345 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
345 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 794
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Title: HPR0794: Full Circle Podcast: U-Cubed De-brief
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0794/hpr0794.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 02:38:56
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---
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The Fault Circle Podcast on Hacker Public Radio in this episode you cupped review.
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Hello World and welcome. It's Thursday the 28th of April and I'm feeling somewhat
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bereft because my regular co-hosts are off doing other exciting things. Ed is still
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unpacking because he's been to Rome where as far as I can make out he's been
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complaining about the rain and playing lots of games on his phone. I know he went
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off to see various sites in Rome at various times. He just didn't bother to
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tell us all about them so we'll give him a grilling and see what cultural
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delights he took in while he was in Rome. And Mr Wilkins is off handing in his
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dissertation and doubtless doing some army things. So this episode a returning
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guest has been volunteered to be a co-host. It is Mr Les Pounder.
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Good evening Les. Good evening. Well thank you Pat lovely intro. It was well
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volunteered. I think drafted was more than volunteered. I did do think that you
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volunteered. I'm not sure you knew what you were volunteering for but I took it
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to be a volunteering so to hear you are. Yeah. Last time you were on we were
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talking to yourself and John sprigs aka John the Nice Guy about the UKIB
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event which was going on at Madlab in Manchester. I'm inclined to start with
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that. How did it go? It went really well thank you. It was a really busy day. We
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had say about 30 plus people turn up on the day to enjoy lots of different
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talks and workshops. I mean highlights of the day were Dan Lynch's talk on
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Unity. Now when I say Unity I don't mean that elephant in the room that we
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have at the moment which has just come out today. I mean Unity between the
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communities that we have in Linux. It was a great talk. I'm going to put a
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video up as soon as I've edited it together on the website which is
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www.yukubed.info so you can find out more about that. It's a long video. It's
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50 minutes long but it's well worth a watch. It's also number great talk by Anne
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who's from Manchester Free Software and it's all about the philosophies of
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Free Software but it's done in an entertaining manner. It doesn't talk down
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to you and it isn't having like RMS in the room telling you that this is this
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and you must follow this way. It is an entertaining talk about what Linux is, what
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Free Software is and what you can do with everything and I know she's had
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requests from a lot of people to do that talk over and over again at different
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venues. So did you fill the venue? We didn't fill the venue but we had enough
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people there to make sure that we gave a good day for everyone. I mean if we'd
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have filled the venue would have been fantastic but it would have been really
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tight in the first session because the main session in the main room was quite
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small. Madlab it is not a big venue but it is a great venue. I mean it's the
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best venue in the North West for doing something like this. You've got all
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the facilities that you need. You've got the Wi-Fi, you've got power, you've got
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refreshments, you've got space for projectors and whatever you need. It's all
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there and they give it to you for free. What we did on the day was rather than
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take from them we gave something back. So all the organisers chipped in and we
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offered don't refreshments on a day for a donation. We ran a raffle which had
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loads of different prizes. The top prize was a full Dell PC which we got
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kindly donated by one of Blackpool love members Tony Hughes. We had all sorts
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of prizes. Well we had an iPhone was offered that was done by Head. It was
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from the pound shop and it was a child's one but it was an iPhone nonetheless.
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What was happening on the day was it was just all different things all coming
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together. It was arranged around the Ubuntu beta release or beta testing and
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global jams that sort of thing but it wasn't just restricted to those
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activities. So yes we did have people who were doing ball testing. Yes we are
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people learning how to package but we also have people giving talks on
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editing video using open shots and using Vi. We had a guy called Dave Gilbert
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who is a seasoned pro in Vi. He was telling people who knew how to use Vi what
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they could do a bit further. So it was really good to see him do his talk and
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the place was packed for his talk. I never know and so many people didn't want
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to actually use Vi and then I got asked at the end. So what do you use to
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edit text and I was like she had it in nano. I had to get out of there pretty
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quick but the purists can have them. I haven't got that much of my life left to
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learn Vi and that's just the way it goes. I'm sure it's fantastic but I'm sticking
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to what I know. In other things we had there was Blackpool Log we had an idea to
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run a Debian demo area which was we all brought some of our computers to the
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event had different versions of Debian on them and we let people try them. Now
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we initially gave Blackpool Log just a small piece of the room to do this
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because we didn't have much space to give. What we should have done is given
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them the entire floor and say we're bombed out all day. People are coming
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over asking them questions and how to do this, sat in the upper with Linux and
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not just a bunch of they were asking about how they can do things with
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CrunchBang Linux, how they can do that Debian itself. So the boys were busy
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that day so I think Memo in the next time is we give Blackpool Log more space to
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do what they can.
