From kragen@dnaco.net Mon Aug 10 14:40:39 1998 Date: Mon, 10 Aug 1998 14:40:38 -0400 (EDT) From: Kragen To: "Nathlich, James R. (JNAT)" cc: rebecalist@bossanova.com Subject: RE: Evolution (was: the truth behind the amazon buying spree) In-Reply-To: <5779E24720E5D11180E500805F6FF7E0ABEE68@con-msx2.backup.chevron.com> Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII X-Keywords: X-UID: 1169 Status: O X-Status: On Mon, 10 Aug 1998, Nathlich, James R. (JNAT) wrote: > [J.] To misquote something I heard recently.. "It's not a > revolution unless it involves automatic weapons". The 'power base' may > be shifting to infomation, but the change is glacial/evolutionary/ain't > gonna surprise Nobody. The futurists have been predicting this since > Naisbitt decided that 'futurist' paid better than 'bad science fiction > writer'. The power base is already information. In fact, it has been since at least the time Sun Tzu wrote The Art of War. To win a war, you need only two things: - to know everything about the enemy; - to be completely unknown to the enemy. Capital is almost irrelevant, except insofar as it helps these two aims -- and it does. > > There will be no change for the better, just change. The simple fact > > is > > that most people need to be led, and will allow themselves to be, no > > matter what the nature of the regime. > [J.] Platitude. Philosophy makes my head hurt this early in > the week. If there isn't any such thing as 'change for the better', > then I'm just not sure it's worth it to chew through the straps in the > morning, ya know? I think you're responding to a post that says, "There will be no change for the better," not, "There is no such thing as change for the better." > [J.] Ah, the open source software... official Buzzword of > August. OK, on behalf of the open-source (tm) community, I plead guilty to overhyping. > Seems like a good theory, but will it go anywhere? Well, that would be a reasonable question if it were a new, untested idea. But (as open-source hypesters are fond of pointing out) the Internet is built almost entirely out of open-source (tm) software. > I get visions of Mac, Unix and Peet's coffee running the > world, except for a band of renegades out of Seattle singing > angst-ridden songs, getting high on 'bucks, and pushing the cause of > this weird little 'Windows' operating system. Heh. :) Yeah, lots of people use Linux because they hate Microsoft. Lots of others use it because it does the job better, or because they hate proprietary software. Kragen