Sunday, August 28, 2011

Government Announces Development of Korean Operating System

The government has announced a plan to develop a Korean operating system (OS) in conjunction with the country's major IT companies. The Ministry of Knowledge Economy said it would set up a project to develop a web-based mobile OS.

It is envisaged that the operating system, to be called K-OS, will eventually replace all other foreign operating systems, including Microsoft Windows, which according to official figures runs 100.00001% of all Korean web sites.

The government fears that national and economic security is being compromised by the poor security of Windows, an operating system so bad it is said to be easy to create compromised pirate versions which when used by companies and government departments can send confidential data directly to China without the need for prostitutes.

It would be the government's third attempt to become software independent from foreign companies. In the early 1990s, it oversaw the development of the K-DOS project, which sought to create a text-only and inflexible alternative to the recently launched graphically pretty Microsoft Windows 3.0. Launched only one year after the widespread adoption of Windows 3, the Korean companies which had developed K-DOS with government funding refused to use it because it was "untested". The government then launched a plan to test K-DOS in the education sector using the money from change left in public telephones, at which point ordinary Koreans stopped leaving change in public telephones just to avoid spending the next five years playing text-only games on their computers.

The government's second attempt to create an indigenous software industry came with the support for the Hangul Word Processor (HWP) produced by Hancom, who describe themselves as "the home of ambitious dreamers 404 not found". With its pioneering use of quantum programming HWP allows, for example, characters to be both bold and not bold at the same time, which not only provides an outcome for every action and inaction, but also effectively prevents foreign companies producing cheaper compatible products because it is seemingly random outputs make it impossible to reverse engineer. Mandated for use by all government departments, it is widely believed HWP even prevented huge numbers of deaths in 2010 when Seoul sent a declaration of war in HWP format to the Japanese government in Tokyo, which according to sources they have so far been unable to open.

Major Korean IT companies, despite standing to benefit from government investment in connection with the initiative, were privately not enthusiastic about the project. "It's hard to refuse the government's plan, so we will help, but to be honest we don't feel like it" said an official at one company, Seongsan. But if major IT companies eventually develop the system, the government is hoping that K-OS will spread across Korea and eventually sweep the world.

Related Links
Experts skeptical about OS development
Electronics giants show reluctance on S.Korean mobile OS
The Korean Government in Smartphones? They’re Not That Stupid
Hangul (word processor)
Hancom
Hancom Wikipedia

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Friday, August 26, 2011

Home-Made High-Speed Train Forced to Stop Again

A home-made high-speed train stopped abruptly on its way from Seoul to Masan Monday due to unspecified but perfectly safe technical problems, according to its operator, the government-owned Korea Railroad Corporation (Korail).

The home-made train, known as the KTX-Sancheon or 'Thousand Acids', was constructed last year by 58 year-old Kim in the back yard of his house in the Myeong-dong district of Seoul. Kim has now built ten trains and has orders for ten more, which he is aiming to complete as soon as he can collect enough scrap metal from the streets of Seoul to construct them.

The KTX-Sancheon was designed to be the successor to the inferior first generation of Korean high-speed trains, which was based on a design by French company Alstom. These so-called 'KTX-I' bullet-trains were always problematic since parts had to be imported into Korea from France, due to the absurd and unfounded fear that if they were licensed for manufacturing in Korea the design would be stolen by Korean companies. But Kim says he felt Korea's national spirit was being damaged by allowing French trains free passage across Korea, which is why he set out to invent the parts necessary to create an entirely Korean high-speed train, not based on copied French parts at all, which he has never seen.

Korail says it is mystified as to why the trains keep suddenly stopping, not stopping, derailing, smoking, and rocking violently from side-to-side, but while there are now ten different KTX-Sancheon trains in operation which have experienced ten different problems, the single commonality in every accident is the track – based on a British design - which may be experiencing some issues due to the strain put on it by Korea's four seasons. Korail is keen to stress that these entirely domestic issues should not have any bearing on the export sales of the KTX-Sancheon it is currently trying to make.

