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.: LarsonsWorld :.
just another persons waste of time

.: May 2008 Archive :.

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01 May 2008

.: use them wisely :.

Peacefire newest Circumventor site:

http://www.flopclock.com/

Remember, always try https://www.stupidcensorship.com first.

The big list.

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Posted by: dimbulb - 6:16 AM MDT
Tags: Circumventor  
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.: the choices the media makes :.

Ann Telnaes - 01 May 2008  
Ann Telnaes - 01 May 2008

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Posted by: dimbulb - 6:20 AM MDT
Tags: Editorial Cartoons - Ann Telnaes  
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.: the future of energy :.

Our New Energy Crisis - Mother Jones

Almost four years ago, when oil was trading at around $40 a barrel, Paul Roberts wrote a story for Mother Jones on a bleak scenario gaining currency among energy insiders, but not yet in the mainstream consciousness: peak oil, basically the notion that the world's petroleum resources are nearing exhaustion. If the theory held true, Roberts warned, oil prices could soon leap to "perhaps as high as $100 per barrel - a disaster if we don't have a cost-effective alternative fuel or technology in place."

Welcome to the disaster: $100-a-barrel oil is in the rearview mirror, and no cost-effective (or even cost-prohibitive) alternative has emerged. The most dire consequences of this failing - hurricanes, drought, extinction - are occurring far more rapidly than even Slideshow Al could have predicted four years ago. And then there's the war.

It's easy enough to blame Dick Cheney, Big Oil, Detroit - all of whom have done their part in obstructing progress. But their chicanery distracts us from the far greater problem, one that, unfortunately, comes down to Organic Chemistry 101. Every technological advance of the last 150 years has been powered by a unique, extremely energy-dense, but finite - and, as it turns out, planet-killing - source of fuel. Switching away from fossil energy requires an economic and social transformation at least as great as the Industrial Revolution. And we have to build this new economy on the fumes of the old, hoping that we don't run out of gas, or ice caps, before we get there. As Roberts points out in this special issue on energy, if we sit on our hands or let the process be hijacked by vested interests, "there may not be enough crude left in the ground to fuel a second try."

Read on ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 6:39 AM MDT
Tags: Environment  The Written Word  
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.: like the moon reflecting in water ... :.

' A person getting enlightened is like the moon reflecting in the water. The moon does not get wet, the water is not disturbed. Though it is a great expanse of light, it reflects in a little bit of water; the whole moon and the whole sky reflect even in the dew on the grass; they reflect even in a single drop of water. Enlightenment not disturbing the person is like the moon not piercing the water. A person not obstructing enlightenment is like the dewdrop not obstructing the heavens.

Dogen, "Flowers Fall"

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Posted by: dimbulb - 6:17 PM MDT
Tags: Buddhist Wisdom  
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03 May 2008

.: do not go after the past, nor lose yourself in the future :.

Do not go after the past,
Nor lose yourself in the future.
For the past no longer exists,
And the future is not yet here.
By looking deeply at things just as they are,
In this moment, here and now,
The seeker lives calmly and freely.
You should be attentive today,
For waiting until tomorrow is too late.
Death can come and take us by surprise--
How can we gainsay it?
The one who knows
How to live attentively
Night and day
Is the one who knows
The best way to be independent.

Bhaddekaratta Sutra

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Posted by: dimbulb - 11:08 PM MDT
Tags: Buddhist Wisdom  
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07 May 2008

.: watercooler :.

The computer security paradox - Raiden's Realm

One of the most prized rights of any American is the right to privacy and security. It's something people in some countries would kill for. Yet now there appears to be a very frightening trend growing. Your privacy and security are being thrown out the window wholesale in favor of easier access by law enforcement. A recent example of this can be seen with the announcement that Microsoft has been providing a tool to investigators that can effectively rip your Windows security to shreds in seconds, exposing all your private data to whoever wants to look at it.

more ...

IBM, Microsoft Trounce Apple on Climate Friendliness Scorecard - Wired

Scorecard IBM earned top honors among electronics manufacturers on a recently-updated climate friendliness scorecard (.pdf), earning 77 out of a possible 100 points to beat runners-up Canon, Toshiba, Sony and HP in a ranking of the companies' responsiveness to climate change. IBM, which makes big, hulking servers and mainframe computers, even beat out Microsoft (38 points) and Google (55), whose products are composed entirely of electrons. Apple, which has taken heat from Greenpeace for the allegedly toxic chemicals in its iPhone, scored a pathetic 11 out of 100.

more ...

