AirPort

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Wed, 05 Jun 2002 12:00:00 GMT
From russmo.com:
A lie can travel around the world while the truth is putting on its boots. -- Mark Twain

I'm typing this on the Titanium PowerBook running OSX. Chicago VII playing via iTunes. I love this machine. My wife got an AirPort for it. Really nice not to have to grab the long phone cord and slink it across the kitchen floor. Just bring up Internet Connect and tell the AirPort to connect. Yes! Anybody know a good cheap AirPort-compatible 802.11b PC-card for Windoze notebooks? This page says that the Java software at http://edge.mcs.drexel.edu/GICL/people/sevy/airport/#Confiqurator knows how to configure the AirPort base station from any Java-enabled machine.

Derrick Story at O'Reilly macdevcenter - Flying High with AirPort - good article on the AirPort, including a link to Apple's AirPort Admin Utility for Windows, likely a better candidate for my office Dell notebook than the Java program linked above.

Steve Kent at MSNBC - There's no ignoring Doom III - Looks like something I'll have to get when it comes out, for my son's GameCube. Hehe. [faisal]

Not for the faint-hearted, Doom III merges scenes of intense violence with unbelievably believable graphics.

Thomas L. Knapp - The Corruption of the Law - why the war on freedom, er... some drugs, is a really bad idea.

Let's be clear on this:

When a political candidate promises a more vigorous prosecution of the War on Drugs, he or she is promising to do everything in his or her power to jail your children.

He is promising that real crimes won't be investigated on his watch so long as there's a chance to pull down a crack ring.

She is swearing that the corruption of law enforcement will not be impeded in any way, shape or form if her vote counts for anything.

He is vowing to drain the treasury, discard the Constitution, ruin the lives of untold millions, sponsor violent crime, increase addiction, ignore legitimate priorities, and conduct a disrespectful burlesque on the sacrifices of those who have given their lives , fortunes and sacred honors to secure and defend our rights for over two centuries.

Remember this -- and keep it in mind when considering whether such a candidate deserves your vote in the Congressional elections next month. Chances are that the Libertarian will be the only candidate who isn't holding that club over your head.

Rick DeStephens at KeepAndBearArms.com - Bob Stewart's Trial: Empty Building, Empty Justice - five years for selling a gun kit. [kaba]

Bob was willing to apologize and accept responsibility for his actions but he had difficulty understanding why he had to alter his position taken during the trial in which he said he was unaware of violating the law. The questioning and conferencing went on for many, many minutes. The hang-up continued to hinge on the word "knowingly." "Did you knowingly and unlawfully possess machine guns and firearms?"

The judge repeated what she wanted several times. But the last time she repeated it, she perhaps mistakenly or absent-mindedly left off the word "knowingly." This might have been Bob's chance, or maybe he would later have just have to sign a document with the phrase "knowingly violated." I don't know. Be that at it may, Bob said he was unable to agree to those terms.

How odd is it that someone who says that he knowingly violated a law is given a lighter prison sentence than someone who could not say that he did it knowingly. Bob Stewart's case aside, the person who says he did it an knew it gets off light than someone who did it out of ignorance. Justice? Or coercion to get a lighter sentence in exchange for the judge feeling better about herself?

Washington Times Editorial - The right to bear arms - The District of Columbia's ban on private handgun ownership is about to be challenged in court as unconstitutional. I won't hold my breath. [kaba]

D.C. residents may soon enjoy their Second Amendment rights and have the right to defend themselves. There will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth from the gun-control lobby, but more than 25 years of strict gun-control laws have demonstrated the bankruptcy of disarming law-abiding citizens. It's time to change course. By taking such a bold stance, Attorney General John Ashcroft may have paved the way to making it possible.

Add comment Edit post Add post