Dec 21 2009

Accepted to University!

chris

Sorry that I haven’t been writing more often, school has been swamping me.  However, I thought it a good idea to lift my nose from the grindstone (hehehe) to say that I have been accepted to the Arthur Kroeger College of Public Affairs and Policy Management at Carleton University in Ottawa!  This was a tied first choice with the University of King’s College in Halifax.  Carleton won’t let me defer (I’m considering deferral so I don’t have to work during university) but said that I’d likely be accepted again.  UKC will let me defer one year.  Now the clock is ticking, Halifax!


Oct 29 2009

Ubuntu out in the wild!

chris

The latest release of Ubuntu has hit the streets.  The much-acclaimed “Karmic Koala” (Ubuntu 9.10’s codename) is now out in earnest, bringing many usability enhancements as well as technical ones.

Really, there’s not much to say except get it.

www.ubuntu.com

Make sure to use the torrents if you can, just to relieve server tension.

Because I can’t update incredibly often, I’ll use this post to point you to OMG! UBUNTU!, probably the best Ubuntu blog I’ve seen out there.  Regularly updated, OMG! UBUNTU! gives you the low-down on everything Ubuntu-related, including upcoming plans.


Oct 3 2009

With A Little Help From the NDP/Yo-yo Ma

chris

Just a few days ago, Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper got the support of Canada’s New Democratic Party during a crucial vote for the 40th Parliament’s survival and that of his minority government and staved off the defeat of his government in the House of Commons as promised by the opposition Liberals.

Not only does Harper get by with a little help from Jack Layton’s NDP, but apparently also with Yo-yo Ma.

Harper did a surprise performance during a Yo-yo Ma concert at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa tonight, playing piano and singing the Beatle’s “With A Little Help From My Friends”.  Ma backed him on the cello.  The crowd went wild.

Here’s a bit of video.  It was started well into the song, but it’s the only one I can find.  Mr. Prime Minister is on the piano and lead vocals in the centre.

(EDIT:  This has been replaced with the official video from the Prime Minister’s Office)

Let the parodies about Minority Government and the song ensue!

If the whole Prime Minister/Calgary-Southwest MP/Conservative Party Leader gig doesn’t work out he definitely has a future singing.

Sorry for not posting in a while.  I’ve been working alot and school has been hectic.  I have not abandoned you, however!  I will be posting soonish with my impressions of Ubuntu 9.10 Beta (which is out now:  www.ubuntu.com)


Aug 26 2009

Battlestar Galactica: The Plan DVD art

chris

So I’m a big BSG fan, and can’t wait for the latest instalment in the Reimagined Series, The Plan.  The Plan is the entire series from the perspective of the Cylons and explores what was going on behind the scenes in the Cylon camp.  While the Series gives you – mostly – the Colonial point-of-view, The Plan will be an interesting balance.

Picture after the break.  Contains Battlestar Galactica spoilers.  No peeky unless you know 11 of the 12 Cylon models.

Continue reading


Jul 31 2009

Sarnians Decide to Moon US Spy Balloon at US-Canadian Border

chris

This one gives me a chuckle.  In a report by the Observer that I picked up on BoingBoing, there will be about 200 people dropping their trousers to moon a American spy dirigible based in Port Huron, MI that overlooks the Ontarian city on the other side of the border.  Basically it’s to highlight the privacy invasion caused by a blimp that can see the name of a ship from 14 kilometers away and likely can look into a person’s house if they live on Sarnia’s waterfront.  It’s like the balloon can already see their posteriours with their cameras, the protesters are just making it official…

Via BoingBoing and the Observer


Jul 10 2009

The New Frontier of Cyberwarfare

chris

Via Wired Online

This is assuming that the government of North Korea *is* behind the attacks against South Korea and the USA.  The question implied in the Wired article is whether such a cyber-attack should be considered an act of war (for the record, the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance is starting to shift towards considering it one, based on experience in a 2007 attack by a Russian botnet against the entire country of Estonia).  Personally, I believe that a government-sponsored attack against cybernetic infrastructure should be considered an act of aggression, no different than bombing hydroelectric dams or poisoning the water system.  In the West – especially in the West – so much is done over internal, national networks that to take those down would be *more* dangerous than poisoning the water main of a major city (think about it:  if Canada’s internet went down East-West-North communications would be severely curtailed, and that’s the least of it:  Provincial health authorities would be unable to relay important information, traffic would stop flowing in many urban centres, news services would be down as well as cellular networks (upon which Canada relies heavily), the Canadian Banks would be down, the RCMP and Provincial Police Forces would have to enforce order, and so forth.  A state the size and population density (or lack thereof) of Canada can not function without its communications networks.  America has a more modular political system – each state could assume responsibility for their own wellbeing; as I understand it, each state has their own military force of some kind (state troopers?) and has an executive which has wide-ranging powers.  Canada has one military, one executive.  The only way a provincial authority can exert force is through its municipal and provincial police.

