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There’s something of a thing among geeks to show off their desks, and apparently score points for messiness. Actually I used to be a serious contender in such competitions but the office I built myself at home really relieved things, I have space and things are not actually all that messy usually – simply because the environment is designed around my personality, rather than the other way around. The exception of course is the cabling, but no amount of careful design and tidying can ever get computer cables neat, it’s simply against the laws of physics or something.

But, my desk is pretty pimped and I’m proud of it, gadgets and lights abound and it looks pretty awesome at night with the screensaver on even if I do say so myself. The latest addition is my plasma ball on the far right (where it cannot interfere with the electronics) which joins my old friends Yoda and Daffy (beneath my monitors) and the Bride (on the left-hand wall).
Of course, claims of glory require photographic proof so here it is. The first picture is in light, the others show the desk in darkness when it really, if you’ll excuse the pun, shines.


DeskLight


Desk Dark 1


Desk Dark 2


Desk Dark 3

Yes. I really am that geeky.

 
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What a morning… the blogosphere and news sites here in SA are abuzzing with the sudden resignation of the South African president Thabo Mbeki last night. Odd though, because it’s pretty much been on the cards for about 2 weeks. From the moment the court dismissed the charges against Zuma the newspapers were predicting that this would spell the end for Mbeki. By last week Friday we all knew that the ANC’s National Executive Committee was meeting to discuss the event and it was an open secret that they intended to use the meeting to decide not if but how to fire the President.
They had essentially three choices. The first option was to impeach Mbeki, this would require a two-thirds majority vote in parliament (and I suspect even now Mbeki might have been able to muster up enough supporters in there [or at least people who knew if he falls they go with him] to avoid them getting that). The second option would be cast a vote of no-confidence in Mbeki, this requires only a vote of 50%+1 to pass and I suspect both they and Mbeki knew they could do it. Either of these are pretty undignified ways to leave the office of the president though, and likely to do longterm damage to our economy, regional standing and international image (which, some would say, would require advanced mathematicians to invent an entire new type of complex negative numbers).
Bringing us to option 3: Simply asking him to resign.
Of course, that by itself wouldn’t have worked outright – except that he knew options one and two still existed and particularly option two wouldn’t be hard. So it was a simple case of: leave, or we kick you out.

All in all I was entirely unsurprised by the events.
Having said that, this is a great day for South Africa. Mbeki was one of the worst things to ever happen to our country, he had been in power too long and he allowed personal feelings and greed to influence his judgment on critical matters like Zimbabwe and the AIDS crisis. Getting him out of power now was a good thing.
Having said that, I don’t think Zuma is a better person, or even a better politician though. He may or may not be guilty of corruption and I think he was, but I think Mbeki was very corrupt himself so this is not a major change in the status quo. What does set Zuma appart is that he was not in power for a long time, he has never been president and in order to get back into power he had to adorn a “champion of the little guy” image. The simple reality is that he is likely to do a better job at this stage because he needs to distinguish himself from his predecessor and he cannot do that without some radical policy changes. His best bet would be to make these changes on exactly those points where Mbeki was the least popular such as the AIDS crisis.
I have always felt that all politicians are corrupt, only the amount varies and the best of them are still more corrupt than the worst average citizen. This is a bit of a generalisation but if you believe, like I do, that only a corrupt person could ever have any desire to hold power over others, in fact that the very desire to have power is corruption then it follows that nobody who isn’t already corrupt would even become a politician in the first place. Once power is attained, the corruption changes focus not nature.
So this being the case, it makes sense then that there are only two things which can help society to get the service they need from politicians. The first is an educated electorate who will fire them if they mess up too badly … well we’re pretty short of those worldwide. The second is enlightened self interest. Create a situation where it becomes in the politicians own best interest to do the right thing. Where doing the right thing becomes the best way to secure his own position.
That is the position we find ourselves in with Zuma now – his only option if he wants to become president and get two terms is to do good things where Mbeki did bad things, and that is good for the country. If we assume that he won’t make too many other mistakes (notice: “too many”, the idea that he may not make any is not even worthy of consideration) then this is a good day for South Africa.
Heritage day is this Wednesday, and this country should party. Much like in the classic movie we can say: “Mona Deary is dead ? We should celebrate !”, those of us who particularly suffered under Mbeki’s semi-tyrannical rule such as people suffering from HIV may even take it a step further, I suspect the treatment action campaign is busy singing “ding dong the witch is dead”.

