000601.html

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Thu, 01 Jun 2000 12:00:00 GMT
New stuff at the bottom...

LostBrain is a very funny place. [brianf]

Brian tells me there's a new "high reliability" monitor for Windows NT Server. It has only the red and green color guns.

Yahoo now has a Web Logs category. [q]

While looking for a list of color names and RGB values, I encountered this nice table of Netscape & Java Colours and this HTML cheat sheet at Canadian Mind Products, the home of Roedy Green. His Java & Internet Glossary also looks good. Lots and lots of information on this site! Freeware and shareware. Political essays, too.

Nearly everything you read signed "God" is just somebody putting their words in My mouth. -- God

Lew Rockwell at WorldNetDaily - Abolish the presidency: Lew reminds us today of this piece that he wrote in September of 1998, when it looked like Komrade Klinton might be removed from office. Both removing slick Willy and leaving his office vacant are still good ideas. [lew]

Wendy McElroy at LewRockwell.com - Trial By Jury: A Source of Freedom or a Bad Idea? A good exploration of trial by jury in the light of the "fully informed jury" strategy. My memory is that juries were invented in England as a way for the people to protect themselves from tyranny by the king. Nowadays they help the king to enforce his tyranny. [lew]

William Michael Kemp at Sierra Times - 50 Million Round 'March' considerations: I'm confused after reading this. Don't know why. You tell me. [sierra]

Lew Rockwell at WorldNetDaily - True Republicans don't love the bomb: good argument that the U.S. should unilaterally destroy its nuclear arsenal. [wnd]

Truly, the amassing of nuclear weapons sounded the death knell of the Old Republic, and if we ever intend to restore American liberties, it is imperative that we junk these weapons.

Jacob Sullum at Reason Online - Real Savings: Only the truly stupid could do a worse job than Social Security at investing for retirement. [market]

In his Cato paper, Tanner estimates that a worker born in 1935 who never earned more than the minimum wage would be receiving retirement benefits of $20,728 a year if he had been allowed to invest his payroll taxes, compared to $6,301 a year from Social Security. "A single-earner couple whose wage earner is 30 years old in 2000 and earning $24,000 per year," he writes, could expect to receive benefits totaling $875,280 from private investment, compared to $292,320 from Social Security.

Will Knight at ZDNet UK - Forget Napster, FreeNet is really scary... Good. [lt]

Charles Cooper at ZDNet News - Playing the Transmeta-AOL angle: Why Transmeta is Bill Gates' worst nightmare. [lt]

Paul Allen is sure to receive a phone call soon from his boyhood chum Bill Gates. Something along the lines of: "Hey Paul, how ya doing? How's the guitar gig going? Hope everything's fine in your neck of the woods and, er --- ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR EVER LOVING MIND?"

"Simplicity for Java is a 100% Pure Java Rapid Application Development (RAD) Tool for developing applications and applets using Java Technology on any Java-enabled platform." I haven't tried it. [cafe]

"BlueJ is an environment designed to make programming in Java simple, and to teach the object-oriented paradigm. It has a unique user interface that integrates the tasks of creating a set of classes, editing source code, automatic generation of interface documentation, execution, and debugging." It now supports Sun's JDK 1.3. I haven't tried it. [meat]

Michael Hall at LinuxPlanet - GNOME 1.2: A Giant GUI Leap: I haven't been using GNOME, mostly because Enlightenment crashed so much. I doubt they have prebuilt binaries for LinuxPPC, so I'll probably wait until the next CD comes out, but if this article is to be believed, GNOME will be worth trying. [lt]

Cameron Pritchard at the Free Radical Online - From Washington to Weasels: Thomas Jefferson's philosophy founded this country. Now we've got Bush and Gore. We need to return to a proper, rational, political ideology.

We are living in an age of anti-ideology. The major political parties have decided that political theories or broad principles are an albatross around their necks. The word ideologue is employed as if it were a synonym for dogmatist. Every mainstream party flings the term around as if it were some kind of disease they don't want to catch, and happily uses it as an easy way of abusing their opponents. To act out of "ideology," they seem to argue, is to be unconcerned for practical reality, as if being able to deal with reality effectively requires that one ditch one's ability for abstract thought.

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