Computing


http://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/why-free-software-and-apples-iphone-dont-mix

Two interesting commentaries on the continued prevalence of digital restrictions management (DRM) technologies in our society:

* 5 Reasons to Avoid IPhone 3G; the truth behind the shiny overpriced phone that lets Apple control your life.
* Refusing Digital Monitoring Policies; Microsoft’s plans to surreptitiously enforce their own concept of ‘manners’ on everyone else.

This week is notable in the lives of lovers of Microsoft Windows everywhere for two key events: the retirement of Bill Gates, who will now work full-time for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the retirement of Microsoft Windows XP, the operating system for lovers of the Teletubbies everywhere.

Microsoft is a company whose success is very much based on fate and being in the right place at the right time.  This has happened on two key occasions.  First, they were lucky enough to secure a deal to provide the operating system for IBM’s upcoming personal computer, which would end up dominating the market place.  This happened largely because IBM’s meeting with Digital Research failed.  IBM turned to Microsoft instead, then known for Altair BASIC and a notable letter which ushered in the proprietary software industry.  Microsoft bought out a company that did a cheap CP/M clone, this became MS-DOS and the rest is history and a legacy of drive letters.

The second occasion was the launch on Windows 3.1.  Windows 1 and 2 were relatively unsuccessful, but Windows 3.1 turned out to be ‘good enough’ and at the right time.  Based on its success, Microsoft broke off their collaboration with IBM on OS/2 and concentrated solely on Windows, turning their work on OS/2 into Windows NT which eventually replaced the MS-DOS line of Windows implementations which contains Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows ME.

Both of these developments were successful for one key reason: cost.  There were other computing platforms around at the time of MS-DOS; it was by no means the first and certainly not the best.  There were other graphical interfaces around at the time of Windows 3.1 (including Apple’s Mac OS, which lead to a lawsuit between the two).  Microsoft succeeded because these systems were relatively cheap compared with the competition at the time.  Back then, there was no Free UNIX implementations in a usable state.  There was no world-wide web, so marketing dominated user’s ideas of what was out there.  This is even more important when you consider that back then computer users were generally more adept than they are now that the general public have a computer in their home.  Microsoft was successful in the workplace; this was the first experience of using a computer for many and the use of Windows became an inbuilt part of our society to the extent that our children are now reared on it from an early age.

Ironically, it is cost that will be Microsoft’s downfall.  Why? Because the cost of Microsoft software has not fallen, but risen over time.  Comparatively, computer hardware is now cheap to the extent that a personal computer in 2008 can cost so little that the additional cost of Windows licensing takes up a significant percentage.  Don’t think you’re paying the Microsoft tax? It’s factored in there at some point, even if it’s not made clear.  Even the OLPC for the fair world will have a levy of $10 for a Windows license.

The other reason for Microsoft’s dominance is apathy.  The majority of computer users don’t care what they use, as long as it lets them write a letter to Auntie June thanking them for their christmas presents, download the Top 40 via iTunes or browse numerous hilarious videos on YouTube.  This is also why the Mac has become successful; they don’t have any ethical advantage over Microsoft (Mac OS X is equally non-Free and worse than Microsoft if just simply because people tend to trust Apple more) and sell their machines purely on the basis that it will be a bit more stable than Windows, look a little nicer and because the hardware is just shiny.

This is why releasing Windows Vista was the worse thing Microsoft could have done, and why it has effectively hammered the nail in their own coffin.  In XP, they had a platform that had stood the test of time to an extent.  It was by no means good, being more like a battered old armchair; comfortable and homely to many users.  But by the end of this week, it’ll be dead.  Microsoft are currently intending to support it on the new breed of eeePC-style computers, if just so they don’t let GNU/Linux systems get a look in; Microsoft arrogance couldn’t allow that.  And of course, people going out and buying Vista AND XP is double the profits for Microsoft.  However, try as they might to call buying a $50 XP install from Dell a downgrade, the computer industry in general knows this isn’t the case and Microsoft firmly have egg on their faces over Visaster.
Thus, they have to been seen to push forward with Vista, but doing so will only further irritate their users.  Microsoft has made many enemies over time, but now even its friends are turning against it.  XP was relatively stable and fast, being designed for machines circa 2001.  Vista, by comparison, is a behemoth, a stellar example of badly written code that needs vast computer resources to run what is in effect just an operating system. The apathetic users we mentioned earlier don’t use Windows; Windows for them is actually Microsoft Word or the like.  If running just the operating system itself requires ridiculous hardware, then adding applications on top just makes things worse, not to mention all the crazy physics-defying DRM ideas Microsoft has stowed away in there.  There are already lawsuits because ‘Vista-capable’ machines just…well..aren’t.

