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No More Monday

July 31, 2002 by Dan

Remember how, last month, word came out that PriceWaterhouseCoopers was going to rename its consulting branch Monday? I think this is a good thing, but IBM has spared us all a lot of fun; it’s buying the division for $3.5 billion.


In the process, it’s dumping the name Monday, which was supposed to take effect next month.


“Too bad – it could have been called ‘Big Blue Monday,’ ” Bill Carlino, editor of Accounting Today, told the New York Post.


Ah, well. Now we’ll have to find something else to make fun of. Fortunately, it’s a big world.


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

A Real Resume Problem

July 30, 2002 by Dan

Angela Gunn points out this amusing and odd piece from the WAPost:



FREETOWN, Sierra Leone 淼 Losing your job, quitting school, going broke and moving back home with your mother after living abroad for years would be tough on anyone.


It’s even tougher when you’re a former military dictator who once had the power to execute opponents at will.


Not a lot of jobs in the Times under “Dictator,” last I checked. (Why yes, I do check. Why do you ask?)


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Yesbut…

July 30, 2002 by Dan

A columnist with the Cornell Daily Sun had trouble with his local Kinkos when he tried to get them to photocopy some of his published work.They demurred on copyright grounds:



I was miffed by his self-important anal-retentiveness. “I wrote that article, look, my picture is on the top,” I said. He told me that didn’t matter, that corporate Kinko’s was overburdened with copyright lawsuits, and consequently he wasn’t about to run my copy job.


OK, so he wrote the article. I bet it’s a nice picture, too. Doesn’t mean he owns the copyright. In fact, the bottom of the very web page that carries the diatribe carries the following legend:


Copyright ゥ 2002 by The Cornell Daily Sun, Inc.
All rights reserved.

 
So it turns out that he didn’t own the copyright after all, and while the Kinkos guy might have been a little more graceful (and don’t they have some kind of hold harmless form?), it turns out that he was probably right. What’s more, it’s precisely copy shops in college towns that are probably the biggest copyright violators.

 

Hey, kid! First rule of content creation: Just because you write it, doesn’t mean you own it. If you’re going to stay in the business, get used to it.

 

For my money, this is just a rant by some Ivy League senior who couldn’t get some townie to do what he wanted.


But I suspect his refusal to print my writing samples sprouted from seeds buried deeper in the human ego. It was an exercise in power. He totally had the power of refusing to copy my articles. And he didn’t.

All together now: Awww………

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

GRASP Exceeding Our Reach?

July 30, 2002 by Dan

Jane’s Defense Weekly is not a publication noted for its levity, so it’s probably true that Boeing is now experimenting with anti-gravity propulsion.



The Boeing drive to develop a collaborative relationship with the scientist in question, Dr Evgeny Podkletnov, has its own internal project name: ÎGRASPâ ÷ Gravity Research for Advanced Space Propulsion.

A GRASP briefing document obtained by JDW sets out what Boeing believes to be at stake. “If gravity modification is real,” it says, “it will alter the entire aerospace business.”


Ya think?


The Russian government is apparently not facilitiating contact with Podkletnov, for what should be obvious reasons. There’s more:



The GRASP paper focuses on Podkletnovâs claims that his high-power experiments, using a device called an Îimpulse gravity generatorâ, are capable of producing a beam of Îgravity-likeâ energy that can exert an instantaneous force of 1,000g on any object ÷ enough, in principle, to vaporise it, especially if the object is moving at high speed.

Podkletnov maintains that a laboratory installation in Russia has already demonstrated the 4in (10cm) wide beamâs ability to repel objects a kilometre away and that it exhibits negligible power loss at distances of up to 200km.


The possibilities of weaponization are left as an exercise for the student. However,



The paper points out that Podkletnov is strongly anti-military and will only provide assistance if the research is carried out in the Îwhite worldâ of open development.


Nat Polish dug out this scientific abstract for a paper presented earlier this month regarding superconducting antigrav .

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Is It Search & Seizure If We Just Give It To Them?

July 29, 2002 by Dan

Think they’re not watching? Think again. From the Village Voice:



As John Ashcroft’s Citizens Corps spy program prepares for its debut next month, it seems scores of American companies have already become willing snitches. A few months ago, the Privacy Council surveyed executives from 22 companies in the travel industryot just airlines but hotels, car rental services, and travel agenciesnd found that 64 percent of respondents had turned over information to investigators and 59 percent had lowered their resistance to such demands.


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Disposable Cell Phones Imminent

July 29, 2002 by Dan

I first wrote about disposable cell phones nearly two years ago, but they finally look like they’re about to hit the market.


