I know I have, from here on, become the worst kind of nerd, but hey moblogging is fun. This is a shot of a rentable office in O’Hare Airport offered by a company called Laptop Lane.
Johnny Carson, the “Tonight Show” TV host who served America a smooth nightcap of celebrity banter, droll comedy and heartland charm for 30 years, has died. He was 79. “Mr. Carson passed away peacefully early Sunday morning,” his nephew, Jeff Sotzing, told The Associated Press. “He was surrounded by his family, whose loss will be immeasurable. There will be no memorial service.”
[Via: Yahoo! News - Johnny Carson, King of Late Night, Dies]
U.S. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Michael Powell plans to resign after four years as chief regulator of the telecommunications and media industries, sources familiar with his decision said on Friday.
Just another one of those stories that proves that man is an irony making animal:
Filmmaker Michael Moore’s bodyguard was arrested for carrying an unlicensed weapon in New York’s JFK airport Wednesday night.
[Via: FOXNews.com - Foxlife - Michael Moore's Bodyguard Arrested on Airport Gun Charge]
Poll: Nation split on Bush as uniter or divider
[Via: CNN.com and Lew Rockwell]
He’s pulling our legs again . . . Tom Waits hasn’t had fun in years:
Moody TOM WAITS admits the last time he had “fun” was 40 years ago – at a JAMES BROWN concert.
The gravel-voiced American singer prefers to occupy his life with educational activities rather than indulging in childish behaviour – but he did allow his standards to slip on one occasion.
Waits says, “I don’t have fun. Actually, I had fun once. In 1962. I drank a whole bottle of Robitussin cough medicine and went in the back of a 1961 powder-blue Lincoln Continental to a James Brown concert with some Mexican friends of mine. I haven’t had fun since. It’s not a word I like.
“It’s like Volkswagens or bell-bottoms, or patchouli oil or bean sprouts. It rubs me up the wrong way. I might go out and have an educational and entertaining evening, but I don’t have fun.”
This is kinda amusing to me because my buddy Peter and I were just talking this morning about how it was inevitable that Google would have to weigh in on the comment spam plague. Today they announced on their blog that they will be implementing an “nofollow” tag that will allow you to block links on your site from being used for ranking purposes on Google. The same rule applies to MSN and Yahoo searches. From the blog post:
If you’re a blogger (or a blog reader), you’re painfully familiar with people who try to raise their own websites’ search engine rankings by submitting linked blog comments like “Visit my discount pharmaceuticals site.” This is called comment spam, we don’t like it either, and we’ve been testing a new tag that blocks it. From now on, when Google sees the attribute (rel=”nofollow”) on hyperlinks, those links won’t get any credit when we rank websites in our search results. This isn’t a negative vote for the site where the comment was posted; it’s just a way to make sure that spammers get no benefit from abusing public areas like blog comments, trackbacks, and referrer lists.
[Via: Google Blog]
All I can say is thank goodness. Maybe it’ll at least slightly reduce the 300+ comment spams this site gets a day, although to keep beating a dead horse, the great product Spam Karma has been blocking them all. I’m also glad to see that my blogging engine, WordPress is already on the case.
I should preface this post by saying I am not, in any real way, an open source developer. I feel no compulsion to distribute the source of my work for others to modify and distribute on their own without proper monetary compensation. In fact I am revolted by anyone who suggests that I have a moral obligation to do so. This is the talk of looters who wish to steal the works of others for their own purposes without the producers consent. However, my feelings on the politics of GNU style open source are well known and not the purpose of this post.
However, I do use several open source products which I assume are developed by people whose desired type of compensation are different than my own. I use WordPress for this blog as well as several plug-ins and tools to support it. Today, Dr. Dave, the creator of the Spam Karma comment spam blocking plug-in (a most excellent product), decided to quit development of this tool because of the mounting complaints about the “stability” of his plug-in in relation to the “alpha” versions of the WordPress engine. The straw that broke the camel’s back was a page long rant on Asymtomatic.com about issues he had with the recent releases of the Spam Karma plug-in.
I can say that I had a couple of issues in installing this plug-in, however, they were entirely due to my ignorance on folder permissions and were resolved with a tiny amount of research on these issues. At no time did I feel anger or resentment at the developer. He developed a product that would have taken me weeks for me to develop on my own and distributed it without charge because he thought it was cool enough for other bloggers to try out. I would have never thought to expect free support from him. At most, I would have dropped him an email letting him know about an issue that I couldn’t resolve only after I had exhausted all of my albeit limited knowledge. However, to self-righteously expect a bug-free product for which you have offered no compensation strikes me as the vilest sort of arrogance. If you can’t get the product to work, then develop your own, pay the developer for a support contract or shut the hell up.
I wouldn’t have posted about this except I noticed another egregious example of this behavior with another free product, although one that is not open source. The w.bloggar tool allows you to post to your blog from a Windows application. It is developed by an enterprising fellow named Marcelo from Brazil. Like Dr.Dave, he develops this app because he thinks it’s cool and wants others to get a chance to use his product. However, he’s also a very busy fellow and doesn’t get a whole lot of time to work on the product. After a long period of silence, he announced that he was still working on a new version of the product to which he got several condescending comments like this one:
Just a suggestion…
When you cannot work on a new version fast enough, you should at least give workarounds to make previous versions usable.
[Via wbloggar.com]
Where do you get off demanding that someone else work on a product that you haven’t paid for? I gave the guy a donation for the product because I used and liked it. However, because it was a donation and not a purchase, I would never demand that he get to work on the latest version. What gall!
These developers work on these products in exchange of the goodwill of those who use them. Their compensation comes from the numbers of users who use the product. If they don’t develop a good product, then don’t use it. But don’t complain about their inability to develop a good product. You have given nothing. You have provided nothing. All you have done is to consume their product for no cost on your side.
If anything, this has confirmed my distrust of the open-source consumer and hardened my resolved to remain a greedy, capitalistic and selfish software developer who demands money for my time.
Not that I have any strong opinions on the subject . . .
The European Union may consider banning Nazi symbols in its 25 member nations after Britain’s Prince Harry wore a swastika armband to a costume party, the bloc’s top justice official said Monday.
[Via: Yahoo! News - EU May Ban Nazi Symbols Over Harry's Gaffe]
This is the high culture from whom we are to take our cues? A continent where the silly and petty actions of the idle rich are worthy of censorship? Never forget that America is great because of our commitment to allowing the silly and stupid to be silly and stupid.
I just love to see the stories about Oklahoma that hit the international news wires:
Oklahoma highway users wishing to call the state about electronic payment passes were mistakenly directed to a sex hotline.
Via: Yahoo! News – Oklahoma turnpike number exits at sex hotline

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