The Fallacy of Socialism

Here’s a shocker for you, I don’t like socialism. In fact I’d go so far as to say socialism is one of the more dangerous ideologies that the human race has ever spawned. My main problem with socialism is the fact it can only work if you use violence against the populace.

Socialism is the system of government where the state controls all means of production. The idea sounds all nice and flowery on the surface. The state ensures everybody has a job, home, food, access to health care, etc. In order to provide these services the state must also control society. For instance in order to ensure there is enough food for everybody the state will decide on the number of farmers required to grow enough food.

Ultimately the claimed desire of socialism is to ensure everybody is treated equally in every regard. The problem comes when equal really means the lowest common denominator. I’m not a very eloquent writer but Eugen Richter was. I have a great book for you to read called Pictures of a Socialistic Future. First let me tell you that it’s free from the link I provided (legally even) and short. Second let me tell you it’s also very disturbing.

The book is a fictional diary written by a man who just saw his country turn into a socialist nation. At first the author (of the fictional journal, not the book) is all for it and declares the greatness of socialism. Of course reality comes in as the state exacts more and more control over the populace to make their great system work. People are required to draw for jobs via a lottery because it’s the only fair way to give out jobs. Although work weeks are originally set very low the state constantly has to increase the hours because their country is producing less and thus are running up a trade deficit. Due to people fleeing the state closes the borders off because every person who leaves is one less laborer.

It’s a good book and although it was written as fiction you’ll notice a lot of similarities between what happens in the book’s fictional Germany and what happened on the Soviet side of Germany after World War II. This is even more significant since the book was first translated to English in 1893 meaning Mr. Richter did a good job at predicting what a socialist country would eventually turn into. If you believe socialism can work I’d advise you to read this book and compare it to what happened in Red Germany. After that please try to tell me with a straight face that socialism can work.

The iPad

Due to completion of a fortuitous side job (here’s an interesting fact, knowing assembly language for Freescale based microcontrollers can be extremely profitable) I found myself with a good chunk of extra money in my pocket this month. I’m sure anybody who read the title can figure out where this post is going, I used some of that money to purchase an iPad.

OK just let out your gasps of surprise and outrage, I’ll wait…

Still going?

Done now? Good. I’m sure you’re wondering how after all my bitching, whining, and complaining about Apple’s mobile products why I’d get an iPad. In all honesty for two reasons. First the iPad fulfills a few needs I have. Second as much as I hate the Apple store, iOS development is something I should know how to do as it’s incredibly popular.

First my needs. I’ve been lusting after a tablet device running a mobile operating system for a very long time. A small and portable device that is big enough to do real web browsing on appeases to me. Likewise It would be nice to have something besides my big honking laptop when traveling. I love my laptop but 15″ doesn’t fit on those plane seat-mounted tables very well. Mostly I wanted a mobile media device.

Why not wait for an Android tablet? Because the only decent one announced so far has a 7″ screen is is tied to various cell phone carriers. I wanted a 10″ screen, simple as that. In addition to that I also wanted a Wi-Fi only device that I didn’t have to pay a monthly fee for. The iPad does all of that and any competition won’t be out for quite some time.

This post is mostly going to be about my initial thoughts on the device. To make things more interesting I’m posting this using my iPad with an paired Bluetooth keyboard (yes this is an awesome feature, a tablet that can use a standard Bluetooth keyboard). Because I’m in a positive mood I’ll start with the things I like about the iPad so far.

To begin let me talk battery life. The batter life on the iPad is phenomenal. I mean that. I used the device for roughly five hours last night and was trying to use every battery draining feature I could come across. Out of the box the iPad had a 90% charged battery and by the end of the five hours it was still above 60%. This includes web browsing, playing some games, watching YouTube videos, and having the screen running for almost the entire time. In fact I set the auto-lock timeout to 15 minutes to ensure the screen wouldn’t be off very often just to beat on the battery. Color me impressed.