But Microsoft had to release Vista.  Why? Because their flawed model of proprietary software requires this.  To be seen as being active, Microsoft have to appear to be working on a new version of Windows to satisfy its critics and, more importantly, its shareholders.  There has to be something new in the pipeline to make more money.  The problem is making money on a new release means getting people to want to buy it and that means having something people want.  The problem is there is nothing in Vista for most people, and most people are satisfied with what they already have.  There may have been lots of copies of Vista going out, but the majority by far will be because it’s on the new machine Mr and Mrs Jones just bought.  And that counts even if Mr and Mrs Jones then download a copy of Ubuntu, wipe off Vista and install Ubuntu instead because little Johnny recommended it to them.

With Vista then, it seems the sadists have finally had about enough.  Unfortunately, rebelling against this seems to mean choosing another version of Windows at present; hopefully many can instead be convinced that a GNU/Linux installation would be a better choice, especially as XP becomes unsupported and its a choice between that or Vista.  Microsoft do seem to have made some laudable efforts to improve things in Vista, but as always with them these improvements tend to be rushed and/or flawed, and additionally, the majority of the audience that would appreciate these changes have long since left for pastures new.  The remaining Windows users are those who just want things to stay the same; if they wanted change, they’d have installed a GNU/Linux operating system a long time ago or maybe just gone out and bought a Mac.

It will be interesting to see how long Microsoft continue to survive.  Things have gone south ever since the monkey took the helm.  As a GNU/Linux user, it’ll be interesting to watch from the sidelines.  Hopefully this drama will keep Microsoft from irritating the Free Software community with even more with spurious patent claims…

I finally got down to making some progress on the new VT web app today.  This was mainly thanks to staying late at the department (still there now actually) due to it being Mesude’s birthday! I’m currently expecting Henry to turn up any minute so we can go down to Zizzi’s to celebrate.

Anyway, this morning I converted some of our old undergraduate projects to Mercurial and put them on the VT server.  You can now find the demonstrators system and the Recursive Meta Scraper there.  DCS Central is the name of the new project; a rather pompous name at the moment for what essentially is a small Java class I wrote ages ago to query the departmental printers and an XSL stylesheet which generates our current people listing on the VT website.

This currently only happens via a static XML file.  The next thing to do is to get a Java servlet firstly to do the processing (as opposed to the web browser) and then to make the XML generation dynamic, taking the people list from a database.  Finally, we add some stuff to the web app to allow us to modify this database.  And as a result the VT web site hopefully becomes a shade more maintainable.

There are still a few things missing from the stylesheet.  We don’t yet handle RAs and research students, but this shouldn’t be too different from the academics. The main addition is that students need a supervisor list and a thesis title.  The latter will eventually link to a longer blurb pulled from rmission.  I’m in two minds about including academic rmissions.  Most of their work should be maintained in projects which will also eventually be listed via vt.

There are also a few other modifications.  We need to allow the default makeperson URL to be overridden, mainly so alumni can be listed.  Alumni will only really differ in being listed on a separate page, so they should be able to use the same stylesheet and just be generated from a different link which does a different database query.

At least there are real results from this at last and not just ideas in my head!

Well yesterday turned out not to be a hacking day at all, but rather a day dismantling VT and installing a new disk (80gb from support).  It’s not yet active (we need some more downtime to setup the new disk, and move data back and forth) but it should mean we have a lot more room to breathe!  Thanks to Simon for his help with the beast; getting a new hard disc into a desktop case proved to be a very non-trivial process!

Today marks the start of hacking on the new VT web application. IcedTea6 and Tomcat are now available on VT, along with a wiki. I’ve also asked support to set up a vtdevel@ alias for us so I can keep track of who is using and abusing VT. The code for the web application will be hosted in VT’s mercurial repositories as usual.

Some planned features:

  • Generate some of the really dumb ™ VT web pages, like the people and project lists.
  • Generate publications lists from the publications database via George’s corporate author hack.
  • Handle seminar announcements
  • Monitor lab resources

Feedback welcomed.

Also a quick reminder to all that Google Summer of Code 2008 applications now close on the 7th of April. Hopefully we will have some successful students from UniShef this year.

