Mac OS X for me...

http://wiki.osx86project.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Ok, so it has been a while since my last blog entry. It may be quite a while longer until the next post, as I am now employed, for at least the next couple of weeks.

Other than getting a job, my last week has been very busy installing Mac OS X. Thanks to the extremely useful tips at www.osx86project.org it was a procedure but not impossible. My Dell Dimension 2400 is now running Mac OS X. My only problem with the Broadcomm 440 on-board ethernet. It worked under 10.4.1 but doesn't under 10.4.8. Instead of messing with it excessively, I've just dropped a Realtek card into a PCI slot and that works like a charm.

For your enjoyment I have tried to keep track of some of the software, I have been installing, since I bootstrapped up a clean operating system. Much of this is open source, available for Unix (can you say AIX? cause I know you can say Solaris) also as in Linux (y'know like Ubuntu and Red Hat), but don't forget BSD is/was Unix too (like OpenBSD, my favourite FreeBSD and Mac OS X). Most of this software even runs on Windows, if you have the stomach for it, I have even been doing a little messing around on Vista in the last couple of weeks. You guessed it.. it sucks.

Feel free to add your favourite applications, that you think, I should download in the comments below.

I recommend all these fine pieces of software:


PS: Dontcha just love that Canada:

The Copyright Board of Canada issued a decision on private copying last Friday that set new levies for fixed recordable media, such as that found in portable MP3 players, and asserted that downloading copyrighted files from peer-to-peer networks does not break Canadian copyright law as long as the copying is done for private usage. - from DRM Watch

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The best of LeftyTube

http://leftytube.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, February 27, 2007


OTI hit 1000 unique visitors for the month of February last night. But, ultimately despite all my efforts to make this blog the better one, it is LeftyTube that gets all the hits. Maybe that's because I don't fill LeftyTube with prattle like this post. Ok, I know why it is, it's because of crooks and liars referring all that traffic.

Anyway, I have had half a dozen posts on the back-burner that haven't materialized in to full posts. Here are few in short form.




"Any truly effective senior manager and executives of a sizeable organization know they must delegate to, and trust, those managers who report to them in order to run an organization effectively. A general manager cannot double-check every activity and transaction a senior manager like Sharma undertakes." - Doug Ausman in an op-ed response in the Martlet in 2004.

I left the UVic student union before Vivek Sharma's reign of thievery. The links above tell a bit of the story about the financial disaster that the Student Union would become in the time after the three years of surplus that signified my involvement.




As the blogosphere argues our way against climate change and increased emissions I find myself extremely intrigued by the means of rhetoric employed.

I'm too lazy to do the kind of full rhetorical analysis I intended (as a post to both review basic rhetorical style and provide links for those arguing against climate change). Maybe it will happen sometime in the future.

I did note with incredible pleasure that the L'Alliance's Lights Out campaign was extremely successful in France. The campaign managed to reduce consumption of electricity by 1% during 5 minutes on February 1, 2007.

For other daily climate saving tips I recommend: CoolMove.org




The continuing unacceptable inequality between men and women will be the topic of a rant not yet written. This article in the Toronto Star highlights this on-going ridiculousness in Canadian Universities.




I have added a script to the blog margin that let's you read items I've read and intentionally shared. I'll try and keep them interesting.

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Where open publishing environs have failed the niche online magazine is contributing significant content

http://www.sevenoaksmag.com/

Saturday, January 06, 2007

"Seven Oaks magazine is a publication which stands outside the realm of false consensus, in unapologetic alliance with those in this country and around the world dedicated to social justice, world peace, gender and racial equality, as well as equality of language rights, self-determination, environmental sustainability, and the celebration of cultural achievement and critical thought." from the Seven Oaks Magazine manifesto.

It isn't just the blog that has created a political stir this year. Even as new mediums allow instantaneous publishing power for anyone with access to the technology, a hard-core of experienced propagandists spend countless hours disseminating the in-depth written arguments and ideas that create the platform on which this freedom is built.

The failure of victoria.indymedia.org and its counterpart at vancouver.indymedia.org to live as long as our foggy memories of Seattle '99, ushers in a new challenge to the left, to create content in open forums, that leads discussion without debasing the debate to the point of irrelevance. Even bc.indymedia.org, created in the ashes of vic & vanindymedia and seen as a way to bring together a province with alternate forms of debate seems abandoned with no new posts in nearly 8 months.

Let's hope these same brilliants writers and activists who are creating on-line places like thetyee.ca and sevenoaksmag.com move quickly to adopt the use of new forms of media. Check this attempt of what I hope for by some local film-makers, now viewed over 5,700 times on YouTube: Guantanamo Bay.


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