Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Are Jobs Obsolete?

I found an interesting article on CNN about how the need for a job coming into question. I think this article is pretty reasonable. Each year it becomes more clear that technology will be replacing more of our jobs. I know I Have no interest in making a daily commute part of my routine. While I love to drive, I also would love to be able to read a book each morning and evening that I have to commute. 

Beyond that, we don't need to bother with as much mail as we used to, we have instantaneous communication. There are hundreds of other examples of industries that will be replaced. Heck, the financial industry is mostly commanded by software anyways - banks lay off more people and see their profits just increase. We can create automated systems to grow our crops and brew our beer.
At some point, the idea of recession because ordinary citizens can't get their hands on discretionary income (jobs) will expand to the point that we have to consider the lack of income as a symptom, as well as the lack of jobs is a symptom. The real problem is that we need to find a new way to order our society. We should value innovation and new ideas and progress more than a 60 hour work week just to make ends meet.

Friday, February 10, 2012

DRM and eBooks

Source


I think this article touches on some very good points. There isn't a need for DRM. DRM only harms legitimate users, because anyone who wants to pirate the product will either find a cracked/drm free version, or crack it themselves. The music industry eventually realised that the best way to compete with the pirates is to offer a product that has all the same features but is more convenient to download. The industry needs to realise that they need to make things easier than pirating and allow users complete control. Why would I want to take the legit route when it means I'm stuck with a product that I can't use as easily as an illegitimate copy? If every time I get the legal version I have to crack it just so I can have a copy on an iPad and Kindle, I'm much more likely to just get a pirated version in the first place.
Now, if you don't get DRM my choice changes to: do I go to the trouble of finding a torrent for an ebook that is the exact version I want and has a good number of peers, or do I just pay a small sum and download it from a retailer? Easy is better than free. Sure, some people are still going to pirate it just like some people will still pirate music, but they are the ones who were least likely to ever pay for it and are least affected by DRM, they are the ones that were never a sale.