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The full circle podcast is the companion to full circle magazine, the
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independent magazine for the Ubuntu community. Find us at www.fullcirclemagazine.org
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forward slash podcast.
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And just as a side note, when we were speaking to you before the event,
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John's wife was imminently about to give birth, which she now has. So we send
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them congratulations. I didn't get the details on the outcome.
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It's a little boy called Daniel.
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Hey, well done to John and his good lady.
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And John assures me today that Daniel eats a lot, but doesn't sleep a lot.
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Okay, well get used to it, John, because you've got another couple of years of this.
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Well, this is a good test, isn't it? We'll see if he's still quite such a nice guy
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when his sleep deprived off to the first six months.
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John, they're not so nice guy.
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John, the John lease, the slightly fractious and techie guy.
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Oh, we shouldn't shouldn't take Mickey.
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Full circle news.
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It's been one of those weeks where lots of cloud-based solutions have kind of fallen off
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their cloud a little bit, because we had a few days ago,
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Amazon's cloud EC3 service fell off for a few hours,
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which everybody's blaming on their North Carolina data center falling over their business
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continuity plan evidently failed.
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You know, there's no other way to say it.
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The business continuity plan will be that the user would have their data center
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hosted in two different locations at the release in different regions.
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And that only one region went down at that time, the loss of those services at that date.
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So if users had had an instance in region one and then region two,
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when region one went down, two would still be going.
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I gather it took some time for that failover process to kick in.
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It did, yeah.
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I'm not sure exactly how long, but it was a considerable amount of time.
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Yeah, it was several hours.
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Yeah.
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I mean, we don't have to go into the various rumors and conspiracies and theories of what took it down
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and why it took them so long to bring it back up.
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But there's an awful lot of comment now about why the cloud as an idea
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isn't quite the all-singing, all-dancing solution that everybody keeps selling it as.
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Cloud cloud computing is all very well as long as your cloud doesn't break up
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and into a little fine fog of Scotch mist.
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It doesn't bowed well for cloud computing when Amazon falls over and dad
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the biggest name in cloud compute.
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Absolutely.
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I kept one while we're on that stream, a couple of Sony stories that we picked up.
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Sony were suing geohots about the PS3 hacking episode and they've decided to drop the story.
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And I think the net conclusion that everybody's come to is that suing your activists
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and your customers may be legal, but it's not really fair.
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And it makes you look like a bit of an authoritarian jackass to say the least.
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And I'm surprised that it took Sony all of what three months to realize that
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didn't do their PR any good whatsoever.
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Sony hasn't had good PR for last week or so has it though?
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Not really, no, because the next cloud related classic is that
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Sony's PlayStation Network has been down for, what is it, seven days and still counting?
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Yeah, it's looking like it's going to come back on middle of next week,
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which is going to be brilliant for everyone to go online and start playing the games,
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but the loss of data is massive.
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Well, we've got two strands to this.
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Number one is the fact that PlayStation Network went down at all and not only went down but stayed
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down, but secondly, because the attack that took it down has evidently been so catastrophic
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that they've had a massive data breach.
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And something like 77 million members' details could have been stolen.
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Could have been being the operative word because nobody at this stage is entirely sure,
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or if they are, they're not saying.
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And the statements, there's been a brilliant round of statements since yesterday and this morning.
