Clean-Up Time
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I’ve finished backing up and mirroring my hard drive to my backup drive. Everything is there, everything works.

Now I’m getting ready to reformat my Mac hard drive for the first time ever, and reinstall the basic system software. Over the last couple of years, I’ve added far too much software, and some of it has caused problems that reach deeper into the system than these programs had any business doing. I’m starting over with a clean slate in order to speed up my system and optimize.

In a year or so, when the early adopters have debugged the new iMacs for me, I’ll probably get one. But, having been the early adopter on far too many systems and OSes, I’ve learned that this time I’ll wait long enough before I adopt for the new chip and the new OS and the new emulator to allow them to crash someone else’s work and screw up someone else’s deadline, rather than mine.

Going On, Going On
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I introduced a couple of brilliant friends to each other this morning. With luck, this introduction will result in a piece of writing software that I’ve been dying to own since I first saw the physical prototype a long time ago. More on this if it goes anywhere.

On ISY, my start point is 76235. Finish point will be 79,235.

On CCC, start point is 10,333. Finish point is whatever I can eke out.

Have a nasty headache at the moment.

Recommending a Search Engine
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I’ve discovered Clusty — very fast, does not track you as you use it, is not plagued by endless advertising, seems to have respect for copyright, returns good results. Clean interface, some nice add-on features.

I’m comfortable recommending it in place of search engines that do not have those features or that do not respect your privacy.

Sony Root Kit Warning
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This is passed on from Jerry Pournelle, who is as unimpeachable as sources get. Does not affect me — I work on a Mac. Could very well affect you.

This is a Chaos Manor Warning. I would be shouting if I were not concerned that it would trigger your spam filters.

You may or may not be familiar with the Sony Music CD Root Kit problem.

Let me begin with the warning: do not buy or install any Sony Music CD on your PC. The records play just fine on other systems. There’s no problem with Mac or Linux or with self contained music players.

But if you try to play that record on your CD, it will tell you that you must install the Sony CD player codec (you can’t play the record through Microsoft Media Player or any other stuff you have installed on your system).

DO NOT INSTALL THAT SOFTWARE. If you do you may never be able to get it off there short of scrubbing your system down to bare iron, reformatting, and reinstalling everything. I wish I were spoofing you, but I am not. This is a serious warning.

Moreover, if you have given a Sony Music CD to anyone as a gift, and they have tried to play that music on their PC (not Mac, not a standalone player, not Linux, but Windows PC) then their systems are infected, and it is exceedingly difficult — exceedingly difficult — to remove that infection in a way that doesn’t blue screen of death the PC.

MY ADVICE IS NOT TO BUY ANY SONY MUSIC CD.

I have heard nothing about Sony movie DVD’s having any such infection, but it’s possible. So far all my Sony DVD’s have played with Power DVD and I have not been asked or required to install any special Sony software to play a Sony movie DVD; if I am asked to do so I will refuse, and so -hould you.

Understand that the Root Kit on the Sony Music CD is a deliberate installation by Sony as part of a Digital Rights Management scheme. They will now, if you jump through enough hoops, send you a patch that will make their scheme visible — like all root kits, their original installation so infects your operating system as to hide in a directory your operating system literally cannot see or access — but it still does not remove it.

I’ll have more on removal in the column and at another time this being column time. I will also have a warning in my Christmas Shopping List in the column.

DO NOT BUY SONY MUSIC CD

This is a serious infection: the scheme has actually been used by third parties to hide other malware on systems that have the Sony root kit installed, and others have used the Sony root kit to hide cheat software for World of Warcraft. Even if you think you know what you are doing, you should not fool around with this stuff. It’s dangerous, it’s very difficult to remove, and there is a very real risk that you will have to reformat your disk and reinstall your OS and everything else.

For more information see:

www.theregister.co.uk …

www.theregister.co.uk (second article)…

www.sysinternals.com…

The last reference is to the Sysinternals page where an incredulous Mark Russinovich relates how he found the root kit on his system: the root kit has been out for months, and this is the first indication of it’s existence.
Sony did a splendid job of stealthing this.

I will have more in the column and on the web page. If you have bought and installed a Sony Music CD on your PC, *you need more help than I can give you*. Start with the Sysinternals page, and *proceed with extreme caution*.

And the best of British Luck to you.

Best regards,

Jerry Pournelle
Chaos Manor

MacRanting: I Am Not WE, Mac
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I’d like to take a moment to pitch a small fit. I am not WE. My opinions are my own, my affiliations are non-existent, and I do not fit — nor choose to fit — into any corporate marketer’s fucking target demographic.