Viacom, Google set for fight to bitter end over Safe Harbor - Ars Technica

It has been just over a year since Viacom launched its $1 billion lawsuit against Google for "brazen disregard of intellectual property laws" on YouTube. Although we haven't heard much news about the case as of late, some fightin' words have come out of both sides recently to indicate that the case is still going strong. There's no sign of an impending settlement, either, as Viacom is still beating the piracy drum and Google continues to stand its ground. Because of this, the eventual outcome of the Viacom suit may set a legal precedent that could send ripples throughout the entire Internet.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 4:49 PM MDT | Updated: 07 May 2008 5:04 PM MDT
Tags: Civil Liberties  Computing  Environment  News  
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08 May 2008

.: the farmer and the car dealer :.

There was a farmer, Perley Moore, who had recently bought a truck and found that the "basic price" was only the beginning. Once the salesman had added on all the extras - towing package, toolbox, fifth-wheeler attachment, etc. - the price was quite a bit higher. Well, by a strange turn of fate, that same salesman stopped by Perley's farm one day to buy a cow. The dealer examined the herd, picked out a likely specimen, and asked about the price.

"That's a hundred-dollar cow," Moore replied directly.

"That's fair enough," said the salesman. "I'll take her."

"Well, now, that's the basic price," Moore added, getting out pencil and paper. "There are one or two extras, of course." He made a few notes and handed the paper to the dealer. Here is the final invoice:

Basic cow $100

Two-tone exterior $45

Storage compartment and dispensing device $60

Four spigots @ $10 each $40

Genuine cowhide upholstery $75

Dual horns @ $7.50 each $15

Automatic fly-swatter $35

Total $370

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Posted by: dimbulb - 7:03 AM MDT
Tags: Humor  
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09 May 2008

.: a couple new circumventors :.

Peacefire newest Circumventor site:

http://www.roachtummy.com/
http://www.ironmilk.com/

Remember, always try https://www.stupidcensorship.com first.

The big list.

Use them wisely!

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Posted by: dimbulb - 6:51 AM MDT
Tags: Circumventor  
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11 May 2008

.: watercooler :.

Broadband: other countries do it better, but how? - Ars Technica

' One of the ironies of the current broadband situation in the US is that staunch free marketeers defend the status quo even though the result of their views has been duopoly and high prices. Meanwhile, other countries (including those with a reputation in some quarters for "socialism") have taken aggressive steps to create a robust, competitive, consumer-friendly marketplace with the help of regulation and national investment.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 7:18 PM MDT
Tags: Computing  News  
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12 May 2008

.: watercooler :.

Deep packet inspection under assault over privacy concerns - Ars Technica

Add the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC) to the list of groups concerned about the privacy implications of widespread deep packet inspection (DPI) by ISPs. CIPPIC has filed an official complaint with Canada's Privacy Commissioner, Jennifer Stoddart, asking her office to investigate Bell Canada's use of DPI (and we're flattered to be quoted as an expert source in the complaint). In addition, the group would welcome a wider investigation into possible DPI use at cable operators Rogers and Shaw, as well.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 4:10 PM MDT
Tags: Civil Liberties  Computing  News  
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13 May 2008

.: all of a sudden, it's dusk on planet earth :.

Earth at 350
By Bill McKibben
The Nation

Even for Americans, constitutionally convinced that there will always be a second act, and a third, and a do-over after that, and, if necessary, a little public repentance and forgiveness and a Brand New Start--even for us, the world looks a little Terminal right now.

It's not just the economy. We've gone through swoons before. It's that gas at $4 a gallon means we're running out, at least of the cheap stuff that built our sprawling society. It's that when we try to turn corn into gas, it sends the price of a loaf of bread shooting upwards and starts food riots on three continents. It's that everything is so inextricably tied together. It's that, all of a sudden, those grim Club of Rome types who, way back in the 1970s, went on and on about the "limits to growth" suddenly seem... how best to put it, right.

All of a sudden it isn't morning in America, it's dusk on planet Earth.

There's a number--a new number--that makes this point most powerfully. It may now be the most important number on Earth: 350. As in parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

A few weeks ago, our foremost climatologist, NASA's Jim Hansen, submitted a paper to Science magazine with several co-authors. The abstract attached to it argued--and I have never read stronger language in a scientific paper--"if humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and ongoing climate change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385 ppm to at most 350 ppm." Hansen cites six irreversible tipping points--massive sea level rise and huge changes in rainfall patterns, among them--that we'll pass if we don't get back down to 350 soon; and the first of them, judging by last summer's insane melt of Arctic ice, may already be behind us.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 5:47 PM MDT | Updated: 13 May 2008 5:49 PM MDT
Tags: Environment  
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.: flippin' the car :.

