Show 'i i i i V h ' i ' i l ' -- iilLMi - 'ry wVV-V- ' j VZ-- : Y: YY '' Page’ The Herald Journal 4 s 'V'v I 1 i y t v' " ' w i A New Old Model of Develbmind pity for servi ecu - Service in copying arid' distributing zSmicain getting features in your timeframe - Scmceimintegrating Scn'iccln training i : T ’ beats Best Case: You never nay for the software a&am Worst Case: You pay for the software one time By Matthew Syme I : r is Said “Time waits for no man” True enough Yet since that ‘ : : : t first incident long ago wben one man waited impatiently for another man humans have devised methods for calculating just how late the other man is for an appointment Thus began our endless quest to regulate v ' time : As Earth inhabitants we base our measurement of time mainly on me of Earth's rotations known as a “day” Obvious to most anyone this measurement only gets us through to sometime tomorrow Further refinements were necessary and evidently the ancient Egyptians determined 24 segments in a day fit well within their zodiac cycles A few centuries later the Mesopotamians concluded that further divisions by 60 seemed natural enough and so today we trace our past and future paths through tune following a few archaic conventions summed up by any modem dock: 24 hours ina day 60 min- utes in an hour 60 sec-pods per minute and soforth Somewhere along the line we deter-mined to divide the day in half with two twelve hour intervals Due to the wobbly nature of die Earth’s rotation found the sun morning comes at v cyclical times during die year and cana seemed djis event hardly good adate on which to base a constant Therefore the first minute of die day landed in the middle of die night presumably marked during an equinox or when the length of day night approximately equal While this makes perfect scientific sense I initially found it somewhat challenging explaining to a pragmat- - ' exactly why a day $ starts during the middle of the night Eventually we concluded that if a ' day couldn’t start at sunrise it would seem rather silly for tomorrow to start just after lunch From this expe- rience I recognized that our time- - ' keeping conventions are so ingrained in our presem day culture that unless challenged we almost never give them a second look But we’ll take a second look at seconds a bit later For a few centuries all was well in the world of clocks until two human endeavors introduced new wrinkles in our efforts to track the passage of time: transcontinental railroads and recreation As trains crossed the wide expanse of America and other continents rail companies discovered that nearly every municipality along their routes set their clocks at wildly dif-- v ferent intervals It became neuly impossible to plan arrivals and departures for so many different time settings As a consequence modem i were first adopted by the in railways the latter part of the 19th Century and later institutionalized in the U& by fch act of Congress in' : linniit Jon “maddog" Hal head 6f a nooproftl advocacy group called Linux International' spoke to Utah State University's Fiee Software Club Friday folks Linux is a religion One of their : five-year-o- time-zon- ' ' Friday wild gray hair and his face covfod with a long bushy white Vi' 4 A couple of Linux-base- beardJon ’‘maddog” Hall kxfod like some kind of Old d lllnn ft nh sost OpDOOS 10 MKfvBOn WVKjOWI ' rfoh arts tor SZOOSm (Both of thoao indudo offieo suites Microsoft Windows Microsoft Offieo must ho sopamMyl LJndowsora ($S9) :tS8u8E4Xim and pur-cftaa- ad s ' (S4O4120) opwna to V1 Mtoroaolt OMoawhich soSs for $4004600 OpanOfllcajora (tost and' can read and wdla n Ifooaoft A tow f Oflic Unux-bose- d fitofomwts) KOfficeorg (free fxit not I- - entirely ' compatible (with Mfcroeoft Office) &?:M StaiOlBce'aieunjbom ($79 ' tor home ues free tar educalton' buyers Compatible itwith i Testament prophet standing before his believers Friday evening at Utah State University: He preached for hours about the future about unit- ingfor the common good about the fall of the enemy And about a man who is lighting the vyay for all to follow His wands were met with the impassioned cheers of those who desire to share this new gospel with all the world He posed a question testing tiieir faithfulness : “What year was the first prirted to Linux?” 