ProLink USB HSDPA Modem Updates

Posted in Free and Open Source Software, Programming and Technical, Ubuntu on September 27th, 2010 by doctormo

If you have trouble with a USB HSDPA modem being stolen away by the usb mass storage device (you get the windows drivers in a disk on the desktop, but not the device in network manager) then try usb_modeswitch. Which is available in lucid but there are updated packages in Odyx’s ppa if those don’t work for you:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:odyx/usb-modeswitch
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install usb-modeswitch

Make sure the device isn’t plugged in, and then try and plug it in. If that doesn’t fix it, try a restart. If that fails then message here and we’ll see what we can do to fix it.

We’re trying to stop the complex guides for enabling various devices. Ubuntu is about computers for people, not only for the courageous command line users. Part of that is turning guides into workable and permanent solutions. If you see a guide that is making you compile things, stop and ask the guide writer if there is a ppa or other solution yet and if not could that be worked on?

Once we have a ppa that works, it’s MUCH easier to get the fix into the next version of Ubuntu than with a guide online. We also have to fix and remove old guides which make Ubuntu out to be very complex.

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Ubuntu's Internet Connection Sharing

Posted in Free and Open Source Software, Guides and HowTos, Multimedia Entry, Ubuntu, Video Entry on December 6th, 2009 by doctormo

I was doing a bit of a search for internet connection sharing this evening, you know like you do. And what I found was a bit of a mish-mash.

Plenty of people on the forums are currently or have in the past advised a method which is highly complex and involves a great deal of custom configuration. Take this thread: Howto Share internet connection in the Tutorials and Tips section of the forum. You get to this when you do a search for “Internet connection sharing ubuntu” and this forum post is from 2005.

To correct some of this misinformation, I’m posting here this evening a quick video guide for how you deal with sharing from one ethernet port to another. I’ve asked my good friend David Edwards to record his first video, he uses WindowsXP for all of his own work and doesn’t use Ubuntu normally.

So to share any internet connection method to your ethernet:

  1. Connect to your internet connection via WiFi, Ethernet or GSM as you usually do.
  2. Right click on the network manager icon
  3. Select “Edit Connections…”
  4. Go to your “Wired” connection tab.
  5. Click the “Add” button
  6. Enter the connection name “Shared Internet”
  7. Select the IPv4 tab
  8. Under Method, select “Shared with other computers”
  9. Click “Apply”
  10. Click on the network manager again, this time with the left button
  11. For the target ethernet port, select the new “Shared Internet”.
  12. Now plug in your computer via ethernet.

If you want to share your internet connection via wifi, then you need to use the “Create new wireless network…” to make a wireless network that other computers will be able to connect to. This automatically shares your internet connection.

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Treat Microsoft Different

Posted in Critique, Free and Open Source Software, Hat Talk, Politics, Ubuntu on October 25th, 2009 by doctormo

I was reading The Register as I do from time to time and was struck by the nature of comments concerning the European commissions battle to redress some balance to Microsoft’s illegal monopoly abuse with regards to internet browsers.

to give you some background: The EU convicted Microsoft of abusing it’s Operating Systems monopoly in order to gain a web browser monopoly.

The proposed solution from Microsoft was originally to not include any browser at all, effectively hobble the operating system in the EU in order to blackmail the EUC into a simple fine. It’s called playing hard ball. Unfortunately for Microsoft the EUC have decided to play hard ball back to them, deciding that that option wasn’t good enough.

Enter idea number two. To present all users of windows (XP, Vista and 7) who have Internet Explorer as their default browser, with a ballot screen. Effectively asking every user what internet browser they would like. The EUC are considering this idea, although Opera objects on grounds of I can’t quite tell.

OK back to the comments from the article above. There are a number of commentators who are of the opinion that it’s Microsoft’s business as to what to include and what not to include in their operating system, and that if we do not apply the same restrictions to the FreeDesktops like Ubuntu and Apple’s Mac OSX then it wouldn’t be fair.

Since the EU isn’t calling for a ballot screen in Ubuntu, the EUC must be trying to do something improper. Since it’s obviously not very good for a Free Market to have a commission simply making stuff up as it goes along in order to disadvantage one competitor in a market place.

This is a quote from the noted Economist Adam Smith:

The price of monopoly is upon every occasion the highest which can be got. – The Wealth of Nations, Book I, Chapter VII

The problem with Microsoft is that they are a monopoly. This is an economic term for a business who controls the market through being it’s only supplier. This means that the invisible hand of the free market is in chains, so long as there is only one to which all the control is focused.

What regulators attempt to do is redress some of the balances by supporting the competition (financial or regulatory) and/or creating anti competition laws which restrict some of the actions that a company can take in order to use their existing monopoly in order to gain a new one.

