Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Computer problems

And of course, now that I reboot my server (I had turned it off to disconnect the monitor cable to install the KVM switch) I get problems. The server boots normally, but just as it gets to the login screen it reboots and the Bios then displays "Disk boot failure, Insert System Disk and press enter". The server had been going for several weeks between reboots.

Ideas anyone? I seem to recall the last time this happened it was a memory problem, which could be the case. That CPU/mobo/ram is pretty ancient. The hard drive is only 10 months old though.

Labels:

A new KVM switch

I just saw this D-Link KVM (Keyboard, Video and Mouse) as a Buy.com "Deal of the Day" and I have to say, it works very well. I was pleasantly surprised to find that it came with six foot cables (I think the average is 3 foot cables). I can finally have more room for all of my other stuff on that desk in my office.

Labels:

Blogging will be light the next few days

Work is whupping up on me this week.

Labels:

Monday, May 30, 2005

Memorial Day being an odd coincidence

I was looking at the referral logs for moodyloner.net and came across A Day in Iraq. It's a blog written by a soldier from Fort Benning (in Columbus Georgia) and his life there. Fascinating stuff with many pictures. A blog very much worth reading.

Labels: ,

Affordable Family Formation

This article by Steve Sailor (via Mickey Kaus) is will worth reading. Put simply, it explains the current American Red State/Blue State gap largely in terms of self selection and children. It's much more expensive to have children in a blue (Democratic) state compared to a red (Republican) State. Throw in some freedom of movement and self selection and you've got a bifurcated America.

A few quibbles. He seems to throw in Atlanta as a "Red City" which is very much not the case. While metro Atlanta is a very red metro area, the city itself is quite blue. Also, the areas with the most recent and illegal immigrants (here in the Atlanta metro area anyway) seem to be the most Republican areas, which is seemingly at odds with his theory.

He also does not mention the Roe Effect, payroll taxes, the total tax burden, the actual cost of a mortgage (I got the full spiel from my mortgage broker when I refinanced, the cost of the mortgage itself can really vary quite a bit.)

On the whole, well worth reading though.

Labels: ,

A good article from Landsburg

I stumbled across this on Cafe Hayek.

"Diversity" has always been my least favorite Shibboleth of the left. In fact, nothing else even comes close, although the right wing habit of appending "of faith" at the end of ever sentence is rapidly closing catching up.

That was why I liked this piece by Steven Landsburg. Initial Paragraph:
I was invited to speak about ``diversity'' to an audience of about 80 students, roughly half black and half white. Most of the blacks sat on the left side of the room and most of the whites sat on the right---as good an indication as any that nobody really cares very much about diversity.
How much of life is taken up with these self-conscious display of piety? If you removed all of the man-years that people have spent talking about "diversity", "sexuality", "culture of life","family values" I wonder what, if anything would be lost.

5-30-2005 Updated for Clarity (verb tense)

Labels:

Not that happy with FeedDemon

After a full day's worth of using the FeedDemon I'm switching back to Abilon. While FeedDemon actually functioned better in every respect, I dislike not being able to see all of the feeds at the same time. Tabbed browsing in the program is essential too. Oh well. I suppose Abilon can always improve with time.

Labels:

Sunday, May 29, 2005

Bolshevism and Islam

As an amplification of my earlier post about Saudi influence on modern Islamic culture. Throw in a bit of Bryan Caplan and Eric Hoffer, and I'm closer having better thoughts on the subject.

To wit, the problem is the merging of state, society, economy and religion into a single unit. The most obvious parallel is pre-revolution Russia, with the Saudi royal family playing the Romanovs, and bin Laden playing Lenin.

After Ivan the Terrible essentially annexed the Russian orthodox church and installed the Czar as head of the church (or maybe that was Peter the Great, I can't remember), all authority, be it economic, political, or religious in Russia became ever more centralized in the person of the Czar. When Lenin seized power in 1917 he merely continued this process, finally culminating in Stalin.

All of this centralization basically discards useful information as revealed in action and prices per Hayek in the Fatal Conceit. One man does the thinking for millions, and the society is one millionth as smart as it could be. Could this be what is happening in the Arab world right now? Is the problem just lack of knowledge and power distribution, as it was in the Soviet era, and current North Korea?

