Author Archives: Kevin

About Kevin

Kevin Jarnot is a technologist who lives just South of Boston, MA. He is currently employed as Chief Technology Officer at DebtX, a financial services technology company based in Boston.

Inside the Cold, Calculating Libertarian Mind

All Americans value liberty, but libertarians seem to value it more. For social conservatives, liberty is often a means to the end of rolling back the welfare state, with its lax morals and redistributive taxation, so liberty can be infringed in the bedroom. For liberals, liberty is a way to extend rights to groups perceived to be oppressed, so liberty can be infringed in the boardroom. But for libertarians, liberty is an end in itself, trumping all other moral values.

Dr. Iyer’s conclusion is that libertarians are a distinct species—psychologically as well as politically.

via Matt Ridley on Libertarians | Mind & Matter – WSJ.com.

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New comet might blaze brighter than the full Moon

A new comet has been discovered that is predicted to blaze incredibly brilliantly in the skies during late 2013. With a perihelion passage of less than two million kilometres from the Sun on 28 November 2013, current predictions are of an object that will dazzle the eye at up to magnitude —16. That’s far brighter than the full Moon. If predictions hold true then C/2012 S1 will certainly be one of the greatest comets in human history, far outshining the memorable Comet Hale-Bopp of 1997 and very likely to outdo the long-awaited Comet Pan-STARRS (C/2011 L4) which is set to stun in March 2013.

via New comet might blaze brighter than the full Moon.

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Yes – Close To The Edge Live 1975

With Patrick Moraz on keyboards!

Yes – Close To The Edge Live 1975 HD – A Celebration 2DVD set – YouTube.

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Get Save As back on Mountain Lion’s File menu easily and without hacks

This actually works!

Get Save As back on Mountain Lion's File menu easily and without hacks | TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog.

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How Microsoft Lost Its Mojo: Steve Ballmer and Corporate America’s Most Spectacular Decline

Great article on how Microsoft’s corporate culture under CEO Steve Ballmer has led to its decline:

At the center of the cultural problems was a management system called “stack ranking.” Every current and former Microsoft employee I interviewed—every one—cited stack ranking as the most destructive process inside of Microsoft, something that drove out untold numbers of employees. The system—also referred to as “the performance model,” “the bell curve,” or just “the employee review”—has, with certain variations over the years, worked like this: every unit was forced to declare a certain percentage of employees as top performers, then good performers, then average, then below average, then poor.

“If you were on a team of 10 people, you walked in the first day knowing that, no matter how good everyone was, two people were going to get a great review, seven were going to get mediocre reviews, and one was going to get a terrible review,” said a former software developer. “It leads to employees focusing on competing with each other rather than competing with other companies.”

Supposing Microsoft had managed to hire technology’s top players into a single unit before they made their names elsewhere—Steve Jobs of Apple, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Larry Page of Google, Larry Ellison of Oracle, and Jeff Bezos of Amazon—regardless of performance, under one of the iterations of stack ranking, two of them would have to be rated as below average, with one deemed disastrous.

For that reason, executives said, a lot of Microsoft superstars did everything they could to avoid working alongside other top-notch developers, out of fear that they would be hurt in the rankings. And the reviews had real-world consequences: those at the top received bonuses and promotions; those at the bottom usually received no cash or were shown the door.”

via How Microsoft Lost Its Mojo: Steve Ballmer and Corporate America’s Most Spectacular Decline | Business | Vanity Fair.

Posted in DeepThoughts, Management, Tech | Tagged | Leave a comment

Come fly the insecure skies, a lesson in IT deployment at one of the largest US airports

C’mon, folks. A simple vulnerability assessment would have discovered this issue.

In what can only be called the mother of all inept network deployments, guest access was left on this Internet-facing content management system and a file marked PUBLIC that was supposed to be only for the staff of the airport had a sub folder called /security which had the airport’s network documentation, security procedures documents, airport terminal hardware manuals and internal financial documents. All of this was found within the first 30 minutes of only basic Googling from his airplane waiting seat, says Halfpap.

The biggest concern is the lack of response from the airport’s IT staff:

Armed with this information he contacted the airport in January 2012 to talk with the CIO or someone in charge of information security. But Halfpap got no response. No voice mails were ever returned. Halfpap tried contacting McCarran Airport via email as well and via its public Twitter account; he got no response.