Next up I want to just say when it comes to polish Apple knows their stuff. The interface on the iPad runs smoothly. There is no lag when scrolling web pages pages, zooming into pictures, or rotating the screen. It all happens instantly and smoothly. In order to get my Evo to rotate the screen I sometimes have to shake it in an exaggerated manner to finally get it to the orientation I want. The iPad also has a switch to lock the orientation so rotating the device won’t cause the screen to re-adjust. Videos, even HD ones, play without so much as a stutter. I used VLC to play a bunch of television shows I have and at no point did I notice any slow down. Everything feels complete and well thought out which is Apple’s modus operandi.

As a media and web device the iPad is great. Of course now it’s time to rattle off when I don’t like so far on the iPad. The biggest drag is the fact that you have this nice, big, and powerful device with wireless network access and you can’t do a damned thing without plugging it into a computer (and the iPad doesn’t charge off of my USB ports, just a small niggle to irritate you). Now only do you have to plug it into a computer, but a computer that has iTunes installed. Getting data onto the iPad is reminiscent of the old Palm OS and Pocket PC days.

Let’s say I want to put a movie onto my Evo. To accomplish this goal I plug my Evo into any computer with a standard USB cable, turn on drive mode, and copy the files to the Evo’s SD card. It’s simple, straight forward, and works very well. Now let’s say I want to put a movie onto my iPad. To accomplish this goal I have to plug my iPad into a computer with iTunes, tell iTunes what movies I want to upload and what application to use those movies on (more on that in a bit), and finally click the sync button and wait. I mention the waiting part because if you try to use the iPad during a sync operating it seems to stall until you lock the screen again. This could be user error as this is an initial thoughts post instead of an actual review.

I mentioned that you have to tell iTunes what application to upload the movie to. Android has a nice setup where anything on external storage is readable by any application on the device. If you have an application that you want to keep the data private one you store that data in the device’s memory which is secure form being read by any other application. iOS lacks the first mentioned mechanism as there is no universal file storage area. Every file on the device is usable by only the single program you copied it to. This means if you want a photo uploaded for use with two applications (let’s say two photo editors that do different things) you need to copy the file onto the device twice. I’m going to be honest here, this is stupid. I understand the desire to sandbox applications, that’s a good thing, but at least have a mechanism for sharing data between applications.

Let me use another example. There is a website I frequent that you probably haven’t heard of. This site has a ton of free PDFs for downloading and reading. On my Evo I just select the PDF, download it to the SD card, and open it with my read of choice. On the iPad I… swear up a storm because I can’t just download a file and open it with another application. When downloaded that PDF is locked to Safari so it can’t be read in another application. I order to get that PDF into a reader application I have to either download it on my desktop and upload the file via iTunes, highlight and copy the URL of the PDF document and then hope the reader application has the ability to download PDF files, or read the PDF in Safari.

To boot the ability to sync with online services just isn’t well implemented. When I add a Google account to my Android phone everything on that account can be synced. This means once setup my phone will automatically pull down my e-mail, contacts, and calendar. The only way to do this on the iPad is using an Exchange server. Adding a Google account only grabs the e-mail. To get your Google stored contacts you have to have Address Book on your Mac sync with your Google account and then use iTunes to sync Address Book with your iPad. The same goes for your Google calendar. I realize that Apple sells their MobileMe servier but frankly if you want to have a device this day an age it should sync with most major online services. There is no reason this day and age to require me to plug one of my portable device into another computer in order to get my contacts and calendar. Fucking ridiculous.

Since I mentioned reading let me get to another task the iPad does poorly. I downloaded the Kindle application and synced Old Man’s War to the iPad. As a reader the iPad sucks. Plain and simple. I don’t like reading on back lit screens now that I’ve experienced the wonders of e-ink. There is no way I could ever go back when it comes to reading novels. On top of that the iPad is very heavy compared to the Kindle meaning you arms are going to tire of holding the iPad for any extensive amount of time. So yeah the Kindle is staying.

