New Elections in Hamburg
Wow. That was quick. Great performance!

And to the Hamburg residents: at the next election, it really doesn't have to be the Schillhaufen ...
At Nochn Blogg. you can find the original article.
Wow. That was quick. Great performance!

And to the Hamburg residents: at the next election, it really doesn't have to be the Schillhaufen ...
At Nochn Blogg. you can find the original article.
Once again, proof of the inhumanity of certain judges. The verdict could easily come from Schill: Rather, due to existing neglect tendencies resulting from the lack of educational influence from their parents, the children were recognizably interested in the sexual acts themselves. (...) Moreover, the abused children suffered no recognizable further psychological harm beyond their already existing environmental damage as a result of the accused incidents. How can a judge deliver such a contemptuous justification? Are children from socially problematic circumstances now the lowest of the low, whom one can simply abuse?
At Telepolis News you can find the original article.
Ok, yet another programming language. But the mix is what appeals to me: taking inspiration from Self, Common Lisp and Smalltalk really hits my taste. I'll have to get the whole thing and try it out. Certainly it won't reach the critical mass needed to do anything serious with it - lately only Ruby has managed that, and even that was something of a sensation - but it's interesting nonetheless.
An interesting article about various user scenarios for outliners and related programs. It provides a good overview of software available on Mac along with their respective focuses and areas of application. Anyone planning to acquire such software should browse through here, which saves a lot of personal trial and error.
That's exactly what the Ich-AG concept is all about: the formerly employed worker is thrown between the millstones of large corporations with a small concept that might just barely work at the local level. When the big players no longer like it, they can easily get rid of him. He then no longer falls into the unemployment statistics, but at best among those receiving social welfare. The balance sheet looks great and an existence is destroyed.
Or did someone really believe that the Ich-AG was in any way about a forward-looking concept that people are supposed to live from long-term? Fooled you. Gotcha.
If it were really about that, the Ich-AG entrepreneurs would also be offered security measures when they go into self-employment. But that gets shifted by the state to the private sector; these people are supposed to get their own security.
Of course, the sloppy founder meetings (more hype than facts) and the rather time-constrained advisory services are not sufficient to turn a former employee into a full merchant. And promptly there are problems later with insurance, contracts, payments, taxes or contributions.
The Ich-AG would be a good concept if it really built on a sustainable model that included security and comprehensive support in business formation—and in a way that would allow the Ich-AG entrepreneur to take the risk. The way it's running now, the most frequently used advice will probably ultimately be debt counseling...
At WDR.de there's the original article.
It took a long time, but now it's done. The first level cracked. Sure, a 2048-bit key is still quite difficult to crack, but it's foreseeable when these limits will also fall. Time for new algorithms and new approaches. My PGP 2.63uin version (please don't be alarmed by the layout of the pages, that's all still from 1998) already had 8129-bit key length, which should last a little while longer. At heise online news there's the original article.
Wow, Riots in Hamburg
At tagesschau im Internet you can find the original article.
An interesting breakdown of all the clauses not included in the SCO NDA. As a result, such a signed NDA would mean that the signatory could only report about SCO what SCO had previously allowed them to sign – regardless of where that knowledge came from, whether they already had it beforehand or whether they might have received it from outside sources. In principle, anyone who signs this NDA would be completely eliminated as a critic of SCO. This would obviously make free investigations of SCO's claims impossible.
At XMLMania.com - Google News Search: SCO I found the original article.
The British Home Secretary fears that British Guantanamo detainees could be acquitted in British courts. And that's why he's arguing that they should remain in Guantanamo. Quite perverse, if you ask me. An acquittal in British courts would be a determination that the detainees are innocent - but that would actually require that they be removed from Guantanamo as soon as possible. But the British government isn't interested in the rights of its citizens, only in the image that Bush's little lapdog presents ...
At tagesschau im Internet you can find the original article.
Well, you can definitely be fooled by that. According to this discussion, there are problems with several programs displaying the processor speed. My PowerBook G4 867 is also promptly displayed as 533, even though it encodes music CDs just as quickly as before. Something seems to have changed in the system interfaces with 10.2.8 that misleads some programs. At Industrial Technology & Witchcraft you can find the original article.
So folks, please keep SCO financially alive at least long enough until they get roasted in court. I want to see the debacle and watch the stock prices crash because of the CEO's stupidity

At heise online news there's the original article.
Perhaps an interesting exhibition for some.
You can find the original article on WDR.de.
Wow, that's quite a rapid self-destruction. That's what happens when there are no viable political concepts, only stupid polemics and stupid slogans.

