Teaching A Lesson

Wouldn’t you know, just when I swear off posting for the day, a thought occurs to me. I’ve been hearing this story all morning.

So, we kill four of them when they attack, and we pursue and kill another twenty seven. Nobody tells us if any escaped, which is to me the most important statistic, from a psychological standpoint.

Think about it. The Pali terrorists don’t mind dying if they get to take Jews with them, so it’s hard to dissuade them from their attacks even by killing them. But if every time the Fedayeen attack us in Iraq, they have no survivors, and we sustain no or minimal casualties, rendering the whole thing futile, I’ll bet the attacks will stop pretty quickly. Imagine their state of mind if they send out a squad against the Americans, and none of them return.

It may in fact be possible to dissuade them, even without killing them all. After all, contrary to the conventional wisdom of the media, it’s hope that fuels such attacks, not hopelessness. We have to take away all hope from Saddam’s minions (which will in turn boost the hope of the Iraqi people).

This is a lesson that we have to figure out how to apply to the Israeli situation. Unfortunately, I don’t think the State Department gets it yet.

My AV Monitor Cry When I Run It

I just got a virus email:

Klez.E is the most common world-wide spreading worm.It’s very dangerous by corrupting your files. Because of its very smart stealth and anti-anti-virus technic,most common AV software can’t detect or clean it. We developed this free immunity tool to defeat the malicious virus. You only need to run this tool once,and then Klez will never come into your PC. NOTE: Because this tool acts as a fake Klez to fool the real worm,some AV monitor maybe cry when you run it. If so,Ignore the warning,and select ‘continue’.

Yeah, I’ll be sure to do that. You’d think these virus writers would put a little more effort into at least making it look like English was their native language…

Report On The New Space Age

There’s an article at Space.com that says that the Columbia disaster hasn’t dampened enthusiasm for the X-Prize or public space travel. If anything, it’s enhanced it.

And here’s a good roundup of what’s going on in the current issue of Wired (via an anonymous commenter in this post). Some choice bits:

Thompson and Ressi are after more than profit, though. Having participated in and grown rich from the Internet revolution while still in their twenties, they have boundless faith in their own power and importance, not to mention the power of technology. They feel betrayed by NASA, which promised so much with those first ounces on the moon. It’s been 34 years since Armstrong took his small step, and they’re still waiting for the next leap, for colonies on Mars and the liftoff of the starship Enterprise.

“For the dotcom folks who got a lot of money in tech ventures,” says Thompson, “the evolution from mainframe machines to the PC is parallel to the shift from the traditional space industry to space tourism. Yes, the X Prize is suborbital. But that’s just a baby step, like the first PC. People said there’d never be a market for them and look what happened. Most techies are geeks who as kids read science fiction, and we all dream of something grander.”

Ressi nods with Buddha-like certainty as three more flasks of sake arrive. “I saw the potential of the Internet to change the world,” he says. “Now I believe the world will be meaningless without the changes that going to space will bring.

“Of course I won’t recoup the money I put into X Prize in the next 10 years,” he says, refilling cups all around. “If space tourism works, some folks will make tens or hundreds of millions of dollars. But that’s not my focus. History has proved that exploration is always worth the cost and risk. There’s just no way to guarantee human survival unless we move off this planet – and our days as a space-faring race start the moment someone wins the X Prize.”

And this one, from John Carmack:

Carmack is pragmatic about how space exploration is luring him away from gaming. “We’re always pushing hard for innovations in our gaming software, but if I disappeared tomorrow there’d be a lot of people doing similar things,” he says. “It’s appalling how in aerospace, we’ve been using the same stuff for decades. There’s a big difference between what’s been done and what’s been possible and that’s the definition of opportunity…”

…”I think there’s definitely a tourism market,” he says, “but I don’t know that it’s huge.” That’s why he’s looking at making a variety of spacecraft that could do everything from carry tourists to launch trinkets – or even go orbital. “You’ve got to build a lot of vehicles to learn. Space has been mythologized way out of proportion,” Carmack says. “We’ve just not had enough people doing it to be comfortable with the challenges. We’re blas

Biting Commentary about Infinity…and Beyond!