Infrant’s Ready NAS NV

I’ve been looking for to build a network-connected storage solution that can handle a couple terabytes without costing me thousands of dollars or being so slow that it’s not really usable.

Based on the reviews I’ve read, Infrant’s Ready NAS NV seems to fit the bill nicely.

This is a standalone networked device that holds up to four SATA hard drives in hot swappable trays. The device comes configured with Infrant’s X-RAID technology, which for my purposes means that when I put four 500gb hard drives in it, I will effectively have 1.5 terabytes of effective storage space in a RAID 5 setup, so there’s built-in redundancy in case one of the drives fails.

But the Ready NAS NV has another backup feature I really like. The device had three USB 2.0 ports to attach external drives. The user can then set up backup jobs on the Ready NAS NV so that the device will copy selected files and directories on the device to the external USB drives. So add three 500gb external hard drives, and you’ve got a complete backup copy on external drives. Take those and use them to make offline backups to DVD once a week or so and you’ve got many layers of data redundancy.

The Infant Ready NAS NV without any hard drives can be found online for about $670. Add $1,200 for four 500gb hard drives, and you’ve got 1.5 TB of redundant storage for just over $1,800. Not bad.

Add to that that most reviews I ran across put the Ready NAS NV at the top or near the top for data transfer from a consumer-grade device like this, and you’ve got a kick-ass storage solution.

Details on First 750gb Hard Drives Leaked

Seagate inadvertently leaked some hints about its plans to release a 750gb hard drive later this year.

According to DailyTech,

Seagate representatives have told us that the information posted was “very premature” and was not be posted on the website for several weeks. Seek time information has not been released yet, which has traditionally been considered the problem area for perpendicular recording devices. However, the 7200.10 datasheet claims all drives in the series will have a 4.16ms average latency time.

Excellent. Announcements like this will help continue the continuing Moore’s Law-like decline in the cost of storage space. Currently if you stick to SATA drives, it costs about $0.64/gigabyte. Cut that price in half over the next year or two, and 5 terabytes worth of hard drive space falls to the $1,600 mark.

Who needs flying cars when hard drive space starts to become that cheap?

Star Trek Fan Films

Fox News has an article about how Star Trek fans are coping with no Star Trek series on the air and another Star Trek film not slated to appear until at least 2008.

One of the things that Star Trek fans are doing, of course, is making their own Star Trek shorts and, in some cases, full length fan films. Some of the fan-generated stuff is very good, and has even attracted Trek actors like George Takei to make appearances.

Add to that the diverse and sometimes equally good Star Trek fan fiction on the Internet and the question goes begging — exactly how did Paramount keep turning out crap like Star Trek Nemesis. All that money poured into Star Trek and the best they could do for the tenth film was a shitty rewrite of Wrath of Khan?

And Paramount seems to be making the same mistake all over again, hiring JJ Abrams. Abrams is hot thanks to Lost and Alias, but when it comes to films this guy pumps out crap that happens to be visually exciting. Why anyone would be excited that the guy who wrote the script to Armaggedon is going to direct the next Trek film is beyond me.

The only good thing about the Abrams announcement is that he is also going to produce, meaning Rick Berman is finally, thankfully, out of the picture. But at this point, the franchise has been so abused, it’s probably beyond redemption at Paramount. Thank goodness the fans keep the true spirit of Star Trek alive.

Smallville Hit By Copyright Kryptonite

Brian Cronin does an excellent job of explaining the very odd legal situation that DC Comics has found itself in over the copyright to the Superboy character.

DC owns the copyrights and trademarks to Superman, Clark Kent and the other characters created and derived from Jerry Siegel and Joel Schuster’s famous creation.

But a funny thing happened to Superboy — in 1976 the U.S. Congress extended the term of copyrights from 28 years to 47 years. It also made provisions so that copyright transfers originally made for 28 years could be cancelled after that period and the additional 19 years could revert to the original owner.

Suppose, for example, that you created a character in 1948 and transferred the copyright for what then would have been 28 years — i.e., the copyright would have expired in 1976. Under the new provision, you could file to regain the copyright in 1976 and decide who to sell the remaining 19 years of copyright protection to.

In 1947, a judge ruled that Jerry Siegel was the sole owner of Superboy, who had first appeared in comics in 1943. In 1948, Siegel and Shuster signed away all their Superman-related rights, including Superboy, to DC for $100,000.

In 2002, however, citing the provisions of the 1976 copyright provision, Siegel’s estate informed Time Warner, which owns DC, that it was reclaiming its right to Superboy.

Unfortunately for DC, it now has a hit show called Smallville which focuses on a young Superman. What a trial court will now have to decide is whether or not Smallville is a series about Superboy, as the Siegel estate contends, or a young Clark Kent, as DC and Time Warner contend.

And the situation is even more complex, since DC and Time Warner are the sole owners to the Superboy trademark, meaning no one could market Superboy-related comics or other media without DC’s approval.

