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September 28, 2007 11:31 AM PDT

Supporting Star Simpson takes more than words

by Daniel Terdiman
  • 7 comments

Instructables is selling shirts with the message, 'Improvising Electric Devices is not a Crime.' Some of the proceeds go to help fund Star Simpson's legal defense fund.

(Credit: Instructables)

When I heard that MIT student Star Simpson had been arrested at Boston's Logan airport for wearing an outfit that incorporated what police called a hoax bomb, but which was really nothing more than a piece of electronic art, I was outraged.

I know that times being what they are, law enforcement needs to take security threats seriously. No one will dispute that. But what we're seeing, again and again, as in the case of the two Boston men arrested for putting up devices that were part of a Cartoon Network marketing ploy, is that police, media and prosecutors have a very hard time seeing the forest for the trees in these situations.

In Simpson's case, for example, there is every bit of evidence--anecdotal, I'll admit, as I haven't seen any legal documents or even the actual outfit in question--that the shirt she was wearing when she went to the airport to pick up a friend was nothing at all like a bomb, was a shirt she wore all the time, and certainly wasn't worn with any intention of scaring anyone.

Yet, she faces serious charges, and therefore serious and escalating legal bills to defend herself against something which, it seems to me and to many, many people, should have just been written off to a misunderstanding.

That's where my wallet and that of others comes into play. Right now, points out BoingBoing, on the site Instructables, you can buy a shirt bearing the slogan, "Improvising Electric Devices is not a Crime," a reference to the device Simpson was wearing that caused her arrest. Some of the proceeds from sales of the shirt will go to her defense fund, so I bought one. And hopefully when people like myself wear the shirt around, it will raise awareness that maybe we all should be willing to take things a little less seriously around here.

This isn't to say that police shouldn't be free to stop someone they see whom they suspect might be a security risk. But they should also be willing to recognize it when that risk isn't there, and let someone like Star Simpson go. Because it seems clear to me that if her case goes to trial, she will prevail, but at significant financial cost to herself and to taxpayers. And what use is that?

July 25, 2007 12:19 PM PDT

Statistics, Mac OS and Windows

by Tom Krazit
  • 54 comments

Quoth Homer: "Oh, people can come up with statistics to prove anything, Kent. Forty percent of people know that."

Something's a little weird about the data reported earlier this week by Net Applications, a Web traffic research firm, on global operating-system share. Net Applications tracks what types of computers are accessing the Web sites of its global network of clients, and it thinks that Mac OS X share is flat this year, while Windows Vista use is soaring.

The specific numbers quoted? Vista share is up to about 4.5 percent of Web users from virtually nothing in February, while Mac OS share has slipped from 6.38 percent in February to 6 percent in June, with the implication that Vista is eating into Mac OS sales.

This seems in stark contrast to what others are saying. Both the NPD Group and IDC have recently reported that Apple's Mac shipments have outpaced the overall market in the first half of the year. And Acer President Gianfranco Lanci has gotten a lot of attention for his comments that Vista adoption has been disappointing, with his PC company receiving lots of requests for Windows XP machines, not Vista.

So, let's look a little closer at Net Applications' data. Vince Vizzaccaro, executive vice president of marketing for Net Applications, said his company's network of 400,000 Web sites mostly includes small and medium-size businesses, but also a few consumer-oriented powerhouses like Best Buy. Net Applications makes software called Hitslink that lets those sites track what types of computer users are coming to their sites, and reports the aggregate data amassed by all of its clients.

Vizzaccaro thinks his company's data is more immediate than market share data, in that in can show trends more quickly than shipment data. He thinks there are two possibilities shown by the most recent Hitslink data: either older Mac users are turning in their Macs for Vista PCs, or Vista is growing faster than Mac OS.

If Mac users are indeed being persuaded to switch to Windows PCs by the introduction of Vista, that would be the first time I've heard that theory. If anybody out there can support that one, I'd definitely like to know, but let's toss that aside for a moment.

Of course Vista is going to grow faster than Mac OS. Just about every Windows PC (with a few notable exceptions) sold since February comes with Vista. Everyone seems to agree that the PC market is relatively healthy these days, so Vista adoption is going to grow with the pace of the PC market, and faster than the overall market because it's starting from nothing.

Let's look at the overall trends since last summer. The combination of Windows PCs (Win 2000, XP and Vista) visiting Hitslink sites in July 2006 accounted for 90.39 percent of traffic. Of course, there was no Vista then. This June, the same combination accounted for 90.46 percent of traffic, implying that if Vista is eating into anything, it's Windows XP and Windows 2000 usage.

The same comparison applied to Mac OS X? Last year, the combination of Intel-based Macs and older Macs accounted for 4.29 percent of traffic to Hitslink's sites. This June, it was 6 percent of traffic, with Intel-based Macs growing as PowerPC Macs decline.

So compared with last year, Mac OS usage is increasing faster than Windows usage. But I'm still skeptical of using these stats to project any kind of trend in the broader market, given the sample size. Netcraft says that as of November, there were 100 million Web sites on the Internet. And that number is growing faster than either company's operating system sales or the nauseating hype behind The Simpsons Movie (which I'm still going to have to go see).

Originally posted at Apple
May 9, 2007 3:48 PM PDT

Electronic Arts announces 'Simpsons' game

by Daniel Terdiman
  • Post a comment

Electronic Arts on Wednesday announced that it will release this fall a new Simpsons video game.

The announcement, by the world's-largest video game publisher, came just minutes before an invite-only press event in San Francisco where it was expected to make a "special announcement." It's not yet clear if the two announcements are one and the same.

(Credit: Twentieth Century Fox)

The game, which is expected to be released this fall in conjunction with Gracie Films and Twentieth Century Fox, will feature the familiar Simpsons characters, and presumably, the storyline. It will also feature the voice actors from the TV series.

"In The Simpsons Game, Homer, Marge, Bart and Lisa use exciting, all-new powers to save the world from rising chaos," EA wrote in a press release about the new game. "To help the Simpsons, gamers at home must journey through all of Springfield (as well as vast worlds beyond), vanquish an amazing array of villains, and fight their way through parodies of multiple popular games."

The game is slated to be released for the PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable, Xbox 360, Nintendo DS and Nintendo Wii.

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