CHAOS MANOR MAILMail 121 October 2 - 8, 2000 |
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CLICK ON THE BLIMP TO SEND MAIL TO ME The current page will always have the name currentmail.html and may be bookmarked. For previous weeks, go to the MAIL HOME PAGE. FOR THE CURRENT VIEW PAGE CLICK HERE If you are not paying for this place, click here... IF YOU SEND MAIL it may be published; if you want it private SAY SO AT THE TOP of the mail. I try to respect confidences, but there is only me, and this is Chaos Manor. If you want a mail address other than the one from which you sent the mail to appear, PUT THAT AT THE END OF THE LETTER as a signature. I try to answer mail, but mostly I can't get to all of it. I read it all, although not always the instant it comes in. I do have books to write too... I am reminded of H. P. Lovecraft who slowly starved to death while answering fan mail.
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This week: | Monday
October 2, 2000
A day devoured by locusts.
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This week: | Tuesday, October
3, 2000
Dear Jerry: You write, Do understand, there are many boards (both PCI and AGP) that will give far "better performance" than the integrated boards. The question is whether you would recognize that increased performance or not. I believe that for most things you do, you will not. Integrated video is good enough and getting better. But how much on-board video memory do you get? I mostly run Linux (for meteorological/environmental research graphics and programming applications), and I _really_ enjoy a setup that gives me 8 desktops at 2048x1536 @ 32bpp. That requires 12MB of video memory right there (and what the video drivers themselves require eats up the rest of a 16MB board. Do the on-board video systems have that much? fwiw-- Carlie J. Coats, Jr. coats@ncsc.org I wonder why you ask? Clearly that isn't what I consider "most things" but some will think that routine. But I'd think you could figure it out. Try it. If things blow up, add a board. Jerry, I've been playing Everquest for several months now and I have encountered the problem with night vision you described. What I found out is that the gamma correction software for Everquest uses Voodoo's 3dfx only. Everyone else has to use the gamma correction software that comes with the drivers for their board. (I have a Creative Labs Annihilator (nvidia GeForce)). Once you adjust this until your windows desktop screen looks real bright you can see at night in Everquest. I have no idea why they thought that only people who have Voodoo cards will play the game in the night time (Everquest time). Regarding finding your corpse there is a command "/corpse" which will "summon" the body close to you if you are relatively close to it. That way if you know you are in the same proximity to where you died you can grab your body and move somewhere else safer if battles are going on around you. Thanks for a great web site! Nathan Stiltner I'll try that. One problem is that Everquest is a jealous god: it doesn't at all like letting you get to the control panel or desktop when it is up, even with a dual processor system. You pretty well have to set all that before you log on. Having said that I'll try fooling with it. Thanks. Dear Dr. Pournelle, A gamer was nailed by his ISP, probably because he did not read his service agreement. See http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/1/13668.html . My own experience with gte.com (now verizon.com, I think) was less expensive. They signed me up for unlimited usage, then, without notice, told me about the newly imposed limit on connection hours. There was no offer of reduced rates for reduced service. I left immediately. Their latest move was to limit time spent in newsgroups, using the same notice and again not offering to reduce rates. Be careful. Your ISP is probably not your friend. You do have the advantage of being literate, causing no end of grief to scam artists. regards, William L. Jones wljones@dallas.net For the record, Earthlink has never given me any problems about that sort of thing. They have managed to foul up billing, but that's not entirely their fault, and it got straightened out. I continue to recommend Earthlink. Dear Jerry: I've been looking into systems like "Freenet", which their advocates boast will destroy copyright protection, and I've had an idea. It seems to me that the same characteristics which make the systems dangerous to copyright -- lack of central servers, anonymity of posters, distributed storeage of files with owners of the machines unaware of what's stored -- make them very vulnerable to counterattack. Wouldn't it be possible to design programs to go onto these systems, copy files containing copyrighted material (books, music, games, etc.) and