For instance, say there was only a single petrol/gas company who sold fuel. Now lets say that the company decided to get into the Hackney Carriage business (taxies). Because of their monopoly status, regulators would be (or should be) keeping a keen eye on what they do in order to break into this market and if they do something to restrict competition unfairly. If it’s seen that this fuel company is using it’s unfair advantage as a fuel supplier to create a taxi monopoly; the regulator has the power to step in and split the monopoly up into a separate taxi business and fuel business and making sure they stay separated in operation.

Let’s say a single company (Microsoft) manages to get a monopoly of the computer operating systems on desktop computers, through the bad handling of another monopoly owned by a different company (IBM). At first everything is going fantastic. Then they miss the boat on a new technology platform called “The Internet” and they’re finding that lots of people are using web browsers such as Mosaic/Netscape to get content via the world wide web on the internet.

Now suppose this company buys/borrows a browser for it’s self. They bundle this browser into their operating system for which they have a monopoly and they do not charge for it. Suddenly all the browser software makers have to compete with a product which is not only free (undercutting their business economics) but is also delivered to every single desktop user. Each of which is forced to buy IBM compatible desktop computers with a single operating system.

Through monopolisation they have rolled one monopoly (desktop computers) into another one (web browsers) and destroyed an entire market for software in the process.

Using their economic strength and their distribution monopoly Microsoft have killed off effective competition in a number of desktop fields: Web Browsers, Media Players, Word Processors, Spreadsheets, Networking Services and many more have all fallen to Microsoft and the companies that developed those ideas and software industries have been swept into the dusts of time.

Web Browsers was a particular worry, since as soon as Internet Explorer had destroyed the market for Netscape. The very standards of the World Wide Web as set up by the W3C began to erode. Everyone doing web development felt it, you developed for IE because it was what everyone had, no one cared that it didn’t follow the standards and it didn’t take long for a great number of websites to be completely incompatible with any other web browser.

So, what have I learned about monopolies? Well firstly they are economically damaging, they serve only to remove fair prices from the market and to stagnate the development of ideas. They are the very opposite of a free market economy and should not be allowed to occur, either through regulation or support for competition.

But what about now? Apple and Free Software is giving Microsoft a run for it’s money isn’t it? That’s fair competition, they can’t be a monopoly if there is competition right? Consider that I’m concerned with the IBM compatible desktop PC market.

Apple is a hardware and glorified life style product company, they don’t sell software to IBM compatible PC users. And if they did, Microsoft would just use it’s other newer monopoly in Office Productivity software to change their minds. Free Software on the desktop computer, it’s not a business, is very small and has no control over the supply. We in the community don’t tell OEMs what they will ship, we give OEMs choices and they choose to do the wrong thing for the market by shipping Microsoft Windows. Free Software is not a competitor because it’s an idea and a principle, not a business, and would be like Goliath vs the moon. Microsoft’s failed attempts to battle Free Software development actually look very similar to that image of a giant trying to battle the moon in my mind.

I believe that the EUC’s goal of regulating Microsoft is right and proper and that the commentators on those articles are simply misinformed about the nature of the beast. Economic freedom and fairness are all well and good so long as everyone is on an even playing field, but good government comes from knowing how to achieve that balance and not loose it to unfortunate history.

As a side note, I would love for the competition commission to award a great deal of money to Free Software development as a way of spuring on competition.

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Mozilla Firefox, Disconnected Installer

Posted in Hat Talk, Ubuntu on September 30th, 2009 by doctormo

When looking at the front page of my Mozilla Firefox web browser today I notice a curious thing:

Teach your old fox new tricks by upgrading to Firefox 3.5 today.

With a nice link to downloading Firefox, the only problem with that is that when I clicked on this download for Firefox 3.5 it downloaded a tar ball. My first response what “what the hell” and my second “A common user is not going to have a bloody clue what to do with that”.

There are a couple of things that are on my wishlist for Mozilla Firefox in Ubuntu, getting it so that upgrade links from mozilla themselves are not tar balls is a new one for the list:

  • Not using the gnome or kde keyrings for password management.
  • Not using XDG directories (freedesktop.org) for cache or configs.
  • Not using a user wide cookies system.
  • Not using the apt packager for plugin management.
  • Hiding user data (bookmarks, tags, history) in a config directory.
  • New! Advertising new version of Firefox and expecting “Linux” users to download tar balls
  • From Comments Profile-Guided-Optimization, so Firefox is faster
  • From Comments 64bit TraceMonkey and more time spent on 64bit FDO release.

Purely my own thoughts though, your thoughts are welcome.

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