Coyote Gulch

 



















































































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  Sunday, October 3, 2004



Kodak vs. Sun

Groklaw: "Here's a truly disgusting story. Kodak bought some patents from Wang in 1997. The patents cover a method by which a program can "ask for help" from another application to carry out certain functions, which is more or less what Java does. Kodak's business is suffering from the digital revolution, so it decided to sue Sun for infringing its purchased patents. It claims that Sun pilfered its technology. The two companies worked on some joint projects together at one time that involved the same technology at issue in the lawsuit, which Sun argued was an indication of Kodak's implied consent." Let's hope Sun fights the patent and wins.
9:00:23 AM     



Denver November 2004 Election

The World Wide Rant: "I'm not supportive of all of Coors' positions, but sleazy tactics like the one pulled by the Salazar camp have all but guaranteed the crappy-beer magnate will get my vote. The ad works, but not like Ken hoped. Dumbass." Thanks to Walter In Denver for the link.

Electoral-vote.com: "Not much news on the presidential front today, but a lot of news on another, much less talked about front: the Senate. Five Democratic senators from the South are retiring at and end of this session of Congress: John Breaux (D-LA), John Edwards (D-NC), Bob Graham (D-FL), Fritz Hollings (D-SC), and Zell Miller (D-GA). Only three Republicans are retiring: Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-CO), Peter Fitzgerald (R-IL), and Don Nickles (R-OK). In addition to these eight open seats, one other seat is semi-open: Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) is fighting to actually be elected to the Senate seat her dad the governor appointed her to."

"Early in the year, the Republicans couldn't control their glee at the possibility of picking up as many as five Senate seats in the South, which has become increasingly Republican over the years. But a funny thing happened on the way to the election. The voters had different ideas. Not only are the Democrats holding four of the five seats in the South, but they are leading in all three formerly Republican seats. They are also leading in the only two really contested seats in which an incumbent might lose: Alaska and South Dakota."

"If the Senate election were held today, the Democrats would take control of the Senate, 52-48 (counting independent Sen. Jeffords as a Democrat, since he caucuses with the Democrats). And this realignment does not take into account the possibility that Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R-RI) might pull a Jeffords and jump ship. He is from a hugely Democratic state and, like Zell Miller, would be much more appreciated in the other party. The only reason Chafee hasn't switched is out of a sense of duty to his late father, John Chafee, who was a respected Republican senator from RI."

Rocky Mountain News: "Salazar said Saturday he supports the Patriot Act, but would like to see greater protection for personal freedom, while Coors said authorities need all the help they can get and he supports the act."

The Denver Post editorial staff sorts out the state of the State legislature today [October 3, 2004, "Endorsements: Statehouse battlegrounds"].
8:40:37 AM     



2004 Presidential Election

Newsweek: "With a solid majority of voters concluding that John Kerry outperformed George W. Bush in the first presidential debate on Thursday, the president[base ']s lead in the race for the White House has vanished, according to the latest NEWSWEEK poll. In the first national telephone poll using a fresh sample, NEWSWEEK found the race now statistically tied among all registered voters, 47 percent of whom say they would vote for Kerry and 45 percent for George W. Bush in a three-way race." Thanks to Josh Marshall for the link.

A Curious Stranger thinks that the War in Iraq is Bush's Vietnam.

TalkLeft actually reads the questions the pollsters are asking and objects, "Objection, Your Honor, the question assumes a fact not in evidence."

Mike Littwin sums up the first presidential debate in his column in yesterday's Rocky Mountain News [October 2, 2004, "Littwin: Bush's briar patch and Brer Kerry"]. He writes, "I'm guessing no one is taking this harder than Karl Rove, who must have thought this one debate was all that anyone would need to watch."
8:34:26 AM     



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