bitter pill
Who indeed
June, 2004
May, 2004
April, 2004
March, 2004
February, 2004
January, 2004
December, 2003
November, 2003
October, 2003
September, 2003
August, 2003
July, 2003
June, 2003
May, 2003
April, 2003
March, 2003
February, 2003
January, 2003
December, 2002
November, 2002
October, 2002
September, 2002
August, 2002
July, 2002
June, 2002
May, 2002
April, 2002
March, 2002
February, 2002
January, 2002
December, 2001
November, 2001
October, 2001
September, 2001
August, 2001
July, 2001
June, 2001
May, 2001
April, 2001
March, 2001
February, 2001
January, 2001
December, 2000
November, 2000
October, 2000
Sprinkles or Jimmies
War and/or Peace
More Suppler
Cookie Jar Joe
How many woods
New digs
Ticket to crap
Ebert
Febuary
I'm a mocker
Techies pride
Under Garment
Survey Survey
Kaiser, I am the damn Kaiser

A little shout out to Jim and Gina: Almost everywhere I've stayed in Germany/Austria they hav served a basic breakfast, and this breakfast has almost always included a roll with butter, a brochen(sp?) as they say. Many times this brochen could be clasified as a Kaiser Brochen...I'm in the land of the roll and butter for breakfast. And damned good coffee to boot.
    Kaiser, I am the damn Kaiser Tue Jun 01, 2004 03:47:43 PM EDT

 
craptastic

Yesterday, I was standing on the pier by San Marco enjoying the view. I thought, what I nice place for a photo, so I pulled my camera out of my bag. I played around with angles a bit. I was leaning against a light post to steady myself, and I snapped a shot. In the exact moment I clicked the shutter, almost as if the very fabric of time and space had begun to fold in on itself, a seagull, who had been sitting on the light above me, crapped on my camera. If that's not a sound indication of my photographic skills, I don't know what is.

Now, I wait at the train station in Innsbruck...why you may ask? It seems when a porter says something in German/English (or maybe Esperanto?) that sounds like get off the train here, you better double check, or else you could be stuck in Innsbruck for two hours waiting for the next train...I'm just sayin'.

    craptastic Mon May 31, 2004 07:31:40 AM EDT

 
Colonel Klink, why have you forsaken me!?

a definition of surreal: Waking up at 3:00 AM in a hotel in Munich, turning on the TV, and watching Hogan's Heroes dubbed in German.

    Colonel Klink, why have you forsaken me!? Fri May 28, 2004 12:06:19 PM EDT

 
breathin' down my neck

There seems to be a lot of budging going on in Germany. On almost every line I'm cued up in there is someone pushing up from behind me or bumping shoulders with me. I'd like to think that the German people want to get just that much closer to the magic that is Mark. Some might say that I'm just a big lumbering American bumping into people, whatever...

    breathin' down my neck Tue May 25, 2004 05:45:50 AM EDT

 
but you can never leave

I'm sitting in an internet cafe at the Westbahnhof train station (waiting for a train), on the overhead speakers they are playing Hotel California unplugged...A tear slips from my eye, and I think this is what freedom is all about...Hotel California unplugged stretching accross the atlantic so people in Austria can realize how mediocre the Eagles are...

    but you can never leave Fri May 21, 2004 03:48:32 AM EDT

 
ich bin ein esel

I arrived in Vienna on Monday, and to validate all my Mothers fears, I was immediately apprehended at the Wien Mitte station, and taken to a concentration camp...If this note gets out via carrier pigeon...tell my ma I love her...

Viva La France!

    ich bin ein esel Wed May 19, 2004 07:04:29 AM EDT

 
free as in...well, not free

I figured since only about six thousand people have weighed in on Six Apart's new pricing structure for the latest version of Movable Type, I thought I'd throw my *two cents in the ring.

First a little history: I have installed MT (Movable Type) for many a user. I have implemented fairly complex configurations of the tool, and I find its plugin architecture simple and elegant. I think it is a fine tool, and as an implementer of MT, I have nothing but nice things to say about it.