then upload corrupted files indistinguishable from the originals until opened? And to do this constantly, pumping enormous volumes of junk onto the systems, continually updated to ape the identity of new files appearing -- poisoning the pool, as it were. The cost would seem to be trivial compared to a couple of high-priced lawyers, much less the $3 billion or so the music industry alone is projecting they'll lose to unauthorized copying between now and 2005. A couple of hundred suitably dispersed machines with good connections would seem to be ample. To protect copyright, it wouldn't be necessary to close down Freenet or Gnutella; simply to make downloading the copyrighted materials impossibly frustrating and time-consuming. If a high percentage of downloads produced nothing but feedback squeals (for music), junk text (for books) and jammed-up systems (programs), then surely...? Am I, in my profound technological ignorance, missing something? Yours, Steve Stirling I am sure there is something terribly wrong with that scheme. There has to be... But I am thinking of a plan for spammers. Something lingering, with boiling oil in it, I think. Hi Jerry, Reading in this weeks column about machine lockups with a Voodoo 5 Video Board. I wonder, do you by any chance use a desktop utility named TraySaver to hide system tray icons that you're not using ? I ran into a problem with an update to that program (from beta 5, to beta 10 - which is the latest version although it's been around for quite awhile). It exhibited the same problem. The monitor (Viewsonic P815) would go into sleep mode and never recover. As soon as I removed TraySaver, the problem went away. The reason I had updated TraySaver was that there was a funny interaction between TraySaver and the latest MemTurbo update which caused Tool Tips to stop working, also only in the machine with the VooDoo 5 board. After replacing TraySaver with Tray Manager from PC Magazine, all problems disappeared. regards rice@vx5.com Webmaster, Network Admin, Janitor Sounds like an interesting program but alas I never heard of it.
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This week: |
Wednesday,
I was a bit under the weather.
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This week: |
Thursday,
October 5, 2000
Jerry: It has been fascinating to follow the discussion on Light Infantry and Land Warrior on your Chaos Manor Infantry Report page. Prior to May of this year my connection to the military has been limited to reading popular press, news, and of course Military Science Fiction. Since May I have been working as the contractor's Sr. Test Engineer on the Army Land Warrior program. Based on my admittedly short-term personal knowledge here is a quick, and biased, view of the LW 0.6 system, that just PROVED itself in the Army Advanced Warfighting Experiment (AWE). Here is the URL for the official AWE website. <http://www.tradoc.army.mil/pao/AWE/AWEIndex.html> Yes I know these reports tend to paint all the systems in the best light possible, but please check out the sections on Land Warrior. This LW is not the Raytheon system! That system, although shown on a GI Joe action figure, was totally unacceptable and is no longer under consideration. A new team of contractors was formed to produce, as far as possible, a Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) Land Warrior. This team was composed of small high tech non-traditional-government contractors and they were given a very specific mission to design, build, test, deliver and train a platoon with a COTS 60% functionality Land Warrior system. Program success was measured by how well our platoon performed in the AWE. In fact when I was hired it was with the understanding that this 0.6 LW need not be usable after AWE. It was not expected to be true fieldable system. This was an experiment to find out what COTS could do and then decide what else would be required, before anyone would consider sending soldiers into combat wearing a Personal Area Network (PAN). The contracts for this program were officially signed in February and March of this year 2000. First units were delivered to the Army for training early June. We continued to improve the system as the platoon trained all summer. Then at the AWE (September 8 through 20th.) our platoon, with NO CONTRACTOR support, proved more successful than we expected. Please read the reports on the above AWE URL for details on how well they performed. The highly trained OPposition FORce (OPFOR) was taken by surprise by the effectiveness of our LW-Platoon lead by a 2nd Lt. who was newly assigned, just before this summer's training, This platoon was quickly assembled from other elements of the 82nd Airborne, they had not been a cohesive unit before our training started. Specifically