Book Reviews
![]() I wrote today a short piece titled The Wooden Horse of Microsoft (in Finnish "Microsoftin puuhevonen"). This text will appear tomorrow as a net column of a Finnish IT magazine. Once again the discussions in weblogs helped to focus my writing, especially those views which opposed my own thinking on the matter. (See also The Fall of Troy: How the Wooden Horse was fashioned, and brought into Troy by her people.)
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![]() I have been keeping this weblog for five months. I have published here 1560 weblog postings and some longer pieces. Some time ago I celebrated my 1003rd posting. I would have expected that my interest in weblogs would have declined, but no. I'm still as interested in blogging as I was in November, 2002.
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![]() Open-Source Windows? Uh, Kinda: "Microsoft's announcement that it will open its source code to the U.S. government isn't quite what it appears. By Michelle Delio." [Wired News]
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![]() Shared Source: A Dangerous Virus is a nice analysis of the Microsoft Shared Source initiative: "Shared source, therefore, behaves like a virus that infects developers' brains. Once you let it into your organization, you must keep careful track of which developers have been contaminated, avoid deploying them to any projects which might compete with a Microsoft product, and even erect "Chinese walls" between projects so that no knowledge from shared source can leak into projects with competitive implications. Failing to implement any of those precautions could result in your organization's being sued for ruinous compensatory damages by Microsoft's armies of lawyers."
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![]() Microsoft to let governments review Windows code: "The move comes as Microsoft fights a growing battle against open-source software, which appears to be edging into government work around the globe." [Computerworld News] This move is a brilliant strategic move by Microsoft. On the other hand, it generates positive publicity because few reporters understand the subleties of software licenses. On the other hand, this move ties the licensees to Microsoft without giving anyone the possibility of competing against Microsoft. In fact, the "Shared Source" license basically prevents anyone who has had access to the Microsoft code from working on a similar code by a competitor. Brilliant, brilliant.
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![]() Too much information is a fine piece on the TIA program (Total Information Awareness): It will take years for total information awareness to get beyond the prototype stage. But if a working system ever does get up and running, you won't have to be Philip K. Dick to imagine the possibilities for mischief, especially if carelessness, to say nothing of malevolence, enters the picture. But not to worry. "The privacy of individuals not affiliated with terrorism" will be protected via "technologies for controlling automated search and exploitation algorithms and for purging data structures appropriately."
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