At tagesschau im Internet you can find the original article.
Sometimes you can't quite shake the feeling that researchers watch too much bad science fiction
There's the original article at Telepolis News.
Ouch. Yes, it really still works:
simon:/usr/local/sbin# traceroute bell.ca traceroute: Warning: bell.ca has multiple addresses; using 204.101.196.36 traceroute to bell.ca (204.101.196.36), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets 1 HOSGate.your-server.de (213.133.111.1) 2 et-2-1.RS86001.RZ3.hetzner.de (213.133.96.121) 3 gi-2-2.RS8K1.RZ2.hetzner.de (213.133.96.57) 4 nbg.de.lambdanet.net (213.133.96.234) 5 F-2-eth100-0.de.lambdanet.net (217.71.105.13) 6 PZU-1-pos100.fr.lambdanet.net (217.71.96.34) 7 LDCH-1-ge000.fr.lambdanet.net (217.71.96.86) 8 109.ge1-0.er1a.cdg2.fr.above.net (62.4.77.225) 9 pos0-3.cr1.cdg2.fr.above.net (208.184.231.206) 10 so-5-1-0.cr1.lhr3.uk.above.net (64.125.31.129) 11 so-0-0-0.cr2.lhr3.uk.above.net (208.184.231.146) 12 so-7-0-0.cr2.lga1.us.above.net (64.125.31.182) 13 pos12-0.pr1.lga1.us.above.net (64.125.30.190) 14 bellnexxia-mfn-oc12.pr1.lga1.us.mfnx.net (64.125.12.34) 15 bells-network-has-lots-of-security-holes-to-exploit.bell-nexxia. (206.108.103.197) 16 bells-network-has-lots-of-security-holes-to-exploit.bell-nexxia. (206.108.103.213) 17 64.230.243.217 (64.230.243.217) 18 bells-network-has-lots-of-security-holes-to-exploit.bell-nexxia. (206.108.97.206) 19 bells-network-has-lots-of-security-holes-to-exploit.bell-nexxia. (206.108.105.138)
It's quite embarrassing when someone points out a security problem to you in this way.

The original article can be found at kasia in a nutshell here.
It would actually make quite a lot of sense. It's been annoying me for a while that I have to check for various software updates separately. From Debian I'm used to only needing one update service. On OS X that's a bit cumbersome sometimes ...
At Industrial Technology & Witchcraft you can find the original article.
A fundamental overhaul of the school system would be the logical step. Better training opportunities for teachers also result in better-trained teachers – contrary to popular opinion, there are indeed motivated teachers out there (I even got to know a few during my school days). And ultimately, it is the teachers who educate our future – or destroy it.
On the other hand, one can hardly expect that in times when there are calls for schools and universities to be geared even more rigidly toward later use in the economy, that knowledge transfer itself can still be the central focus. Just look at what politicians are calling for at the moment when they present their wonderful education reforms. Shortening the total time in school, earlier enrollment – what is that supposed to achieve? Approaches to problems in the school system must start with teaching methods and personnel. Children want to learn. The older they get, the more motivation needs to come into play – why they should continue learning – after all, learning is not without effort, and no child will sustain it for 10-13 years without motivation. This also includes further education after school – study places and apprenticeships must be available so that kids can see perspectives on where their learning leads. Otherwise, even if the teacher wears a red foam nose ever so often, by middle school no one will take him seriously if he cannot point to a potential future. And this also requires their own concepts – merely parroting concepts from yesterday borrowed from other countries doesn't help either.
Where, for example, are the continuations of the alternative school systems that were examined? What about the promotion of specialized school forms that were supposed to help children with problems in school? Look at the austerity programs of the states; these areas are affected too. Instead of investing precisely here – after all, it is our future – cuts and cancellations are happening here as well. Instead of prospects, concepts include making higher school forms more expensive – as if money were a guarantee of competence.
The fiasco in both the school system and vocational training is a glaring deficiency in our society, one that is no longer willing to build its own future, but instead prefers to smash everything and sell itself out.
I found the original article at TAZ.
Great. Microsoft wants to exploit patents in the area of the clunky FAT file system. When will Microsoft take action against FAT implementations in open systems? The whole thing is absurd. File systems are standards for data exchange; charging licenses for them is completely absurd. Especially since the implementation of FAT is so primitive that even at the time of its invention, the actual inventive achievement couldn't have been particularly high...
At Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com) there's the original article.
Oh man, not a good week.
At heise online news there's the original article.
If someone is interested in the drivel that Darl McBride is spouting, here's a link to an open letter from SCO. Absurd to the point of ridiculousness, the way he spins things together. In any case, the GPL in this case isn't about some derived higher rights, but about explicit licenses that the authors of software willfully define for their own works. I hardly believe that the US Constitution can be used to interpret an author's copyright in such a way that the author themselves can't decide on the license under which they release their work. That would be too absurd even by American standards, I think.
Quite apart from the fact that SCO itself explicitly used the GPL — they never said that the GPL was illegal and invalid. Because if it really were, under what right would SCO have been allowed to distribute Linux at all?
What's really shocking about this is that this edifice of lies is actually succeeding on the stock market and the SCO stock — which has absolutely no backing in any form in its core business or products — is being kept high. I'm hoping that the stock market will eventually realize what garbage this is and hopefully the stock value will plummet into the abyss before (or even better in the middle of) the proceedings. I'd like to see the faces of the lawyers who at the moment probably still have millions in their eyes, and then suddenly only see blanks.