The demographic that has me most deeply pissed off at the moment is the Mac Community, as created, promoted and described by MacAddict and MacWorld magazines.

I got a computer. I did not joined a goddamned cult.

But from the contents of a couple of years’ worth of MacAddicts and MacWorlds, and the painfully hyped and never-ending Mac advertising, you would think I was ready to shave my head and start chanting “Steve Jobs is God” along with whichever group of cheesewhiz pissant Mac users it is that has collectively disconnected its cortex matter from its input devices and started sucking on the corporate tit for its opinions. (I have to assume this group exists somewhere. The few other Mac users I know are sane people, but SOMEBODY has to be the model for the crap that goes into these two mags.)

Please don’t misunderstand me. I like my Mac. It’s slow, it was overpriced, and it has certain design features that are there because they’re stylish, not practical, and frankly, fuck style. You know? But the Mac is rock-solid, it’s secure, I have to look at maybe three pieces of spam a day because I use Mail, which comes bundled with the OS for free and has the best spam filter on the planet, bar none. (Please note, however, that my recommendation for buying a Mac only applies to a Mac running OS X. Any Mac OS prior to OS X I consider unusable crap. Tried previous versions, loathed them.)

And the only words I’ve lost since I started using my little iMac were, one time, from a user error. Word crashed on me. (Word is a Windows port. I in no way blame Apple for its bugginess — Apple software works.) When I reloaded it, the Mac politely brought up a temp file of the document I had been working on when Word crashed, and the Mac asked me if I wanted to save this document. The machine had saved all the words I would have lost if it hadn’t been such a polite, elegant little beastie. And I clicked the wrong button. Dumped the doc. User error. One time. About 600 words in the last however-many years.

I don’t get viruses, I don’t get trojans, I don’t get pop-ups, I have never had to reformat my Mac’s hard drive, though I do take good care of it with DiskWarrior. And I keep religious backups anyway, because You Never Know.

But my acquisition of a Mac was a business decision. B-U-S-I-N-E-S-S. It met certain criteria that I required in a BUSINESS machine that was responsible for keeping the mission critical side of my business going. Mainly, that it is rock-solid, that it is less susceptible to all the crap floating around the Internet than a comparable Windows machine, and that it doesn’t routinely eat my work like my last computer, which was a POS Compaq.

Buying a Mac was not a Lifestyle decision. I don’t have a Lifestyle, thank you very fucking much. I have a life. My computer is a part of my life inasmuch as, and no further than, it acts as my interface between me and my written words. I do not let it dictate my diet, my politics, my opinions, my religion, or my sex life. No matter what the editors and the writers of the aforementioned Mac magazines — one of which suggested in a recent article that “if a vegan diet is good enough for Steve, maybe we should consider it” — might think.

Eat me. It’s hardware, pal. Hardware. It’s not an icon, it’s not a revolution, and if I want someone to admire, it won’t be a shitwad multi-millionaire who abandoned his girlfriend and kid to fend for themselves, and who is, even when described by friends, a temper-tantrum-throwing prima donna.

Would I recommend a Mac? Yes. No. Maybe. What do you do with your computer?

I’ve given the pros above. If you have something mission-critical that you do with a computer (mission critical is defined here as, if your computer glitches or gets overrun by viruses and eats your last six months of work, you’ll starve), and if the Mac will run software that will let you do that job, go out RIGHT NOW and by a Mac.

But understand that for the price you’ll pay for any Mac, you could get about double the processing power, speed, and hard drive space in a Win Box.

Here are some other cons.

It’s hard to find Mac software if you don’t live in a densely populated area. Consign yourself to ordering it online.

The software is generally more expensive than what you would pay for Windows software. (It’s usually better, too, but part of that is that the Mac is a much better-integrated machine than a Windows machine. The Mac does have sweet spots.)

If your primary use of a computer is to play games, forget the Mac forever. Games on the Mac are slow, late, kludgy, lumpy, uglier than comparable Windows games, prone to crashes, way overpriced, and they don’t run worth shit unless you paid as much for your computer as I did for my car. (Used, eight years old when I bought it, in good shape, a Mazda.)

If you’re just kicking around with your computer, you don’t want a Mac either. Part of the fun of having a computer is buying cool new software for it, and as previously noted, there isn’t a lot of software for the Mac and what there is is hard to find.

And if you want a rock-solid machine for cheap, you don’t have to have a Mac. If you hear the words “I wrote a script” and you think computer, not Hollywood, build your own Linux box and you can have all the goodies I’ve described with a Mac, and you won’t be able to play any good games either. But you won’t pay as much for the privilege.

