Saturday, December 11, 2010

Boring, snowy day. Back to blogging.

So I noticed I hadn't posted on my blog since the Internet was disconnected before our move last spring. We've had moderate speed DSL here in Russell for the last couple months but I haven't had much to say. I thought today was a good time to get back to it because there's a blizzard outside. With the iPod Touch I can pretty much blog from anywhere that there's a Wi-Fi connection. Add to that the DragonDictate software I can even just speak it right into my iPod Touch which is exactly what I'm doing right now, of course it will take some tweaking to add the punctuation. But today it's a snowy day and I'll take a few pictures to go along with this but I have nothing else to do but Netflix so why not.
It's a bit hard to get perspective with snow pictures but I assure you less than an hour ago the neighbor struggled to extract his 4-wheel drive truck from its parking spot.

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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Someone needs to re-make the movie "Network".

The 1976 film "Network" is 64 on the American Film Institute's "100 years, 100 movies" list. I would rank it much higher after seeing a lot of the films on the list. Erin and I watched "Network" again last night and several points struck me as relevant today.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074958/
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The times are surprisingly similar to the mid-1970's. There's a recession, fear pervades the national consciousness due to terrorism, and the price of oil could cripple us on any given day. At least we don't have to worry about the Russians anymore.


The movie presents a television newscaster as a prophet after he announces he has "run out of bullshit" live on the air. A programming executive says that kind of anger is exactly what people want to hear. The show is incredibly popular.

The media geek in me sees this as a piece of art that is a commentary on socialization by mediated reality. This quote pretty much sums it up.
_____
Howard Beale: [arms outstretched to the heavens] Edward George Ruddy died today! Edward George Ruddy was the Chairman of the Board of the Union Broadcasting Systems, and he died at eleven o'clock this morning of a heart condition, and woe is us! We're in a lot of trouble!
Howard Beale: [calmly strolling toward the audience] So. A rich little man with white hair died. What has that got to do with the price of rice, right? And *why* is that woe to us? Because you people, and sixty-two million other Americans, are listening to me right now. Because less than three percent of you people read books! Because less than fifteen percent of you read newspapers! Because the only truth you know is what you get over this tube. Right now, there is a whole, an entire generation that never knew anything that didn't come out of this tube! This tube is the Gospel, the ultimate revelation. This tube can make or break presidents, popes, prime ministers... This tube is the most awesome God-damned force in the whole godless world, and woe is us if it ever falls in to the hands of the wrong people, and that's why woe is us that Edward George Ruddy died. Because this company is now in the hands of CCA -- the Communication Corporation of America. There's a new Chairman of the Board, a man called Frank Hackett, sitting in Mr. Ruddy's office on the twentieth floor. And when the twelfth largest company in the world controls the most awesome God-damned propoganda force in the whole godless world, who knows what shit will be peddled for truth on this network?
Howard Beale: [ascending the stage] So, you listen to me. Listen to me: Television is not the truth! Television is a God-damned amusement park! Television is a circus, a carnival, a traveling troupe of acrobats, storytellers, dancers, singers, jugglers, side-show freaks, lion tamers, and football players. We're in the boredom-killing business! So if you want the truth... Go to God! Go to your gurus! Go to yourselves! Because that's the only place you're ever going to find any real truth.

-----

The film ends with a commentary on corporate interest coming before the value of human life. I won't spoil the ending by explaining it.

  I guess you could compare Jon Stewart to Howard Beale, except Beale wasn't funny and was crazy.

You don't have to rent it. Someone has posted it to Google Videos.

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Friday, February 12, 2010

my reviews from the cigar.com house blend sampler

I've always liked cigars, but I wanted to expand my palette so I bought the house blend sampler from cigar.com. It's a pretty economic way of trying out a bunch of new cigars. Here are my reviews in the order that I tried them.

