Josh Marshall made a nice catch today.
Josh Marshall made a nice catch today.
Just to prove I’m fair and balanced:
Slashdot reports that GEOS, a windowed operating system for the Commodore 64 is now available for download. I can’t imagine using a Commodore 64 (or 128) for anything other than nostalgic reasons, but the download page seems to indicate that the owners of the product still think people would use it to be productive. Either way, reading about GEOS for the first time in a very long time reminds me that it was a very much anticipated Christmas present many years ago. My parents tricked me by hiding it in a gift that included a pair of pants.
Earlier today I (and everyone else) read that the source code to Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 2000 has been released onto the Internet. My friend called me tonight to tell me that Steve Ballmer had admitted that the source code was stolen by someone who had illegitimate access to Microsoft’s internal network for over three months. I haven’t seen the source code nor have I seen any confirmation that Microsoft has acknowledged the exposure.
Jack Shafer takes New York Times reporter Judith Miller behind the woodshed for her pathetic reporting on national security in the runup to the invasion of Iraq. At a certain point, it was obvious to any informed reader that any story published with Miller’s byline was going to bear little resemblance to reality. The fact that she was allowed to go on unchecked speaks very poorly for the Times.
Today I’m playing with Feed on Feeds, a server side RSS aggregator written in PHP. If I can get it to do what I want, I’ll be extremely pleased because one of the big problems I’ve had in the past is deciding which computer to keep my RSS reader on. Until I was unemployed I kept it on my computer at work, which meant that I couldn’t catch up on RSS feeds when I was at home. A good server side reader could obviously clear that problem up entirely, and Feed on Feeds looks simple enough that I could add features myself if I need them. I’ll let you know how it goes.
I don’t have any dog in this fight, other than to chalk another scoop up to weblogs. The Business2 Blog has photographic proof that Dr. Atkins was not as fat as some media outlets are claiming at the time of his death.
I kind of feel like people are having trouble seeing the forest for the trees when it comes to President Bush’s service in the National Guard. The issue here is that Bush took the rich man’s way out and went into the National Guard on the wings of a political favor, and then said Sunday in his interview with Tim Russert that he supported the war in Vietnam. Everything after that is window dressing. Even if he showed up and was the most conscientious National Guardsman during his time of service, he still decided he was too good to fight in a war that had his support. Isn’t that the character issue here? The fact that the paperwork is jumbled and they can’t find any actual people who will admit that they saw him doing his duty is a side dish.
Update: Slate bottom lines it pretty well.
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The Windows source code
Well, BetaNews is reporting that the Windows source code was stolen not from any computers at Microsoft but rather from Mainsoft, a company that ports Windows applications to Unix. Ironically, word is that the stolen source code was stored on a Linux box that was compromised.