Install Mac OS X on a case-sensitive (i.e. real) filesystem. It’s wonderful to watch how all the badly written applications break in strange and wonderful ways. Oh the joys of proprietary software development and not being able to fix completely stupid bugs like this…

No, this is nothing to do with James Bond. We’re now two and a half hours into 2008, and so it’s time to look back ponderously at 2007 — just like we looked back at 2006 last year…

January

Last year I struggled to remember anything from the first couple of months of the year. I put this partly down to it being fairly uneventful (I couldn’t remember much) and also not having a blog for that period (I didn’t start properly until September 2006).

This year, I’m struggling to remember much about the first couple of months of the year too. And guess what? — I have a blog. Guess what I wrote in it? Hardly anything. Looks like we’ve got a great couple of months to look forward to then if the last couple of years are anything to go by. Although with all the stuff that’s ‘about’ to happen, I have a feeling it won’t be true this year.

My main memory of last January is of Mike Stannett discovering the Internet. Most people would have discovered it before 2007, but not Mike. He got a new computer and developed a sudden fascination with all things net, insisting that we all get webcams and microphones so we could talk to him at home. I still don’t understand why, and fortunately by the time the next semester had started this obsession had somewhat subsided. I think it had a lot to do with wanting to stay at home to be honest.

In my 06 year blog, I mentioned Shaukat joining earlier in the year. At the end of January last year, he left. We made our first VT expedition to Jumbo’s as a goodbye meal. Going back to the beginning of the month, for some reason the first few days stick in my head because I didn’t go back on the 2nd, having an optician’s appointment, but Ramsay did with him and Mahmood ending up in a fire alarm practice outside in the cold. Weird how I remember that.

February

The first week of February saw Mike Stannett’s birthday, and we trooped down to see him the week before to give him a present. The other big event of the month, for me at least, was my trip to Brussels and FOSDEM. I remember planning to leave rather late because I thought me and Henry had to actually attend Siobh´a;n’s lectures for her module as well as do the marking. But it turns out we didn’t, so that, coupled with a late plane arrival and trying to find everything, made me get there a lot later than I would have ideally hoped to. I’ll be going again this year so hopefully the travel and stuff will be better. The event itself was great and I expect this year’s to be even better too.

March

There still doesn’t appear to have been much happening even in March, given that I resorted to using my blog to write dramas. But at least I wasn’t alone in blogging then because Mike was actually doing so at the time (although checking that link just now shows he has posted again for the first time in six months). Looking back at mine brings back a few interesting memories. And to blatantly re-use that format, that was the month that:

  • Simon bought a RISC PC which has since mainly festered in the corner of the lab.
  • Simon bought a GP2X which has seen more use.
  • Ramsay acquired a SGI box from Kirill which has since mainly festered in the corner of the lab (spot a theme here…?)
  • Zubair was mad enough to install Vista — oh how we laughed.
  • Scarily, that was the first time I talked about DynamiTE — has it really been that long?
  • Ibby passed his transfer report at long last on the 13th; unlucky for some but not for him.

But mainly one of just being in the lab I guess. I know there was a lot of demonstrating going on. Me and Henry taking packed COM162 classes with Sanaz, Ben and Swampi. Lots of the aforementioned marking. COM2030 tutorials for Georg. And the Turnitin stuff started to kick off as well, not to mention Crossover as always so that probably explains why not much else went on.

April

April always seems to be where things start to kick off, with May becoming a veritable tornado of activity. In 2006, it was the month we spent gallivanting around the country (BCTCS, MGS, Types, TFP and all that jazz) and April 07 was similarly pretty busy. Although my blog again shows my whimsical musings, it also clearly demonstrates a busy month. I suppose the most memorable bit is that bloody CONCUR paper. I spent two entire evenings in the lab with Mike while we cranked it out and while I spoke lyrically of it back then, the response to it clearly showed it didn’t smell of roses.

Speaking of MGS, Simon went off there again and this time Henry, Ibby and Peter went too. Memorably, Ibby travelled there and back every day, was less than diligent in claiming back the expenses for this, got lost, most enjoyed looking in the pond rather than at the lectures, made a racist slur, set the department in a bad light and phoned me every day. Not bad for a week’s work.

