο για προσωπικούς όσο και για επαγγελματικούς λόγους έχω ασχοληθεί με κάποια από αυτά. Ο δικτυακός της τόπος της Dell για την Ελλάδα είναι πενιχρός. Μια κάκιστη μεταφορά του αμερικάνικου, με ένα μικρό μέρος του περιεχομένου στα Ελληνικά και το υπόλοιπο στα Αγγλικά, με σαφείς ελλείψεις ολόκληρων σειρών προϊόντων από τον κατάλογο (τα οποία όμως μπορεις να βρείς μέσω της αναζήτησης) και προβληματικούς συνδέσμους. Για παράδειγμα, παλαιότερα -- όπως συμβαίνει ακόμη και σήμερα με τα sites της εταιρίας άλλων χωρών -- υπήρχαν τρείς βασικές επιλογές για κάθε κατηγορία προϊόντων: 'ιδιώτες', 'μικρές και μεσαίες επιχειρήσεις' και 'μεγάλες επιχειρήσεις και δημόσιοι οργανισμοί'. Η πρώτη κατηγορία έχει εξαφανίστεί από ένα μεγάλο μέρος του τόπου, ενώ υπάρχουν ακόμη κάποια μέρη αυτού που τη συμπεριλαμβάνουν. Dell ή Hell; Ας σημειωθεί πως η Dell φημίζεται διεθνώς ως μια από τις πρωτοπόρους στην άμεση πώληση προϊόντων και υπηρεσιών αρχικά μέσω mail-order και μετέπειτα του διαδικτύου. Το Ars Technica πρόσφατα δημοσίευσε ένα άρθρο όπου ο Μichael Dell, ιδρυτής και CEO της εταιρίας δηλώνει πως θα είναι πλέον 'επιθετικοί' και στο λιανικό εμπόριο (μέσω μεταπωλητών). Καλή τους τύχη.

HVD Fonts: F*ck Comic Sans :)

A few nice free title fonts by HVD Fonts (Germany). Their HVD Comic Serif is quite nice (and its accompanying PDF -- excerpt below -- hilarious). I, obviously, share the sentiments. :)
Fuck Comic Sans!
Image © hvdfonts.de

Full RSS feeds reduce activity on a blog?

Interesting question. I dislike the provision of full posts in RSS. It's not about ad revenue (I don't make money from my blog) or anything else except for my belief that the web is perfectly adequate and --- indeed --- superior to RSS feeds for human communication; RSS feeds on the other hand are excellent for notifications of new content (the pseudo-push aspect previously missing from the Web) and automatic dissemination of content to multiple sites/aggregators (even though I have my qualms about this too; there should be a better standard for this). Yet, CogDaily's experiment is flawed. The time-series is too short, the information does not cover all aspects of 'activity' of a blog and -- by their own admission -- the samples are not representative (there was reduced content publication). While I (intuitively) agree with the statement the data provided by CogDaily do not seem to support it.

See you in court!

I had been planning on getting a new Merom MacBook Pro ever since I found out about the processor more than 18 months ago. In the end I never did. Right after my last trip to London in early December 2006 I wrote a long rant about how the displays of the, then new (and still current) MacBook Pro on show at the London Apple Store looked horrible; my complaints included uneven backlight, narrow viewing angles and a grainy display. I guess I was not the only one to notice these; these are supposed to be Pro machines used by Pro people after all. So now Apple is getting sued for false claims in its marketing/advertising material regarding the quality and capabilities of its displays. It's quite reminiscent of the G4 MDD Leafblower towers when it took an organised effort, several web sites and constant 'harassment' of Apple executives to pay attention and own up to their crappy hardware. Yet with so many fanatics spending money on Apple products without paying attention to what they're buying as long as it's got an Apple logo somewhere I'm not surprised Apple keeps ignoring its customers and the quality issues of their products.

The community is vastly more innovative and powerful than a single company.

I've followed Jonathan Schwartz's blog for a while and more than often he has interesting things to write. Sun has long been one of the major forces in the computing industry and it's gradual decline in mindshare and presence after 2000 was saddening, even though it was justified. After years of confusion within the company about its strategy and the role of Open Source, it seems that it's starting to 'get it'. An interesting 'apology' by Schwartz, Sun's CEO, coupled with the usual marketing-babble. I hope he means it.

Karen Spärck Jones

One of the few female computer science pioneers, Karen Spärck Jones died in early April 2007, just a few short years after her husband, Roger Needham, passed away in early 2003. Read the CL obituary as well as this month's IEEE Spectrum's article on her life and work titled "A woman's work".