Not much. Always something. Mostly good.

President Obama's Speech to Students

I've now read the President's speech that he'll give tomorrow. I think you should, too. I think the vast majority of us are reasonable, even if we disagree. And that's why I say:

No reasonable American could object to what the President is saying to our students in this speech.

Grand Master George Anderson In Memorium

Yesterday, Aug 23rd, I attended the memorial service for Kwanmukan Karate founder Grand Master George Anderson. You can learn more about Mr. Anderson here, but I'll just say briefly that his accomplishments in the martial arts, and as a person, were astonishing.

I met Mr. Anderson last year, and was honored to have a delightful discussion of violin with him. Before his career in karate, Mr. Anderson was already an accomplished violist, and he spoke with me not as a master and low-ranking student, but as two people sharing a love of music.

Here, in a form more lyrical, are my feelings about his passing.

Mr. Anderson's picture hangs in our dojo. One day, I said to sensei, "He reminds me of a bear." Sensei said, "He is!" A few weeks later, looking at the picture again, I said to sensei, "He reminds me of a tiger." Sensei said, "He is!"

Mr. Anderson had the body of a bear, and the heart of a tiger. The body contains the heart, and while we live the heart is struggling to break free, to share all that it is with everyone. Mr. Anderson's heart was freer than most, and he shared it with thousands.

Now his body is gone, and his heart is fully unleashed. The bear is dead, but the tiger roams the earth.

Oh. Just Get Rid of the Windows Registry. Right

I just read a reasonably good review of Windows 7. But, there was one comment (stated better by John Dvorak) that showed a real non-understanding of computer software.

I still wish Windows 7 had dropped the System Registry, which slows down systems over time.

Right. Just drop it.

I agree that the registry is an obstacle, and I further agree that programs should be self-contained. But the notion of just "dropping" the registry is worse than ridiculous, it's inane.

Most software, and certainly almost all high-end, expensive, business-oriented software, relies on the registry to store dozens, even hundreds, of settings. Would the above article's authors ask Microsoft to render almost all of a user's software incompatible, and require almost all software makers to recode their applications to be Windows 7 compliant?

The registry can't just be dropped. That would be like dropping access to RAM, or dropping support for C++.

However, Microsoft might be able to ease programmers into a new direction.

Microsoft could change the API call so that it instead writes to an xml file located in the application's folder. This would mean that, on program un-installation, all registry entries would be removed along with the folder.

I admit, that would make me happy.