Book Reviews
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       Robert X. Cringely writes about Microsoft vs. Linux: "Against Ballmer's glib insincerity we have Linus Torvalds, a very solid guy totally devoted to both the concept of creating powerful software and to giving it away. No wonder he is so misunderstood in Redmond." 
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       Apple's Knowledge Navigator revisited:  
"During my session at BloggerCon I referred to Apple's famous Knowledge Navigator concept video. I first saw that video in 1988. Today I tracked down a copy and watched it again. It stands the test of time rather well! Certain elements of that vision are now routine -- for example, Google found me the video and WiFi delivered it to a PowerBook which, when equipped with its iSight camera, bears a family resemblance to the Dynabook-like talking computer featured in the video. Other aspects are still far out of reach, especially the conversational interface based on deep understanding of natural language." [Jon's Radio]
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       Dive into mark writes: "Panther, Panther, Panther. Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther) is out. I took a few screenshots and wrote up a few thoughts. OK, I took 100 screenshots and wrote up 11 pages." 
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       Apple Third Time Lucky: "In summary, this is a far-reaching and impressive upgrade to the Mac experience. It justifies its cost far more than the 0.1 version change would suggest." (The Guardian via MyAppleMenu) [MyAppleMenu] 
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       DarwinPorts seems to be a nice alternative to Fink for installing software on Mac OS X. 
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       New York Times has an insightful review of Mac OS X: "In Panther, Apple has taken an already sparkling, super-stable operating system and made it faster, better equipped and more secure." If moving from Mac OS X 10.1 to 10.2 was like moving from Windows 2000 to XP, moving from Mac OS X 10.2 to 10.3 must be like moving from XP to Windows 2005 (or 2010?). Update:: There is followup to the NYT article on Mac OS X 10.3. 
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"During my session at BloggerCon I