Biggest reason NOT to own a Mac? The Mac Community as described and promoted by MacAddict and MacWorld. When these mags stick to tech articles and reviews, they’re as good as any other computer magazine. You need to subscribe to at least one, just because the reviews and tech articles are valuable. Sometimes essential. But along with the good stuff, you’ll have to put up with prissy digs at Windows machines and Windows users, self-congratulatory little asides on how Mac users are smarter, vast generalizations about how Mac users love Steve (I’m voting for fricasseed), essays about how being number two is better than being number one because it makes you special, flat-out pushes for Mac users to support Steve’s Causes like Steve’s Hollywood Friends do (about which we could have a ANOTHER WHOLE FUCKING REALLY NASTY RANT RIGHT NOW, but we won’t), and a whole lot of other snotty, elitist MacBullshit that is almost, but not quite, enough to get me to toss the machine.

But I won’t.

Because, like I said, I DO have a mission-critical app. Writing. The Mac is my business machine and if there were a Mac magazine that had an honest-to-God business slant instead of a we’re-too-fucking-precious-for-words slant, I’d dump the other two and subscribe to that. In the meantime, I’ll keep my Mac, and eventually I’ll buy another one.

And just to allow myself to feel better about being a Mac user — thus lumping myself in with the Mac mags’ fictitious Mac Community of Users (which lives in complete disconnect with me and the other Mac users I actually know) — I’ll eat meat (which I would have done anyway) and once every couple of years I’ll find my way up to Alaska and club a baby seal.

Back
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Both the 40GB main drive and my 120GB backup drive are now all spotlessly clean and shiny on the inside, and things are once again working the way they should.

Somewhat later than I’d like, then, I’m getting to work.

And I should be ashamed of myself. While I was sitting here waiting for opportunities to click the "Continue" button, I had a nice big glass of iced green tea (tasty and at least moderately healthy), and <sigh> the Potato Chip Breakfast, which consists of a medium-sized bowl of potato chips and a hunk of blue cheese, cut into slices, to put on the chips. Bad. Bad, bad. BAD.

DiskWarring
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My usually rock-steady Mac is hanging up following my dumping of a bunch of programs off the hard drive. Suspecting that I messed up permissions somewhere while haphazardly ripping things out, I’m going to spend the first part of my working morning today cleaning up my hard drive with DiskWarrior.

More in a bit.

Technology May Have Bypassed Me
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One of my best friends sent me a link for the TouchStream LP ZeroForce Keyboard

I looked it over, thought it was terribly cool, considered it … and then realized with horror that I would not be able to use it. I’m sure it would remap to Dvork — that isn’t the problem. The problem is that technology finally appears to have thrown me a ringer that I couldn’t deal with. I’m reminded of pen-and-paper writers confronted by the typewriter, and typewriter devotees assaulted by the wonders of word processing.

Here’s an excerpt from the e-mail I sent my friend

I taught myself to type on a manual typewriter when I was twenty-four, Prior to that, I had pointedly never learned to type because if I could not type, not even starvation could end me up doing secretarial work, and I had sworn to myself I would never be a secretary.

When, at the age of twenty-four, I wrote in my diary that one of my New Year’s resolutions was to write a book, I did a little reading on publishing and discovered that manuscripts had to be typed. So I bought a thirty-five dollar portable manual typewriter, whited out all the keys, drew a diagram of the key layout on a piece of cardboard, and pinned it to the wall in front of me at eye level. And while the kids napped, I simultaneously taught myself to touch-type and wrote my first novel.

I am a very physical typist. I still miss the slam-kachunk-ding of the return bar and the pleasure of smacking the carriage from right to left. I touch-type with the same weight I did when I actually had to slam the letter bars into the platen. Nobody likes to be in the same room with me when I’m typing because I’m almost as loud on a soft-keyed modern keyboard as I was on that old Olivetti. The desk shakes, my monitor boogies.

Keys that I can’t hit would interfere with my thought processes.

My early-life issues with secretarial work were a mother-daughter conflict. Turf wars. The rest of it stands without further explanation.

For those of you who have not yet been aged-out (obsoleted) in the technology wars, I pass on the link. Have fun. Be happy.

Clustering Techniques for Breaking Writing Barriers
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How ’bout that. Not only that, but pain and all, working today is actually soothing. Remember yesterday’s little image cluster?

Well … it grew. And I’ve had a couple of story breakthroughs because of it.

Here’s the same thing in outline form — a little less overwhelming.

Gifs and outline and the HTML for it and everything are done by Inspiration, by the way. The only thing it won’t do for you is load the finished work to your site. But that’s all right. Already could do that myself.