the army did not recruit techno literate soldiers for this platoon. One of the things we were being judged on was the ability to train normal soldiers to use this high-tech gear. At AWE our LW platoon had superb situational awareness, they were natural pathfinders for the majority of the troops who were not LW equipped. . Just like Heinlien describe in "Starship Troopers" they had digital terrain maps that were overlaid with their own and the team teammates positions, provided from their individual military GPS receivers automatically communicating over the wireless LAN. The LW did not have and did not need a compass. Each LW soldier's personal icon was in the shape of an arrowhead, with the point oriented in the direction the soldier's body was pointing. Soldiers had the ability to digitally mark enemy positions and pass these positions to the team and up the chain of command. He knew where he was, where his team mates were, and where the enemy was. Operations orders were passed down from the tactical Internet through the RTO to the platoon leadership. The Lt. and his sergeants made plans, again on digital map overlays, and sent them to all the platoon members over the wireless LAN. Each platoon member had a radio (high frequency very low power line of sight voice over IP) that allowed configuring, via pull-down menu options, who in the platoon would receive radio traffic. Usually the squad only communicated with them selves, or just their team, but could quickly reach any platoon member in range. The planning overlays and radios allowed them to know what their leaders wanted them to do, minute by minute, if necessary. Each rifle team member had a very small Daylight Vision Site (DVS) on his weapon. Some also had either the existing medium weight or the brand new Light Weight Thermal sites. Digital sight images and cross-hair adjustment reticles were presented to the soldier in his Helmet Mounted Display (HMD). A LW can and did make kills at 300 yards while only exposing his hands and weapon. This new style of indirect weapon firing will make the soldier much more survivable since they do not need to expose their heads for normal cheek to jowl firing. Clearing buildings and reaching objectives in the military operations in urban terrain (MOUT) exercises went much smoother than expected, but the army referees were not fully cognizant of the capabilities of the LW. In one case our LW soldiers were in direct team-to-team radio communications coordinating who proceeded when and where. The referees were just about to call a safety halt since, to them, it did not look like one LW fire team knew the other team was about to enter their field of fire. Next time the referees will need to be on the platoon net as well. The weight of this new system (batteries for nearly 24 hours of full operation included), when combined by a new lighter weight helmet, new lighter weight more flexible interceptor body armor, new modular load bearing system and Light Weight Thermal Weapon site, was within 2 pounds of a currently equipped line soldier. Everyone realizes that today's soldier is expected to carry too high a load into combat so this is not good enough! We do have program requirements to continue to reduce the weight and manprint. But that is just what COTS technology has been doing for the whole computer field. The next contract will be for a few hundred fully fieldable robust reliable Land Warriors; that must pass DOD tests and be accepted for real combat. The Army and the contractor consortium know this doable if the specifications are kept reasonable and do not require the contractors to build out of unubtanium. Today we are truly seeing the communications layer of the Mobile Infantry suite become real. Land Warrior will give the American soldier significant overmatch against any opponent in the world, from set piece heavy maneuver battles to "Peace Keeping" missions. Chuck Cady Land Warrior Test Engineer Home Email: CECady3@aol.com I make no doubt this will start a new round in the debates and I look forward to that. Mr. Cady sends this attachment as well: Good Web Sites for the new version 0.6 land Warrior Not the failed Raytheon system. http://147.71.210.21/adamag/August%202000/ibct.htm http://www.wral-tv.com/news/wral/2000/0720-modern-warfare/ http://www.