At XMLMania.com - Google News Search: SCO I found the original article.
A report on the occasion of his 75th birthday about Noam Chomsky - a remarkable person both as a linguist and as a political figure. And as a critic of the US government, definitely a different caliber than Michael Moore.
At Telepolis News you can find the original article.
Sorry, as incompatible the Shockwave Rider is with Communities, that's how incompatible I am with Awards. I just find them ridiculous.
At Der Schockwellenreiter there's the original article.
All four areas (SMP, Journaled Filesystems, NUMA, and RCU) that SCO claims were stolen were knowingly distributed by SCO themselves under the GPL (with their Linux product), explicitly promoted, and supported by employees and even actively enhanced and improved through patches by Christoph Hellwig in person. I believe SCO can expect a few problems in court.

No wonder - of course Möllemann wasn't solely responsible for the whole mess. The FDP has some skeletons in the closet. But the fact that Möllemann just slapped a million in cash on the table, that's something. Somehow I imagine dimmed lighting, smoky, raspy voices, cigar smoke. Maybe even a henchman in the background cleaning his fingernails with a switchblade.
But it probably happened much less romantically and much more mundanely than I imagine...
At WDR.de there's the original article.
Wow. That would be a bombshell for the next Tour. Not only strong, motivated rivals who finally want to beat Armstrong, but also his strongest helper as a new competitor? Armstrong should already be thinking about how he'll get through a Tour like that. After all, Heras was not insignificant in some of his successes. And in the mountains, he's one of those who – if he's in good form – can definitely keep up. Even if he looked a bit thin against Armstrong and Ullrich in the mountains at the last Tour.
So let's summarize who could have ambitions for the throne: Hamilton certainly after his gigantic fourth place last year. Vinokurov definitely, his dominant third place and his fighting spirit last year were a clear sign. Beloki will certainly maybe still be a bit wobbly after his crash, but motivated for sure – after all, he kept up fantastically until his crash last year. And of course Jan Ullrich, who probably finally wants to break Armstrong's streak.
And then all the up-and-comers and the second tier – if one of them rides a good Tour, he can mix it up well. I'm thinking of the Euskatel captains for example, or Heras. I'm starting to get really excited about the next Tour, it could be really exciting.
At RADSPORT-NEWS.COM - News Overview you can find the original article.
Fitting for the Christmas season, the saber-rattling of the world's largest rogue state (hey, the US government provided that definition, and I can't help it if it perfectly applies to themselves).
At tagesschau im Internet there's the original article.
Although an unpleasant problem, it's good that you discovered it - so it can be fixed. So it's time for another round of kernel updates.
At heise online news you can find the original article.
Great. Instead of throwing the dolphin slaughterers in jail, it's the ones who want to save the dolphins that get caught. The responsible Japanese authorities have suffered complete mental damage
At Spiegel Online: Wissenschaft you can find the original article.
Well, a classic case of pissing against the wind

At heise online news there's the original article.
Doping Drugs Becoming Cheaper?

