Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Dropbox

I have suffered because of this, and I want to tell you why.

Dropbox was made possible because of the Cloud, and it cannot be understood unless the Cloud is understood first. Wikipedia says:

Cloud computing is the on-demand availability of computer system resources, especially data storage and computing power, without direct active management by the user. The term is generally used to describe data centers available to many users over the Internet.

Dropbox (which is free) makes the cheap storage in the Cloud available to smaller users. 

Before we go into the details of how it can do this, we have to answer the question "Why does it want to do this?"

And the answer is "To make money for itself!" 

The Railroads did the same thing: the difference between what their service cost them, and what the user paid, went into their pockets. This was Capitalism: you paid money to make money. And this made everyone happy. 

Dropbox makes this easy for its users, but it could not make this perfectly easy. I will explain why. 

The Computer runs on Information. we have an Information Economy. Another word for Information is Data. And the presence of Big Computers makes Big Data possible - and profitable. 

That was a long statement, and I will shorten it to "Data is worth money!" And that is why Dropbox
is in business, To make money out of all the data people store in it. It can do this while protecting your privacy (it claims).

This a big claim, the same claim every cloud maker makes, and it is probably accurate. But you should be aware that they are using your data. You have to trust them to do the right thing with it.

If someone else wants to know what everyone else is doing on the Web, all they have to do is ask services such as Dropbox. Facebook also makes money this way - lots of money. 

We can now answer the questions "What is Dropbox? What can it do for me?" I will not go into any privacy questions.

Dropbox provides boxes that you can put your data in, In computers, data is contained in files. And this is what you put in your boxes.

You get a box for each of your devices  - a Laptop and a Phone, for example. And a box on their cloud.

You can get another box anywhere you want it, even in another country, as long as it has good Internet connections.

All of these boxes will contain the same data. Dropbox keeps track of all this data (using the Internet) and makes sure they are the same. You still with me?

On a laptop, you get a dropbox icon on your toolbar (on the bottom of the screen) you can click on, to get a handy window that displays all your files and information about each one.

Each time I add a photo to my Laptop, this also gets copied to my Dropbox. I have a folder there containing all my photos and videos.

As you can see, all this adds up to a lot of data, exactly what Dropbox wants. And for this reason, it makes it hard for you to delete data.

In case you missed the point, I will repeat it - Dropbox wants your data, and the more of it the better. In return, it gives you more data space. and helps you manage it. 

Monday, March 2, 2020

Once it's gone, it's gone

And it doesn't come back

What is it?
It might be your mind. Because when your mind (or a group mind) goes away, it is gone and doesn't come back.

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Prairie Divide

An ambitious plan to restore the grasslands of the past faces impassioned resistance from the present.

This is in the February issue of the National Geographic, which I subscribe to.

Not too long ago, the government permitted some of the Indians to sell their tribal land. Which they prompted did, and bought drugs with the money. 

This was an experiment that did not work.

Humeston and Shenandoah Railway

Wiikipedia

I have been trying to discover the Railroad that ran through Lamoni, Iowa. This article has a few dates, but not much else. As Wikipedia says:

This article includes a list of references, related reading or external linksbut its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Whatever this means. 

Few in the 19th Century were interested in keeping records. 


Fascinating Fascism


Fascist aesthetics include but go far beyond the rather special celebration of the primitive to be found in The Nuba. They also flow from (and justify) a preoccupation with situations of control, submissive behavior, and extravagant effort; they exalt two seemingly opposite states, egomania, and servitude.

As I have said elsewhere, this also applies to the followers of Joseph Smith, 150 years after his death. 

Latter-Day Saint

Many churches use this as part of their title, without being embarrassed by it.

One exception is the RLDS church that changed its name to the Community of Christ, which is a more modest title and represents a break with its Mormon past.

All the other churches are still following Joseph Smith, 150 years after his death.

Censure

Merriam-Webster

This dictionary demonstrates the inadequacy of the American Senate, and the American People it represents.

Senator Manchin made this speech, and no one thought it unusual.

I knew a guy once who worked for the Congressional Record. He said his fellow-workers got a good laugh out of reading some of the speeches they were required to print.