Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob:
You are living in the past my friend! 1) It costs nothing to make works available to the gutenberg project. 2) There are other endeavors, such as gutenberg (some colleges request help in obtaining materials, Virginia is only one)... 3) There are excellent peer-to-peer filesharing networks (Take a look at Winmx--it guarantees no spyware or malware in the app) 4) IRC allows direct DCC SENDS of data from one chatter to another. (this begs for someone to set up an amateur chat room anyway--MIRC is an excellent IRC chat client.) 5) There are free Web Hosting ISP's on which you can host data, files, etc.--all you need to know is HTML markup language and an FTP client (ask your kids/grandkids--they can set it up for you--if not, I will give some assistance.) 6) Ebooks can be emailed and shared. 7) etc., etc., etc. The only excuse of why not to is ignorance and lazyness... Regards, John -- I would like to point out, I do appreciate the "Been there--done that!" posts. Indeed, now your observations, comments and discourse should be filled with wisdom--I am listening!!! "Bob Miller" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 10 Apr 2005 13:26:40 -0700, "John Smith" wrote: To all: It is my understanding that all gov't materials, since paid for by taxpayers, are non-copyright. Also, any material before 1923 would have expired copyrights and, undoubtably, a significant amount of material will have been published "public domain"; so, does anyone have a list of non-copyright materials pertaining to antennas? Or, any ideas of how to obtain the information on how to assemble one. A website of non-copyright materials concerning antennas would be a great asset to this community... Regards, John I'm not sure I understand your point about copyrights. Even if a copyright has expired or never existed in the first place, anyone who gives you a printed piece is going to charge for paper and ink -- all the manufacturing costs involved in a printed piece. Or, if you're just looking for web materials, it costs money to put up a web site. You'll be charged to help defray those costs. What are you expecting? bob k5qwg |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 09:11:37 -0700, "John Smith"
wrote: Bob: You are living in the past my friend! 1) It costs nothing to make works available to the gutenberg project. 2) There are other endeavors, such as gutenberg (some colleges request help in obtaining materials, Virginia is only one)... 3) There are excellent peer-to-peer filesharing networks (Take a look at Winmx--it guarantees no spyware or malware in the app) 4) IRC allows direct DCC SENDS of data from one chatter to another. (this begs for someone to set up an amateur chat room anyway--MIRC is an excellent IRC chat client.) 5) There are free Web Hosting ISP's on which you can host data, files, etc.--all you need to know is HTML markup language and an FTP client (ask your kids/grandkids--they can set it up for you--if not, I will give some assistance.) 6) Ebooks can be emailed and shared. 7) etc., etc., etc. The only excuse of why not to is ignorance and lazyness... Regards, John I'm sure all of the above exists, but it sounds like you are basically for people working for free and not being compensated for their labor. I'm about as damned-liberal as anybody on this group, but I believe people who create intellectual property should be paid for it, and if they want their kids and grandkids to benefit, so be it, and any deadbeats outside the family who want to glom on to it for free, to heck with 'em. There are way too many folks who want free music, free film, free books, free everything -- but if we stop compensating people who create intellectual property, it will simply stop being created. bob k5qwg |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob:
You have a right to any opinion you so choose to hold, as an American indebited to my forefathers sacrifices--I would defend such with my life... Personally, I find you underhanded, subversive and purposefully obstructive, I cite your posts, to this point, as proof, the rags you attempt to hide such behavior behind are simply revealing to the point of being invisible! NO ONE HERE has/is even hinted at illegal, immoral or unethical practices--EXCEPT YOU! I suspect your motives are much less than honorable and just an attempt at interferring with the free exchange of information and knowledge... There is a natural tendency of humans to help other humans. No where is this better demonstrated than one amateur helping another; It is a notable and highly redeeming quality of the human condition... You my friend are one who is on the verge of being a "Control Freak!" I suggest you re-analyze your motives, intentions and goals and certainly how others will view an "unbridled tongue!" Regards, John -- I would like to point out, I do appreciate the "Been there--done that!" posts. Indeed, now your observations, comments and discourse should be filled with wisdom--I am listening!!! "Bob Miller" wrote in message ... On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 09:11:37 -0700, "John Smith" wrote: Bob: You are living in the past my friend! 1) It costs nothing to make works available to the gutenberg project. 2) There are other endeavors, such as gutenberg (some colleges request help in obtaining materials, Virginia is only one)... 3) There are excellent peer-to-peer filesharing networks (Take a look at Winmx--it guarantees no spyware or malware in the app) 4) IRC allows direct DCC SENDS of data from one chatter to another. (this begs for someone to set up an amateur chat room anyway--MIRC is an excellent IRC chat client.) 5) There are free Web Hosting ISP's on which you can host data, files, etc.--all you need to know is HTML markup language and an FTP client (ask your kids/grandkids--they can set it up for you--if not, I will give some assistance.) 6) Ebooks can be emailed and shared. 7) etc., etc., etc. The only excuse of why not to is ignorance and lazyness... Regards, John I'm sure all of the above exists, but it sounds like you are basically for people working for free and not being compensated for their labor. I'm about as damned-liberal as anybody on this group, but I believe people who create intellectual property should be paid for it, and if they want their kids and grandkids to benefit, so be it, and any deadbeats outside the family who want to glom on to it for free, to heck with 'em. There are way too many folks who want free music, free film, free books, free everything -- but if we stop compensating people who create intellectual property, it will simply stop being created. bob k5qwg |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 17:18:06 GMT, Bob Miller