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/08/10/computer.soldiers.ap/ http://www.pstripes.com/ed082400f.html http://www.fayettevillenc.com/foto/news/content/2000/tx00jul/n20land.htm http://www.post-gazette.com/headlines/20000401landwarrior2.asp http://www.armytimes.com/stories/army18.htm http://www.armytimes.com/stories/army19.htm Dead Reckoning Module part of Land Warrior http://www.pointresearch.com/accelera.htm land Warrior batteries http://www.engineeringtalk.com/news/saf/saf108.html Note these disposable batteries were a failure at AWE. In fact some of them caught fire one burned up a soldiers pack, luckily the soldier was not wearing it at the time. The disposables were taken from the soldiers and they completed the AWE mission on rechargeable Batteries. Here is a GAO description of the failure of the previous Raytheon system : http://www.gao.gov/openrecs99/abstracts/ns96190.htm Dear Jerry, I have a little problem, which I was hoping you could help me with. I have in my house two PCs, one of which is considerably newer than the other. Each PC has a modem, but the old PC has a better modem than the new PC. I was wondering if you could tell me how to switch the modems over, how easy is it to take a modem from one computer and install it into the other. I know a little bit about the architecture of the Pc, as I am currently studying Computer Systems Engineering at university. But modem instalation hasn't come up in the course yet. It would be a great help to me if you could solve this problem as I much prefer using my new PC on the WWW. Yours Sincerely David Brockwell Depends on the operating system. Windows 98 if at all updated, and Windows ME almost certainly, will know about any modem you have. But to be sure, get on line and download the appropriate drivers for each modem, then put the driver files on the proper machine that will have that particular modem. Now shut down each, and swap modems. When you turn them, on the system ought to detect new hardware and want drivers. You will have provided those (although the OS may have perfectly good ones already). Now you will have to tell applications that use modems to use the new one or they will vainly try to find the old. I would myself go to Control Panel / System / Device Manager / Modem on each machine and remove the old one before doing the shut down and swap; that should make most applications depend on the new one. But you never know some apps remember too much: like the Bourbons after Napoleon they have learned nothing and forgotten nothing... re: Planting dummy files into piracy networks Steve Stirling speculates (suggests?) that "Wouldn't it be possible to design programs to go onto these systems, copy files containing copyrighted material (books, music, games, etc.) and then upload corrupted files indistinguishable from the originals until opened?" I have heard that the Canadian band "Bare Naked Ladies" is planting demo versions of several of their songs into Napster servers for just this reason. If the demo/partial song is everywhere, then you get the marketing boost of having a downloadable version, but people still need to buy the "real" one if they like it. - Greg Goss (mailto:gossg@mindlink.com Indeed. Rather clever. Of course it will not be long before the "real" one will bo available through Napster also. > We have an AMD Athlon system. It locks up with an nvidia Gforce board. Trying new drivers. You may want to try to reduce the speed of the card. I recently acquired a brand-new system from GamePC (www.gamepc.com), whom I recommend, using an ASUS A7V KT-133 mainboard, an AMD "Thunderbird" 1-GHz chip, and an ASUS GeForce2 AGP-V7700 video adapter. The GamePC people told me that it kept locking up the system until they tweaked the speed down from 200 MHz to 198 MHz (I subsequently tweaked it down further to avoid some additional lockups, to 180 MHz). As I understand it the card should be able to perform all the way to the FSB speed which is 200 MHz but apparently it cannot. With the ASUS card this is easy to do, it comes with a "Tweak Utility" that allows this. I do not know whether you can do the same easily. However suffice it to say that Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn, which used to lock up about every fifteen minutes or so, has not done so in many hours of play since I went all the way down to 180 MHz. YMMV. Very respectfully, David G.D. Hecht Good point, and I must look into all this. I wonder if it's possible to reduce the speed of a Voodoo 5 as well? I have no need of THAT much board speed. Just enough to win the loving cup... You may already be aware of this issue, but just in case... Some video cards render images darker than others. And good games usually offer an option to change a "gamma correct" setting that compensates for this difference. I found that without this setting, early first-person shooters I played would have been basically unplayable on my computer. Too dark to see anything. So if it's image darkness that is affecting the depth of what you see, look for a "gamma correct" setting and see if that brightens things up a bit. - Ron Kyker A happy reader of your columns for some time... Yes, and thanks to you and others I have been playing with gamma corrections for the past couple of days. It's a black art.