Jim Borgman - 12 May 2008  
Jim Borgman - 12 May 2008

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Posted by: dimbulb - 8:33 PM MDT
Tags: Editorial Cartoons  
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14 May 2008

.: context in out of context :.

Non Sequitur by Wiley - 12 May 2008  
Non Sequitur by Wiley - 12 May 2008

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Posted by: dimbulb - 7:01 AM MDT
Tags: Comics  
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.: a new circumventor :.

Peacefire newest Circumventor site:

https://www.cranberrycow.com/

Remember, always try https://www.stupidcensorship.com first.

The big list.

Use them wisely!

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Posted by: dimbulb - 7:03 AM MDT
Tags: Circumventor  
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18 May 2008

.: watercooler :.

Perilous Landings by Soyuz Worry NASA - Washington Post

Two consecutive chaotic and dangerous landings by Soyuz space capsules, including one with an American astronaut aboard, have NASA and space experts concerned about the spacecraft's reliability in ferrying astronauts to and from the international space station.

more ...

The Old Titans All Collapsed. Is the U.S. Next? - Washington Post

Back in August, during the panic over mortgages, Alan Greenspan offered reassurance to an anxious public. The current turmoil, the former Federal Reserve Board chairman said, strongly resembled brief financial scares such as the Russian debt crisis of 1998 or the U.S. stock market crash of 1987... But in the background, one could hear the groans and feel the tremors as larger political and economic tectonic plates collided. Nine months later, Greenspan's soothing analogies no longer wash. The U.S. economy faces unprecedented debt levels, soaring commodity prices and sliding home prices, to say nothing of a weak dollar.

more ...

In Colorado, an unlikely alliance against drilling - CSMonitor

Plans to open up a swath of wilderness are bringing hunters and environmentalists together – and reshaping state politics.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 5:49 PM MDT | Updated: 18 May 2008 8:26 PM MDT
Tags: Environment  News  
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.: just another circumventor :.

Peacefire newest Circumventor site:

https://www.jellyshovel.com/

Remember, always try https://www.stupidcensorship.com first.

The big list.

Use them wisely!

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Posted by: dimbulb - 5:55 PM MDT
Tags: Circumventor  
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19 May 2008

.: watercooler :.

Warming and Storms, Uncertainty and Ethics - NY Times

Over the weekend, a pair of very different climate studies - one physical, one social - illustrated two uncomfortable, and related, realities confronting society as it grapples with possible responses to human-driven global warming.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 8:30 PM MDT
Tags: Environment  News  
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21 May 2008

.: losing perspective :.

We are becoming a nation of narrow thinkers, thanks to the Internet, newspapers, and schools.
by John C. Dvorak

These days everyone is so enthusiastic about the evolution of the Web, with its free content, interesting blogs, citizen journalism, and the rest of it. Not me. The big problem, as I see it, is the decline in general perspective, which is due to the decline in the popularity of newspapers and magazines.

By perspective, I mean generalized or common knowledge. When you pick up The New York Times and look at the front page, you get a general perspective on world events. As you page through the newspaper, you see all sorts of interesting articles that you might not have read if you were merely surfing the Net for news.

Over time, this sort of happenstance approach to information gives a reader perspective on things. You have a sense as to what the economy is doing. You know if some international disaster has occurred. You are more tuned in.

This is going away.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 8:34 PM MDT
Tags: The Written Word  
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22 May 2008

.: 35 years ago today - the ethernet is born :.

Bob Metcalfe memo on the ethernet

Bob Metcalfes original memo describing his idea for the ethernet.

Enter Ethernet - Wired Magazine

Metcalfe had been an MIT undergraduate whiz kid and Harvard grad student working on computers and how to network them. Even before completing his Ph.D., he went to work for Xerox PARC, which assigned him the task of designing and building the first network for PCs.

PARC was installing its own Xerox Alto, the first personal computer, and EARS, the first laser printer. It needed a system that would allow additional PCs and printers to be added without having to reconfigure or shut down the network. It was the first time that computers were small enough for hundreds to be in the same building, and the network had to be fast to drive the printer.

more ...

Ethernet - Wikipedia

Ethernet was originally developed at Xerox PARC in 1973-1975. Robert Metcalfe and David Boggs wrote and presented their "Draft Ethernet Overview" before March 1974. In March 1974, R.Z. Bachrach wrote a memo to Metcalfe and Boggs and their management, stating that "technically or conceptually there is nothing new in your proposal" and that "analysis would show that your system would be a failure." ... In 1975, Xerox filed a patent application listing Metcalfe and Boggs, plus Chuck Thacker and Butler Lampson, as inventors (U.S. Patent 4,063,220 : Multipoint data communication system with collision detection). In 1976, after the system was deployed at PARC, Metcalfe and Boggs published a seminal paper.

more ...