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The anonymous group who were mounting concerted denial of service attacks against Sony because of
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the whole GeoHot's lawsuit. Anonymous have stepped up and said, it wasn't us gov, we didn't do it,
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and Sony aren't saying who they think did it, but they are saying it's okay,
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they didn't get your credit card details.
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And then just as an aside, they probably got everything else up to and including your inside leg
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measurement. So this doesn't exactly say an awful lot for cloud services for one and Sony's data
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security policy for another.
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No, I mean, I'm looking at BBC News now and the credit card details were encrypted,
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but why wasn't other bits and pieces encrypted?
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In fact, personal data, surely the people who were looking after I Sony should take every measure
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to ensure that the customer's data is secure.
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Yeah, the news stories this morning were a full of rumours that the class action lawsuits were being
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prepared even as we speak and that Sony can expect a significant bill from this one as well as
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a significant loss of credibility.
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It's going to hurt their online activities, it really is. I mean, Microsoft has Xbox Live,
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which obviously it's Microsoft's own thing, it isn't, the pinnacle is not the best in the world,
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but it's had limited issues over its lifetime.
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The house been bits and pieces, usually at Christmas time, when the network goes down,
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just to the sheer volume of users using it any one time.
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But from what I can recollect, we haven't had a loss of data as of yet.
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I couldn't be wrong, and if anyone's proved me right, please do.
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Or not one that we know about anyway.
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Yeah, but Sony's just had this massive PR explosion.
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This is really going to hurt their network, so they're going to have to start shifting
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a lot of games, really cheap to get people back on.
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Yeah, it's really the whole breach of trust thing
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that I think is going to hurt them more than anything else.
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But the statement that they released what a couple of days ago saying,
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we're not rushing to put the thing back up, there's,
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we're going to, I haven't got the quote in front of me,
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we're going to solidly rebuild the network from the ground up.
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It really says they had a massive catastrophic failure in security somewhere.
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I mean, they've got an external security company coming to check
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what's happened and do an audit and see what can be done to correct it.
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Really, Sony should have got this right from day one, this is people's data.
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And what were their previous security consultants doing?
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Because I can't imagine a company the size of Sony doesn't have
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external audits by Black Hat investigators going in and doing periodic reviews of security.
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All of the big business customers that I've had, we've either had consultants on a retainer
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to do just that or we've instigated periodic reviews by third parties to come in and do some
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penetration tests and policy and procedure tests. Where Sony have gone wrong on this,
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it just doesn't bear thinking about.
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Okay, a couple of other stories, not that I find this sort of thing particularly fascinating,
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but it has been the biggest news on the block for a while.
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Apple, suing Samsung for patent infringement.
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And this is, I keep covering these, we do these on the side pods every few months
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and I occasionally blog something about the latest round of court cases.
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Apple going after Samsung mobile division rather than Samsung Corporation in total
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because they have, they claim that Samsung have, they've knowingly, willingly and deliberately copied
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the iPhone 4 right down to the icons, barring a little bit of color and they're just going
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after them all guns blazing. It makes you wonder if Apple's legal department aren't doing this just
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for something to do just because there's a building full of them over in Cupertino and they don't
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get to play with the other kids. I don't know what it is.
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They're probably looking for a bit of publicity now that they've released the Y iPhone 4,
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which, you know, everyone's going mad for just because it's a white phone.
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I mean, I don't see why Apple has to chase Samsung for patent infringements.
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Yes, they both got touch screen phones. Yes, they both got icons on the screen to launch
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application. Yes, they both got an app market or an app store or some, some manner.
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Yeah, there are similarities.
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I've, I've feeling that some of this comes down to the fact that US patent law being the
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complete dog's breakfast that it is these days and being completely broken.
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Other manufacturers are probably looking at Samsung's phone going, well, that looks exactly
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like an iPhone. If they can get away with it, so can we. And Apple's only
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recourse is to defend the patents or lose them, which is how the patent system works.
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So they may not actually be wanting to go after Samsung.
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It's just that if they don't defend against Samsung, they will have no court precedent
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to defend it against anybody else who decides to do an iPhone clone.