See via “Come fly the insecure skies, a lesson in IT deployment at one of the largest US airports” on betanews.

Posted in Security, Stupidity, Tech | Tagged | Leave a comment

Children warned name of first pet should contain 8 characters and a digit

From NewsBiscuit, via JWZ:

Popular pet names Rover, Cheryl and Kate could be a thing of the past. Banks are now advising parents to think carefully before naming their child’s first pet. For security reasons, the chosen name should have at least eight characters, a capital letter and a digit. It should not be the same as the name of any previous pet, and must never be written down, especially on a collar as that is the first place anyone would look. Ideally, children should consider changing the name of their pet every 12 weeks.

Expectant mothers have also been advised to choose carefully where they give birth. Anywhere that has a place name is best avoided. These are listed on maps, which are freely available on the Internet.

It’s a good idea too, security experts have warned, for children not to get friendly with certain teachers. For instance, Miss Smith may be enriching your son’s education but he should try and see if he can’t make a favourite of Father O’Grinnighan-Scythe II, even though it may mean a lot of staying late.

We tried to call Barclays’ security expert R0b Ste!nway for a comment, but he was not available for 24 hours, having answered his phone incorrectly three times in succession.

via Children warned name of first pet should contain 8 characters and a digit | NewsBiscuit.

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Library of Congress obtains astronomer Carl Sagan’s personal papers

How cool is this? Much respect to Seth MacFarlane.

Until recently, all [of Sagan’s personal papers] had been stacked in filing cabinet drawers in the Sphinx Head, a tomblike secret-society building that became Sagan’s home in Ithaca, N.Y. For years, Sagan’s widow, Ann Druyan, had carefully preserved her husband’s archive, hoping to find an appropriate repository. The Library of Congress had long been interested; the library owns the papers of such innovators and scientific luminaries as Alexander Graham Bell, the Wright brothers, J. Robert Oppenheimer, E.O. Wilson and Margaret Mead.

Carl Sagan

Along came Seth MacFarlane, creator of TV’s “Family Guy” (and director of the new movie “Ted”). Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson introduced MacFarlane to Druyan when Tyson and Druyan were developing a remake of the enormously popular 1980 PBS series “Cosmos” that made Sagan famous. In the process of backing the new “Cosmos,” MacFarlane provided an undisclosed sum of money to the Library of Congress to buy the archive from Druyan. The library will officially announce the acquisition Wednesday.

via Library of Congress obtains astronomer Carl Sagan’s personal papers – The Washington Post.

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DarwinTunes software ‘evolves’ music without composers

DarwinTunes software 'evolves' music without composers – latimes.com.

Noise filtered through generations of listeners eventually becomes melodic, offering insights into how our tastes evolved.

Robert MacCallum of Imperial College London and his colleagues asked 120 undergraduates to listen to continuous loops of the computer-generated tunes and rate them on a 5-point scale that ranged from “I can’t stand it” to “I love it.” The tunes were also posted on the Web (at darwintunes.org/evolve-music), where anonymous critics added their feedback.

Each time tunes were rated, the half that came out on top were selected to contribute to the next generation of music. Each successful melody would mate with another successful melody, spawning similar-but-not-identical daughters before expiring from the collection.

Tunes that didn’t make the cut were relegated to the evolutionary trash heap without leaving behind any musical legacy.

Posted in Geek, Music | Leave a comment

Gigantic Ancient Fish Carcass Found by 4 Canoeists Near Boston

Gigantic Ancient Fish Carcass Found by 4 Canoeists Near Boston [Photos] | BostInno.

Four women were canoeing on the North River in Quincy, just 20 miles south of Boston, when they paddled across a dead fish. But this wasn’t any old trout. The carcass they came across was that of a six-foot long, 75 pound female ancient Atlantic sturgeon, according to the New England Aquarium.

Rather than scream and paddle in the other direction, the four women did what any other ladies would do, of course: They pulled the sturgeon into their boat, and contacted local wildlife authorities. The dead sturgeon was then brought to the New England Aquarium, where the head veterinarian, performed a necropsy on the fish. The carcass will be donated to the Harvard’s Museum of Natural History.

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