Dr. Pournelle, Visit this site, click the "Explorer" button, punch in your neighbor's address, see a satellite photo of your neighborhood. Don McArthur And indeed I was able to make out our block and the park above us. The interface will drive you mad if you have a slow connection, but it's pretty neat. And free. Thanks! Jerry, After reading "Gaming, Graphics, And Problems Chasing More Problems Down" on the Byte Web site I was caught by the statement "if you have goofy problems with your system you can be sure it isn't memory." Have you really come across bad memory in any of your systems? How did you determine it was the memory that was at fault, by swapping with known good memory or by diagnostic software? If you used diagnostic software why did you use and if you didn't do you recommend any products that will find bad memory. Trayz Gredner, MCSE ASE Yes I have come across bad memory. I scrapped a perfectly good Cheetah because of bad memory; I thought it was the hard drive. And in another machine replacing the el cheapo memory with Kingston cleared up some mysterious and random problems. I do not have any recommended memory tests. I used to use them, but memory tests generally will find only gross failures, not small slips and errors. The best insurance against bad memory is to buy good memory. I currently recommend Crucial and Kingston. There are probably other good sources, but those I know are reliable, and I trust them. When I build new machines the last thing I need is to have problems I can't find, and memory problems are usually the kind you can't find because they can't be reliably reproduced. In the past I have wasted considerable time before swapping out memory and having the problems go away; so now I don't bother with el cheapo to begin with. When I built Phillip's Persian Gulf system, I told him, "If it goes bad, save the disk drive and the memory and fling the rest overboard..." Your mileage may vary. Dear Jerry: No apologist for Microsoft I, but my experience with Microsoft support this afternoon was so excellent that I would like to place it on the scales of your readers' opinion. I had a problem installing Outlook 98 (US English version) on a new computer to which I have to transfer all my files and applications. The new computer uses Win98 SE, French language version. I reported the problem to Microsoft's no-charge web-based support. I had an answer in less than an hour, referring me to the order department for a newer version of Outlook 98. Next, a toll-free call, no waiting, and a brief conversation with a courteous customer service rep, who offered to ship me the newer release that Support had recommended. No charge. Should be here in a day or two - and I know from past experience that they keep their word. I'm no one special, just an obscure, individual user of Microsoft products. But I know when I am being treated right, and I think I know excellence when I see it. And I was, and I did. Speaking of excellence, I would like to thank you for all the years of great service to people who use small computers, and for your fine, lively writing. I often marvel at what you manage to get done in a day. Please don't burn out. You have a lot of friends who like to check in with you often. Sincerely, Charles Fitzsimmons Nice to hear sometimes things go well! And thanks for the kind words.
The following is a new policy at Columbia, adopted without objection from the Faculty Senate. One Columbia professor said of the Senate meeting that when he questioned this abrogation of the basic rights of Columbia students to face their accusers and be given timely notice of the charges, he was told that he favored red tape over justice and ought to be glad of tenure. There were also veiled threats of taking tenure away.
