Archive for November, 2006

A big win for CC in the battle of DRM?

Monday, November 27th, 2006

Not only is the zune being considered a complete failure if you were unlucky enough to receive
one, either as a give or the way a virgin receives pregnancy, you can now find away around microsoft’s long hard um drming. Relish in this first victory, I doubt this will be the end of the battle.

give a gift twice as nice when its opensource

Monday, November 27th, 2006

With christmas around the corner and over consumption around the bend its always nice to be the weird cheap skate in the family. But sometimes you can actually be the cool weird cheapskate to help with this comes make magazine opensource gift guide. What better way to spice up that old eggnog recipe than with some opensource beer. Also note that not all the gifts are for the cheap skate at heart, many will require you to rip apart some old electronics for those precious LED lights. The free ones almost all require some good elbow grease.

A step toward inclusion

Monday, November 27th, 2006

What does it mean to make something under a creative commons license? Is a nice way to get your name out there? A way of finding a following and then turn around and make your next media the profit maker? or can there be a middle ground. make it profitable but make it free. . . profitably free, there’s an oxymoron for you. But just like jumbo shrimp its damn good eatin.

Brazilian film-maker Oona Castro recently received funding from the Brazilian government to make a movie. The budget was small something around 200grand. Castro turned around and made the movie, then licensed it under a creative commons. He released the movie simultaneously in theaters and through p2p networks, with alternate endings. The result a larger audience for the movie. Not only that but Castro asked fans to work on their own endings.

Sounds like a winning combo, to tell you the truth I can’t see the same crowd going to the cinema being interested in watching the film on their computer anyway. I don’t think I’d ever be able to convince my mom to watch a movie on a PC, just as I have friends that I can’t convince to pay for a movie. Sorry MPAA I’d can’t get my boyscout badge by divulging their names though.

Main stream LINUX?! whaa

Monday, November 27th, 2006

Well not really… So you just invested 600 U.S. dollars on a shiny new PS3. did you know it runs off of linux?  considering that the ps2 sold well over 100million units world wide if its predecessor can do equal amounts as I’m sure sony is hoping for thats a good about of penetration for linux in an indirect sort of way. PS3 Linux. Now I hope to see some good home-brew games come from this.

ubuntu

Monday, November 27th, 2006

So I decided to try to walk the walk after talking so much about open source. I loaded up a laptop, an old amd 700 with about 300 MB of memory, with ubuntu the dapper drake version. Well technically i didn’t even load it up myself. i asked my brother who works at a computer repair store if he happened upon any free old laptops as he usually does, he replied yes, and after telling him i planned to load ubuntu on it he said he already had one with that, so i took it. I say this because I believe its important to the story and because I’m just that honest. So any way new computer and OS in hand I set out to learn a thing or two about this release which is praised not only for its ease of use but for the way Ubuntu is set up to always and forever remain free.

The first thing I noticed off the bat was the extremely user friendly GUI, usually pronounced gooey for those non code literate, thats Graphical user interface. Anyway the GUI resembles windows visually. A nice thing considering I’m not a fan of the mac icon tray that many really love. anyway I think its important to have something familiar for those who think linux = command line. I’m in no way claiming that linux isn’t command line because ooooh it sure is.

Getting to know the terminal was both a pain and quite fun. It’s a pain because as I learn, and the way i learn is through slow emulation of example and constant error, I slowly just want to move to my desktop and be content with windows. However its fun because you are actually having to think instead of being lazy and pushing around a cursor. And yes there are several things that are fully GUI compatible, many debian files are click operable. However a good amount of things require the use of the terminal.

To tie this together with moving opensource to the main stream I like to take a second to realize that linux may never fully be accepted by normal PC users but Ubuntu and the software used in the daper drake release give hope to the small flicker that one day a user friendly linux OS may surface. More on this later.

open source in a web 2.0 world…

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

So there are only so many hours in a day, people can’t spend all their time watching Youtube. Some day they will need something that isn’t so closed. I recently closed my youtube account, yes i was one of those jerks with a video of their friends being defamed on the internet. I had a video of a friend being kicked in the balls. let me put this incontext. I first found youtube and found it a bastion of hilarity and weird stuff. I posted a video of a friend dressed as Megaman, a semi-popular old school game character. Well it got some hits, we laughed. Then another friend wanted to challenge my friend to hit count war. So i uploaded a video of him being nailed in the junk.

Well before I knew it that video had 15,000 hits, the megaman cosplay had maybe 900. Anyway it had been awhile since i check on it when i got an email from Youtube saying that the ball kick had been removed for content. Unsure of why this happened, the email didn’t explain much, and there was no way for me to contest the discision, I was attacked by the man and so in response I took down my entire catalogue.

This is just the set up. This made me realize why the opensource movement is so important. Not for the monetary reason but the community aspect. Youtube has developed a false sense of many a thing. First is its fake sense of community. Sure you can video battle your nemisis from the east coast in a tap dance contest, but where do you turn when youtube takes down the video. Wanna complain to the makers, eh they care… they just made a cool billion off their community selling your videos to google.

What do you do when they use your video on a commercial, promotion. Take it. Promblems are furthered when you think of youtube as the prime example of web 2.0… wait its not… its just a poser, the avril lavigne of web 2.0. Go to youtube right now and try to download your own video…. can’t do it… didn’t think so… go post your youtube video on a friends myspace.. … like the bulging youtube ad you’ve just grown in your pants? Sure its integrated to a point, but these walls that are created have too much of the staunchness of web 1.0. Islands in a sea of creativity, huge money exchanges and the consumer will loose.

So where to turn, of course there are options out there for opensource distribution but there really needs to be a place to dump all this stuff like youtube, but without the walls. Someplace that embraces it’s community and gives them a voice. Without their community youtube would never be worth the price google paid for it. It’s a real shame the creators didn’t realize this.

I told my story only to show that I may be biased, but i hope that I have made some valid points that I was already becoming concerned with and then the sale occurred right after my complaint and it all seemed to pile up.

..haha overly used joke

Frozen Rodent

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

No I didn’t find a dead squirrel and keep it in my freezer, later to be revived with my special … reanimator serum… um where was I…Oh yes Ice weasel was what I’m discussing. Ice weasel is a new GNU product. Basically they’ve taken the code from fire fox.. get it fire = element = ice; fox = mammal? = weasel, and turned it completely ‘free’. the folks at gnu.org actually explain the naming better. Anywho its taken the opensource code of firefox and stripped it of its naughty unfree clothing. Though Firefox’s code is free it turns out that the logo and several programs it has integrated are anything but free, and now there is a completely free version avaible, enter the weasel of ice.

Where does this leave us, the end user? Split between an ethical cause and the accessibility of firefox. Well at this point Ice weasel is still being developed so there may be more reason later than merely slight ethics. If Iceweasel provides what it hopes it will allow communities the ability to really use the source code for their own good. So there may be enough people interested to really add some nice additions to the app.