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I can't imagine what this is doing to their business relationship because, apparently,
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Apple orders something like $6 billion worth of components from Samsung semiconductor,
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which is one of the same parent company, but Samsung mobile is a different division and they're
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only going after that division. So who knows? Yeah, but it always happens. You'll get Apple soon
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from passing infringements on Samsung. Samsung will do the same with Apple for something else,
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which they have in fact done. Samsung strikes back and they've this week launched a counter suit.
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It's all part of that whole nuclear arms race and patent law is the one route to mutual
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self-destruction. Who knows where this one's going to finish up? It does make you wish that
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well, it's wishful thinking. Maybe somebody in the US Congress would stop fighting each other
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for long enough to work out that the patent system's broken and that they need to change it.
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Further, in the article I'm reading now, you can see Apple's currently embroiled in disputes
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with Finland's Nokia, Taiwan's HTC, and the US handset maker, Motorola, among others.
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Everybody, somebody is trying to draw up a chart as a graphic of all of the current lawsuits
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that going on because you've got, Apple is also suing Microsoft, who is suing them. Everybody's
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having a go at HTC, Microsoft's having a go at everybody that's producing Android handsets,
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the web of legal cases that are going on in the US and other courts is absolutely mind-blowing
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when you try and see it represented as a graphic. It's difficult to spot who isn't suing
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somebody else. Interestingly, with Samsung, they're actually going after Apple in some of the European
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and Asian courts to establish some court precedent before they then take it back to the US and press
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their account suit over there because they're hoping that if they can go back to the US armed with
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some precedent, they might bring the things with a bit of a swift conclusion, but I can see this
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going on for the rest of the year. It's insanity. It's the point where everybody else says,
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guys, can you please just innovate rather than legislate because you're not helping anybody?
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That's it. Well, how much innovation have they all got at the moment? With markets around the world
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as they are, there's not much money out there. Well, you say that, but Apple just turned in another
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record-breaking set of results for the last quarter. So they are evidently making money.
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Apple will make money because they're just repackaged something. I mean, I've had to love iPhone 5
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by the end of the year. So all the iPhone 4 people really upset me trading those in, or as all the
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Android people will be happy as Larry because they've got cracking phones already. And one of them.
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So yeah, I've got to update the wildfire to a signage in mod 7 at some point over the weekend.
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Get some gingerbread on there. Moving swiftly on, one thing that did cheer me up slightly,
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internet filtering, possibly to be outlawed in Europe. The European Parliament is getting
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it's act together and trying to preserve some net neutrality, which is in marked contrast to
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the U.S. Congress, which seems to be so cozy with the telecoms carriers that it's prepared to
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hand over any net neutrality it might have so that mobile carriers can carry on making some money.
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European Parliament's starting to legislate and in individual national parliaments as well,
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to try and block filtering and throttling of traffic. And I saw another story this morning
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where the Dutch Parliament are actually starting to put this into legislation. So I thought that was
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that was worth hailing the European Parliament, which I loathe with a passion for actually doing
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something right or see if they can pull it off. Well, I see we need net neutrality. I mean, if we have
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a teared net, it's just going to degrade the experience for everyone. It's the last possible
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thing we want. There are very few places in life where everybody has any kind of equality and
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the web is one of those and I know it's under threat but I'd prefer to see it stay as neutral as
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possibly can. Next story, there's a new KDE project which is aiming at tablets and mixed user
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interfaces and I haven't seen an awful lot of detail on this one but there is a new open source
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project launched by the KDE developers aimed at bringing a consistent user interface across a
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variety of touch screen interfaces and I'm just thinking that maybe KDE could be one of those
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tablet interfaces that actually works. Yeah, I mean KDE, it's big in its brush with the widgets
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and the layout of the desktop. It's really good for a touch-based interface. It's a lot better
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than what we've seen at the moment with the Unity interface which is a little bit
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mishmashed at the moment. I don't think it's ready yet to actually be mainstream whereas KDE,
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it came out in 4.0 and it was dire but it has been slowly getting better with each dot release.