Cigar.com Cuban Label **.5
http://www.cigar.com/cigars/viewcigar.asp?brand=276
    A medium smoke with a bit of peppery spice. Slightly reminiscent of Garcia Vega, which makes sense due to GV's cuban seed tobacco. Of course this smoke is much smoother and tastier. The quality of wrap leaves a bit to be desired as it falls apart a bit after cutting, also ashes a bit messy. Starts weak, but great by the middle of a corona. Two and a half out of five. Erin gives it a 0 out of 5 on the headache scale.

Cigar.com Corojo Label ***.5
http://www.cigar.com/cigars/viewcigar.asp?brand=508
     A nice full-bodied smoke with an oaky touch. The quality is better than the cuban label, leaving no messy ashes or pieces on the cut end. Erin says it is a pleasant smelling smoke with a 0 of 5 on the headache scale.

Cigar.com Blue Label ****
http://www.cigar.com/cigars/viewcigar.asp?brand=42
    Comparable to the Perdomo Fresco Connecticut label, this smoke is medium bodied with less spice than the Cuban label. This was was a torpedo rather than a robusto and had a very smooth draw. Erin sneezes and gives it a 1 of 5 for headache.

Cigar.com Cameroon Label ***.5
http://www.cigar.com/cigars/viewcigar.asp?brand=292
    The Cameroon Label cigar is a very deep, rich smoke. Hints of wood and leather accompany a very smooth draw. There is a bit of spice at the beginning, but it mellows out and provides consistent flavor for the rest of the stick. I give it a 3.5 out of 5. Erin says they're no headache factor, but there was a sneeze or two.

Cigar.com Purple Label ***
http://www.cigar.com/cigars/viewcigar.asp?brand=277
    This smoke started mild with a bit of spice. In the middle it mellowed out and exceeded my expectations. The long filler made this smoke better than the Cuban label, even though it had a similar flavor. Erin reports no headache. Solid three out of five.

Cigar.com Brazilian Label ***
http://www.cigar.com/cigars/viewcigar.asp?brand=607
    The Brazilian label came as a corona instead of a robusto, and produced a smooth draw with a less potent smoke. This is a good thing because this cigar has a dark and creamy smoke with esperesso and chocolate tones along with a hint of leather. There's a sweetness to the finish that other cigars in the sampler don't have. Erin does not report a headache. Another three out of five.


Cigar.com Red Label ***.5
http://www.cigar.com/cigars/viewcigar.asp?brand=278
    I had especially high expectations for the Red Label cigar. I'm a big fan of dark maduro wrapper cigars. This smoke lived up to my expectations for a house blend maduro. It started with a light draw and a bit of spice, but developed into a deep flavor with a hint of sweetness. By the nub it was dark and rich with a slow draw. Erin says it ranks 0 out of 5 for headache. I give it a 3.5 out of 5.

As an addition to my order, I also got the "90+ rated sampler". For comparison, every cigar in that group would rank at least a 3, most gaining a 4 or 4.5. I will re-order several of these house blend cigars, maybe another sampler. I've even gone so far as to purchase a humidor.

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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

still searching for The One Device to rule them all

So I've used my Palm Zire 72s for a LONG time.

It's done everything from write papers, to keep assignments organized, to playing music and browsing the web. The SDIO wifi card I have for it has apparently stopped working and it no longer does a lot of the things I want out of a portable device. I've soldered the headphone connector twice now, and if it breaks again I'm going to replace it.
In preparation for this replacement I'm looking for a new device that fits my needs.

-Plays music. I would need either an SD card reader OR sync to iTunes. I currently have playlists set up in iTunes that I dump onto my stack of SD cards and carry around my music and podcasts that way. It would be really nice to get the metadata back into iTunes (ratings, playcount, last played) but it's not essential

-WiFi. Though not completely ubiquitous, you can get wifi almost everywhere and it's almost always free.

-Not a cell phone. I'm not paying a monthly fee for a device. I have a firm standing on this. A device is not a service and I won't pay for a subsidy to the original cost of the device. One device below will break this rule, but is available unlocked.