What a weird mess, and frankly one that DC deserves given the shabby way it treated Siegel and Shuster for creating characters that made the company literally hundreds of millions of dollars.

Source:

Judge Says Siegels Own Superboy. Will It Affect “Smallville”. Brian Cronin, ComicBookResources.Com, April 6, 2006.

McKinney Follows Suit

Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-Georgia) found herself in a lot hot water for assaulting a Capitol police officer who didn’t recognize her when she blew threw a security checkpoint without her Congressional pin.

For most people that would be enough absurdity, but this is Cynthia McKinney, so you had to know that was just the beginning of the trainwreck.

At first, McKinney tried to portray herself as the victim of racism (at some point you just know her father is going to blame Jews for his daughter’s latest mess). When it was clear that wasn’t work, McKinney decided to apologize, but that didn’t go very well either. According to the Atlanta-Journal Constitution,

But even as McKinney appeared to be trying to put the issue to rest, a bodyguard she hired — reportedly a former George state trooper — was raising another furor when he threatened a television report trying to interview McKinney outside the Capitol just minutes before she appeared on the House floor [to issue her apology].

When the reporter from Cox Broadcasting tried to ask McKinney about the grand jury, the bodyguard told him, “I’m going to put your ass in jail. I’m a police officer,” a videotape of the incident shows.

Asked if he worked for Capitol police, the man said, “I work for Miss McKinney.”

This is hardly surprising behavior for the only national political figure on record as supporting Zimbabwe dictator Robert Mugabe. Mugabe, of course, regularly intimidates journalists and occasionally has them tortured. It should hardly be surprising that a supporter of a dictator who doesn’t respect the freedom of the press would surround herself with like-mind people.

What is surprising is that McKinney keeps being returned to the House of Representatives.

Source:

McKinney apologizes on House floor. Bob Kemper, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 6, 2006.

Reusable, Microwavable Desiccants

I have thousands of DVDs neatly filed into storage cases and then placed in RubberMaid storage boxes and finally placed on shelves in my basement. One of my major concerns is keeping the DVDs from being exposed to moisture.

For a bit of added protection, Light Impressions Direct sells reusable desiccant canisters.

Put these in storage containers to absorb any moisture and maintain an acceptable level of humidity. Periodically microwave them to remove moisture and reuse. Very cool.

Finding a Decent Task Manager

It amazes me how difficult it can be sometimes to find a piece of software that will perform the functions I need. This week I must have spent 8 hours researching different software packages to manage my growing to-do list.

Now admittedly, my to-do list requirements are probably a bit more stringent than most people’s since I literally have thousands of to-dos in dozens of categories, and subcategories.

The main sticking point, however, seems relatively trivial especially since it fits so well with the Getting Things Done method that has been embraced by so many people.

Basically I have this list of thousands of tasks, and I need the ability to go in to my lists every morning, mark the tasks I want to concentrate on that day, and be able to see a list of just those tasks. Sounds pretty trivial, at least to me, but it’s amazing how difficult it is to find a program that will do this well.

After downloading and installing about a dozen different programs and trying another half-dozen web-based applications, the only program that even came close was My Life Organized which appears to have been developed specifically with Getting Things Done in mind.

But, alas, even My Life Organized isn’t perfect. First, it lacks a calendar feature, and it would be nice to have a calendar and task system integrated. But I can live without that.

The second thing is the price — $59.95. And that price apparently will not include the upcoming PocketPC edition.

Damn, that’s expensive even for me. But it’s important enough that I’ll probably pay it — the software does exactly what I need, unlike practically everything else I tried.

Golden Rule Not Much of an Ethical Tenet

The local Gannett rag, the Kalamazoo Gazette, ran a rather disjointed article in its April 22, 2006, profiling a local religious professor who apparently believes that the solution to the world’s problems is the Golden Rule. Now the paper might be distorting the professor’s views, but regardless, the Golden Rule isn’t much of a basis for transcending differing views of morality. In fact, the Golden Rule can be downright pernicious.

According to the Kalamazoo Gazette,

A foundation of the world’s great religions, the rule in its Christian form, Siebert says, states, “In everything, do to others as you would have them do to you.”

In its Jewish form, it is, “Do not do to others what you would not want them to do to you.” In the Islamic form, it is, “No one of you is a believer until he desires for his brother that which he desires for himself.”

“The Golden Rule embraces not only the whole Hebrew law and the prophets, but also the New Testament and the Koran,” Siebert said before leaving Kalamazoo.

In addition, Siebert says, even atheists and agnostics and those who call themselves humanists can agree that this rule should “be accepted as the foundation of a global ethos.”

Especially now in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorists attacks and ongoing conflicts in the Middle East, it is more urgent than ever that the rule be taken more seriously, Siebert says.

Well, this is one atheist who doesn’t see the point in having the Golden Rule accepted as “the foundation of a global ethos.”

