Apple threatened to sue me…

16 08 2006

As seen previously, I had quite a week in regard to some screenshots taken from a DVD I got at WWDC. The DVD was a preview release of Mac OS X ‘Leopard’, and I posted several screenshots on Techpedia.org. The screenshots were, I am proud to say, the first to hit the web.

While the attention and the traffic were cool, the downside is that Apple considers screenshots a iolation of the NDA that we developers agree to when we join the ADC program. Needless to say, I got a cease and desist from Apple via email.

After a couple of days and a few email exchanges with their lawyer, I opted to remove the screenshots, for several reasons.

*Yes, in looking at the agreement for ADC, screenshots are listed and are certainly protected.
*I like Apple. I love Apple. If Apple were a fruit, I would eat it.
*I don’t have the money to get sued/fight a losing battle, just so I can be an internet tough guy.
* I’m just a simple cave man…your ‘electricity’ and ‘words’ scare me…
*I don’t want my $1500 ADC membership revoked.

Anyway, it all ended nicely I guess. The Apple lawyer sent me back the following message:

Thanks for removing the screenshots, Scott. Apple appreciates it.

Regards,
Ian.

To which my new best pal zeverken said:
ApplePleased.jpg

:)

Anyway, by this time there are HUNDREDS of sites using mine (and their own) screenshots, so maybe someday I can put mine back up. Of course, by then they will be irrelevant, but oh well.



60 dead puppies…

16 08 2006

This is just sad. I don’t even have a smartass comment.
:(

Link to the story…

The US Department of Agriculture joined state and local authorities yesterday in probing a tractor-trailer fire that killed dozens of puppies in Lowell on Monday afternoon after a thousand-mile journey from the Midwest to New England pet stores.
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Investigators searching the charred 40-foot trailer said the fire, which suffocated some 60 puppies before firefighters arrived, was probably sparked by an overheated ceiling fan.

When Deputy Lowell Fire Chief Patrick McCabe arrived at the truck, he said, the flames had burned through the roof.

“We got the fire knocked down,” he said. “But it was already too late — there was no hope for saving the puppies.”

State Police spokesman Robert Bousquet said no charges had been filed yesterday, but his department planned an “involved investigation to make sure that there was nothing that was inappropriate.” The state fire marshal’s office and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals are also investigating.

The USDA is looking into whether the death of the puppies, being delivered from Hunte Corp. of Goodman, Mo., violated the federal Animal Welfare Act. USDA spokesman Darby Holladay said the department had no “prior enforcement” against Hunte Corp.

Officials with the company, one of the nation’s largest brokers of puppies , did not return repeated calls yesterday seeking comment.

About five dozen puppies from 8 to 12 weeks old were housed in cages inside the air-conditioned aluminum trailer that caught fire. All of them perished. The vehicle was traveling on the access road from Interstate 495 south to Route 3 when the driver, Joseph Price, 40, of Joplin, Mo., received a radio call from another truck driver alerting him that flames had broken out in the back of his tractor-trailer.

Price and another driver traveling with him, William Iriarte, 50, of Nesho, Mo., were delivering the puppies for Hunte Corp. State Police cited the driver and Hunte with three violations unrelated to the fire, for having defective brakes and an expired inspection. The vehicle was held in police custody as part of the investigation.

The truck had made a stop about 4:15 p.m. at a pet store in Salem, N.H., and was headed to Debby’s Pet Land & Aquarium in Nashua. The Nashua store’s owner, New England Pet Centers, receives 30 to 50 puppies a week from Hunte Corp. for the chain’s 10 stores, according to a company spokeswoman.

Hunte is “a very upstanding company,” said New England Pet Centers spokeswoman Kim DuRoss. “The cages are beautiful. They’re ventilated and clean — it’s like a puppy hotel.”

But the Humane Society of the United States said the dogs’ deaths highlight a widespread problem with the national puppy trade that connects dog breeders with pet stores.

“There might not have been anything they could have knowingly done to prevent this — that will be determined by the police — but the way to prevent a similar incident like this from happening again is to quit carting thousands of puppies around the country in tractor-trailers every day,” said Stephanie Shain, the society’s director of outreach. “The journey is too long, and they’re moving them like they’re cartons of toasters.”

The Missouri Department of Natural Resources investigated a Hunte kennel facility in 2003 after receiving complaints about how the site disposed of dead animals. Inspectors cited the company for violating state clean water and waste laws. They called the trenches of dead canines they discovered “marginally compliant.”

The kennel was close to violating the state’s dead animal disposal laws, which allow no more than 1,000 pounds of dead animals to be buried per acre, said Mark Rader, water and land section chief for the department. He said that most facilities bury dogs in landfills and that it is rare for a kennel to bury so many dogs on site. Radar said he did not know how the dogs died.

“As far as I know, they did respond to making changes and are in compliance,” he said.



V for Vendetta

12 08 2006

Rent it, buy it, steal it or whatever. But see it, most certainly see it.

“VoilĂ ! In view, a humble vaudevillian veteran, cast vicariously as both victim and villain by the vicissitudes of fate. This visage, no mere veneer of vanity, is a vestige of the vox populi, now vacant, vanished. However, this valorous visitation of a bygone vexation stands vivified, and has vowed to vanquish these venal and virulent vermin vanguarding vice and vouchsafing the violently vicious and voracious violation of volition. The only verdict is vengeance; a vendetta held as a votive, not in vain, for the value and veracity of such shall one day vindicate the vigilant and the virtuous. Verily, this vichyssoise of verbiage veers most verbose, so let me simply add that it’s my very good honor to meet you and you may call me V.”



Like to eat? Like to save money? Like Mike?

12 08 2006

Ok, that last one didn’t fit. But you should check out restaurants.com. You can get $25 gift certificates to pretty much anywhere for only $10.

VERY handy if you know you’re going to have a large group and want to pretend to be generous. I mean, if you are generous…
:)

Click the picture linky thing to check them out:



Baby, can you Digg your man?

10 08 2006

(Bonus points if you get the title reference)

Today one of my sites, Techpedia.org, got it’s digital ass kicked.

Digg.com is a very popular technology news site. Users submit stories of interest (not original content in most cases), and other Digg visitors vote them up/down based on the cool/usability/techy value of the site.

An article I posted on Techpedia a few days ago about Apples new OS, codenamed ‘Leopard’, contained some of the first publicly available screenshots of the new OS. Being at WWDC recently, i was one of the lucky 6000 people in the WORLD to get their hands on a preview release. I, of course, being a huuuuge geek immediately installed it and posted the screenshots and some commentary on my site.

Well, after a couple of days with a few hundred visitors, the Digg effect really kicked in, and yesterday and today we had over 50,000 visitors.

That’s not page views, my friends…that’s unique IP addresses. Yeah. More people than you, I and our familes combined know.
:)

So the server itself got its butt kicked. MySQL failed bigtime, as all of the screenshots were stored in the DB. Not the pics themselves, just the metadata for them and the filesystem references. But poor php, wordpress and mysql as a team were beaten down badly. OH, so badly.

At this point, I’ve created a simple html page with the images, and redirected all ‘real’ traffic to that page, to ease the load on the server and to alleviate the downtime for the other sites on this server. Sorry guys.

Anyway, it’s kind of a back handed compliment…I’m thrilled that my content is so popular, but at the same time, a little disappointed that only 2 of 5 visitors got to see it in context.

Ah well. That’s life on the internet, I guess.

Oh, if you want to see the content mentioned, check out: www.techpedia.org …if it’s up.
;)