Reuters reports that Hop-On says it’s gotten FCC approval to sell a mass-market recyclable cell phone with 60 minutes of service. Price: $40.



“Hop-On mobile devices are plastic, two-way phones the size of a deck of playing cards. Users talk and listen to callers via a microphone/earpiece connected by a thin wire. Customers buy scratch cards in increments of additional talk time of 60, 90 and 120 minutes, according to company officials. “


The first phones will run on CDMA networks — Sprint and Verizon. A second wave, priced at $29, will run on GSM networks — Voicestream (a/k/a T-Mobile) and Cingular. In all cases, toll charges will be extra.


If you like Slashdot (not to everyone’s taste), here’s their discussion of this.


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

So the Schools Will Run Linux, Right?

July 29, 2002 by Dan

The New York City school system is about to get a new chancellor: Joel Klein.


Yes, that Joel Klein. The one who (successfully, so far) represented the U.S. government in its antitrust case against Microsoft. The one who was, until today, the U.S. head of Bertelsmann. (What this means for Bertelsmann, one of the world’s five largest meda companies and the CEO of which was pushed out yesterday, is fodder for another article.)


Here’s what the NYTimes says about it.


Interesting. Klein is the second chancellor in a row to come from the business community rather than the education industry. Klein is also very much the choice of Mayor Bloomberg, himself a successful businessman. (For those of you who don’t follow city educational politics, Bloomberg recently got control of what used to be called the Board of Education — which has eluded mayors for decades — and appears hell-bent on implementing some serious systemic reform.)


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

This is How Bad It Is.

July 29, 2002 by Dan

Story in the NYTimes this morning that Ziff Davis, hobbled by debt and crushing declines in the tech advertising market, will probably go Chapter 11 this week. At one time, Ziff Davis also owned a thriving events business that included Comdex, which it spun off and is now called Key3Media. So, should Ziff have kept the events biz? Umm, probably not; it’s being delisted from the NYSE today. That’s what happens when you’re trading at 5 cents.


Fortunately, Ziff doesn’t owe me any money, though I do have an assignment from them, which I probably need to inquire about.


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Sun Rises Online

July 29, 2002 by Dan

When the New York Sun launched this past spring as the first new daily broadsheet in decades, some thought it odd that there wasn’t a companion website for the right-leaning daily. Myself, I considered it a good idea to concentrate on the main deal and wait to go online until the underlying machine was spinning steadily.


The Sun’s site now appears to be up and running, though I haven’t seen an announcement of it anywhere. www.nysun.com carries a small selection of major stories from that day’s edition, with a list of other pieces that you can see my actually getting a copy of the print edition and paying 50 cents.


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Credit Where It’s Due

July 26, 2002 by Dan

So while Enron, Tyco, and Worldcom are splashed across the airwaves and the front pages, as the stock market plummets and people’s retirement funds are wiped away in a matter of weeks, what’s Congress doing? Why, making it harder for poor people to declare bankruptcy, of course.


A “bankruptcy reform” bill has been moving through Congress for the last year, and the NYTimes reports that it’s finally cleared a conference committee. The most salient point in the bill is that credit card debt would not be discharged in a bankrupcty; it would still have to be paid off.


It should surprise no one that the moving force behind the legislation is MBNA, one of the more aggressive mass-marketers of credit cards — particularly to the “sub-prime” borrowers who have worse credit and fewer financial resources. These people, of course, pay higher rates, tend to carry balances, and default more often. The plan was that the fees these borrowers paid would offset the higher default rate. It didn’t work out that way, and MBNA has successfully gotten Congress to bail out its damaged business plan.


Some interesting points from the Times that should be skipped by those who still respect the legislative process:



  • “Ranked by employee donations, MBNA was the largest corporate contributor to President Bush’s 2000 campaign.”
  • “The company acknowledged that it gave a $447,000 debt-consolidation loan on what critics viewed as highly favorable terms to a crucial House supporter of the bill only four days before he signed on as a lead sponsor of the legislation in 1998. Both MBNA and the lawmaker, Representative James P. Moran Jr., Democrat of Virginia, have denied that there was anything improper about the loan.”
  • The compromise that moved the bill forward was the elimination of a provision that would have allowed anti-abortion demonstrators to get out from under paying court fines and judgements. Just what that provision was doing in the bill in the first place would make an interesting discussion on its own.

I don’t know if the bankruptcy system does or doesn’t need reforming. But this bill looks like Congress and the financial industry are perfectly willing to step on the necks of the very people whom they helped trip up in the first place.


 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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