Introduction About Site Map

XML
RSS 2 Feed RSS 2 Feed
Navigation

Main Page | Blog Index

Archive for July, 2011

K-Swiss Manchester 10K

K-Swiss 10K

US Independence Day/Weekend was a lot of fun. The Manchester City Stadium 10K (ten kilometers, which is about a quarter of a marathon) took place on Sunday. I was among the runners there and the following day I cycled for 9 hours because it was nice and sunny (now it rains again). Today I spent over 3 hours at the gym, making the total of time spent on exercise in the past 3 days something around 16 hours. In order to keep in decent shape but not make races just a torturous experience (I went to the gym straight afterwards for weights), I took it easy in this race and I intend to carry on running and cycling more than before, maybe building up stamina for a change. My diet too has improved somewhat. So anyway, it was a very pleasant weekend, maybe I will upload more photos later. I will probably do the same Manchester 10K race next year as it exceeded my expectations. The number of participants was a couple of thousands, meaning far smaller than the great run, which is also 10K but has a low of slow runners. The race was by mere chance talking place on one of the more pleasant days of the year, even though it was a little too hot for running (early in the day and not a cloud in the sky). Anyone who considers doing future K-Swiss Manchester 10K races probably won’t regret it.

New Interview With Me

Head over to Muktware where there is there is this new interview.

Nortel Patents Go to Hostile Hands (and the Rest of My Rant About Software Patents)

Summary: Personal perspective on the subject of patents and software patents in particular

In [cref 50561 part 1] I mostly explained my history wrt software patents. In the news this morning I found yet more aggression with software patents meeting a barrier in Eastern Texas:

In a legal victory with potential implications for many US printers going forward, an Eastern Texas jury has ruled that Vistaprint prepress software does not infringe on patents held by New Jersey-based ColorQuick.

There are also new reports about embargo attempts against Sony and Samsung, thanks to the marvels of software patents [1, 2, 3]. Is this innovation?

Reston-based ObjectVideobizWatch ObjectVideo Latest from The Business Journals Venture Philanthropy Partners closes in on M second fund Intellivid’s assets rolled into Tyco security unitNovak Biddle’s Andrea Kaufman says venture capital is more art than science Follow this company has filed a complaint with the United States International Trade Commission accusing Sony Corp.bizWatch Sony Corp. Latest from The Business Journals Sony team moving to Austin ‘Cars 2′ drives to top of box officeFlix Brewhouse to host sneaky grand opening — blog Follow this company , Samsung Techwin Co. and Robert Bosch GmbH, accusing them of infringing on its video analysis software patents.

According to the most important report, however, “Nortel Patents Sold For $4.5 Billion To Apple, EMC, Microsoft, RIM, Ericsson & Sony [...] And, given just how aggressive these companies have been with patents lately, you can rest assured that “license” demands will be made and there will almost certainly be lawsuits. Progress via the courtroom, apparently.”

Well, it wasn’t too difficult to see this one coming. A year ago, all that was left of Nortel was a giant patent portfolio that everyone knew would result in a bidding war. At the time, people predicted the portfolio was worth an astounding $1.1 billion. Back in April, Google made news by placing a $900 million “stalking horse” bid for the patents, which had many people shaking their heads at the size of the bid. Google had made it pretty clear that it was seeking to buy the patents to keep them from being used by others to sue and block Google. Of course, Microsoft whined and complained to the government about how unfair it would be if Google won the patents. The government was apparently unconcerned.

They are building another thicket/cartel like CPTN — a subject I covered in some of the videos below. What a travesty.

YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 6

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 7

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 8

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 9

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 10

Or as Ogg:


Commentary on Patents – Failed Audio Tests (Audio Hangups)

Amid problems with the audio, this attempt was made to provide a rough overview of the problem with software patents

YouTube: Commentary on Patents – Failed Audio Test #1

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Commentary on Patents – Failed Audio Test #2

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Commentary on Patents – Failed Audio Test #3

Or as Ogg:


Next video will be the next episode of the show, hopefully (Episode 2).

Software Patents: A Personal Perspective (Part I)

Summary: Personal perspective on the subject of patents and software patents in particular

WHILE STILL experimenting a little with recordmydesktop, I’ve created a bunch of videos as a sort of test run before the next TechBytes Video episode (with Tim). In the following I talk a bit about software patents.

YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 1

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 2

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 3

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 4

Or as Ogg:


YouTube: Ramble About Software Patents and Their Harms – Part 5

Or as Ogg:


Part 2 will be out soon.

Retrieval statistics: 19 queries taking a total of 0.132 seconds • Please report low bandwidth using the feedback form
Original styles created by Ian Main (all acknowledgements) • PHP scripts and styles later modified by Roy Schestowitz • Help yourself to a GPL'd copy
|— Proudly powered by W o r d P r e s s — based on a heavily-hacked version 1.2.1 (Mingus) installation —|