-Web browser. I want to be able to hop on the 'net and google stuff. Facebook, google voice and Gmail are a must. Google docs would be nice. (This blog post was composed in google docs)

-VOIP. This is not a necessity, but it would be smart if I could make calls using the wifi connection. I'd like to tether a voip account to my google voice number if possible.

So far I've come up with a list of candidates that fit all of these needs in some respects. Here they are in no particular order.

Google Nexus One, unlocked without a GSM SIM card $529
The Nexus One does everything I could ask, with the possibility that voip would be a pain because it's a phone. It's also the most expensive device on the list, so this is a very unlikely choice.
Pros - VERY fast, Google integration, It has a nice camera
Cons - It's a phone, Cost, doesn't sync with iTunes

Apple iPod Touch 8 GB $199 - 32 GB $299
The iPod Touch meets all the requirements, with some weirdness in the browser department. Apple products don't support Adobe Flash and that introduces a world of hurt on some websites. But, most of those websites have done a good job of making a version of the site that works in mobile safari thanks to the iPhone. The app store is also locked down, only apple approved software.
Pros - Probably the cheapest device unless I want the bigger one, syncs with iTunes, more apps available, popular device with plentiful support
Cons - Locked down app store, no Flash, no removable storage

Nokia n810 Internet Tablet $229
The Nokia is a great device, if you know what you're looking for. There is a voip app, web browser with flash lite, and it works great with google docs. It has removable storage, but it's not a straight SD card so I'd be buying media. I've also read reviews that the media features are a little clunky, but so is my palm.
Pros - Adobe Flash support, removable storage, browser does google docs, GPS
Cons - Obscure device with questionable support, fewer apps

Archos 5 Android tablet $389
This is basically an android phone without a camera, or the android marketplace.
Pros - Android, 160 GB, GPS (subscription)
Cons - No access to the android marketplace, without google integration the Android OS doesn't mean much, physical disk


Palm Lifedrive Used on ebay "buy it now" $105 bids slightly lower
This device would fit my needs, it has built in wifi and does everything my Zire72s did when the card was working. It may be cheap, but it's also used and the hard drive is a physical disk instead of flash memory. If I happened to win one for $50 or so, it might happen.
Pros - Cheap, same basic workflow as my current system
Cons - Obsolete, used, spinning disk is just waiting to fail

I don't really know why more device manufacturers aren't making devices that fit into this category. I guess going for the cheap-ass customer doesn't pay off in the long run. But making something useful with the same hardware you use on your smartphone handsets and selling it stand-alone could be a way to build a user base among the masses, just like Apple did. I'm leaning heavily toward the iPod Touch because it's a popular device that comes with a warranty and has a robust community around it. There were days when I wanted to be an outsider interested in the niche stuff, but I was also a mac guy for a long time because Apple products usually "just work".

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Saturday, January 23, 2010

So long crew, nice being with you. RIP Captain 11.

I used to watch Captain 11 every day when I got home from school. I always wanted to open the treasure chest.
http://www.keloland.com/captain11/

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Eventually cell companies will learn that they are just a dumb pipe for data, hopefully soon.

Years ago now I had a revelation when looking at my cell phone bill. I was paying $40 per month for 8 state roaming and around 1000 minutes, I had used a total of 140 minutes in the month the bill was for. Once my contract was up, I dropped that service and ported my number to a prepaid phone. Virgin Mobile had its downsides, but despite spotty coverage in SW MN (Sprint network) it was less than half of my old bill with the same usage.
Eventually I'd like to see the whole contract model disappear. You pay the same monthly fee whether or not you have a phone that is still subsidized. Right now T-Mobile offers plans that allow you to "bring your own phone" and actually pay LESS than the contract plans. The exact same situation I went through with Virgin Mobile.
http://mashable.com/2010/01/19/billshrink/
Hopefully devices like the Nokia N900 and Google's Nexus One can push the transition along.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/01/kafka-nexus-one
T-Mobile doesn't provide any service in SD, so we're stuck for now. Maybe I'll get a Nexus One and use it without a SIM card. At least it would be a big leap from my Palm Zire 72.