wrote: but if we stop compensating people who create intellectual property, it will simply stop being created. Hi Bob, This assertion is untested by simple virtue of the extension of copyright, and the continued abuse of patents. Being untested does not mean that it defaults to being true. Insofar as left/right/liberal/conservative politics go, Ben Franklin was very much against patenting. In his era, plagiarism was rife, but its penalty was weighed against purpose and claims and punished in the form of opprobrium. You were far more likely to be sued for slander than stealing ideas. Back then, if you couldn't pay the fine, they threw you in the slammer. But back to the assertion, there is every proof that this is simply not the case. One of the chief contentions that America is shipping its software jobs east (the far east, not Jersey) is that Asians will soon crowd the field with better programmers (or simply more, cheaper programmers) who will flood the capitalist market with their product. Creativity being what it is, and what intellectuals do, such product that is free and unencumbered has already washed the Asians out like a tidal wave. I can point at one example of creativity that confounds the monetary need for patent or copyright: http://sourceforge.net/ where you and others may observe more than 98,000 software packages are being offered for free (this is NOT crippleware) that are being built by more than 1 Million designers (creative individuals). They do ask for pledges, but this is not a condition of use. The Chinese don't need more programmers to burn illegal copies of M$ Office, but neither do I need to fly to Shanghai to buy them. Instead I can download Open Office for free (and certainly at less hazard to asian infections). Do I breathlessly wait for the next iteration now called Longhorn? That horse is so lame, M$ hasn't realized that the field has left it behind. If a million Indian Engineers could put it on wheels with a hemi under the hood, it still wouldn't pay their wages in rice when it hits the market. M$ daily pays the cost for exclusivity that eclipes copyright or patent. As far as creativity go, copyright and patent offer abysmal return unless you are a one note symphony composer. The ONLY software I have ever purchased in the last 10 years was for Agent (the newsreader I am now using to post to this forum) and Outpost Firewall. Both items were to protect me from the third piece of software I bought, M$ Win2K Pro which could now be easily replaced with Linux (which I now build custom business systems on). Absolutely every application that is mainstream can be replaced and upgraded to for FREE. In the spirit of compensation, not to the individual(s) who designed Open Office, but to the community at large, I have contributed my own Web Search Engines for FREE. My effort to produce them expended as much time, but far less cash in my pursuit of 5 patents (ego certificates). If any want to argue that this is far different from Mickey Mouse protection, I would offer that even if his copyright expired, there would still be protection through Trade Mark, and Licensing agreements. Really, the laws are manifestly and explicitly for intimidation alone. You can be sued for distributing the image of Moe Howard, but sky through with Abraham Lincoln's mug on a T-shirt. This is not about creativity, merit, or intellectual worth. It is simply about government sanctioned monopoly (and again, manifestly and explicitly so). As TR observed 100 years ago, expanded monopolies are bad for America. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 11:15:34 -0700, Richard Clark
wrote: Absolutely every application that is mainstream can be replaced and upgraded to for FREE. Hi All, In today's news, from the Seattle Times: "'My belief is that open-source software is going to help drive the acquisition cost of software down toward zero,' he said, a shift that will require software companies to move 'over to a maintenance and support model.'" and this is a quote from Martin Taylor, Ballmer's chief of staff at M$. Now, taking that cue about future trends in protecting the rights of those who create intellectual property, you may notice that patents and copyright have ceased to have market leverage in an industry that is content dominated. On the other hand, maintenance and support are strictly labor centric. How long do you think 1million Chinese will take to hone their mid-west accent? How long do you think it would take you to brush up your Mandarin or Cantonese? The economy of off-shoring is not found in how many calls the Chinese Help Desk can answer, but in how many answers the Chinese Help Desk can make understandable. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Richard Clark wrote:
On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 11:15:34 -0700, Richard Clark wrote: Absolutely every application that is mainstream can be replaced and upgraded to for FREE. Hi All, In today's news, from the Seattle Times: "'My belief is that open-source software is going to help drive the acquisition cost of software down toward zero,' he said, a shift that will require software companies to move 'over to a maintenance and support model.'" and this is a quote from Martin Taylor, Ballmer's chief of staff at M$. KWAAANNNNG! (or other odd sound as you see fit) Yes indeed, it just may drive software companies to adopt a different paradigm. It is about time! Right now, it would seem we need a new improved operating system every two years, according to the comapnies that make such things. We need a "new improved" word processing software, laden with "features that no one will use, according to those same companies. When in fact, what I want is an operating system that simply works, and allows me to see my files and work with them. And programs that work. Which we will not see until we DON'T have a new operating system every two years. - Mike KB3EIA - |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Download Slackware Linux and spend the time to learn it, you will NOT be
