Rent-a-coder does your homework?

I’m sure some of you have seen this before, but I’m a little astonished to see this sort of thing done so explicitly. I suppose there are websites for buying term papers and stuff, but this is new for me.

Have a look:
Rent A Coder – C Basic Sorted Array List

Basically a student is asking someone to do his/her homework, using a programming contracting site. I see that the request was cancelled– hopefully the student rethought the idea– but it’s dismaying that it was even posted. There’s even a link to the course assignment webpage. It might be a joke, but I know that if I were doing it as a joke, I’d put up something more elaborate, and inject some more outrageous or humorous bits into the description.

Is this sort of thing common? I sure hope not. I like having faith in humanity, thank you very much.

Article on Daler Mehndi

Some of you may not have heard of Daler Mehndi. But, if you have, you know that, to know him is to love him. He’s a huge figure in Bhangra, a form of popular Indian music, and I must say that his songs are incredibly catchy and easy to like even for someone like me who knows very little of Indian culture.

So when my friend said that there was a big scandal about him, I had to look it up on the web. I found these articles talking about allegations linking him to human trafficking. Please, Daler, say it ain’t so!

[Rise and fall of Daler Mehndi]:http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/5922_442702,0015002000000062.htm
[A fallen pop icon]:http://www.deccanherald.com/deccanherald/oct26/sl1.asp

Those articles are a little old. A more recent article (dated October 26, 2004), [Cops and Robbers]:http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=57660 from the Indian Express mentions that the charges really had no supporting case.

So I guess that clears things up. Kind of sucks for Daler Mehndi though… going through all that scandal and crap because the local government wanted to pursue some sort of private vendetta.

Anyway… I’ll be listening to some more Tunak Tunak Tun and Bolo Ta Ra Ra Ra. Rock on.

Paul Graham’s “Good Bad Attitude”

Paul Graham writes a lot of awfully good essays. Here’s one about “hackers” and their opposition to copyright that I found quite good and thought-provoking. 🙂

Good Bad Attitude

Can I really support John Ashcroft?

John Ashcroft’s Justics Department supports some pretty scary legislation. Yes, this includes the Induce Act, and the [Piracy Deterrence and Education Act]:http://www.publicknowledge.org/content/legislation/hr4077 (linked for your convenience). Since I can’t directly vote Ashcroft in/out of office, perhaps this would mean voting for Kerry. Have a look at this article:

[Wired News: Ashcroft Vows Piracy Assault]:http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,65331,00.html?tw=rss.TOP

Unfortunately, the picture isn’t so clear, since [both of them seem to say]:http://p2pnet.net/story/2560 “we support copyright” equally vaguely. The RIAA seems to [contribute roughly equally to both sides]:http://www.opensecrets.org/softmoney/softcomp1.asp?txtName=recording though the TV/Movie/Music sector [seems to favor Democrats]:http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/indus.asp?Ind=B02 .

[Some guy]:http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/archives/000653.html seems to think we really should just consider educating the Republicans, since they’re supposed to support “less government,” “less regulation,” and “market determination.” Don’t forget to lobby your congressional reps, I suppose.

Please do vote. If you don’t like either of the two, vote for one of the smaller party’s candidates, so your dissenting voice can at least be counted.

Making pizza for the great leader

It’s a rare event for any foreigner to be in contact with the leader-recluse Kim Jong-il of North Korea. But making pizza for him? Indeed. Here’s the article: [BBC: Making pizza for Kim Jong-il]:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3559266.stm . It’s worth a listen online. The audio segment(I made pizza for Kim Jong-il) is supposed to air on [BBC’s Radio 3]:http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/ at around 2:40pm PDT, but I will probably forget. If you do listen, post a comment here, or on your own blog(and give me a trackback so I can read it).

While North Korea has [horrible prison camps]:http://www.hrnk.org/hiddengulag/toc.html , [horrifying human rights]:http://www.nkfreedom.org/important_nk_topics.html, and [virtually no freedom for individuals]:http://www.pbs.org/wnet/wideangle/shows/russia/map_nkorea.html , at least their great leader still gets to fly in foreign chefs to teach cooking cuisine to selected chefs. (sigh)

Great Hackers

Great Hackers

This is a really great article about, well, programming-type people. No, not about h4x0rZ… hahaha

IE’s monopoly slips (and OneNote)

Hey, I think Microsoft is perfectly capable of making some really great software, but sssshhh.. I think Internet Explorer is on its way out of dominance. Which isn’t a bad thing. Everyone still uses Windows for other monopolistic reasons, including those which existed when Netscape dominated.

