Lawful Commerce in Arms Protected

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Sat, 22 Oct 2005 12:00:00 GMT
From root:
"Ignorance and bungling with love are better than wisdom and skill without." -- Henry David Thoreau

# Attack Cartoons - It's a pun, dammit - cartoon commentary on Hillary Clinton. Hohohohohohohoho.

# The Gun Guy - National Ammo Day - the week of November 19 is National Ammo Day/Week. Remember to buy at least 100 rounds of ammo, or components to load same. [gunguy]

# Ryan Singel at Wired News - Furor Grows Over Internet Bugging - the Fucking Communications Commission is doing their damndest to kill Voice over IP. [claire]

# Gun Owners of America - House passes S.397 - My title. Theirs was too long. S.397, the "Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act", passed the house on Thursday. GOA bemoans the trigger lock and "armor piercing bullet" study amendments that sullied the bill, but thanks GOA members for preventing Feinstein from adding a new "assault weapons" ban. [claire]

# GeekWithA.45 - Senate Version of Lawsuit Immunity Passes! - The Geek isn't nearly as worried about the "unclean" parts of the lawsuit immunity bill. [geekwitha.45]

# freeculture.org - Cereal Solidarity - Rocco Monteleone's cereal bar is being sued by Cereality for, get this, pouring milk on their customer's cereal. Cereality claims to have a business method patent on "adding a third portion of liquid" to cereal. First, kill all the lawyers. [picks]

# TomFlocco.com - Bush--Cheney CIA/Plame case indictments released this morning - read with a grain of salt. No hint of this at any mainstream news outlet. If only... Not that whoever took over would be any better.

# Stuart Feldman at Queue - A Conversation with Alan Kay - Alan Kay is always interesting. Here they talk about the history of programming languages, including, of course, Smalltalk. [cafe]

If you look at software today, through the lens of the history of engineering, it's certainly engineering of a sort--but it's the kind of engineering that people without the concept of the arch did. Most software today is very much like an Egyptian pyramid with millions of bricks piled on top of each other, with no structural integrity, but just done by brute force and thousands of slaves.

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