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4.5 and 4.6 are fantastic and I'm not a KDE fan but I do appreciate that they've come on
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leaps and bounds and there is something quite elegant, usability, I think they've got a little bit
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a way to go still but it's very very glossy, very slick, very attractive and I can see people
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being drawn to KDE on different devices. Yeah, well I'm not on a tablet, it'd be fantastic
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because it's big in its brush but you can press the button and the Firefox will load, you can press
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this and Skype will load. It's what the user wants a tablet for. They don't want miniscule buttons
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and loads of switches and weird and wonderful little buttons to press. They want big brush
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in your face. I want to do this right now. Yeah, so more power to the KDE people and we would
|
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kind of touch on it just then. I think the big story of the day for us is ta-da. Ubuntu 11.04,
|
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the Natty Narwar, and we'll try and ignore the code name. 11.04 is released today, the official
|
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|
|
release. Complete with its Unity user interface which various people either love or hate but
|
||
|
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it's like Marmites, there is no possibility of indifference, you either love it or hate it.
|
||
|
|
I've noticed that a lot of people in the last few days have been putting their defences up
|
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|
|
already and saying yes we know it's still a work in progress. It is still a work in progress.
|
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|
|
I mean it's not perfect, yeah. I've been using it for a week on my Samsung network and the
|
||
|
|
experience is good but it's not earthsharing. I still prefer the standard no-minute interface
|
||
|
|
but it does do the job. Yeah, I've got to say I'm still with you on that one. I posted a comparative
|
||
|
|
review on Unity and Nome 3, the Nome Shell last weekend and I'm not the only one to say this but
|
||
|
|
I don't think either of them are the finished obstacle yet. No, it still has little things that
|
||
|
|
needs to be sorted out. I mean on the podcast with FabPot Linux I lost 2.02 we'll talk about how
|
||
|
|
you shut down the computer, you have to press the alt key and then go up to the shutdown button
|
||
|
|
to actually turn the computer off. That has been sorted out as a package you can download that
|
||
|
|
will actually rectify that but it's just little things like that that should have been really
|
||
|
|
force of at the start the basics and then build upon the basics to make it better. It just doesn't
|
||
|
|
seem right yet. I'm all for trying out a new kinds of interface. Unfortunately they both seem
|
||
|
|
to be so desperate to get rid of convention or drop down menus and hierarchical menus
|
||
|
|
but we've thrown out the baby with bathwater. You open up Unity and in application spaces
|
||
|
|
you'll get various lines of icons open up and then if there's more than you can display on the
|
||
|
|
screen it will say cn number more and even if that number is just one you have to click on that link
|
||
|
|
to see what the other extra icons are. There's no concept there of scaling things to fit the
|
||
|
|
available space. It seems a little bit for all where claims of being radical and thinking outside
|
||
|
|
the box and maybe this is a coding issue but you get to a certain point and it's very fixed and
|
||
|
|
very dogmatic in its layout and it's thinking and its usability. I think it's still got a long
|
||
|
|
way to go. I think if we give another two months like the people who are behind the scenes doing all
|
||
|
|
the coding and all the book testing see what the reports are from the field work on the books
|
||
|
|
and then produce updates that will rectify some of the issues that have currently been experienced
|
||
|
|
by the users and then give it a proper honest review then because right now it's ready but it's
|
||
|
|
still not fit for purpose. It's bleeding edge. I got a hold of I downloaded the beta 2 that was
|
||
|
|
updated on I think it was Saturday or Sunday. Put it on a USB stick. It's still not working on
|
||
|
|
smaller Intel graphics. Unity doesn't want to know my big Dell 6400 laptop at all. Just refuses
|
||
|
|
to run natively. Put it on a Dell network. That's absolutely fine because it's got a relatively
|
||
|
|
new what's that 18 18 month old Intel graphics chip on it. Unity runs fine out the box. No extra
|
||
|
|
drivers required. It's fine. You've got full 3D work size intended but that's that's one machine
|
||
|
|
out of the four that I've got here at the moment. I'm just waiting to see how many people with older
|
||
|
|
hardware are going to be lighting up the forums and the wikis saying it doesn't work.