This was also the time of my eponymous blog about the Information commons. From what I’ve seen, it still all holds. In fact, in all accounts everything I’ve heard since has merely darkened my opinion, notably including its effect on the opening hours of St George’s and the name of the Main Library as well as its ridiculous mandated 24-hour policy. There’s no money to helpfully open St George’s for a few extra hours of an evening which students actually want, but keeping the Information Commons opening at 2am and during the Christmas break is a must.

It’s all been departures this year, and sadly April saw the unhappy story of Ravie leaving, as he lost funding to continue in Sheffield. He was given the option of continuing back home in Malaysia instead and took it. These changes have had quite an effect on the lab, and its makeup today is quite different than it was this time last year.

May

What a heady month May was! It even kicked off quite dramatically, when we did the final rearrangement of the VT lab to what it is today. I’m quite pleased with how it is at the moment, to be honest, although judging by what Mike Holcombe told Mesude it’s not that clear that we now have some space in there, and, thinking about it, the current space is pretty akin to the space that was there before the last shuffle. Interesting.

May was also the start of the Emily odysseys. I remember running in to her in the kitchen (not literally) at some point, Henry had past history of seeing her in the disgrace that is Embrace/Mingdom, and it all kicked off there, with us arranging a night out. That ended up being the same day that Alice left. Quite strange really, because I’d only recently got to know her through the whole Turnitin debacle. Both her and Em joined us on what was the first of several VT07 nights out that culminated in a trip to the Leadmill. It was a Thursday and I still think the best night we’ve had. Everyone made it to the end for one thing. It was also the only one Ibby attended (partially) — certainly the only time he came out clubbing and as a result lost his phone. I’m surprised, as I thought it was surgically attached. Strangely enough, only myself and Henry have been on all our many adventures last year.

It was also the month of the GRADSchool trip, which I moaned and whined about beforehand, but which turned out to be quite brilliant. I chronicled it all pretty fully at the time, in probably my most epic blog to date. But suffice to say, I made some good friends on the trip, maybe even learnt a little and had a good break from the usual hussle and bussle of the DCS. It even seemed to have a positive effect on Simon — well, for a few days anyway until he reverted. We’ve still got to have a reunion, which I hope will happen sometime this year.

Oddly, once of its most notably effects in the short term was the consequent rise (and later, demise) of Facebook. I’d actually become a member back in November of the year before, when invited to it by Fran. Me, him and Zubair conversed on there a bit but there wasn’t really much point. We were all seeing each other day in, day out anyway. It took off when I then used it to keep in contact with the members of Team S, my new-found friends from GRADSchool, but the straw that broke the camel’s back was Emily finding out. I don’t know how many times we messaged each other over the first few days but it became quite bonkers to be honest. Thankfully, things slowly calmed down until it was basically dead by late summer.

June

The 1st of June was marked quite notably by the inaugural VT lab party, which celebrated the start of summer, the leaving of the undergraduates and the successful completion of transfer reports for everyone from the 05-06 bunch. Yes, we actually had a party that wasn’t a VT Christmas party, nor just a few drinks and a chat in the retreat. This was a full blown thing with music, food, drink and even non-VTers (Emily, Sanaz, Ben, Swampi, Daniella, Julia and James all put in an appearance as far as I remember). And it didn’t stop there; we went out afterwards too, ending up in the Leadmill with a severly inebreated Mike Stannett (who me and Em had to roll in to a taxi) and Henry (T to his friends) who proceeded to fall over people and had to be delicately manouevered home by Julia.

On the way to the Leadmill, Henry instead decided to try Gatecrasher One. They didn’t let us in. It burnt down a week later. I swear there is no relationship between those two events, though no-one has yet been able to prove either way. Yes, June was certainly packed with events. We were invited to Alice’s party, but that somehow went awry. I organised two seminars, one being the return of Gerald and the other my final Theory SIG with Nick Bezhanishvili. That’s probably significant because of Emmanuel’s track record in inviting speakers in the first half of 2006, although we didn’t do that much better even with me in charge.

Also in that month, Peter Höfner left us to return to Germany, following some sausages and potato salad in the DCS quadrangle. Henry celebrated his birthday with a night out at Nando’s and Havana, proceeded by a rather pointless postgraduate research day hosted by the University. Finally, Sheffield was submerged by floods in the final week of June (usually one of the hottest times of the year) and we really needed our umbrella-ella-ellas (ay ay ay). What a rollercoaster that was!