As I read over this post I see it is very jumbled and unclear. I'll explore more on this topic later.

Labels: ,

Saturday, May 28, 2005

RSS Readers

I've been using the free version of Abilon for a while. It's very good at some things, the tabbed browsing inside the RSS program itself is especially nice, but it has the unpleasant habit of choking when it tries to update the feeds. Also it will sometimes "lose" feeds. No idea why that happens. I'm current experimenting with FeedDemon but it does not have tabbed browsing inside the program. I'll keep my loyal readers posted on what I decide.

If only there were some kind of product placement and review system for the blogsphere!

Labels:

The Saudis

There are currently unconfirmed reports that King Faud of Saudi Arabia is dead. This is not as momentous as it seems since he's effectively been out of power for several years.

This leads me to wonder: How much of modern Islam is just Saudi quirks?

In comparison, if you gave one of the more radical environmental groups, say Earth First, 200 billion dollars a year starting in 1985 to spend on the "Movement" what would environmentalism be like now? I would imagine it would be more extreme, and much, much weirder since there would be no idea competition or moderating influences.

Labels: ,

An interesting evening with PBS

I Tivo'd Speaking Freely on a whim and was amused to see that Charlie Daniels was the guest. I actually learned quite a bit.
  1. He's a very good fingerpicker, I thought he only played fiddle
  2. He was on Nashville Skyline I thought that Norman Blake did all of the guitar work on that.
  3. He is a very articulate and charming guy, which is not the impression I had of him before. Although after 30 years as an entertainer I shouldn't be surprised he knows how to work a room.
Then it was on to Unfiltered with Tucker Carlson, which is rapidly becoming my favorite of the talking head shows. At first I was surprised when by the quality, since Crossfire was terrible. It opens with a monologue, then on to 2 rounds of interviews with experts of some kind. The absense of politicians reciting canned responses is quite rereshing.

Labels:

Friday, May 27, 2005

Hitch puts it very well

Christopher Hitchens gets it right in his latest Slate column (refering to the fatwa put on Salman Rushdie)

Now, everything in me is revolted by the burning of books, let alone the attempt to murder writers, and I claim the right to feel this at least as strongly as any illiterate fanatic may choose to feel about a story in Newsweek. Some of us can be offended at insults to our culture, and we, too, possess unalterable convictions and principles. Many people take the same view of the desecration of Old Glory. But we would never dream of venting ourselves in random assaults on mosques or Muslims, and if anyone on our soil did dare to commit such atrocities, I hope and believe that they would not receive moist and sympathetic treatment in the pages of the American press.

Hitchens is one of the very few commentators that does not treat Muslims as exotic pets.

On a related note this CNN.com article was interesting for a few reasons, money grafs

Women in black veils marched through Kashmir, where schools and businesses were closed as part of the protest, and set American flags and copies of the U.S. Constitution ablaze.

"The defilement of our holy book is outrageous because we consider it to be the word of God," thundered Asiya Andrabi, head of the women's group Daughters of the Community, through her veil. "Guantanamo Bay is a cage. It is not a prison."

  1. They burned copies of the Constitution? That's a first. Maybe they DO hate us for our freedom.
  2. "Daughters of the Community"?
  3. "Thundered.... through her veil". Who writes this stuff? Are they trying to work jokes in?

Labels:

I'm a Mastermind

I'm an INTJ, or "Mastermind" on Myers-Briggs Tests, specifically
IntrovertedIntuitiveThinkingJudging
Strength of the preferences %
78508878
Short Description:

INTJs are perfectionists, with a seemingly endless capacity for improving upon anything that takes their interest. What prevents them from becoming chronically bogged down in this pursuit of perfection is the pragmatism so characteristic of the type: INTJs apply (often ruthlessly) the criterion "Does it work?" to everything from their own research efforts to the prevailing social norms. This in turn produces an unusual independence of mind, freeing the INTJ from the constraints of authority, convention, or sentiment for its own sake.