|
||
|
|
I suppose that's where the other derivatives of Ubuntu will come into their own such as
|
||
|
|
Ubuntu, Ubuntu and Ubuntu as well because they're not using this interface. They could
|
||
|
|
see a surge in more users coming over to them. I think you've missed the most obvious one which is
|
||
|
|
mint. Yeah, I did miss that one. It's the gateway distribution isn't it really. People put
|
||
|
|
windows. Yeah. And I think the the claims not made any indication that he's in any rush to
|
||
|
|
jump to unity and some of the things that I've seen coming out of the mint camp would indicate
|
||
|
|
that they're going to stick with classic gnome because they've got their mint menu that they put
|
||
|
|
on top which is very windows like and the kind of thing that people will be used to. So we'll have
|
||
|
|
to see what what the downloads are like for 1104 in the in the short term and whether or not there's
|
||
|
|
a spike in the derivatives downloads as people decide that unity isn't for them and either
|
||
|
|
drop back onto classic gnome 2 with the classic no menus and panels or they decide that they've
|
||
|
|
had enough of canonicals dictating how the interface should work and they jump ship and go to one
|
||
|
|
of the others. Well, Linux meant you've also got the Debian based version development which is
|
||
|
|
a roll release. Yep. So that looks the last time I looked at it it was almost indistinguishable
|
||
|
|
from the Ubuntu version. Yeah, it's practically indistinguishable. I'll try and say that word.
|
||
|
|
That's easy for you to say yes. In the Debian version it's a roll in release so you install it once
|
||
|
|
and it just keeps updating itself as you update it. Yeah, you don't need to think oh well,
|
||
|
|
now Linux meant whatever the the uh it's a hooker name to give it hell and air or
|
||
|
|
restating or something. They've always given it, as you said on Linux Atlas, we're giving it a dodgy
|
||
|
|
name. You can cut that a bit out. Yes. Debian edition is a roll in edition. It's just got a time stamp
|
||
|
|
for when it was created that ice I was created but the other one which based on Ubuntu all have
|
||
|
|
code names. So Linux meant 11 will be some woman's name and then again. Mint 10 was Julia
|
||
|
|
which was one of the more sensible names that they've used. It doesn't sound like a Russian street
|
||
|
|
walker. I'll cut that bit out as well. Yeah. We'll watch the stats for 1104 and see what the uptake
|
||
|
|
is like. Any more news? I think we have covered all of them. We've covered what we're going to cover.
|
||
|
|
Feedback. You can post comments and feedback on the podcast page at fullcirclemagazine.org
|
||
|
|
forward slash podcast. Send us a comment to podcast at fullcirclemagazine.org. You can also send us
|
||
|
|
a comment by recording an audio clip of no more than 30 seconds and sending it to the same address.
|
||
|
|
Comments and audio may be edited for length. Please remember this is a family friendly show.
|
||
|
|
Okay shall we wrap up? I think we should yes.
|
||
|
|
Excellent. It's going dark here and I can't actually see my keyboard anymore.
|
||
|
|
So we've probably been on for too long. Well it's been good to have you on. Change of host. I can now use
|
||
|
|
you as a a stick to beat Wilkins and Ed with and say if you don't behave yourselves I've got a reserve
|
||
|
|
reserve host waiting in the train. It seems to get subbed on the pitch. That's all right. I'd love to
|
||
|
|
have you back on another show. Keep us up to date with some of the other events that you've got lined up.
|
||
|
|
We'll try and we'll try and promote a few more of those as well. Get people out and about and
|
||
|
|
get involved. Communitize the community. Oh sorry that's copyright downlink isn't it?
|
||
|
|
We'll say good night. Thanks very much Les. We'll see you on the next one and thank you everybody
|
||
|
|
for listening. This has been full circle. Thank you very much. I'm Robin Catling. Good night.
|
||
|
|
Thank you for listening to H.P.R. sponsored by Carol.net. So head on over to C-A-R-O dot
|
||
|
|
all about C-A-R-O dot
|