An example of Microsoft’s really good software:
[Microsoft OneNote]:http://www.microsoft.com/office/onenote/prodinfo/default.mspx It seems to have all the stuff I was thinking of when I was telling my friends and family about my note-taking computer idea way back in the mid 1990s. Of course I also said I would only pay $200 for a device which would be replacing a couple years worth of notebooks, pens, markers, and highlighters. It’s still the first polished software realization, and with the tablet PC, it’s the first reasonable solution. Of course, Microsoft will probably try to patent everything in it, like “a software mechanism for a stylus to leave an overlaying colored trail on a touch screen,” because yes, *no one else* would think of letting you highlight stuff. Really.

Anyway, I digress. You probably want to read this [entry at Memex]:http://memex.naughtons.org/2004/07/08.html which talks about how Internet Explorer’s the security-holeyest browser, and how Microsoft needs to keep telling users that the software they have isn’t good enough, and they need to upgrade to the latest flawed Microsoft incarnation. I know, I know… other software is flawed too. So why stick with Microsoft? Open-source software used to be a source of frustration with me, but it keeps becoming a more and more credible alternative.

Examples of good free software:
[OpenOffice.org]:http://openoffice.org still needs some work, but really, I think it’s good enough. Occasionally, it crashes, but only about as much as a system with a slightly buggy device driver.
[MozillaFirefox]:http://mozilla.org/firefox is certainly *better than good enough*, with its 0.9.1 version being one that I’d recommend to my parents, and even my grandparents. Its resistance to popups and spyware alone will give them less overall headache.
[Knoppix]:http://www.knopper.net/knoppix/index-en.html continues to impress me. With a Knoppix CD, I can boot, read all of my windows files, browse the web, play DVDs and .avis, burn CDs and DVDs, listen to MP3s and streaming music, make office documents, and a bunch of other stuff, ( *here’s the kicker* )without installing or configuring anything. You stick the CD in, and it works. I think Knoppix should have a “mainstream” version that has less features and is a little dumbed down for people who don’t know that they need to run a program called k3b to burn CDs easier than “Easy CD Creator”. Seriously, when I was doing my periodic reinstall of Windows (OS decay and all), I was wondering why I didn’t just use Knoppix instead. But the answer came quickly…. [Monkey Island games]:http://www.worldofmi.com/ need Windows (or Mac, I suppose).

MT3.0 licensing update

Yesterday, [SixApart announced]:http://www.sixapart.com/log/2004/06/announcing_pric.shtml a new pricing structure for MT3.0. It seems reasonable now. I fit under the free license, and I have the flexibility to add two more disjoint, non-overlapping blogs. If I want more, I can get unlimited blogs, and I’d be able to add four more authors for $70. $70 isn’t that cheap, but if I really had to have more than three blogs, and my friends/family didn’t want to install their own copies, I can see it in the realm of possibility.

$100 for a no-limit personal license. Nice to see that there’s a cap. $100 for a license that lets you do anything isn’t all that bad. And with inflation increasing, pretty soon a hundred bucks won’t be that much money anymore. hah.

They lost a whole lot of points with their initial pricing plan, but this one wins them a whole lot of customer service points. It’s nice that at least one software vendor is listening.

Concert riders

At [The Smoking Gun: Backstage Pass]:http://www.thesmokinggun.com/backstagetour/index.html there’s an archive of “concert riders” which basically attach to the contract between a performer and the concert venue. It’s really quite amusing. Most of them seem to have basic stuff, making sure artists rake in as much as possible, and strictly denying the concert organizers from profiting from the artist’s brand.

Some interesting bits from Britney Spears’s contract rider include: specs for furnishments of the dressing room, and a fine charged in case the dressing room’s phone number is leaked. Don’t forge the specs on the catered tuna salad, and the required bucket of KFC for the band. 😀

Favorite Website Awards

From [K10K]:http://k10k.net :
[Favourite Website Awards (FWA)]:http://www.favouritewebsiteawards.com — It’s got links to a bunch of cool websites. Most importantly, it’s got a category for “recreation and games”, which has a bunch of nifty little stupid flash toys.

Check out [Simwork]:http://ezupa.com/simwork/

I’d better close that tab before it sucks away too much time. 🙂