disappointed! There maybe a "LUG" near you (Linux Users Group) they will be more than happy to help your learning curve--and from time to time they host "Install Fests." Just load up some old computer laying around (a 133 Mhz or better, and "better" I do recommend) and you will go home from the install fest with Linux on the machine! Regards, John "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... Richard Clark wrote: On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 11:15:34 -0700, Richard Clark wrote: Absolutely every application that is mainstream can be replaced and upgraded to for FREE. Hi All, In today's news, from the Seattle Times: "'My belief is that open-source software is going to help drive the acquisition cost of software down toward zero,' he said, a shift that will require software companies to move 'over to a maintenance and support model.'" and this is a quote from Martin Taylor, Ballmer's chief of staff at M$. KWAAANNNNG! (or other odd sound as you see fit) Yes indeed, it just may drive software companies to adopt a different paradigm. It is about time! Right now, it would seem we need a new improved operating system every two years, according to the comapnies that make such things. We need a "new improved" word processing software, laden with "features that no one will use, according to those same companies. When in fact, what I want is an operating system that simply works, and allows me to see my files and work with them. And programs that work. Which we will not see until we DON'T have a new operating system every two years. - Mike KB3EIA - |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Richard Clark wrote:
If any want to argue that this is far different from Mickey Mouse protection, I would offer that even if his copyright expired, there would still be protection through Trade Mark, and Licensing agreements. Why would anyone pay to license something for which the copyright has expired? Really, the laws are manifestly and explicitly for intimidation alone. No. They are also meant to encourage R&D, advance the state of the art, and promote entepreneurism. You can be sued for distributing the image of Moe Howard, but sky through with Abraham Lincoln's mug on a T-shirt. That's where the similarity ends. But where does it begin? This is not about creativity, merit, or intellectual worth. It is simply about government sanctioned monopoly (and again, manifestly and explicitly so). As TR observed 100 years ago, expanded monopolies are bad for America. The Truthspeak word for pessimist is realist. ac6xg |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 14:57:52 -0700, Jim Kelley
wrote: Why would anyone pay to license something for which the copyright has expired? Hi Jim, That is simply repetition. The extension of copyright makes that moot. Can you name a single Disney product with copyright that was not licensed as a trademark right? No one is seriously interested in Little Mermaid knock-offs but the Chinese. And how many dozen are Disney going to sell to Chinese at $20 a pop when they can only afford 25 cents? When the capitalists go into China with Hammer and Tong over copyright issues, they are not selling anything. And since the introduction of Linux as a substantial option, the Chinese have shown even less interest in M$. There's the payoff of investments in Hammer and Tongs on a sliding scale. Really, the laws are manifestly and explicitly for intimidation alone. No. They are also meant to encourage R&D, advance the state of the art, and promote entepreneurism. This lies somewhere between misty-eyed dreaming and the soft-porn of industry pleas. There is absolutely no grant nor entitlement, much less funding that is vested into R&D by the government's supporting monopoly. Copyrights and Patents are boldfacedly proclaimed as rights of enforcement ONLY. No R&D lab I've been in had a legal department, and most companies that did have a legal department, bought their R&D and simply did the marketing. If ever there was a case study of this, it is M$. Chairman Bill's dad was NOT a mathematician NOR a scientist, he was a Lawyer. He couldn't care less about copyright of DOS1 because by the time any issue made its way through the courts, no one would be using it. Can you name the writer of DOS1? So much the value of copyright for a trillion dollar industry. An entrepreneur is the other guy with the money, not the one with the intellectual property. I've pitched against more than $100Million worth of these types, and most of them would stare daggers at you if you uttered you had Patent pending. They know how to do that themselves, and they certainly don't want competition seeing their names as assignees in public records. Jim, you got any of your own patents? Ever copyright any substantial work? How much did it tilt the balance ledger? There's reality. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 16:36:31 -0700, Richard Clark
wrote: Jim, you got any of your own patents? Ever copyright any substantial work? How much did it tilt the balance ledger? There's reality. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC One example, the people whose names follow the "created by" credit on a successful (and copyrighted) tv series have been known to make mountains of money. bob k5qwg |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
The FAQ (Well, Question 1, at least) | Homebrew | |||
The FAQ (Well, Question 1, at least) | General | |||
WTB Really Skinny Whip Material for 1/4 wave two meter | Antenna | |||
legal aspect of internet radio | Broadcasting | |||
Roger Wiseman material | Policy |