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November 15, 2005

An idea for the 'delete' file

With the World Summit on the Information Society starting tomorrow in Tunis, some governments think that since the Internet was made for everyone’s use, there is no reason why the United States should have control over it through ICANN. Therefore that control should be handed over to the United Nations.

That seems perfectly logical to me. After all, it’s not as if the U.S. invented the Internet or something. Similarly, the French didn’t invent Champagne and this is why anyone in the world can produce white wine, with or without bubbles, and sell it as Champagne.

Anyway, USA Today has a nice analysis of the subject in U.N. control of Internet? An idea for the ‘delete’ file and I share their point of view (if it wasn’t clear from the above sarcasm):

The common, mistaken wisdom is that the United States runs it. But it doesn’t. Nobody does. The closest anyone comes is the non-profit ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers), headquartered in the same coastal California building where Postel had his office.

ICANN is little more than a technical coordinator with an internationally diverse board of directors. For the past seven years, under a system Postel helped shape, it has assigned Internet addresses and made sure the vital infrastructure functions. The U.S. Commerce Department audits ICANN but, for the most part, in hands-off fashion.

The whole article is worth a read.

November 8, 2005

Video game soundtracks

Inside Mac Games:

Electronic Arts Game Music Coming To iTunes

Electronic Arts has joined with Nettwerk Music Group to form EA Recordings, a library to manage recordings from some of its most popular games. The library will offer the tunes to various online music providers including iTunes.

I’m pretty sure that in the event of every track starting with the “EA Games, challenge everything” whispered jingle, there will be murder.

November 1, 2005

Mac OS X 10.4.3

My top five anticipated features in Mac OS X 10.4.3:

  • iChat preferences now allow you to display emoticons (such as a smiley face) as text (such as “:-)”) instead of as a graphic. Great for cross-coding monkeys communication.

  • .Mac members can enable encrypted chat sessions after installing this update. Might come in handy.

  • Disk Utility can verify the Mac OS X 10.4 startup volume with this update. Might come in handy.

  • Keychain Access searching is no longer case-sensitive after installing this update. Useful if you stored SanDeE*’s phone number in your Keychain.

  • Items copied into a Drop Box have permissions set correctly.

Do not meddle in the affairs of Coding Ninjas, for they are subtle and quick to anger.