That said, it always irked me that they gave the software away for free (for personal use), and yet would not release the source under a GPL or open source license. I talked to a handful of people about this point, end users, developers and even people who were familiar with the Six Apart developers themselves. All gave me different reasons why they felt the licensing was the way it was, and most defended it's licensing. I concluded it was basically about a desire to keep control over the source and to be able to leverage said source for monetary gain. Mind you, this does not make me a genius by any stretch of the imagination. This is how commercial software companies have been doing business since the dawn of time.

So, Six Apart was giving away MT for personal use, letting schleps like me and my friends use said software to publish terabytes of drivel regarding our summer travel plans, how much we hate or love some movie or Microsoft or How shocked we were to see Janet's boob while viewing it over and over again on the internet. However, they never even implied that this was open source or GPL code, and they charged for commercial use of the product. It was clearly a commercial product with a very low fee for personal use. In this case $0.00.

We fast forward a few years, and oddly enough Six Apart releases a new version of MT, and changes their pricing structure. They are actually charging more that $0.00 for said product. People are shocked. Cries are heard throughout the internet (ok, really just a group of self involved weblog authors who spend too much time on the web posting and reading posts and need to get out of the house where the sun will instantly incinerate my their pasty white flesh).

People are upset about having to pay. However, Six Apart never said they weren't going to charge. Actually, they said way in advance of MT 3.0 that they were going to charge. It's not like they lied. People are complaining about the price, but in the commercial software world the price for what they offer is well below the industry norm.

Oddly enough a commercial company that exists in this world to turn a profit is charging for their product. Go figure. So what do I do now you may ask...Gina and Mark may just have some answers...

- - -

* the actual cost of said opinion may vary depending on changing economic factors and length and innocuousness of said opinion, but will never exceed two cents in value.

    free as in...well, not free Sun May 16, 2004 01:24:53 AM EDT

 
reexamine our reasoning

We are the strongest nation in the world today. I do not believe that we should ever apply that economic, political, and military power unilaterally. If we had followed that rule in Vietnam, we wouldn’t have been there. None of our allies supported us. Not Japan, not Germany, not Britain or France. If we can’t persuade nations with comparable values of the merit of our cause, we’d better reexamine our reasoning.

-Robert McNamara, The Fog of War

    reexamine our reasoning Sun May 16, 2004 12:28:33 AM EDT

 
another go 'round the sun

Another year passes, and a disturbing cake. I'm not sure what the blood writing is supposed to mean, but if you chant it three times while facing north you will summon the devil.

liloltman

Those aren't candles by the way, they are used syringes.

    another go 'round the sun Sat May 15, 2004 09:22:56 PM EDT

 
now and then...

We will not walk in fear...We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason, if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine, and remember that we are not descended from fearful men -- not from men who feared to write, to speak, to associate and to defend causes that were, for the moment, unpopular.

...

The actions of the junior Senator from Wisconsin have caused alarm and dismay amongst our allies abroad, and given considerable comfort to our enemies. And whose fault is that? Not really his. He didn't create this situation of fear; he merely exploited it -- and rather successfully. Cassius was right. "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves."

Edward R. Murrow
See it Now (CBS-TV, March 9, 1954)
'A Report on Senator Joseph R. McCarthy'

    now and then... Sat May 15, 2004 01:12:25 PM EDT

 
there's so much that I don't know

I’ve worked at dotcom-type companies full of liberal arts majors with no software experience or training who nevertheless were convinced that they knew how to manage software teams and design user interfaces. This is weird, because nobody thinks they know how to remove a burst appendix, or rebuild a car engine, unless they actually know how to do it, but for some reason there are all these people floating around who think they know everything there is to know about software development.

- Joel Spolsky forward to Coder to Developer

    there's so much that I don't know Fri May 14, 2004 09:45:31 PM EDT

 
licorice gallery

apparently I like the taste of the Licorice Gallery

    licorice gallery Thu May 13, 2004 11:39:25 AM EDT

 

© 2002 - bitterpill.org is a holy owned subsidiary of Yummy Foods Inc.