INTJs are known as the "Systems Builders" of the types, perhaps in part because they possess the unusual trait combination of imagination and reliability. Whatever system an INTJ happens to be working on is for them the equivalent of a moral cause to an INFJ; both perfectionism and disregard for authority may come into play, as INTJs can be unsparing of both themselves and the others on the project. Anyone considered to be "slacking," including superiors, will lose their respect -- and will generally be made aware of this; INTJs have also been known to take it upon themselves to implement critical decisions without consulting their supervisors or co-workers. On the other hand, they do tend to be scrupulous and even-handed about recognizing the individual contributions that have gone into a project, and have a gift for seizing opportunities which others might not even notice.

Other masterminds include William F Buckley, Michael Dukakis, Donald Rumsfeld, CS Lewis, Colin Powell and Ayn Rand. Where they got that info I don't know.

How about the rest of my many readers?

Labels: ,

Thursday, May 26, 2005

20 Predictions

Bearing in mind the Pundit's Fallacy, here they are:
  1. Iran will work itself out fairly peacefully.
  2. Executions will increase in the US as people realize that DNA testing and soon to be omnipresent surveillance makes it ever more likely to be executing the right person.
  3. Surveillance cameras will proliferate, people will complain, but they will not alter their behavior at all.
  4. Animal right and environmental groups will turn violent.
  5. As the legacy of campaign finance reform grows ever uglier, term limits for politicians will make a comeback.
  6. Social Security will not be altered in the next five years. It will transform into a general welfare programs for the elderly in 15 years
  7. Marijuana will be legalized on the state or county level as a tax product when some interest group like education or seniors discovers a way to exclusively reap the tax receipts.
  8. Jews will leave Europe for America and Israel.
  9. Saudi Arabia will become increasingly isolated in the world.
  10. China will buy or "assume responsibility" for part of Siberia.
  11. Japan will change it's constitution to re-arm itself.
  12. India will overtake China as the dominant Asian economy, though China will be a very significant player.
  13. Chechnya and Russia resume their very ugly war.
  14. Indian Medical Vacations kick off the start of a thriving global medical treatment market as people travel to lower cost medical treatment. Also a domestic medical black market will develop for surgery and treatment.
  15. While their democracy holds the Palestinians don't accomplish much. On the other hand, the Lebanese will thrive.
  16. The US government will forcibly medicate all of it's prisoners with mood altering and tranquilizing drugs.
  17. The battle over abortion will be overtaken by legal fights over decisions made at the beginning and end of life.

    The beginning of life will start with prohibitions on smoking by pregnant women, unapproved prenatal care, etc and will end with genetic testing and an "approved" lifestyle for pregnant women.

    The end of life fight will begin when government picks up more than 80% of the cost of health care and someone discovers the disproportionate amount spent on health care for the last few months of life. The right to die question becomes the number one question at this point.
  18. Many forms of congenital birth defects and diseases vanish from the population as genetic testing improves and people selectively abort non-optimum fetuses. This will have the unintended consequence of a vicious generational conflict down the road.
  19. Higher energy prices prompt a move to nuclear power and the importance of Middle Eastern oil is diminished slightly.
  20. The EU will be largely irrelevant, the UK and Eastern nations will eventually move away from binding commitments to the larger whole..

Labels: ,

It's Hebrew day here in Steveland

For some reason I've been reading up on Judaism and Israel today. That led me to WikiPedia and then to the "Battle of Jenin". The eye catching thing part (apart from the estimated death toll dropping from 3,000 to 56) was this:

Many Western news agencies reported these claims uncritically and without confirmation. However, on April 30, Kadoura Mousa Kadoura, the director of Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement for the northern West Bank, dropped the death toll to 56 people, including armed combatants. Further investigation by the United Nations and international reporters found that only 52 Palestinians where killed in the operation, 22 of whom were civilians. [8] (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/2165272.stm)

On May 2, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) filmed adult Palestinians carrying out a mock funeral procession. The funeral was fake and the "body" was able to get up and walk. On May 8th, 2002, The Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights and the Environment (http://www.lawsociety.org) issued a press release [9] (http://www.lawsociety.org/Press/Preleases/2002/May/may8.html) stating that it was only Palestinian children playing "funeral". Israeli groups reject this claim outright.


Children playing funeral?

Labels: ,

An interesting column

Anyone who's talked to me for a while knows that I think self-selection is a powerful thing. It is illustrated very well in this Steven Landsburg column, Why Jews Don't Farm.