At RADSPORT-NEWS.COM - Nachrichten-GesamtĂĽbersicht you can find the original article.
I found the original article at Channel 'python'.
The rumor mill was right - the Digilux 2 is a Panasonic Lumix LC1. With the specified data and a very nice appearance, in my opinion. Nice device, nice technical specs. I especially like the classic operation of the camera. Now all that's missing is a nice price. But that will probably be typical Leica again, definitely beyond the 1000 euro mark. But it's interesting nonetheless, Leica's marketing of the analog digital camera I think fits well. At Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com) you can find the original article.
A little something about the new patriotism that politicians are demanding. I already hate the word patriotism itself—you can't have it without nationalism, and wrapping it in neoliberal or neoconservative packaging doesn't help either. But then again, stupid blather and empty phrases are basically the political program at the moment ... And of course there are lies: just read the New York Times commentary in the article about Germany as a business location: In addition to low tax rates and wages, state subsidies and weak unions, scaled-back social systems and private provision, it now also includes education, qualification and the promotion of talent (manpower) to make Germany fit for the knowledge society and global competition. But of course we have to keep cutting corporate tax rates, reducing social contributions (and cutting social benefits), and naturally weakening unions so we remain competitive. That's what the politicians say, so it must be true.
At Telepolis News you can find the original article.
Well, anyone should have already recognized from their previous behavior that they have a contemptuous view of humanity. The advertising campaign is just the latest escalation of all this filth.
When business associations value themselves and their supposed rights higher than law and society, then one shouldn't be surprised by such actions - these aren't slip-ups, no derailments, these are clear expressions of opinion. The heads of the film industry truly are this contemptuous of humanity.
This was just as much not a slip-up as Hohmann's speech...
At heise online news there's the original article.
Oh yes, here we go again, another one who thinks he knows what he's talking about. Well, if he had specified somewhere in his tirade against Apple networking which part of networking he actually means, then maybe one could find his comments worth considering, but like this? Does he mean AppleTalk? AppleTalk/IP? Samba? NFS? Or one of the many alternative protocols that the Apple Finder can mount directly like FTP or WebDAV? But it's much easier to make sweeping statements against Apple, you're in good company with so-called analysts. And if he really said stuff like that 10 years ago, he was talking just as stupid nonsense then as he is today.
And where does he see the solution? Of course in Windows protocols. The poor sap: with Longhorn, Microsoft will give him another kick in the ass and he gets to start all over again. But surely he'll still claim that his approach was the right one. Anyway, my life is too precious to waste on such nonsense.