Sep 202008
 
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Dear lazyblog,
Happy Software Freedom Day.

/me dresses in rags and does the hula.
*I can if I want to. That’s what freedom means !*

 
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As the news broke that the RIAA has filed a lawsuit against New York Attorney Ray Beckerman (best known as slashdot contributor NewYorkCountyLawyer) who has taken on many cases to defend victims of the RIAA’s “protection money scheme”^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hcopyright infringement lawsuits, over a line on his blog where he describes their suits as “a sham”, I decided to join the effort to reward them for their attempt at censoring an informed opinion by enhancing the visibility of his site, and hopefully boosting it’s pagerank. Currently searching google for RIAA lists his blog blog at number 9, hopefully, enough people will be linking it because of this story (and the grassroots suggestion that people around the world do so) to put it at number 1…. just imagine if the very first hit for RIAA is to a site about how illegal and ridiculous their cases are ? Make no mistake my fellow South Africans – ASAMI is no better, they just don’t have as much power (yet) – the only way to make sure they never do, is to stop the RIAA in the US now, because what the RIAA achieves there, the US will force on WIPO soon enough, and WIPO will force on us – and once they have that power, our fair use rights (fair dealing in South African terminology) will be as far lost as our friends on the North-East end of the Atlantic.

To all who read this, if you have a blog, and care about copyright reform, please post a similar piece – it’s a small effort that could have a real impact on this cause, and shows support for one of those few lawyers who are actually on the side of us normal folk. If any of my fellow South African’s who care about this still wonder if you should support him… just imagine how you would feel if ASAMI filed a lawsuit against Andrew Rens for his work on copyright reform and the creative-commons here.

 
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Due to being very bored and unhappy in my previous position, I resigned last week. So I am now actively looking for something else. Normally I would not have quit one job until another was offered, but in this case I didn’t have a lot of immediate financial pressure and I had reason to believe that a dedicated jobhunt would be more likely to yield the kind of results I am actually after.

If you’re looking for somebody like me in your company (and this blog should give a fairly clear idea of the kind of cutting-edge work I am good at and love) then please do feel free to contact me.

 
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As promised, here is the presentation of my CLUG talk on making your own distribution. Jonathan was taping it, so I hope to be able to link a video of the whole talk soon.

 
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I am happy to announce that BW64Installer version 0.0.3 is released and available in the usual place. This release fixes the installs on the LiveDVD as well as several other bugs and adds support for lower memory systems.

In other news, I’m giving a talk tonight at the CLUG meeting on how to make your own GNU/Linux distribution. I spent some serious time doing it for a living and prepared the talk quite well so I hope that everyone who can make it will enjoy it. I promise a good mixture of theory, history and practical tools. If you would like to attend, you can find directions and more information at CLUG’s upcoming talks page.

I will post my presentation to this blog tomorrow, after the talk.

 
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As you may know, the feature freeze for KDE 4.2 is only 3 weeks away, so of course that means that if KDE3to4 is to be includeable there, it needs to have the current bugs fixed by then. Unfortunately, I am also right now working on bw64installer which needs to be ready ASAP so it can be included in bluewhite64′s next LIVEDVD. I will therefore put in a big bughunt fest for kde3to4 it this weekend with hopefully a 0.0.5 release by Monday which should be ready to propose for inclusion into the main kde 4.2 tree.

Socialist Libertarian

FSF

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