Sexual Misconduct Policy and Disciplinary Procedure Policy The University's Policy on Sexual Misconduct requires that standards of sexual conduct be observed on campus, that violations of these standards be subject to discipline, and that resources and structures be sufficient to meet the physical and emotional needs of individuals who have experienced sexual misconduct. Columbia University's policy defines sexual misconduct as nonconsensual, intentional physical contact with a person's genitals, buttocks, and/or breasts. Lack of consent may be inferred from the use of force, coercion, physical intimidation, or advantage gained by the victim's mental and/or physical impairment or incapacity, of which the perpetrator was, or should have been, aware. Disciplinary Procedure for Sexual Misconduct A student charged with a violation of the University Policy on Sexual Misconduct is entitled to notice of the specific charges, an opportunity to be heard, and an opportunity to appeal a disciplinary decision to the Dean of his or her School. Ordinarily, a disciplinary proceeding begins with a written communication from the Coordinator of Sexual Misconduct Prevention and Education, requiring the student to attend a disciplinary hearing to respond to a specified charge. Charges shall be timely if brought while the accused student is still enrolled in the same school as at the time of the alleged violation, but in no case longer than five years after the occurrence. In rare cases, the proceeding may begin with an oral communication requiring the presence of the student at a hearing. The hearing is held before two deans and one student, from a pool of specially trained individuals not affiliated with the school attended by either party unless otherwise mutually agreed. The student member may be excluded by agreement of the complainant and the accused, and either student may object to the membership of any specific panelist on the basis of acquaintance or other conflict. Either party may be accompanied by a nonparticipating member of the University community as support. The hearing must commence within10 days of the Coordinator's receipt of the complaint, unless the University is not in session. The hearing is not an adversarial courtroom-type proceeding; the student does not necessarily have the right to be present to hear other witnesses and does not have the right to cross-examine witnesses or prevent the consideration of relevant evidence. In addition, although students are always free to consult with an attorney, they are not permitted to have an attorney present during a disciplinary hearing or at any appeal. Confidentiality about identifying information regarding the participants in the hearing must be maintained by all individuals involved. The complainant bringing the complaint must inform the hearing panel of the facts of the situation, and answer any questions from the panel. The accused student is informed of the evidence that led to the charges against him or her and asked to respond. The student may offer his or her own evidence. This includes the student's own appearance at the hearing and may include the appearance by others on his or her behalf and any written submission or relevant documents the student may wish to submit. Each party will be informed of statements made and evidence presented by the other party, and by witnesses, and will have a full opportunity to respond. After the panel has heard testimony from both students and any others, and has considered all of the evidence, it reaches a determination and notifies both parties in writing of that decision. Both deans on the panel must agree on the determination. The panel will also submit a written report, summarizing the evidence and its findings to the Dean of Students of the accused student's school, and recommending a penalty. If the student member of the panel disagrees with the determination, he or she may write a dissenting opinion, which will be submitted to the Dean of Students together with the written report. If the accused student is found to have committed a disciplinary infraction, the penalty can include probation, suspension, or dismissal, and may include a prescribed educational program. Both students will be informed in writing of the Dean's decision, and the penalty imposed. The student has the right to appeal a decision that results from a disciplinary hearing to the Dean of his or her School. The appeal must be made in writing within thirty days of the time he or she is notified of the decision, and it must clearly state the grounds for appeal. Normally, on such an appeal, the Dean of the School relies solely upon the written record and does not conduct a new factual investigation. However, the Dean is free to discuss the matter with the panelists if questions about process or proof are raised by the appeal. The Dean focuses upon whether, in the Dean's view, the decision made and the discipline imposed are reasonable under all of the circumstances of the case. There is no further right to appeal within the University. Breaches of the confidentiality of the proceedings, or retaliation against any person bringing a complaint, will constitute separate violations of the Sexual Misconduct Policy. I attach also an open letter to the President of Columbia: Dear President Rupp: I'm not sure further comment is needed. Under this policy a senior could be accused of date rape taking place when he and accuser were freshmen, and be convicted without hearing the testimony of the accuser. Fascinating. Greets, Doc. Columbia students who don't like the new policy should protest by filing huge numbers of spurious complaints of sexual misdeeds. Each complaint would have to be handled by a panel; even if they took only five minutes each to dismiss as baseless, ten thousand complaints * five minutes * two deans = a whole lotta time. The policy printed in your mail page didn't mention any penalty for a false accusation; that might be covered in a different policy. Another form of protest would be for each accused to file a civil suit against the school and the original complainant. I'm not sure how well that would work, especially with a "conviction" from a kangaroo court to show that the accused was an obvious low-life. I noted that the deans and student sitting on the kangaroo court were to be specially trained. Want to bet that trainees who don't spout the party line that no one ever makes a mistaken or malicious complaint of sexual wrong-doing will not be certified as trained? I've seen that in a few similar situations. As usual, feel free to display my name and/or email address if you "print" this. Regards, SRF -- Steve Furlong, Computer Condottiere Have GNU, will travel sfurlong@acmenet.net r