So, what's different about the Jews? First, Botticini and Eckstein explain why other groups didn't leave the land. The temptation was certainly there: Skilled urban jobs have always paid better than farming, and that's been true since the time of Christ. But those jobs require literacy, which requires education—and for hundreds of years, education was so expensive that it proved a poor investment despite those higher wages. (Botticini and Eckstein have data on ancient teachers' salaries to back this up.) So, rational economic calculus dictated that pretty much everyone should have stayed on the farms.

But the Jews (like everyone else) were beholden not just to economic rationalism, but also to the dictates of their religion. And the Jewish religion, unique among religions of the early Middle Ages, imposed an obligation to be literate. To be a good Jew you had to read the Torah four times a week at services: twice on the Sabbath, and once every Monday and Thursday morning. And to be a good Jewish parent you had to educate your children so that they could do the same.

The literacy obligation had two effects. First, it meant that Jews were uniquely qualified to enter higher-paying urban occupations. Of course, anyone else who wanted to could have gone to school and become a moneylender, but school was so expensive that it made no sense. Jews, who had to go to school for religious reasons, naturally sought to earn at least some return on their investment. Only many centuries later did education start to make sense economically, and by then the Jews had become well established in banking, trade, and so forth.

I have no particular point with any of the above, I just wanted to get it online before I forgot about the article.

Unbelievable

For the second time I've had to pull a stray chicken bone out of my dog's throat. Who is doing this crap?

Labels:

A good idea.

TechnicalVideoRental.com - where you can rent "How to" videos and DVDs, including quite a bit of the Homespun music catalog. HT: Marginal Revolution

Labels:

I learn new things about the cell phone

Namely I learn it has a night setting.

Labels:

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

Our troubling times

I came across this article on Instapundit. It's a Reuters article about Italian authorities criminally charging an author for defaming Islam. For all practical purposes she would be tried for blasphemy. She's rather old and living in the US and I doubt she'll be extradited. Glenn ends with this quote
Tom Wolfe once said that Fascism is forever descending on the United States, but that somehow it always lands on Europe. Perhaps the same is true with theocracy?
Now mind you, she is being charged in Italy, not the US. If the Italians want to dig their own grave, so be it.

The cause (I think) is based upon vastly different underlying concepts; namely the West has moved the concepts of state, society and religion (and, for the properly educated, the economy) so far apart that Westerners' really aren't on the same page as those raised or educated in the Middle East or in the Middle Eastern way. What is a minor matter to us is a much larger thing to them and vice versa. Political Correctness and a permanent indignation industry don't help either.

I do think it's going to end badly. The cumulative effect of legal and other victories on behalf of Muslim sensibilities will effectively dehumanize Muslims in the eyes of the West and move them further out of the mainstream. By expending large amounts of effort on what seem to be trivial matters (based on the conceptual differences listed above), and maintaining group unity (which also seems to be happening) it will have the de facto effect of separating Muslims from the rest of society and giving them a high-maintenance reputation. Put in more mathematical terms it will raise the costs of interaction. The long run effect of all this is that the Western world treats Muslims as exotic pets and they never assimilate.

I wonder if there are any Ricardian Theories of cultural conflict? If not, this is the genesis of one I suppose.

Labels: ,

The view from the bike ride

I took the camera phone with me on my ride today and came across this fallen tree. It's had to tell from the photo, but this tree seems to have fallen for no apparent reason.



For about 2 months now a baby carriage has been in the middle of an empty field that is next to the bike path. The carriage seems to be in fine working order, and it has been sitting on it's side on private property for some time now. Of course, the one time I bring the camera it's gone.

Labels:

3 and 1

Bad for the morning
  1. The update to window server is 330 megs
  2. The update to Norton antivirus is 25 bucks, for virus updates, it was only ten two years ago
  3. There are several built in .Net functions such as GetFileName() and GetExtension which exist natively in the .Net framework. I had built some simple functions to accomplish the same thing.
Good for the morning
  1. The Gios C# PDF writer library

Labels: ,

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

Interesting Links

Labels:

Garrison Keilor creeps me out

I was looking online for Gillian Welch appearances and encountered her on prairie Home Companion. Since her songs were spread through the whole show I listened to the whole show over the web.

