Haiku Project Makes First Test Release

The developers of the Haiku operating system, an open source effort to build a BeOS-inspired, desktop-oriented operating system, have made their first formal test release. The Haiku R1 Alpha 1 release is available for daring testers from the project web site.

I wrote a bit about Haiku last month. It is one of my favorite open source projects. The various Linux and BSD Unix distributions are great operating system for what they are, and they can’t be beat for server purposes, but they don’t ‘just work’ as well as they should as desktop systems. Despite the strides made by some key projects like Ubuntu which have finally made Linux usable by mere mortals, it still isn’t totally ‘put together’ for desktop end users. Haiku, however, is being built differently. It’s target user is the desktop user. It, like BeOS before it, approaches the user with a simple, beautiful, minimalist interface that stays out of your way. It doesn’t expect you to be a nerd to use it.

Of course, at this early stage, being a nerd helps—Haiku doesn’t yet support wireless networking and may need some nerd-attention to get running on some computers. The system is off to a great start though. Check it out!

Great Weekend

It’s been a great weekend, but it’s been a busy weekend. My sister came up Friday afternoon to visit for the weekend so we had a nice dinner with her at our favorite Thai restaurant (Star Thai in Fair Lakes).

On Saturday, Melissa had an art show in Falls Church which apparently went reasonably well. While she was at the show (with my sister playing art assistant), I had a few things I needed to get done. You know, fun things like getting new tires for the Subaru and buying a Mossberg 500A shotgun at Virginia Arms in Manassas. Oddly enough, the tires cost quite a bit more than the shotgun. We concluded the day with a great dinner with the whole clan at my parents’/grandmother’s house.

Today, after Mass, we had a nice lunch with my parents (so the whole Bradford clan was together) and then we all went out to the house. The drywall has been put in so it’s starting to look much more like a house. I probably should have taken pictures, but I didn’t. It’s looking really good. Then we went to the mall for Melissa and Kristen to shop. I just went around to the different computer and cell phone stores to check out all the fancy new technology from Apple, HTC, Palm, RIM, and others. I’m a nerd, I know.

As always it was great to have spend some time with my sister, parents, and grandmother. Good times.

Now, sleep.

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Memo to CNN: Use Your Brain(s)

You may have caught an erroneous news report this morning, first reported by CNN, that a U.S. Coast Guard vessel had fired upon a threatening vessel in the Potomac River in Washington, DC. According to these initial reports, the skirmish happened around the time that President Barack Obama (D) was very close by at the Pentagon. As a result of the ‘incident’ departures were halted at nearby Reagan National Airport for twenty minutes.

The problem? There was no incident, there were no shots fired, and nothing newsworthy was happening.

Indeed, there were Coast Guard vessels on the Potomac . . . engaged in a regular, low-profile training exercise. As part of the exercise, Coast Guardsmen were communicating on a radio training frequency. Apparently somebody monitoring this frequency heard the exercise chatter—including a report of shots fired (complete with Coast Guardsmen saying, “bang, bang” to represent gun fire . . . no kidding). Apparently the folks at CNN couldn’t be bothered to ask, say, the Coast Guard was happening before reporting about this supposed incident on the river, and a media frenzy ensued.

Reporting a minor training exercise as a possible terrorist attack without any verification whatsover is, plain and simple, bad journalism.

Mobile Browser Notes

There have been a couple of changes to my official mobile browser support for the site over the last several weeks.

First, Torch Mobile’s Iris web browser for Windows Mobile has been discontinued, so I have ended official support for it on this site. Iris was a WebKit-based browser that was closely related to Apple’s Safari and the default browsers on Google’s Android and Palm’s WebOS. Torch Mobile has been acquired by Research In Motion (RIM), maker of BlackBerry smart phones, and will no longer produce software for Windows Mobile.

Second, with Palm’s announcement today of the new WebOS-based Pixi smart phone the company has [finally] discontinued its last Palm OS-based phone, the Centro. With the effective end of Palm OS, I am ending official support for the Palm Blazer web browser. If you’re still using a Palm OS phone, I recommend you install Opera Mini for your web browsing needs.

Hopefully the mobile browser universe will start stabilizing now. Please?

Anyway, I’m not doing anything to break the site in Iris or Blazer yet, so things should still work for now in those browsers if you insist on using them. Blazer did require some code acrobatics to support, and moving forward I won’t put any effort into those, so things will probably go goofy in Blazer after my next site update. Ah, the sweet smell of progress.

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You Can’t Spend Yourself Out of a Hole

It’s basic common sense. When you are low on cash, you don’t spend . . . you save. According to Keynesian economists, however, the way a government should handle a recession or depression is to start spending. The theory goes that government spending puts people to work, which gives them income, which gets spent, and the economic cycle gets moving again.

The problem is that Keynesian economics is as crazy as it sounds. On its face there’s a kind of a logic, but if you have even a simplistic understanding of how money works you know that it just doesn’t seem right. The reason is that the government, in order to pay for these initiatives, has to find money somewhere. It can just print it out of thin air, which leads to inflation and reduces the value of the money and further destabilizes the economy. It can also run up huge debts, which is better than fabricating money out of thin air but still leads to all kinds of long term problems. The debts have to be paid sooner or later.

Keynesian economics is a discredited theory, at least among economists who aren’t blinded by their own personal politics. It doesn’t work. It was attempted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt (D) during the Great Depression and, despite the over-simplified story they tell us in grade school, those efforts prolonged and deepened the economic calamity we found ourselves in. It most certainly didn’t help things, and we’re still paying the debts we ran up with all of FDR’s ‘New Deal’ programs 70 years later.

Scott Bradford is a writer and technologist who has been putting his opinions online since 1995. He believes in three inviolable human rights: life, liberty, and property. He is a Catholic Christian who worships the trinitarian God described in the Nicene Creed. Scott is a husband, nerd, pet lover, and AMC/Jeep enthusiast with a B.S. degree in public administration from George Mason University.