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This week: |
Friday, October
6, 2000
Brute Force computation is now for sale. You recently mentioned seti@home as an example of how simple it is to gather large groups of home computers into an impressive supercomputer. This concept is now being offered commercially. My spare computing power is currently being donated via www.parabon.com to a cancer drug research program. Parabon is promising to start BUYING home computer computation time from us with real money "real soon now". Their page has discussions on how to buy computation FROM them. I remember that the article where I found Parabon had at least one other "we will buy your spare computation" company. I don't know whether the concept is truly commercially viable, but I find it interesting. I have previously donated my spare computing to prime number searching and seti. And we now have supercomputer capability available to anyone... This column, and others can be found at: www.marineshq.com Bulging Muscles Won't Win the Next War In 1631, General Tilly's imperialist Roman Catholic army was whipped by a significantly smaller force under the command of King Gustavus Adolphus. For more than 200 years, the formations Tilly fielded that day -- the Tercios -- had dominated the battlefield. But Gustavus had secretly developed a lean, agile army that struck like lightning -- employing combined-arms teams of artillery and infantry led by a new breed of leaders. Not only did Gustavus win, he revolutionized how wars were fought. For all of its awesome power, the Tercio was an obsolete, muscle-bound organization -- no match for a more flexible opponent. Only after his butt was kicked did General Tilly realize his Tercio structure wasted manpower, was redundant and could not compete with Gustavus' streamlined killing machine. sent by George Laiacona III Indeed. The article is very much worth reading. In reference to Mr. Gredner's query: about six months ago, I was experiencing some very peculiar and progressively worsening system behavior, and the solution for me was GM.exe ( http://www.goldware.iol.cz/goldmemory ). This is a DOS program that runs some very thorough routines to test memory and some other things as well. I was just about to swap the motherboard out in desperation when I tried this software and it immediately found a bad 32 meg PC 100 DIMM. This is the only time I've ever run across bad memory but as you say "when you need it, you need bad". It probably will not work with ME (being DOS based) but Win95 and Win98 are no problem at all. Hope this helps someone. Ron Booker rbooker@roxboro.net Thanks. Actually you can get at DOS with ME. I think I told that story here already. HeroicStories #179: 29 September 2000 www.HeroicStories.com Not On My Watch by Caryl Vittorio Naperville, Illinois, USA I was on the shoulder of a busy tollway in the Chicago metropolitan area, looking in the trunk for my tools and spare tire. I had changed tires before -- that was no big deal -- but I was worried about being accosted by another person while stuck on the side of the road, or being hit by a passing car. As I bent into the trunk, I heard a man's voice from behind and to my left. I have no idea what he said, because when I heard his voice I screamed, jumped over the guard rail, and ran toward the nearest building. After a moment I realized he wasn't following me, so I turned to see what he was doing. That's when I saw the van full of Boy Scouts parked in front of my car. And I saw the voice: their Scout Leader, a man in his mid-40s, removing the spare from my trunk to fix my flat! As I timidly walked back, I could hear him speaking to the boys, who by now were standing behind the guard rail. "See, boys," he said to them, "this young lady is terrified, and for good reason. Thousands of young women are attacked every year. Last month a girl was killed on Route 88 when her car broke down. It's dangerous to be a young woman alone in this world. She did the right thing running like that. This girl will NOT be found dead in a forest preserve, not if we can help it." He told the boys how they, as men, are responsible not only to treat women with respect, and as equals, but also to watch over and protect them. He told them that if they see another man harming a woman, they have a responsibility to try to stop him, or call the police. Once he made that point, he gave step-by-step instructions on safely changing a flat on the side of the road. Now, I don't know what the Boy Scout definition of a Scout Leader is. This man displayed the epitome of everything I'd want taught to my son in Boy Scouts, or anywhere. He took the time, not only to help one woman in distress, but to do his best to ensure that other women in need of help will receive it. I was so relieved he was there, with his 'not on my watch' attitude. That Scout Leader may have saved my life that day. I'll never forget his mentioning the murdered girl, because I was thinking of that same incident. Who knows if the next person coming down the road wasn't the one who killed that other girl? Those boys learned a lot that day, and so did I. I'm so grateful there are still honorable, decent men out there. I witnessed one, teaching our youth to be honorable and decent, making the world a safer place for women, for our daughters, for everyone.