One thing I never thought I’d miss on a device is the Android back button. It’s hard to realize how often you just need to go back to a previous screen until you’ve had a device with a dedicated back button and then used a device that doesn’t. It’s a small thing but every time I want to go back in an application I generally have to tap a button at the top of the screen. I’ll admit it’s not a big deal just a little something I noticed.

Overall I like the iPad for the reasons I purchased it. It’s a far more portable device than my laptop and handles media very well. Until iOS 4 becomes available for the iPad I’m not going to give it an serious consideration as a communication device because I need multi-tasking for an IRC client. The iPad also oozes polish and user experience. It’s seriously fast and the interface always runs smoothly. As a phone operating system I don’t think I could get by with it. I’m too used to having a phone that isn’t dependent on being connected do another computer.

The bottom line is I like the iPad for what I bought it for but do not line iOS as anything outside of a media operating system (so far, maybe that will change as I find new things). There are also some seriously fun games for the iPad… just throwing that out there.

Apple Deprecates Their Java Virtual Machine

No, I’m not trying to turn this into the Apple blog but I found this news discouraging. Apple is deprecating their Java Virtual Machine meaning it could be removed in a future OS release. Although I’m not sure why Apple is doing this I wouldn’t be surprised if it had something to do with Oracle.

Since Oracle purchased Sun the Java community has been rather… leery. Oracle is already suing Google because they believe Google’s use of the Java language infringes on Oracle’s Java property. Combine that with the fact Oracle isn’t the most loved company on Earth and you realize the future of Java is on somewhat shaky grounds.

I’ll admit that I use very little Java software. With that said there is one piece of Java software that I simply can’t work without, Eclipse. Eclipse is kind of the juggernaut of Integrated Development Environments (IDE). If you want to write an application in a specific language there is a very high chance that an Eclipse plug-in exists for it. It’s kind of my Swiss Army Knife for development and frankly I don’t want to be stuck running it in a virtual machine all the time (since Eclipse is as a big of a resource hog as it is useful). Granted I could just use a text editor and compilation tools but I really don’t want to switch up my entire work flow. Hopefully Java stays part of OS X for a while longer, at least until somebody else releases a quality virtual machine for it.

Apple’s New Annoucements

Yesterday Apple held their Back to the Mac event. This is the event of the year where they release things that I actually get excited about (I know I give their mobile devices a lot of heck on here but I really do like their computers). There were several announced products; some I’m excited for and some that I could care less about.

First the stuff I don’t care about. They announced a new version of iLife and they are creating a FaceTime client for OS X. I don’t really use iLife and frankly I don’t need people to see me when I’m talking to them. With those two things out of the way let’s talk about the stuff that actually matters (to me).

The next version of OS X was announced. This one is keeping with the big cat naming scheme an has been titled Lion. This will be the eight version of OS X (they started with 10.0 and are now on 10.7). Apple made no qualms about saying 10.5 would be the last really big update for quite some time. 10.6 was mostly a maintenance update with a few new features and 10.7 seems to be the same thing. Apple is tossing in some iOS features into 10.7 and that seems to be the main thing. I’m sure there will be a lot of under the hood fixes to boot.

For quite some time Apple has had the MacBook Air. The Air was the product that I never really understood where it fit in because it was expensive and had a 13″ in screen which the MacBook and MacBook Pro line both had. Needless to say outside of thickness the Air really had nothing going for it. I have to admit the new MacBook Air models Apple announced yesterday actually seem to have enough advantages to be worth introducing.

My main laptop is a 15″ MacBook Pro. A 15″ screen certainly isn’t the most portable screen size on the planet but 90% of the time I have my laptop on a desk and really only need the portability to go from point A to point B. I like having a large work space and I find a 15″ screen to be the perfect combination of portability and work space. The problem comes when I’m in small and cramped areas like airplanes. Having a 15″ monstrosity on one of those dinky seat mount tables on an airplane isn’t pleasant. If the guy sitting in the chair forward of you leans back there is a good chance he’ll pinch the top of your screen which could very well damage it.