While listening to his very good announcer voice I began getting a creepy vibe from all of it, particularly from Garrison Keilor, and after a while I realized why.

In about 1988 I was nearing the end of my comic book period and encountered the comic book miniseries V for Vendetta. The story takes place in a post-apocalyptic fascist Britain and is centered around a concentration camp escapee bent on revenge. One of the minor characters is the official spokesman for the government who got his start as an announcer/administrator at the concentration camp where the protagonist was interred.

It's a vivid story and made a deep impression on me. For some reason Garrison Keilor deep, rich telling of bland stories and anecdotes reminded me of my conception of the announcer in the comic book.

I hadn't thought of V for Vendetta in years...

Oddly enough, a quick google search tells me that V for Vendetta will soon be a movie.

UPDATE--corrected the spelling of "Keilor".

Labels: ,

I'm blown away

I searched for Gillian Welch on Google, and discovered CMT bluegrass radio. CMT generally features the dregs of soccer mom country music and is generally best ignored. However, I now see they have a bluegrass station and I'm utterly blown away. It's absolutely superb, both in audio quality and in selection.

Labels: ,

Just got back from Blind Willies

Where I saw the lovely and talented combination of Bill Sheffield, Beth Casner, and Roger WhateverHisLastNameIs (featuring Ralph Lutrelle on Dobro) for a lovely evening of country blues. For some reason this cell photo turned out very grainy.

Labels: ,

So like us

I saw this at Gates of Vienna under the heading "The Jihad That Refreshes". Then I laughed hysterically. It basically takes the Coca Cola logo, flips it, changes it is non-obvious ways, to make the logo have an anti-Islam message. It's a middle eastern version of the old Proctor & Gamble church of Satan hoax.

Labels: ,

Monday, May 23, 2005

Impressions

I finally got around to seeing Charlie Rose's interview with Ariana Huffington. I was very underwhelmed. Somehow she missed the often expert nature of the commentary. Also she neglected to mention the speed that information is processed, but I guess one shouldn't expect too much from a 15 minute interview.

Speaking of the Huffington Post, I read Jim Lampley's current rambling of
Some esitmates for friendly fire casualties in Viet Nam exceeded forty percent. So what happened to Tillman, sadly, isn't very surprising. Unfortunately, the implication that the Pentagon fudged the information to boost the heroism impact of Tillman's sacrifice isn't very surprising either. Tillman's parents deserve bravery citations for telling the truth about their feelings.

Two things of note:
  1. Why do they have no spell check on that blog? Note the use of "esitmates".
  2. The phrase "Some esitmates for friendly fire casualties in Viet Nam exceeded forty percent. So what happened to Tillman, sadly, isn't very surprising" is the lamest phrasing I've heard in months. Why not cite the sources? Why go out of your way to appear weasely?

Labels:

Sunday, May 22, 2005

A new slur!

Yesterday while at Borders I spent about 20 minutes flipping through a US News & World Report special issue about Islam. What I read was fairly informative. While I thought it neglected the conceptual differences between traditional Islamic notions of law and society and traditional Western notions, it was still a good read.

One thing that stuck me was the interviews with American Muslims (in describing themselves they used the phrase "Muslim-American" which annoys me intensely) was their descriptions of how 9-11 affected them. Granted I'm sure they interviewed dozens of people and they only chose a few, but they all had the same theme, largely that they were all self-consciously Muslim in their day to day life, whether in garb, associating with other Muslims, etc. One even went so far as to describe identification with a larger group as "uniquely American". That also annoyed me intensely (this should be a country for individuals, groups are for the Balkans.). They were then surprised and offended when people began viewing them differently after 9-11. Put another way, they voluntarily profiled themselves before 9-11, but became offended when perception became negative.

There was also a section on Europe's experience with Islam. The Theo van Gogh story is well known, but there was an article about Muslim immigrants not assimilating in Germany. The article also mentioned that the immigrant children are taught in Islamic schools. I don't remember if the German taxpayers were on the hook for that or not. Not surprisingly this produces youth who have no interest in assimilating and I would imagine no economically viable skills, which is great if you're trying to produce a permanent underclass, but beyond that it seem braindead. The slur mentioned in the title is "Pork Eaters" which is a derogatory term that the Muslim schoolchildren use for ethnic Germans.