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This week: | Saturday,
October 7, 2000 Busy with column work.
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This week: | Sunday,
October 8, 2000
Dr. Pournelle: Anything's for sale on the net. At www.privacypro.com they sell kits with 'concealable' packages (and, um, plumbing) with "laboratory tested and certified" urine for passing blood tests. The kit includes heating packages for keeping the product within acceptable temperature ranges--apparently, body heat isn't enough to keep the stuff warm and testing companies use liquid crystal thermometers on the specimen cups as a guard against cheating. I don't suppose I've heard everything, yet. Jomath Hmm. I think I decline to comment whilst I think on this. Dear Dr. Pournelle,
There were a lot of good comments built up about LW, to which I'll try to write a good reply. Chuck Cady's letter is especially intriguing. As you commented, SOT (Strategy of Technology) simply is not being applied to infantry and has not been this century. Maybe a rejuvenation point for the debate is for everyone to go read the SOT section. Having worked in Force Mod before medically retiring in 1990, here's the single most depressing aspect I observed in the LW saga: It took 7 years of R&;D from 1991 to 1998, culminating in a production authorization request to Congress (rejected) BEFORE anyone wrote an email to DARPA and told them light weight battery technology is now in the critical path. Just out of idle curiosity, I wonder how much of the bureaucracy's LW paperwork in that time was created on personal computers that had UPS (uninterrupted power supply) batteries. And how much of it was written on laptops with 8lb, 45 minutes duration batteries? It's that vacuum of foresight that makes me not reject Mr. Cady's surface lack of military qualifications. New blood is exactly what's needed in this situation. In fact, he's so new there's a real chance of circumventing the bureaucracy there. He's looking for an education and has a partial perception the DoD Establishment has very little to teach him. The 'x-program' aspect of Mr. Cady's project is also very encouraging, assuming that can be mated to consistency of purpose in the Army bureaucracy (a huge assumption I know). To my knowledge, infantry ballistic protection materials technology has NEVER been stated as a war decisive technology to DARPA. Yet the fact is proclaimed in various ways every month on the front page of the Washington Post. Being realistic, the Army has never put serious $ behind infantry ballistic protection, so why would anyone else in DoD take it seriously? Face hardened ceramics or plastics combined with plane geometry seems not to be getting any consideration in protective schemes. Oh well. Plane geometry these days seems to be a post-grad course, instead of 8th grade when I was going to school. The requisite batteries and materials are not OTS (off-the-shelf), and it's a good thing, too. Otherwise someone else would have done this already. We just can't local purchase this one at Earth Outfitters. Another huge objection I have to L-W's excessive electronics focus is EMP, as in electro-magnetic pulse. They seem to have simply assumed it away. And it's such a natural thought to a less modernized Chinese Army with their "Asymmetrical Warfare" concept. How do we reply? They didn't even create fallout, let alone blow anyone away. So we sure won't escalate to dirty nukes or even neutron bombs. Best, mag What is really needed is a series of X-programs to build and test. When I was in the business, I very nearly went to work for Army Continental Command setting up war games and supervising results interpretation; this would have been at Hunter-Liggett. I decided to be a writer instead... But we can use some strategic thinking. Particularly if we think we want to police the world. The Kagans have a good book on what happened to Britain between the wars with the kind of thinking we seem to be doing.
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