~ update ~

The Ethernet entry on Wikipedia has been edited to remove the Bachrach memo reference and quotes. It now reads:

Ethernet was originally developed at Xerox PARC in 1973-1975. In 1975, Xerox filed a patent application listing Metcalfe and Boggs, plus Chuck Thacker and Butler Lampson, as inventors (U.S. Patent 4,063,220 : Multipoint data communication system with collision detection). In 1976, after the system was deployed at PARC, Metcalfe and Boggs published a seminal paper.

Also, I have received an email from R.Z. Bachrach, and so has at least one other person, clarifing his point of view of the 1974 quoted memo. Here is the text of email to me.

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Posted by: dimbulb - 6:34 AM MDT | Updated: 26 May 2008 3:15 PM MDT
Tags: Computing  
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.: air travel these days :.

Mike Luckovich - 22 May 2008  
Mike Luckovich - 22 May 2008

Stuart Carlson - 22 May 2008  
Stuart Carlson - 22 May 2008

 
Wayne Stayskal - 22 May 2008

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Posted by: dimbulb - 9:28 PM MDT
Tags: Editorial Cartoons  Editorial Cartoons - Mike Luckovich  Editorial Cartoons - Stuart Carlson  
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25 May 2008

.: where is yours? :.

Towel Day - May 25th  

Huh?

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Posted by: dimbulb - 12:07 PM MDT
Tags: Ect...  
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26 May 2008

.: for the fallin :.

Cam Cardow - 26 May 2006  
Cam Cardow - 26 May 2006

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Posted by: dimbulb - 9:38 AM MDT
Tags: Ect...  
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27 May 2008

.: is it more efficient to leave your car idling? :.

Found an interesting article on Slate about whether to idle or shut off you car. It even goes into whether to warm up your car or just start driving.

Some excerpts:

Today's cars use electronic fuel injectors, which rigorously control the amount of gas delivered to the engine when you hit the ignition. As a result, virtually no fuel is wasted during startup, and only a thimbleful is burned as the car roars to life. So forget about the 30-minute axiom you were raised on - the threshold at which it makes more sense to shut off rather than to idle should be expressed in seconds, not minutes.

The researchers concluded that restarting a six-cylinder engine - with the air conditioner switched on - uses as much gas as idling the same car for just six seconds.

Idling is similarly wasteful in frigid temperatures. Contrary to popular belief, cold-weather drivers needn't warm up their cars for longer than 30 seconds. The best way to raise an engine's temperature to optimal levels is to drive it almost immediately after startup; according to a study by the Ontario Ministry of Transportation, a car driven for 12 minutes in 14-degree-Fahrenheit weather will achieve the same temperature as one that idles for 30 minutes. (However, it's best to avoid rapid acceleration during that 12-minute warm-up drive.)

But if we were able to eliminate idling in stop-and-go traffic, the effect could be more dramatic. Right now, it is imprudent (and often illegal) to cut your engine while on public streets. There are automated systems, such as in the vaunted Toyota Prius, that can rapidly turn engines off and on when the car is, say, stopped at a red light or involuntarily "parked" on a bumper-to-bumper freeway; just apply some pressure to the accelerator, and the engine springs back to life. According to the learned folks at Car Talk, the widespread adoption of such technology could reduce our national fuel consumption by as much 10 percent.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 4:33 PM MDT
Tags: Ect...  Environment  
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.: what solidarity :.

Stuart Carlson - 27 May 2008  
Stuart Carlson - 27 May 2008

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Posted by: dimbulb - 7:55 PM MDT
Tags: Editorial Cartoons - Stuart Carlson  
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.: watercooler :.

Six hours to hack the FBI (and other pen-testing adventures) - Computerworld

It takes a lot to shock Chris Goggans; he's been a pen (penetration) tester since 1991, getting paid to break into a wide variety of networks. But he says nothing was as egregious as security lapses in both infrastructure design and patch management at a civilian government agency -- holes that let him hack his way through to a major FBI crime database within a mere six hours.

more ...

New Climate Report Foresees Big Changes - NYTimes

The rise in concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from human activities is influencing climate patterns and vegetation across the United States and will significantly disrupt water supplies, agriculture, forestry and ecosystems for decades, a new federal report says.

more ...

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Posted by: dimbulb - 9:01 PM MDT | Updated: 27 May 2008 9:26 PM MDT
Tags: Computing  Environment  
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