October 26, 2004

iTMS goes Austria!

Yeah! Finally, the iTunes Music Store is available in Austria (and other European countries) too. Thanks, Apple! Now its time to spend some money on music again...

Update: I just bought my first album from the iTMS: Rush - Feedback. Buying music this way really rocks!

Posted by guenter at 06:36 PM | Comments (0)

October 20, 2004

Happy Birthday GNUstep!

GNUstep, the open source implementation of the OpenStep API (whose most famous incarnation is Apple's Cocoa) celebrates its 10th birthday these days! Happy birthday!

Posted by guenter at 04:15 PM | Comments (0)

October 04, 2004

Congratulations SpaceShipOne!

Congratulations to the SpaceShipOne team for winning the Ansari X Price today!

Posted by guenter at 08:02 PM | Comments (0)

Steve Ballmer, Savior of Corporate America

Our dear friend, performance artist and CEO of Microsoft, Steve "Sweaty Armpit" Ballmer emitted big words again last weekend, this time accusing iPod users of being music thieves. Yeah, and we all knew that all Windows users take copyright issues damn serious... Anyway, for your enjoyment, here is an iPod commercial parody produced by the cool guys from macboy.com featuring our friend.

Update: The Register story on this is, as usual, a enjoyable read.

Update 2: I don't know what I said exactly, but it was bad., "iPod owners very honest, not thieves at all" Oh my...

Posted by guenter at 01:30 PM | Comments (0)

October 03, 2004

Software Patents

So Kodak now apparently wants $ 1.06 billion from Sun, for parts of Java violating some shitty old patents Kodak got hold of via the acquisition of Wang in 1997.
The patents (5,206,951, 5,226,161, and 5,421,012) basically describe the concept of an object request broker, so lots of other software (including CORBA, .NET, COM, plus some that I wrote) seems to be affected as well, if Kodak gets this through. Just another example that shows how the concept of software patents is thoroughly flawed. Unfortunately, we Europeans are already laying the ground for a similar situation as in the US. We can only hope that the EU legislators put a little bit more brainpower into the issue than their counterparts on the other side of the Atlantic.

By the way, just on Friday, Jonathan Schwartz wrote in his blog about his strong believe in IP, including software patents. I wonder if the recent events maybe motivated him to change his mind.

And on a related note, I really hope that all those "intellectual property" companies whose brilliant business idea is to buy patents and make money from them by filing patent infringement lawsuits against everybody else all die a painful and horrible death.

Posted by guenter at 08:38 PM | Comments (0)