I then come across this article in Reason

On April 30, American journalist Chris Crain became the victim of a hate crime in Amsterdam. While walking in the street holding hands with his partner, he was savagely beaten by seven men shouting antigay slurs. A few days later, Scott Long, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Program at the Human Rights Watch, expressed some sympathy for the gay-bashers. Crain's attackers were reportedly Moroccan immigrants.

"There's still an extraordinary degree of racism in Dutch society," Long opined to the gay news service PlanetOut. "Gays often become the victims of this when immigrants retaliate for the inequities that they have to suffer."

and

Serap Cileli, a Turkish-German author and filmmaker who escaped an arranged marriage, told Der Spiegel that until recently, the German media refused to publish her accounts of her and other Turkish women's experiences for fear of appearing "racist."

Even feminists often balk at breaking the multicultural faith. A 2001 article in Labyrinth, a feminist philosophy journal, lamented that concerns about the oppression of women in the Third World could perpetuate "the stereotype that 'brown' men abuse 'brown' women more than white men" and cause "Third World" people to be perceived as "more barbaric" than Westerners.

Now beyond the implicit statistical errors in the above what does it say when everyone is so concerned about appearances and feelings over everything else. I'm reminded of the old Onion headline "ACLU defends Klan's right to burn down ACLU headquarters".

Labels: ,

Funny

Nothing is stranger than reading the New York Times discuss NASCAR
For a certain segment of the population, Nascar's raid on American culture -- its logo festoons everything from cellphones to honey jars to post office walls to panties; race coverage, it can seem, has bumped everything else off television; and, most piercingly, Nascar dads now get to pick our presidents -- triggers the kind of fearful trembling the citizens of Gaul felt as the Huns came thundering over the hills. To these people, stock-car racing represents all that's unsavory about red-state America: fossil-fuel bingeing; lust for violence; racial segregation; run-away Republicanism; anti-intellectualism (how much brain matter is required to go fast and turn left, ad infinitum?); the corn-pone memes of God and guns and guts; crass corporatization; Toby Keith anthems; and, of course, exquisitely bad fashion sense. What's more, they simply don't get it. What's the appeal of watching . . . traffic? It's as if ''Hee Haw'' reruns were dominating prime time, and the Republic was slapping its collective knee at Grandpa Jones's ''What's for supper?'' routine. With Nascar's recent purchase of a swath of real estate on Staten Island, where it intends to plop down an 80,000-seat racetrack and retail center for the untapped New York City market, the onslaught seems poised on the brink of full-out conquest. Cover your ears, blue America. The Huns are revving their engines.

Labels: ,

Sunday link smorgasbord

  • ChicagoCrime.org - a wonderful marriage of Google Maps and publicly available crime stats. Now one can see where the bad neighborhoods really are. Hat Tip: Defense Tech

  • Arnold Kling on starting a business instead of going to college.

  • From one of the Jane Galt Commenters:
    "Warning: the author of this piece is completely absent in any training in mathematics, science, or any other discipline involving rigorous thought that might qualify them to form a decent critical opinion. Read with caution."
  • Very good thoughts over at the Belmont Club, particularly "We live in a strange world where the Beslan story vanishes in weeks while Abu Ghraib lives on for years."

  • The Daily Pundit's has come up with a very good blogger's kit.

Labels: , ,

Perfectly put

From Will Wilkinson's blog

Should we expect less bottom to top, number one with a bullet, mobility as an economy grows wealthier overall?

Yes. People are constantly confused by the growing gap between the rich and poor. This is good thing, not a bad thing. If the bottom is fixed, at zero income, and the top keeps going higher, you've got a bigger gap. But lots of people are better off and nobody is worse off. Similarly, if the lowest quintile is anchored by a fixed bottom, and the top is untethered and rising, the distance from the bottom to the top will increase. The distance from the bottom to the middle will increase. So it will take longer to get there. If today's middle is equivalent in real terms to yesteryear's top, people who are going from the bottom to the middle are doing no worse than people of yore who went from the bottom to the top (even if we assume, counterfactually, that there has been no change in quality of life for people at the bottom.)