July

Things started to dry out a bit in July. I remember taking a trip around the ghost town that Meadowhall had become, post-flood before returning to the university for the postgraduate barbeque. The most memorable event was of course the departmental picnic which was preceded by my move to VT Lab 3 and an afternoon spent with Mike and some old cassette tapes preparing the music quiz. That was the first time we didn’t make it to the end with Emily (the last three times we got a taxi back home together) and we haven’t managed it any time since either.

August

In August, we had a yearly visit from Barry, this time without his sidekick Monika. Memorably this marked the beginning of the collapse of party planning which didn’t really recover until November. Having had four successes fairly close together (the kick off in May, the June lab party, Henry’s birthday and the departmental picnic), we were trying to get something together for the day of Barry’s visit but this was scuppered by Simon’s Theory SIG arrangements and a general lack of interest.

The following week we did go out for the August birthday celebrations, but things went quite differently to our past events. To start with, Emily missed this one (she was on holiday as I recall). It was much more a VT affair. The usual triage of Henry, Emmanuel and Abraham were there, along with Stannett who was also becoming something of a regular. However, initially we also had Simon and Ramsay, and Mahmood also came along, being keen to finally try a nightclub.

My most vivid memories of that night are of us eating lunch outside at the University arms and then heading to the Harley for seemingly endless games of pool, with Mahmood being something of a dark horse. We’d lost both Simon and Ramsay by the time we moved over to RSVP, where Stannett was showing severe signs of intoxication and Mahmood finally gave up and went home, after being exposed to the volume of the music there.

Now a quintet, we ended up in hell, also known as Embrace, where I first took the position that popular venues are like popular music i.e. generally rubbish. The events I’ve been to since have been an order of magnitude better, and going off on my own to organise things has been one of the best things I’ve done since. Not that I don’t still enjoy our nights out — just as long as we end up at somewhere vaguely decent like the Leadmill and not a preposturously overhyped place such as Embrace. It really is no different from what Kingdom was and I knew that well enough by reputation before. The departmental holiday afterwards was so much better.

September

The first week in September was notable for my trip to Lisbon. The main thing I can remember is the heat which was all too much for me. I think I’d prefer future conferences to be in Antartica or something. Well maybe not, but at least somewhere where the temperature isn’t overbearing. On my return, I acquired access to the University CMS after jumping through the appropriate hoops, and Liang left us after completing his MPhil panel successfully. His desk was quickly taken by Csaba, who’s visiting John for six months. It was also the last month that Ibby was with us, as far as I recall. At the beginning of the month, he was organising gym sessions with me, but by mid-September he’d decided to take a year out. We’ve yet to see if he will actually return.

I’m reminded of him also because he was originally going to go to Gatecrasher’s 14th birthday party at Magna with me. In the end, he gave it up due to Ramadan, and I ended up going with Henry instead. It was a fantastic night, and something I’ve since experienced again with the Boxing Day event. I’m now looking forward to the Resurrection on the 22nd of March and the eventual return of Gatecrasher One around September (if I’m still around by then).

October

October was a month of quite a few nights out, but none of them involved the VT crew. On the 2nd, I visited the Tuesday Club for the first time and was treated to a brilliant show by DJ Yoda. The week after, it was the Octagon for Oakenfold (along with Ben Gold and Riley & Durrant who been at all three Crasher events so far). The month culminated with a return to the Tuesday Club on the 30th to see Skream and High Contrast. That was also my first experience of a D&B crowd though (or rather a student D&B crowd), which wasn’t pleasant. Let’s not dance, let’s just push each other about… what fun.

Back in the DCS, we gained two new PhD students, Andrea (who I’d already met in April when she came for an interview) and Mesude (who Mike told there was no room in the lab…). Both have proved really enthusiastic so far, and it makes a nice change to actually have some people who are willing to get involved, do things and be sociable. On the subject of social events, the last weeks of October also saw us kick off our postgraduate meetings (which Mike had mentioned to me back in July at the picnic) with free pizza and a second postgraduate meal (this time for new students) at K Pasa, having moved from Wokmania and its rather dodgy food (health inspectors anyone). Saying that, K Pasa has gone somewhat downhill since, and after numerous trips over the past six months or so, me and Mahmood pretty much say goodbye to it in December.

The postgraduate meetings were something of a trial to get going. The first one was attended by just me, Maslita and Mahmood and resulted in an e-mail and associated discussions which meant that the next meeting had only three people missing. Since then, things have settled down to just over half of the VT postgraduates attending. It will be interesting to see if this continues in the new year. Also in October, I acquired the role of Sun campus ambassador. It’s still yet to really kick off but things are looking promising (unlike with the Google debacle).

