Writings of a techie wizard
 
Archive: 2011 - Page 2
Wed, 31 Aug 2011

I just came across an article that shows I'm not the only one who thinks that US Constitutional law has gone a little overboard in its interpretation of the Marbury v. Madison Supreme Court decision.

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Posted at 17:59   |   Category: opinions   |   Tags: history, politics   |   Permalink
Sun, 28 Aug 2011

In a previous post I mentioned the Protect IP Act as an example of government making things worse instead of better when it tries to censor the Internet. Today I came across an article talking about another very bad effect that the Protect IP Act would have if it were passed: it would break DNSSEC, which is a key security mechanism that lets your computer validate DNS records, so that, for example, when you type your bank's URL into your browser, you know that you're talking to your bank's server, instead of some rogue site that has been set up to impersonate it.

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Posted at 12:55   |   Category: opinions   |   Tags: computers, politics   |   Permalink
Fri, 26 Aug 2011

Twenty years ago (yesterday, to be exact, but cut me some slack here), Linus Torvalds posted a message to the Usenet newsgroup comp.os.minix, announcing that he was working on a free operating system and wanted to know what features people were interested in. The original message is on Google Groups here. So it's time for another brief nerd interlude:

peter@localhost:~$ uname
Linux

At some point I'll do a longer post on why the above is true, but for now I think I'll just let it stand by itself. Thanks, Linus, for starting it all 20 years ago, and thanks to all the developers and distributions who have kept it going.

Posted at 12:37   |   Category: opinions   |   Tags: computers   |   Permalink
Sun, 14 Aug 2011

I've already referred to my favorite Heinlein quote once, and I'm sure I'll be doing it again, so I figured I might as well lay it out in full and unpack in detail why it's my favorite quote. Here it is, from Time Enough For Love, as noted on wikiquote:

The human race divides politically into those who want people to be controlled and those who have no such desire. The former are idealists acting from highest motives for the greatest good of the greatest number. The latter are surly curmudgeons, suspicious and lacking in altruism. But they are more comfortable neighbors than the other sort.

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Posted at 18:17   |   Category: opinions   |   Tags: politics   |   Permalink
Mon, 08 Aug 2011

The New York Times, which is certainly a bastion of the liberal arts types if anywhere is, has been running a debate about law school that is similar to the one about college in general that I discussed in my post a couple of weeks ago on the two cultures.

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Posted at 22:40   |   Category: rants   |   Tags: education, politics   |   Permalink
Fri, 05 Aug 2011

For non-nerd readers, I promise I won't do this very often, but once in a while I just have to get these sorts of things out of my system. Does anyone else find the following (from a transcript of a short Unix shell session) a little weird?

peter@localhost:~$ true
peter@localhost:~$ echo $?
0
peter@localhost:~$ false
peter@localhost:~$ echo $?
1

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Posted at 22:19   |   Category: general   |   Tags: computers   |   Permalink
Fri, 29 Jul 2011

In the interest of keeping the record honest following my last post, it's only fair to report that I have now been pleasantly surprised.

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Posted at 17:44   |   Category: rants   |   Tags: info   |   Permalink
Wed, 27 Jul 2011

Today I had one of those experiences that make you wonder how anything ever gets accomplished in our society.

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Posted at 23:10   |   Category: rants   |   Tags: info   |   Permalink
Sun, 24 Jul 2011

I recently came across two articles talking about whether a traditional college education is really worth it any more, and they awakened a pet peeve of mine.

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Posted at 21:34   |   Category: rants   |   Tags: education   |   Permalink
Wed, 20 Jul 2011

After posting last week about how the Supreme Court's role has evolved since the US Constitution was adopted, I did some more poking around on the Charters of Freedom site.

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Posted at 22:11   |   Category: opinions   |   Tags: history, politics   |   Permalink
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