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Centenarians, Freedom, and Innovation |
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Wednesday, 22 March 2006 |
Requiem
One hundred years and four days. That's how long a remarkable guy named Norman Vaughn lived, I recently heard on the radio. Norm was an Alaskan adventurer I've met several times. When I first met him, he was in his 80s, taking a sea kayaking navigation class. He was taking up a new sport.
Norm had visited the South Pole with Admiral Byrd, on the first expedition to make it to the pole. Norm had raced in the Iditarod many times, most often winning the Red Lantern award for the last racer to finish each year. Norm was an irrepressible optimist, living his dreams every day, and an inspiration. He died two days before Christmas.
One hundred years ago, there were no computers, no IBM, let alone Microsoft, and certainly no open source software. It would be interesting to compare common attitudes and platitudes from then and now.
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Time to give Linux a try? FI 11/05 |
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Monday, 28 November 2005 |
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"If it ain't broke, don't fix it!" Here at Freelock, we're strong believers in that maxim. The problem is, so much about computing is broken these days. And in most cases, we've just learned to live with the problems.
You have had choices. For the past decade, your choice has been between crash-prone and insecure Windows, incompatible, expensive, and slightly strange Macs, or highly technical, user-unfriendly Linux. Times are changing, for all three.
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Computing and the American West: FI 9/05 |
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Wednesday, 28 September 2005 |
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Computer history has some interesting parallels in the history of
the American West. After the initial forays of Lewis and Clark and the
first set of explorers, early settlers crossed the plains in covered
wagons. But the West wasn't accessible to most Americans until the age
of the railroads, when the Union Pacific Railroad put tracks across the
continent and started running regular passenger service.
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