I did a short interview with ITBusiness.ca about Firefox

 

Dan James thinks about the future of the Mozilla Foundation

 

PBS Frontline: Rumsfeld’s War

Screenshot from Frontline documentary, Rumsfeld's War
Watch the PBS documentary in small streaming format from PBS.org or download the higher-quality bittorrent version

The PBS Frontline special, Rumsfeld’s War, details the internal power struggles that have shaped American foreign policy over the last ten years. The documentary is available, as one web forum poster put it, “…in Gameboy size resolution and s-s-s-s-streaming format…” at the PBS website. For a significantly better viewing experience, there a complete bittorrent version (bittorrent file) with much higher quality.

The documentary is striking for several reasons. First, the internal political posturing that characterizes the most powerful positions in U.S. foreign policy is as fascinating as any Hollywood war drama.

Second, the line between fiction and reality is eerily faint when all of your information comes through a small color screen in your living room. Last week, I was struck by the lack of contrast between the depiction of the Middle East conflict (or as Jon Stewart calls it, “Mess-o-potamia”) as depicted in the NBC drama, The West Wing, and the nightly America television news.

Regardless, the PBS special, Rumsfeld’s War, is worth watching.

 

Acts of Volition Radio: Session 16

Acts of Volition Radio: Session Sixteen This, the sixteenth session of Acts of Volition Radio is a collection of hidden gems. These are great songs that you have likely never heard before (most of them, at least). This session features a super-duper-quadruple-pack of a band you’ve almost certainly never heard of before, Chagall Guevera. Thanks to Dennis for rekindling my love for the band.

Acts of Volition Radio: Session Sixteen (54MB MP3)
More good music. Recorded Thursday, October 28, 2004 by Steven Garrity. Run time: 1hr 6min.

Session Sixteen Playlist:

  1. The Watchmen – All Uncovered
  2. Sandbox – Curious
  3. The Northern Pikes – She Ain’t Pretty
  4. Toad the Wet Sprocket – Before You Were Born
  5. Newsboys – Lost the Plot
  6. Chagall Guevara – Escher’s World
  7. Chagall Guevara – Violent Blue
  8. Chagall Guevara – I Need Somebody
  9. Chagall Guevara – If It All Comes True

For more, see the previous Acts of Volition Radio sessions.

Special geek-recording note: This was my first session recorded under Linux. I had previously been rebooting into Windows to use n-Track to record the sessions. This session was recorded in the open-source and cross-platform audio editor, Audacity, on my Fedora Core laptop. It worked well.

Acts of Volition Radio
Acts of Volition Radio
Acts of Volition Radio: Session 16
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This might be an early indicator in the future of operating system trends

 

Red Herring on Firefox’s “October Revolution” New York Times advertising campaign

 

Point here if you support Ralph Nader for President: enblogment (disclaimer: I’m a Canadian citizen)

 

The Descent of the American Empire

Flag Art

Growing up a couple hundred miles from the U.S. border in Canada’s smaller province, I’ve always had a sense that we in Canada have a unique vantage point on the United States of America. From here, we can see that America is a large beast, but we are too close to see the whole thing. Sleeping with an elephant, we sometimes say.

I grew up with a feeling that America was the center of the world. There were people in the rest of the world, but that was just the backdrop to America. Maybe someday, the whole world would come to be like America.

More recently in my life, I’ve become aware that while America lumbers on, still the center of it’s own universe, the rest of the world isn’t paying attention anymore. America is becoming irrelevant.

The American military is without equal. That sounds good, until you realize that a massive military without an equal means you have an irrelevant army. America is building a missile defense system after being attacked with domestic civilian aircraft. America sees the world in need of policing, while the world sees America as something from which you should protect yourself.

Europe wants its own global positioning system, because they know better than to have their governments and companies rely on a system being run by an increasingly isolated America. China wants its own software systems, because they know better than to build their economy with tools built in an increasingly isolated America.

Economically, America is clearly still a massive power. However, thanks in large part to the success and growth of large American corporations, economic power no longer respects international borders. Great American brands like WalMart, CocaCola, and General Electric, know that there is money to be made in the rest of the world.

We use American institutions and companies as a barometer for the adoption of open-source software, while the power of open-source software is happily moving on without the US.

While the coming US election seems like the potential turning point inside the US, and the rest of the world will move regardless of who sits in the White House next year. The future lives in Asia, South America, Europe, Africa.

Meanwhile, America responds by talking louder, listening less, and tightening it’s borders. In ten years, or fifteen, or twenty-five, the lights in America will dim and it will see beyond its own glare, look around, and see that it is no longer the center of the world and that the rest of the planet has moved on without them.

 

Download Eminem’s anti-Bush video, Mosh

 

Our friend Alan has a new Beer Blog and I couldn’t help but make up a quick beer-themed layout for it.