1994!” several astute followers It has yet to have a 64- who “fod two-anda-h- alf - -- : SAN FRANCISCO — When 321 Studios Inc hit store shelves wife software that could back up DVD I movies onto blank disksit seemed like a smari idea for households foil of rambunctioqs children who pky with their copies of “Finding Nona’’' V But Hollywood studios sped mid federal courts have limited what the St Charles company can I legally offer its customers What I rough-and-tum- Mo-tas- ISO years earlier the ed ’ ht ttfo snow lacks the ability to ovande measures drat padlock l : tech support folks at 321 Studios and was told there was likety some commercial content The software conflict with other applications on also indees it unnecmarily difficult to author and burn homemade video ‘Y my PC 'The suggestion from 321 Studios clips digital photos and music toy was to uninstall or disaUe the fol-blank DVDs and CDs f y Y l installed all 191 megabytes of - lowing itemk they existed on my anh-pira- cy ’Y-'-l'Y- - See SYME on C12 c : die DVDXTREME suite on my PC and grudgingly filled out the inva- give “product activation” form The minimum system requirements are Windows 98 or better a Pentium III 500 megahieitz processor 128 ' ' megabytes of RAM and 20 gigav: bytes of hard drive space You’ll also need a DYI writing disk drive if you want to bum your ' f prfijects to a blank DVD back couldn’t I up my Knowing DVDs I experimented and honeymoon with my wedding ' DVD:: I 0I store-boug- access to it by making the source code available to the public - Source code is the decipherable code computer programmers use to create a computer xogram In the case of Microsoft and other proprietary software companies that code is translated into undecipherable binary code before the public ever lays eyes on it which protects lefoal property but alsp makes fix- ing bugs or making modifications and improvements impossible for engi- -' anyone other than a Microsoft neer I '' Think of it this way: it’s like foiy- ing a new car but the hood is fused ‘shut You can’t see how it works you can't fix it if it breaks and you can’t make adjustments or improve- ments to better suit your jifestyle V The concept of open sotfree soft- ware is similar to the way the : intel-mon- ly ’ i ' ' ' J SeeLINUXonC12 home PC or a standalone DVD 'play- DiiectCD (Roxio’s burning tool) DLA or Drive Letter Access (a er I dragged 21 photos into this used tool that allows you to gram added an MP3 audio file for and dreg drop files direedyto a background music and burned the recordable disk drive) InCT) (Nero’s to a blank DVD cket writiM software) Norton y However the newly burned DVD - j PC: pro-wide- mfi boa ofohenVpt- prognuns I usbSSslSiuSl' riwwwis pqwIqw up failure there rind moved on t lv The nod application tried on DVDXTREKffi was AudioX 'Ibols ly v ucnwiiuknnMedu ' Player when I tried to play it and dislcwMn’treadable atall in my Panasonic DVD player ' Despite this lackluster software release 321 Studios isn’t giving up foe tight to provide consumers with a rnefood for making backup copies of their DVDsthd tool1' : More-boug- ht : : A bit systfoT boomed Hall who heads up a nonprofit advocacy group called Linux International The crowd roared with laughter They all knbw the answer but one man in the hack succumbed to the urge to yell it out anyway “Microsquish!” he hollered Microsquish also known in these circles as MicroSoft but most com- referred to elsewhere as Microsoft is the great and abom- inable church to this crowd and Bill Gates its billionaire mastermind is Son of the Morning The religion these people most of whan belong!to USU’s Free Soft- ware and Linux Club practice revolves around die central idea of open source or free software Tbe two terms have subtle differences: but ultimately the same mission: Y cheap if not frceconmuter soft-ware that can be modified and improved upon by anyone vfho has ’ ' By Ron Harris Associated Press Writer ' industrialized northern hemisphere recognized in tile early 20th Century the potential benefits of collectively moving clocks ahead one hour dur- ing the summer months Knownas Daylight Saving Time the initiative dtedehergy conservation and “extended daylight” for formers But as any golfer or angler knows DST merely provides more time for j Jojntheclub 1918 DfODOSCdbV BcDI&lillQ By Jasmine Midiaelson is head surrounded by es Initially prophets was at USU Photo by Brent Stevens v: ld l Franklin soine some To v WindowTMedia it’s redundant to but Audio files tools many people already have pVDX Show was im next claim: ingit would turnmyagital photos into s DVD movie wife nifty trensi-tio- n effectstobe playedon my Y ‘wavor : appeals and emergency stity requests to federal appeals courts in New "i York and Srm Francisco arguing ' that the l998 Digital Millennium Y Copyright Act unconstitutional!: Too ted die legal fight also has ' r taken away the best software 321 Studios had to offer — at least for how- i ’ |