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Monday, January 18, 2010

I just dug out a tarball from the wayback machine. Here's a peek at Max's Tavern

freak@columbia:~$ telnet localhost 7100
Trying ::1...
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
          ************************************************************         
          *                      Welcome To                          *         
          *            #     #               ###                     *         
          *            ##   ##   ##   #    # ###  ####               *         
          *            # # # #  #  #   #  #   #  #                   *         
          *            #  #  # #    #   ##   #    ####               *         
          *            #     # ######   ##            #              *         
          *            #     # #    #  #  #      #    #              *         
          *            #     # #    # #    #      ####               *         
          *                                                          *         
          *       #######                                            *         
          *          #      ##   #    # ###### #####  #    #         *         
          *          #     #  #  #    # #      #    # ##   #         *         
          *          #    #    # #    # #####  #    # # #  #         *         
          *          #    ###### #    # #      #####  #  # #         *         
          *          #    #    #  #  #  #      #   #  #   ##         *         
          *          #    #    #   ##   ###### #    # #    #         *         
          *                       Version 3.0                        *         
          *                                                          *         
          *                 Be excellent to each other               *         
          ************************************************************
Give me a name: freak
Give me a password:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

New users: type ".help commands" for a list of commands.

Any questions or comments? Please email freak@dune.net

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Welcome Freak...

You were last logged in on Mon Jan 18 16:42:39 2010 from localhost.

Your level is: GOD

Room: bar

Welcome to Max's Tavern. This is the main Bar where everyone talks and
drinks. There is a stage off to one side where the house band "RPM10K"
plays every friday night. "Max's Brew", a small-batch microbrew, is
available from the friendly bartender. This place may not be someplace
special, but it's home. After all, we're just here to hang out and talk.


Exits are:  hallway

You are all alone here.

Access is fixed to PUBLIC and there are 0 messages on the board.
Current topic: It's my dick in a box!
.map
  +----------------------------------------------------------------------+  
  |                           ____                                       |  
  |                          | __ )  __ _ _ __                           |  
  |                          |  _ \ / _` | '__|                          |  
  |                          | |_) | (_| | |                             |  
  |                          |____/ \__,_|_|                             |  
  |                                                                      |  
  |                                                                      |  
  +-----------------------------+---   ---+-------------------+----------+  
  |       _   _   _   _         |         |                   |          |  
  |      / \ / \ / \ / \        |    H    |                   |  Closet  |
  |     ( P | o | o | l )       |    a                        |          |  
  |      \_/ \_/ \_/ \_/             l    ____                +---- -----+
  |       _   _   _   _              l    |w |  Stock Room    |          |
  |      / \ / \ / \ / \     ____    w    |o |                |          |
  |     ( r | o | o | m )    |m |    a    |m |                  Manager's|  
  |      \_/ \_/ \_/ \_/     |e |    y    |e |                   Office  |  
  |                          |n |         |n |                |          |  
  |                          |s            s |                |          |
  +-----------------------------+---------+-------------------+----------+
.news

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

3/23/02 Max's Tavern 3.0 is born at maxstavern.dune.net 7100

------------------------------------------------------------------------------


I just untarred it and ran the program. If I set up port forwarding I could probably even host the thing out to the net.
http://www.godaddy.com/domains/searchresults2.aspx?ci=16811

For now, it's just a bit of history for all of the talker nerds.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talker

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Friday, January 15, 2010

I am such a marching band nerd


I love it, in so many barely describable ways. Happy Friday!

Courtesy of @alyankovic on twitter.

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

What is really poised to knock America off our perch? Deintellectualization and fear mongering.