We should be AIMING at a system where the middle of the middle is, say $500,000 per annum, and so the trip from the bottom of the bottom to the top of the bottom, much less to the middle of middle, is a VERY BIG trip indeed.

The original post is here. I wonder why I've never heard that arguement put that way before. It's the standard economic reasoning for a positive sum game, but that line is the best you're going to see in terms of delivery.

Labels:

Saturday fights

I just saw Lamon Brewster knock out Andrew Golota. After the fight he offers condolences to Larry Merchant on a death in the family. A class act all the way, in the ring and the interview.

Oddly enough, then I go to his website, and while he does have a flash intro (bad in my opinion) it's done in a comic book style, which is good. He also has an "Ask Lamon" feature to the site which more athlete/celebrity sites should have.

Labels:

Saturday, May 21, 2005

Just got Team America


I just picked up the DVD, only the 5th non-instructional DVD I've ever purchased,and I have to say, it was as good as I remembered. It was as vulgar as I remembered too. Actually it was the most vulgar movie I've ever seen, and I've seen Bad Lieutenant. There were only about 5 minutes of deleted scenes, and I'm not sure why they deleted some of them (though many were understandable to get the R rating).

Labels:

Post Secret

Post Secret just freaked me yesterday, it's clean, weird and creepy. From their description:
PostSecret is an ongoing community art project where people mail-in their secrets anonymously on one side of a homemade postcard.

Labels:

It's odd

That no one has discussed the similarities and differences between the current Newsweek fiasco and the Valerie Plame affair. Both were anonymous sources, both were damaging and both were very political.

Labels:

And please join me in welcoming....

Leland-Nation to the blogosphere.

Labels: ,

Saw Revenge of the Sith

Mark and I saw Revenge of the Sith, and unlike many of the reviewers I liked it quite a bit, I hadn't seen the previous two but this one stood on it's own quite well. Eric was supposed to meet us but had car problems.

While walking back to the car Mark and I saw this bumper sticker (which was pretty good)



And this car, which is hilarious, inspired by the Napoleon Dynamite movie evidently.

Labels: ,

Thursday, May 19, 2005

The worst job ever

The worst job of all time is dead body smell tester. In Israel the IDF is training their search and rescue people to do their jobs in the presence of dead body scent.

Could you imagine the product testing for this? The article says that they
Rescue and medical professionals, who are familiar with the stench from personal experience, tested several chemical and organic substances before finding the exact "smell of death
That must have been awful couple of days. "How about this one? Too alive This one? Too dead. This one, that's perfect, its smells just like death!"

Labels:

While I'm waiting

For the hosting data center to "reboot to fix latency they call it", I'll share this link on media self-absobrtion by Claudia Rosette. It's the best article I've read so far about the Newsweek debacle. Money grafs"

But the chief victims to date have been the rioters themselves, some of whom died as the violence escalated. A Washington Post report Monday quoted an Afghan dry-goods salesman, Del Agha, who joined one of the riots, as saying: "We wanted to have a peaceful demonstration, but the demonstration was like a car and some people who are the enemies of Afghanistan took the steering wheel and turned it in the wrong direction."

As recounted in the Arab News, an English-language newspaper based in Saudi Arabia, Afghans angered by the Newsweek story "have lashed out in fury in all directions. The fact that not only government and UN buildings were burned, but even mosques shows the depths of their rage. The same level of public anger has been reported from Pakistan, Indonesia, Egypt and many other Muslim countries."

Let's pause right there. We are hearing that Muslims, infuriated by a report of blasphemy, went on violent rampages that resulted in . . . dead Muslims and burned mosques. Meanwhile, not only is Newsweek apologizing and retracting, but the U.S. government is regretting the loss of life.

What's really going on here is two stories. One involves Newsweek and the ups and downs of U.S. journalism. The other involves a swath of the Islamic world in which anger, fueled by years of gross political misrule, is a chronic feature of life--seeking to acquire a target. What produced these particular riots was the intersection of Islamic-world furies and that brand of U.S. self-absorption in which no subject is more fascinating to the American media than any possible misdeeds of the U.S. itself.