The new MacBook Air comes in two screen sizes; the familiar 13″ model which I still find kind of pointless and the small 11″ model which I find great. Of course the price of the 11″ model hovers around the $1,000 which is pretty damned expensive when you consider you can get a netbook for roughly one third of that price. There isn’t much to justify this additional cost beyond the Air has an Solid State Drive (SSD) drive that is supposedly “instant on” (which generally means almost instant) and the screen resolution is 1366×768 which is pretty damned good for an 11″ display. One of the things I really like about Apple’s laptops is the screen real estate. I was looking through some other laptops the other day and found most 15″ model laptops that are a decent price have a screen resolution of 1366×768. That’s not even usable in my opinion. So having an 11″ screen with a resolution equal to that of most cheaper 15″ laptops is pretty damned impressive.

Honestly I can’t justify plunking down $1,000 for a laptop that I wouldn’t use all that often (because mainly I’d want it for flying and I don’t do that very often) but I do see where this model fits into the product line. It also seems that Apple is treating this as an appliance since it doesn’t have a standard sized SSD. Most SSDs have the same form factor as a traditional hard drive. This is so you can easily upgrade an old computer but frankly there is no reason SSDs can’t be smaller than their mechanical brethren. Apple decided to say fuck backwards compatibility and toss in a bare SSD stick. This allows the laptop to be smaller but comes at the sacrifice of being easily upgradable. I wouldn’t be too worried about being able to upgrade a netbook that cost $350 but when you’re getting into the $1,000 range I start expecting to keep the computer around for a few years. Still I think it’s a pretty sweet product overall.

Finally the last think Apple announced is the new Mac App Store. The premise is simple, it’s the iTunes App Store for the Mac (well it’s not really an iTunes App Store as the Mac version is a standalone application thankfully). One thing Linux has been able to lord over Windows and OS X are centralized package managers. If you want to install an application in Ubuntu you just have to open the Add/Remove Programs menu, search for the application you want, select it, and click install. Once you click install the application is downloaded and installed onto your system automatically. This also allows the package manager to automatically update your software when new released are brought out.

Apple will finally have this ability in OS X with the Mac App Store. This new App Store will allow you to purchase, download, and install applications onto your computer. The part I liked most about this new App Store is the fact any application purchased on there will be authorized for all of your Macs. Valve’s Steam service does this with games; once you purchase a Steam game it’s tied to your account and you can install it on every system you can log into Steam with. If you go to a LAN party and need to use another computer you can simply log into Steam, download, and install any game you’ve purchased. Of course Apple is doing their traditional 70/30 split but if you don’t want to pay you can continue publishing your software as you have been. Overall I like the idea of a centralized Mac App Store.

Because You Need More Crap to Mount on Your AR

You’ve already attached an EOTech, Surefire light, green laser sight, red laser sight, backup iron sights, a vertical foregrip, a mount of your iPhone, and even a bayonet to your rifle so you ask yourself what more could you possibly want? How about a HD video camera to record all that awesome you do while at the range practicing your tactics?

A copy called Tachyon has announced a 720p helmet camera that also has the ability to mount to a rifle rail. Now you can shoot a movie both figuratively and literally. “Yo dawg we heard you like to shoot so we put a camera on your rifle so you can shoot while you shoot.”

Also notice the rifle they have it mount on in the picture… yup an M1A. I wonder what the heat tolerance of that camera is.

Magic Battery Dance

Slashdot has a story about a group of scientists who believe they have found the cause of lithium-ion battery degradation.

As with any such story somebody inevitably posted their magic dance for extending battery life. What do I mean by magic dance? Well it seems everybody and their grandmother have a foolproof system that extends the life of lithium-ion batteries. Some people claim you have to drain them down completely once a month, other say never go below 30% if you can help it, and others will say sacrifice of a goat during a solar eclipse will ensure your battery lasts for years. It shows we really don’t understand the cause of lithium-ion battery degradation (anytime you can ask 50 people a mechanism for doing something and get 50 different answers the true problem isn’t understood).