I'm a few months behind on my Wired magazines, but last night while doing laundry I read a great article.
http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/10/ff_waronscience
The piece outlines how celebrities like Jenny McCarthy have succeeded in getting parents to stop vaccinating their kids because they believe vaccines cause autism when the scientific evidence shows the opposite. I didn't just see it as a piece about the paranoia surrounding vaccine scares, but rather the fear mongering and lack of risk analysis that has done so much to this country over the last few years. Here are a few examples:
Airline Security: I've heard plenty of people prattling on about how the underwear bomber could have been caught at the airport. But the truth is, he wasn't successful because other passengers responded. In a post-911 world, no one on a plane is going to sit idly by. The reactionary thinking by TSA only assuages the fears of the weak-minded and gives travelers a false sense of security. But I'm still all about the full body scanners.
Global Warming: Just like vaccines, scientists have a consensus on this issue. Global warming exists, and we caused it. Those arguing against things like cap and trade legislation usually have money at stake in oil companies. There have been massive PR campaigns to convince people that there isn't a scientific consensus, but there is.
I found one quote very compelling from the Wired article:

The rejection of hard-won knowledge is by no means a new phenomenon. In 1905, French mathematician and scientist Henri PoincarĂ© said that the willingness to embrace pseudo-science flourished because people “know how cruel the truth often is, and we wonder whether illusion is not more consoling.” Decades later, the astronomer Carl Sagan reached a similar conclusion: Science loses ground to pseudo-science because the latter seems to offer more comfort. “A great many of these belief systems address real human needs that are not being met by our society,” Sagan wrote of certain Americans’ embrace of reincarnation, channeling, and extraterrestrials. “There are unsatisfied medical needs, spiritual needs, and needs for communion with the rest of the human community.
Looking back over human history, rationality has been the anomaly. Being rational takes work, education, and a sober determination to avoid making hasty inferences, even when they appear to make perfect sense."
And when looking at the reader responses I found another great quote:
From Pieter, respondent #433 to the Wired story about vaccine panic: “About the poo-flinging you’re undoubtedly a victim of, there’s an African proverb: ‘When you throw a rock into the bush and hear a lot of noise, you’ve hit something.’
http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/10/readers-respond-to-an-epidemic-of-fear-part-1/
In conclusion, sometimes we in the media need to be careful when we provide "balance" to a story in which the facts are clear. It's also necessary for consumers of the media to be critical and rational when examining evidence. While I was perusing my BS in Speech Communication I learned about Aristotelian fundamentals that have been around since before the rise of Rome. Every argument needs Ethos (credibility of the speaker and quoted experts), Logos (The evidence), and Pathos (an emotional appeal). If the story scares you, it's likely to include a lot of Pathos, without much of anything else. Americans need to learn how to be rational and critical instead of scared sheep.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Probably just another stupid action movie.

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I am the first guy who will go on a rant against re-using old ideas. If you're going to use something that was good, at least re-brand it like the Mighty Ducks did with the classic Bad News Bears. But in the case of the A-Team, it works.
Movie producers couldn't have picked a better staple of cheesy 80's TV (Unless you want to get Ernest Borgnine back for an Airwolf reunion).
The plot is relatively simple and you can build an entire story into a 2 hour movie. It's also never been put to screen before, just TV, so you're not changing any "canon" movie stories(*cough*JJ Abrams*cough*).
It's prime for sequels, because the entire plot was designed for serialization.
And it's easily updated to the current time. The "Elite Commando Unit" could have simply served in the first Gulf War, or some action related to the "War on Drugs".
Maybe it's because I don't have quite the attachment to this (or Transformers) than I do to Trek, but I don't mind the idea of a new A-Team movie. In fact, I love it when a plan comes together.

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Monday, January 4, 2010

Back on the weight-loss bandwagon. Walking outside in negative temps while hungry is fun, right?

The weigh-in always takes place on Friday. I was down a total of 18lbs at last weigh-in, but that was the Friday before Christmas. So after two weeks of holiday food and not writing down my lack of self-control I fear for this week's mass measurement operation. Maybe I'll convince my lovely wife to play 18 holes of Tiger Woods '10 every night this week. That could burn a candy bar from last weekend.

Here's hoping I'm not up more than a couple lb's. I was averaging about -2lbs per week. I'm still on the same belt hole, so here's hoping I'm not up too much.

 

** This post brought to you by the motivation to post something with the lack of any compelling content. (And a growling stomach)

 

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