Could be interesting at some point - maybe I could mix that into the Python Desktop Server so that you can also access databases with SQL? In any case, it would be a worthwhile tool to make it easier for people to get started with databases - Metakit is rather unusual.
An interesting breakdown of what a type actually is and the various terms in that context (static typing, type inference, and everything else) from the programmer of the Perl 6 virtual machine (Parrot). I find it fascinating to see how increasingly more elements are being discussed and implemented in Perl6 development that have been considered standard in the Lisp world since the 80s. Mainstream programming will eventually catch up to the Lisp world.
The original article can be found at Squawks of the Parrot - here.
Adenauer, the greatest Kohl of all time, as a role model? No thanks.
At WDR.de you can find the original article.
The hunt for copyright infringers will probably soon take up more space than the hunt for drug dealers and arms dealers. But then again, that's clear – the economy makes money from arms dealers and drug dealers keep the population down...
At heise online news there's the original article.
DPreview now has a complete review of the Olympus E-1. If you're interested in the camera that was at the forefront of press coverage for a long time, you can now read whether it can also compete in the technical front ranks.
At Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com) you can find the original article.
Wow. An online law attorney is demanding that Udo Vetter (the one with the Law Blog) provide a statement on the legality of his comment function in light of competition law for attorneys. The whole thing is already crazy. But Udo's response letters are nicely formulated Here's the original article.
Oh no - such a discussion early in the morning ruins your whole day. Let's hope the law bloggers jump into the discussion and untangle the whole thing a bit. In my (admittedly extremely layperson's) opinion, anyone who publishes something thereby gives consent to link to it - that was also established in the Paperboy case. And quotes in themselves are allowed. Just as expressing one's own opinion is allowed. And these are exactly the functions that a typical blog usually performs. Certainly there are limits - but I already see a difference between what a blog like mine does and what this Swede did. On the other hand, there's hardly any stupid idea that some lawyer somewhere hasn't represented at some point, and in Germany the decisions made as a result of such proceedings are sometimes a bit strange... Here's the original article.
Not bad. First opening your mouth and bragging. Then kowtowing to the USA. Then letting yourself be made a fool of. And then backing down.
I don't want to know what this embarrassment alone has cost ...
You can find the original article at tagesschau online at tagesschau im Internet.
Oh wow, that letter contains a lot of nonsense. SCO won't really have much of a chance with something like that.
Well - the green jersey could be almost more exciting next year than the yellow one. After all, with Hondo, Petachi, McEwen there are three young top riders, with O'Grady and Zabel two old hands, that will certainly provide plenty of excitement. Let's see how next year's Tour with its significantly changed profile will affect the sprinters. After all, the high mountains come late, which means the entire front part is sprinter work. And after the work then into the high mountains, right away with a mountain time trial. And the points winner is ultimately the one who also finishes in Paris ...
At RADSPORT-NEWS.COM - Nachrichten-GesamtĂĽbersicht you can find the original article.
Jo, that's already something very strange again. I can only agree with the reader in the Spiegel forum: since when does Spiegel report on end-user problems with consumer devices in the USA?
And the fact that a battery eventually dies with frequent use - and that 300-500 charge cycles (incidentally, only partial charge cycles count as full cycles for the lifespan of lithium-ion batteries!) don't last forever - anyone can easily calculate for themselves...
At MacGuardians there's the original article.
A blog with construction site photos and occasional commentary on construction sites from an employee of a company involved with those sites. Nothing particularly gruesome in itself - but management apparently isn't having any fun with the blog and now wants to shut down the blogger. That's the short version.
Regardless of how one feels about this situation, one thing becomes clear: when you publish something, you have to reckon with the fact that someone will read it. And might misunderstand it (or understand it correctly - depending on the content) and then react to it. Blogging is, regardless of what subject matter you cover - publication. Worldwide publication. With archives and backups. And a pack of sociopaths who have nothing better to do than suspect the worst in every person.
That doesn't mean bloggers shouldn't blog anymore - but it certainly helps to occasionally take a step back and look at your own blog with fresh eyes and think about who might be most annoyed by it and why. At least then you're not completely surprised when one of the above sociopaths strikes. Because unfortunately, what the colleague wrote elsewhere - I don't want to be a business person with journalistic responsibility, I just want to do my thing without anyone telling me what to do. this is private, if someone doesn't like it they can move on. - is simply not enforceable under German law. Public and private are mutually exclusive. Does this herald the end of blogging due to lawyer attacks? No, I don't think so. I do think we should continue to say and do what we want. However, one should assume that the innocence of the Internet no longer exists - if it ever did.
Every action has a reaction. Sure, if you only look at every action from the perspective of possible reactions, then you don't do anything anymore, you freeze in panic over problems. But let's be honest: who refuses to cross the street just because they might get hit by a car? Or doesn't go to the cinema because they might get mugged on the way?
We take risks every day, sometimes completely without being aware of them. But now and then something happens that reminds us of these risks. I live at a busy intersection with potential conflict between left-turning traffic and pedestrians. I'm regularly reminded that we live dangerously. Still, I go outside. It's the same with blogging. There are risks. These risks are real, denying them is silly. But it would be equally silly to let them paralyze us. However, things do happen that sometimes remind us that these risks are real. A blogger gets sued or receives a cease-and-desist letter - we remember that we take risks. But just as we shouldn't refrain from going out on the street, we shouldn't refrain from running our blog. At least not for that reason. Here's the original article.
Was already everywhere else, but as an old Smalltalker I of course have to blog about it too.
Once again, proof that you only need to leave a matter to the courts for it to become absurd, ridiculous, and nonsensical.
You can find the original article at heise online news and here.
That's cool. But simply relabeling the camera and lens doesn't really bring any real advantages - except that the camera will certainly cost twice as much because of the name.
The Contax name is becoming increasingly diluted and more of a pure commercial label. This certainly has nothing to do with the image quality and craftsmanship that Contax is normally associated with.
A shame. Instead of silly consumer products with the Contax name, Kyocera should rather bring out a successor to the failed N Digital, or perhaps finally an RTS IV for the N system. Because while the N1 is nice, it's definitely not an RTS IV.
At PhotographyBLOG you can find the original article.