Well I decided to post my foolproof mechanism for extending the life of lithium-ion batteries. When your battery is showing signs of storage capacity problems buy a new one. Holy shit what a revelation!

This day and age lithium-ion batteries are no longer very expensive to replace. I found a second battery for my Evo 4G for something right around $10.00 (and it was a factory HTC battery to boot). All the time and effort spent extending the life of your battery for a year is wasted if your time is worth any amount of money. Personally I just charge the batteries in my devices when I can and discharge them when I must. I don’t concern myself with cycles, percentage of battery drain, days there will be solar eclipses, or any other such nonsense. Batteries are cheap and by the time you can no longer purchase batteries for a device it’s probably been replaced anyways.

I’m sure somebody is now going to ask what do you do with a device that has a non-removable battery. Simple, don’t buy that device. Once of the features I still look for in new purchases is the ability to easily replace the battery. Yes my unibody MacBook requires the removal of several screws to get at the battery but it’s still easily replaceable once the back cover is off.

Education Spending

The Obamessiah is calling for hiring 10,000 more teachers in order to bolster math and science grades in school. Of course this doesn’t actually add up as pointed out over at Random Nuclear Strikes. Take a look at some charts.

The first chart shows the number of public school employees versus the number of students enrolled since 1970. Notice something odd there? The second chart is an adjusted for inflation (thanks Federal Reserve) display of the cost of K-12 public education versus the percentage change in achievements of 17 year-old students. Once again something is amiss there.

It seems simply throwing money at the problem isn’t helping. I know our current administration believes strongly that if something isn’t working you just have to do it again only harder but that doesn’t actually work. And interesting book I’m reading through right now (which is available for free in PDF form) is The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America. The book goes through the history of education in America and indicates our country’s problems in academia seems to stem back to the turn of the century. The main issue is our country’s education system used to cherish education for education’s sake, now we do workforce training and teach kids to do as they’re told because they’re told to do so.

Firearm Safety Rules

I’m sure almost everybody reading this site know the four rules of firearm safety. In case you don’t they are:

  1. All guns are always loaded (until you establish whether they are or not).
  2. Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy. Keep your gun pointed in a safe direction at all times: on the range, at home, loading, or unloading.
  3. Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on the target (and you are ready to shoot).
  4. Be sure of your target. Know what it is, what is in line with it and what is behind it. Never shoot at anything that you haven’t positively identified.

This four rules are not to be questions because they were delivered down from Jeff Cooper himself. Alan over at SnarkyBytes is questioning the word of God Jeff Cooper.

He certainly has a point if the rules are to be treated as absolutes and always followed. I say this because it’s impossible to follow rule one while cleaning many firearms. In order to disassemble my Glock I have to pull the trigger. This violates rule one as I’m pulling the trigger in my domicile and thus not treating the gun as if it were loaded. Dry fire practice is the same thing.

It’s a good read and Alan makes a valid argument. Go over and read it.

Sony Going After Hackers

Although I do not speak German and thus am reliant on another person’s translation it appears as though Sony is going after hackers. I’m not talking about malicious hackers who break into computer system, I’m talking about hackers whom are hacking their own PlayStation 3 (PS3).

A bit back a USB dongle was released that jailbroke the PS3. Sony apparently wasn’t happy just going after the manufacturer of the USB dongle (which is irrelevant as there is now an open-source implementation of the crack) and have decided to take legal action against people who purchased it. I’m not sure about German law but in the United States if you purchase a piece of hardware it’s legally yours to do with as you please. For instance if you purchase an iPhone and hack it you’re completely legal regardless of what Apple says.

I’ve been done with Sony products since they stole the built-in Linux capabilities of the PS3 (I paid for it, they removed it from their system, I can’t use the system to go online without removing the Linux capabilities meaning I lose a feature no matter what, and in my book that’s theft). If I hadn’t already given up on the PS3 this would have certainly made me do it.