November

November saw our clubbing trips re-established after a few false starts and me going it alone for a bit. The first of two took place on the 2nd, where Emily rejoined me, Henry and Abraham. Csaba also joined us and we briefly had the company of Mesude, before she had to rush off for her Design Patterns meeting. Csaba made it as far as Reflex before he also decided to head for home, and we finished the night in the Leadmill again. Memorably, Emily went off home early, because her feet were aching and both Henry and Abraham headed off not long after. I finished the last hour or so off on my own before heading home when the club closed. It was quite empty given it was still middle of semester, and even more so by closing time, with the taxi driver also commenting on this on the way home.

The week after I returned to the Tuesday club for the big birthday bash and Pendulum. I was already a bit doubtful of it, after last time’s experience with the D&B folks, and was also feeling a bit tired. However, it ended up turning into a fiasco when the fire alarm went off not once but twice and we all ended up outside in the cold. We ended up seeing probably about an hour of Pendulum and went in the other room for about half an hour after they’d gone off to make up for it and also avoid the cloakroom queue.

On the 21st (a date chosen especially for this reason), we celebrated Emily’s 21st (actually on the 19th) with another trip out. The socials list proved its worth when Dave came along and it was one of our best nights out in my opinion. We kicked off in the Cavendish as usual, before going to the Varsity. However, we didn’t stay there when we discovered that they’d decided to show some football match that night. Instead, we headed for the Forum which was blissfully free of such torrid entertainment and we had a nice chat there going briefly to the Frog and Parrot (where we parted company with Csaba) and then the Leadmill. We were a little early, so we ended up having to wait to get in. Emily’s birthday tickets paid off when we all got a free drink, discounted entry and they enjoyed a bottle of champagne.

It had to be one of the weirdest nights though, given they had some bucking cow thing that people were riding on and they were playing all sorts of classic pop tunes such as the Spice Girls, PJ and Duncan and S Club 7. What I’ve said about popularity obviously rings true because it was packed to the rafters for this. I was soon pretty fed up of it and I think this was also felt by the others. Emily left early again and, in hindsight, I probably should have gone with her, as we left not fifteen minutes later.

December

December was indisputably the party month, though I feel only me and Emmanuel were really feeling the vibe. We had two VT lab parties, the first being a postgraduate one but this was nowhere near as successful as the one in the summer. Only the usual VT suspects turned up, and we reined it in by about 7pm and went home. It was however a good chance to try out the new speakers and amplifier before the Christmas bash the week after.

The VT party was really quiet to begin with and I don’t think it ever really took off for the academics. At 12pm, you’d not have thought there was a party imminent, and it must have took until at least 2pm before there was a sizeable amount of people there. They seemed to come in dribs and drabs and it was quite late on before the VT choir (myself, Henry, Mesude, Abraham, Emmanuel and Tony Simons) gave our rendition of ‘VT The World’. Fortunately, we were spared another slideshow from Tony, and the party took on a life of its own when it was left to just the postgraduates for the last few hours.

There was quite a final ring to all this, as this is likely to be the last Christmas we’ll all spend together. As a result, it’s a good job all three parties (these and the departmental one) were good fun, if not anything spectacular. It will be interesting to see what 2008 now brings and how VT continues to change…

If you haven’t heard already, Microsoft have acquired a 1.6% share in Facebook. The primary reason is advertising, for which they are already Facebook’s exclusive provider. However, I have a feeling there will be much more to it than the share size suggests, although Microsoft getting its grubby hands all over your data for targeted advertising is enough to begin with. To think Ballmer was preaching only the other week how Google read their users’ e-mail. Seems they like following in their footsteps, as this is very much akin to Google acquiring YouTube when it’s own attempt, Google Video, flopped. Windows Live Spaces, their Facebook competitor, is a similar also-ran.

I’m leaving as a result. I don’t want my data being used for who knows what, and it’s already lost a lot of the shine it had six months ago, now being littered with a deluge of bizarre applications. To add insult to injury, the fact that you can’t actually delete your account via the site (an e-mail to privacy@facebook.com is required) is ridiculous really. You can only deactivate your account, which is what Mike did early this year. And this is the reason I still have messages he wrote in my inbox… which interestingly I can’t delete, because the lack of a box for me to write a further message also takes away the Delete button.

So bye bye Facebook, it’s been nice knowing you, but I’m afraid you just sold out.

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