The KTX-Sancheon can reach speeds of 330 km/h, but Kim overcame the technical issue of how to use brakes from Hyundai Accent sedans to slow the high-speed train down, in what is regarded as a triumph of domestic engineering and an improvement on the earlier inferior French design, which was not copied. While many have hailed Korea's home-made high-speed train as a paradigm-shift, some have criticized Kim's decision to place a steering wheel in the KTX-Sancheon, with suspicions mounting that it may have contributed to at least one of the train's derailments.

In recent months there has been growing disquiet with Korea's domestically designed products, with problems reported with home-made tanks, howitzers, rifles, submarines, and nuclear power plants.

Related Links
KTX train forced to stop
KTX train derails for 1st time
KTX-II/KTX-Sancheon
Korail seeks compensation for KTX glitches
Public concerns over KTX safety grow following China accident
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S. Korea's state auditor to probe KTX breakdowns
3 Disruptions in a Weekend Add to Bullet Train's Woes
KTX high-speed train malfunctions again
High-speed train halts again after smoke occurs
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Once again, KTX halts, this time in a tunnel
Brazil gives thumbs up to Korea’s bullet train

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Thursday, August 25, 2011

Mayor Oh Wins Free Meal Battle

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Vote for Nothing
Vote Oh
Oh Se-hoon, the 50 year-old conservative mayor of Seoul - who earlier this year selflessly cast himself as an 'antipopulism warrior' and launched a fierce attack on those who participated in the electoral process which elected him - has won his battle over free school lunches as a sufficient number of voters failed to show up at polling stations.

The mayor had knelt on the floor and wept earlier in the week as he promised to resign if he failed to stop the spread of populism in the democratic process - surprising those who claimed if he was going to lose his composure it should have been after the recent devastating flooding in Seoul which killed 14 people. He is now expected to stay on in his post and end his seven-month boycott of Council meetings while drawing his full salary.

Early Wednesday, the number of voters was reported to be high, and there were fears that the popular vote would reach the 33.3% quoracy required to make it valid, marking a major defeat for the former member of the anti-democratic military government's Army Defense Security Command, which was charged with internal security, the preservation of loyalty to the regime, and the deterrence and investigation of subversion. But the number of populists arriving at polling stations to exercise their dubious democratic rights tailed off in the afternoon, in an apparent endorsement of Mayor Oh's position and his "Vote for Nothing - Vote Oh" campaign. The final turnout was 25.7% and the mayor is now expected to press ahead with further anti-populist measures, including pursuing action against the kind of populists who voted in the referendum.

Mayor Oh has been intending to use his high-profile and caring campaign to deny children food in school as a springboard to bid for the Presidency, and some progressive liberal media outlets, fearing the consequences, have nefariously tried to portray Mayor Oh's victory as a defeat, dubbing him 'Mayor Zero'. But the mayor stayed true to his anti-populist credentials, and the failure to achieve a popular turnout in the referendum he fought hard to hold now clears the way for him to become Korea's next president with support from groups such as the popular National Anti-Populism Union.

The failure to achieve a quorum in the referendum also marks an important victory against populism in Korea, since the votes that were cast will not be counted before being destroyed, and the political status-quo will be maintained. Experts say this clears the way to impose quoracy thresholds in other populist elections at the 66.6% level, with elected officials remaining in their posts unless a sufficient number of voters turn out and defeat them, which will promote political stability.

But while Mayor Oh can be proud of his legacy, it may yet backfire; President Lee Myung-bak has expressed a willingness to stay in his position despite constitutional rules preventing this, and given his huge popularity supporters say it is only fair that the quoracy level for presidential elections is set around the 99.9% level.

Related Links
Seoul Mayor Casting Himself as 'Antipopulism Warrior'
Mayor Oh loses free meal battle
Tension prevails as Seoul's free lunch referendum under way
Seoul mayor stakes his post on vote
Will turnout surpass 33.3 percent?
Parties rally their faithful for free lunch judgement
Parties Criticize Seoul Mayor's Decision in Unison
[Editorial] Mayor Oh’s referendum conundrum
Career self-sabotage

Disclaimer: Please note the links above are generated automatically by our software and may not always be directly related to the news article.