The sorting software, called Ballot Browser (image above right shows the software's user interface), is an open source program written in Python to run on a Windows or Linux platform. The Humboldt version is running on Debian Linux Etch and uses a Fujitsu high-speed scanner also using Debian Linux.
[Roy: Brazil has already moved all its voting machines to GNU/Linux (hundreds of thousands of boxes).]
#1: Flexibility
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#2: Open source
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#3: Command line
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#4: Hardware requirements
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#5: Security
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6. Portability
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#7: Cost
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#8: More available software
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#9: Not so dumbed-down
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#10: Keyboard efficiency
At a time when most companies are happy if the balance sheet does not show any red ink, Red Hat Linux has bucked the trend. Its stock price leapt 32 percent last week compared to that a year ago, during a week when technology stocks overall fell by 2.6 percent.
According to information available at Channel Insider, the so-called mixed source company, Novell, saw its stock price fall by 11 percent, the biggest loser of the week.
Whenever someone tells me that something is easier in Windows, I am immediately suspicious. I wonder what compromises they have made in their own mind. This is telling. It says that Windows users are willing to put up with much in order to use Windows, before they begin to work. They either really don’t mind having to re-boot when they update and wait on endless updates after they boot up or they just see this as the cost of using Windows and it does not register.
Modern PCs can execute billions of instructions per second, but today's web applications can access only a small fraction of this computational power. If web developers could use all of this power, just imagine the rich, dynamic experiences they could create. At Google we're always trying to make the web a better platform. That's why we're working on Native Client, a technology that aims to give web developers access to the full power of the client's CPU while maintaining the browser neutrality, OS portability and safety that people expect from web applications. Today, we're sharing our technology with the research and security communities in the hopes that they will help us make this technology more useful and more secure.
The smart box is based on an open Linux-based platform and includes a raft of wireless technologies which allow users to connect remotely via a PC or smartphone.
Despite snapping up Symbian only a matter of days ago, Nokia has revealed that in the future it plans to use a Linux-based operating system in its more expensive models.
Nineteen-year-old Ciara Sauro has pancreatitis and because she needs an islet cell transplant, she’s hospitalized every week, a situation resulting in a huge accumulation of medical bills.
Now, “Because she didn’t defend herself against a copyright lawsuit, a federal judge in Pittsburgh ruled she’s a music pirate, and that could cost the Sauros almost $8,000 in fines,” says Pittsburg news channel WTAE.com.
“I already have severe depression,” the story has her saying. “I mean, it’s so hard to sit there and think that I have to get in trouble for something that I didn’t do. It’s not fair.”
As I type this, members of the European Parliament are preparing to repeat one of the worst mistakes in copyright history — enacting a European version of America's reviled Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998.
The EU version will tack 45 years onto the duration of copyright for existing and future sound recordings, making for a grand total of 95 years' worth of monopoly control for companies that produce recordings.
Five years after the US passage of the Copyright Term Extension Act, the US Supreme Court heard Eldred v Ashcroft, a case that challenged the constitutionality of extending the copyright of works that have already been created.
I will let you decide which applies to the author of a "research study" of Google's bandwidth use being pushed by the anti–net neutrality site NetCompetition.org. Using some rather dubious proxy measures—which would be worth further scrutiny as well, if the fundamental premise weren't so manifestly bogus as to render such quibbling moot—telecom shill Scott Cleland estimates that Google and its subsidiaries "used" 16.5% of consumer broadband traffic in 2008, but only paid 0.8% of consumer broadband costs. This, the author brazenly claims, amounts to an implicit subsidy of some $6.9 billion to Google, and proves that Google "uses" 21 times as much bandwidth as it pays for.
This is stupid on so many levels I'm almost too stunned to know where to begin. Why would you ever imagine that the per-byte cost of getting upstream traffic out on a few enormous pipes would be the same as the per-byte cost on the downstream side, where the same traffic is dispersed to a bazillion consumers, each with their own broadband connection? (Nestle pays a lot less per pound than you do for sugar; I await a "research study.") What would possess anyone to posit that there's some inherently "fair" division of the cost of connecting end users to popular (mostly free) services anyway? Google adds value to the product ISPs sell, presumably helping them to attract customers; should Eric Schmidt be demanding compensation for the "implicit subsidy"?
Comments
xISO-ZWT
2008-12-09 21:12:08
RIAA is copying from members of congress & senators in US. Greed at corporate & political institutions do not know ethics, compassion, much less empathy.
SubSonica
2008-12-10 12:51:18
"This is a world where Windows runs on virtually every computer and putting on a carnival show for an operating system is not helping these children at all. I am sure if you contacted Microsoft, they would be more than happy to supply you with copies of an older verison of Windows and that way, your computers would actually be of service to those receiving them..."
Microsoft FUD has permeated the uninformed citizen's mindset deeper than I feared. To the of making people believe software cannot be for free. This is very serious. And is affecting the way our kids are educated.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-12-10 13:01:03
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