excerpts category archive
I wouldn’t know anything about this from my past experience:
From past experience, I’ve observed a trend where these companies (whether it’s Oracle, SAP, or you name it) make big promises, a company “bites” (knowing that the problems outlined really ARE big issues they’d LOVE to solve), and then the vendor proceeds to bleed millions of dollars out of their new customer.
Eventually, something is constructed/customized that accomplishes SOME of the original goals, but does so in a rather clunky, bug-infested manner, while other items on the “want list” get bumped to “future stages of implementation” (which often never really get completed, because they’re too costly and complicated).
By this time, upper level management is forced to cost-justify the monstrosity, so they do their best to keep their jobs (and pride) by praising the software as a
…
by Scott Carpenter on 25 February 2008 at 9:34 pm
Permalink |
Comments (0) | filed under excerpts
|
Run to the Hills: Iron Maiden, the Authorised Biography, by Mick Wall
I’m not sure if I should mention this, since it could affect the willingness of people to loan me books, but I do a lot of my reading in the bathroom. Some books don’t grab me enough to carry out of the bathroom and it can take a while to get through them. This wasn’t one of those books.
(Oh, by the way, I’m giving you a review of a book that seems to be out of print. I don’t even see used copies at Amazon as I write this.)
I wouldn’t say the book is especially well written. (Much like this post and web site.) It’s a bit fannish in parts. It can …
by Scott Carpenter on 21 January 2008 at 8:09 pm
Permalink |
Comments (4) | filed under books, excerpts, music, reviews
|
Originally published 17 October 2007 in Free Software Magazine.
I’m working on Guns, Germs, and Steel, by Jared Diamond. Good book so far, although I’ve ground almost to a halt halfway through. (I’d probably make better progress if it showed up in blog-sized chunks in my feed reader every day.) I like sweeping accounts of history, and this one presents many new ways to look at things. It also gets me thinking about the current sorry state of the patent system, with these excerpts:
All this is not to deny that Watt, Edison, the Wright brothers, Morse, and Whitney made big
…
by Scott Carpenter on 2 November 2007 at 6:22 am
Permalink |
Comments (0) | filed under books, excerpts, patents
|
Jeremy Allison is fast becoming one of my heroes. Not only for the great technical work he has done with Samba, but also for his principled support of free software. He quit Novell in protest after they signed their patent pact with the devil, and he and the Samba team gave an early vote of support to GPL v3 by moving Samba to the new license soon after its release.
He also regularly contributes thoughtful essays to Tux Deluxe. I just found The Innovation Game in my feed reader, which has some positive points about innovation in free software, but also deals with a depressing subject, Microsoft and software patents:
So who could possibly be against this wealth of the commons? People wishing to own innovative ideas, that’s
…
by Scott Carpenter on 21 October 2007 at 6:00 am
Permalink |
Comments (3) | filed under excerpts, innovation, patents
|
I like quotes and excerpts. I’m not a big fan of the signature quote in emails and forums — it becomes repetitive to see the same pearls of wit and wisdom over and over and over again — but in general I like a good quote and have collected quite a few over the years.
(Skip ahead past techie background info to read about the exciting new MovingToFreedom.org site feature…)
I’d been thinking lately about adding some kind of random quote feature here, and this weekend after writing a couple of posts I needed something to prevent me from doing other pressing tasks, so I started toying around with the idea. I considered a custom PHP feature, and although it would be a good learning exercise and fun for …
by Scott Carpenter on 16 September 2007 at 10:09 pm
Permalink |
Comments (0) | filed under excerpts, quotes, wordpress
|
I first became aware of the P2P Foundation last year after Michel Bauwens sent me a nice email in response to “Free software is a weak mode of production?” I’ve since followed the P2P Foundation blog in my feed reader.
It is delightfully information-dense with good pointers and commentary about peer production. It can also be hard to keep up with, given my scattershot approach to information absorption. I should take more time to read and think about the ideas presented there by Michel and others.
An entry by Michel today is typically thoughtful and thought-provoking. He apparently has a deep well of enthusiasm and energy to draw from for this subject, and I’m glad someone is saying these things so eloquently. I love reading stuff like this, conveying so …
by Scott Carpenter on 9 September 2007 at 1:03 pm
Permalink |
Comments (0) | filed under excerpts, peer production
|