The problem with the Golden Rule is that it is entirely possible for people to advocate heinous moral acts so long as that they too are willing to be subject to such barbarities.

For example, consider the protests by Muslim hardliners in Afghanistan after a man who converted from Islam to Christianity was set free from prison rather than executed. So long as the protesters who wanted to see the man executed are willing to say, “if I became an apostate it would be okay to kill me”, then killing a man simply because he converted from one religion to another is completely consistent with the Golden Rule.

Certainly most religions have never seen the Golden Rule as limiting their behavior. It certainly didn’t stop the genocide against the Canaanites described in Joshua, nor the wholesale infanticide described in Exodus 11 and 12.

Apparently even the otherwise-totalitarian George Bernard Shaw could see through the flaws in the Golden Rule, famously saying,

Do not do unto others as you expect they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.

The University of Chicago’s Alan Gewirth brought a more philosophical attack on the Golden Rule arguing that it made justice impossible. From Gewirth’s obituary,

Gewirth’s point about the Golden Rule was straightforward: it makes justice impossible. “If you always ‘do unto others as you would have them do unto you,’ a thief might say to the judge,  ‘you wouldn’t want to go to prison. How can you send me to prison?’” Gewirth’s replacement for this rule is based on a principle that, he argued, was more universal.

Gewirth’s work is linked by the search for this supreme moral principle: it began with early work on Descartes’ “Cogito,” including a major article that is still in print and discussed; a middle phase with a book on the natural law and political philosophy of Marsilius of Padua and a translation of his work, both still in print and considered definitive; and finally developed into the ethical rationalism for which he is best known. In his work on Marsilius there is already a careful attention to human need, which Gewirth developed into his supreme principle of morality, the Principle of Generic Consistency (PGC), according to which all agents have inalienable rights to the capacities and facilities they need in order to be able to act with a real chance of success.

Thus Gewirth’s own golden rule: “Agents must act in accord with the generic rights of others as well as their own.” His defense of this principle “that it is impossible to deny the principle without contradicting yourself, because agents contradict that they are agents if they deny the PGC or act contrary to it” echoes Des Cartes’ idea that one cannot deny one’s existence because this very denial implies one’s existence. Gewirth’s further argument, originating in Marsilius, that self-interest and community good are not opposed but mutually supportive, was expressed in his book The Community of Rights, 1996. A new book, Human Rights and Global Justice, unfinished at his death, extends his examination of these principles to the current world context. His work found unities between reason and love, and between the self and the other, the central theme of his last completed work, Self-Fulfillment, 1998; and an optimism about the human capacity to overcome evil that is not based on religious faith. “Yet,” added Professor Beyleveld, “his philosophy is not one of naive expectation. It is a philosophy of hope that places the onus on the human capacity and duty to take responsibility for one’s actions.”

Of course even then all we’re left with are generic rights that don’t do much to solve any but the most basic of moral problems. The Golden Rule or The Principle of Generic Consistency each do little to reconcile individuals or societies that have widely divergent moral viewpoints. They make nice bumper stickers, but that’s about it.

Sources:

Alan Gewirth, 1912-2004, rational ethicist who challenged Golden Rule. Press Release, University of Chicago, May 17, 2004.

Universal ethical tenet transcends sectarian, secular cultures, WMU professor argues. Kalamazoo Gazette, Chris Meehan, April 22, 2006.

Wired’s Tired Article on Digital Distribution of Comic Books

I opened up the May 2006 issue of Wired Magazine to see an odd article by products editor Mark McClusky arguing in favor of digital distribution of comic books. McClusky writes,

The two biggest comics publishers, Marvel and DC, control huge back catalogs — as in 70 years of content. But if you want to read old issues of a venerable franchise like Spider-Man, your choices are either to hunt down expensive original copies or to buy costly paperback compilations. . . .

But imagine what these publishers — and smaller imprints — could do in the digital realm. Last year, thousands of readers snapped up The Complete New Yorker, a $100 DVD set containing scans of every issue of the magazine . . . If DC were to release The Complete Batman, fans wouldn’t just be excited — there would be mass hysteria. Comics lovers aren’t averse to spending money; it’s easy to imagine them happily paying $300 for such a compilation. I would. And while it might cannibalize sales of the trades, the radically lower production costs of a DVD set would offset the difference.

Yeah, imagine if instead of having to buy an expensive trade paperback to read all those early Spider-Man comics, you could buy a CD or DVD set that had the entire 40 year run of the book?

It’s such a good idea, Marvel did just that in 2004. It followed that up with DVD collections of the entire run of The Fantastic Four and X-Men with an Avengers DVD-ROM on the way (and for about $50 rather than $300; sadly, there was no mass hysteria or UFO sightings accompanying the release of any of these products).

Here’s an article idea for Wired — what if companies would create programs that would scan incoming e-mail and files for viruses and notify the user or automatically delete them before a user’s computer became infected? Wouldn’t that be a great idea? Probably worth a cover story, even.