So yes, a government-sponsored cyber-attack should be grounds for war or at least very very very strong sanctions and a retaliatory cyber-attack (which I’m sure Canada could mount much more effectively than North Korea and the US even more effectively)

Getting involved in cyber-warfare is one of the career possibilities I am possibilitiatizing right now with the Canadian Forces, so this is particularly interesting.

On a lighter note, Wired has a list of 100 *basic* skills for Geeks.  I do #44 and I should show #77-79 to my Computer Science/Engineering teacher who runs KCVI’s robotics club (and is very good).


Jul 8 2009

Google to make Linux-based Operating System

chris

Talk About A Bombshell (Which everyone knew was coming eventually, but we pretend to be surprised anyways)

Google, the big little company we all know and love, has decided that a logical extension of their vision for Google Chrome is the Chrome Operating System.  While the original Chrome was marketed as being similar to an OS in how it handled the web, Google decided that the desktop OS is built for an age where people are tied to desktop applications.  Google says that ChromeOS will be a lightweight, fast-to-boot-fast-to-run OS that focuses on getting people to the web.  While aimed at netbooks, it will also be available for desktops and laptops (so presumably not a Moblin-like interface).

While it will be Linux-based (like Android but seperate), ChromeOS will build many things from the ground up.  Now, I probably won’t wind up using ChromeOS (this is purely speculatory with no screenshots or anything) as I like the full-fledged Desktop OS provided by Ubuntu, but because the project is open source and builds on open source projects there will be a lot of new material coming in to the FLOSS ecosystem which will inevitably be picked up by the mainstream Linuxes.

I incorrectly reported on Twitter (based on a misunderstanding of Gizmodo) that it would be able to run Windows and OS X apps.  As far as I can tell, there won’t be apps per say but rather web-based applications which can be run on any operating system from any modern browser.  This, needless to say, makes more sense, though I am dissappointed because geting Win/Mac compatibility in an open source project would mean Win/Mac compatibility for the Linux universe.

So yes, I’m excited.  Can’t wait to see where this goes.  I am a fan of Chrome as a browser (if it only did Flash it’d be my default on Linux – it’s alpha is great) and I’m sure Google will do a great job on ChromeOS


Jul 6 2009

Internet Explorer bombs since march

chris

I’ve made no secret of my (intense) dislike for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser, and today I got some good news.

Via TechCrunch

According to NetApplications, Microsoft’s forced-use browser Internet Explorer lost 11.4% of the browser market between the three versions currently in the wild (the recent IE8, the first-IE-with-tabs-finally-half-baked-standards-support-they-could-have-gone-all-the-way-but-noooo IE7, and the it-just-won’t-die-no-matter-how-many-times-I-whack-it-with-a-sledgehammer-AHHH-AHHHH-AHHHHH IE6).  While IE7’s loss in popularity is explainable – people upgrading/being forced to upgrade to IE8 – and IE6’s persistence is starting to wane because it lacks certain features like tabs and any notion of security, the nice thing is that it’s losing to the renewed competition in the Second Browser Wars.  Where it was once mainly between Netscape and Internet Explorer, there’s now Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox (Netscape’s next of kin), Opera,Apple’s Safari, and the new and very impressive Google Chrome.  As the Internet Explorer line has done very little in the way of innovation (A small browser called NetCaptor invented them in 1998 and after losing market share to the tabbed Opera, Firefox, and Safari, IE integrated them in 2006) this isn’t surprising.

What is surprising (though not at all unwelcome) is that people are taking enough interest in quality to look past the default, to revolt from the dictatorship of Good Enough.  All the new entrants to the browser wars bring new innovations – Firefox with extensions, Opera with Unite and many others, Chrome with Tab Sequestration – and people are realizing that what comes installed on their computer really isn’t that good.

Anyway, the numbers speak for themselves.


Jul 1 2009

Happy Canada Day!

chris

img_0332

Happy Canada Day everyone.  To 142 more years of Peace, Order, and Good Government.

I’m not going to do a write up (hey give me a break, it’s a holiday!) but just link to Maclean’s reasons we are the best place on earth.


Jun 30 2009

The Firefox Cometh!

chris

Aaaand Firefox 3.5 drops today.  This post is a Three-In-One.  Part One is a Firefox Overview, Part Two is how to give Firefox some (more) serious speed, and Part Three is how to stop wasting your time on the web.

Here’s your overview.  I was going to write one all by myself but the Mozilla team’s great quick tour really defeats the purpose:

It’s interesting how “buying gifts” has become a universal euphamism when it comes to Private Browsing…

That aside, it’s all about the speed:

(Image via Technologizer)

There are also all the usability features which are great but don’t really *innovate* as much as they follow Google’s (amazing) Chrome browser.

As someone who designs and builds websites, however, what I’m really excited about is Open Video. Open Video uses the OpenSource OGG-Theora video codec (which is included by default in Linux, BSD, and Solaris systems and available for Windows and OS X) to do some really neat stuff: Continue reading