One media flaw that this (and every other article I've read) misses is that the media will not acknowledge that there are large parts of the world that are unreachable to them, yet it acts like it's giving you the whole picture. It will not admit ignorance.

While we're awash in celebrity stories, and the white house press pool will devote considerable time to getting their affectations right, we hear very little about the hundreds dead in Uzbekistan, and next to nothing about Darfour. Yet one never sees Peter Jennings saying "we have no Central Asian news tonight because the government won't allow us in. Now J-Lo and P Diddy are back together...."

The two points are not entirely related but I thought I should get them on paper.

Labels: ,

The classics never die

I came across this again today, suffice it to say, the classics never go out of style.

The best comic book cover ever.

Labels:

Thoughts on the media

First is this article from Virginia Postrel,
Some people say they want "just the facts," and fault reporters for introducing too much analysis. Others complain that stories do just the opposite, treating all sides in a conflict as equally valid. The news-buying public seems to want contradictory things.

But one person's contradiction is another's market niche. Those differences help answer an economic puzzle: if bias is a product flaw, why does it not behave like auto repair rates, declining under competitive pressure?

In a recent paper, "The Market for News," two Harvard economists look at that question. "There's plenty of competition" among news sources, Sendhil Mullainathan, one of the authors, said in an interview. But "the more competition there has been in the last 20 years, the more discussion there has been of bias."

The reason, he and his colleague, Andrei Shleifer, argue, is that consumers care about more than accuracy. "We assume that readers prefer to hear or read news that are more consistent with their beliefs," they write. Bias is not a bug but a feature.

In a competitive news market, they argue, producers can use bias to differentiate their products and stave off price competition. Bias increases consumer loyalty.
I've always though that the media should admit to having a side instead of pretending that they follow some conceptually impossible standard of objectivity.

The other is this very cool map of where all the news is coming from, called Buzztracker.

Labels: ,

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Things that annoy me, part million and four

The headline "Jane Fonda Film Banned From KY. Theaters" caught my eye immediately, and I started wondering if some combination of veterans and film critics had seized power in a subtle coup in order to have the power to ban a movie.

I then read the article and I find that a theater owner isn't showing the movie. Some ban. Why won't newspapers let words mean what they're supposed to? I suppose I've blacklisted the movie by not seeing it. It being a small world, all of this happened in Elizabethtown (near Fort Knox), ancestral home of the French clan.

Full Article Here

Labels:

Very Cool Blog

75 Degrees South, life in Antartica.

HT Instapundit.

Labels:

Notable

This post from RJ Rummel, while not terribly timely is worth reading, it points out the little known fact that Hitler, while he was elected chancellor, was not elected dictator for life as many seem to think.

Also, he has an interesting historical bit at the very end, to wit:

Note that during his Beer Hall putsch of 1923 in Munich, Hitler launched an unrealistic attempt to rally the public and take over the government. As Hitler and his supporters “marched on Berlin” they were met by police lines blocking their path. Someone fired a shot, and the police then fired into the crowd of marchers, where Hitler and his bodyguard were in front. His bodyguard was hit, and wrenched Hitler to the ground, dislocating his shoulder. Goring was shot in the leg, and 14 marchers and 4 policemen were killed.

Think about how the world would have been changed if one of those many bullets had killed Hitler. And think of this, when commentators treat the present as though the inevitable outcome of irresistible forces. Because one man survives a hail of bullets, everything – everything -- human in the world is changed.

Labels: , ,

Jimmy Martin RIP

He actually passed away several days again, but I'm finally getting around to writing about it. He was certainly one of the towering figures in bluegrass, both as a songwriter and as a showman.

This article from Gritz goes a long way for an interview. It does not go into what exactly was wrong with him in term of mental illness. I've heard it was definitely something serious; and judging from live recordings he always seemed very odd. It also touches on the many feuds he's had with people.

He does have several pieces of high praise for Earl Scruggs who is yet another towering figure in the genre who probably won't be in this world for much longer either.

Labels:

In place of a longer thought

Songs for John Doe was an anti-war record put out in the early 40's by dutiful Soviet apparachiks the Almanac Singers (Pete Seeger, Woodie Guthrie and the rest). For a brief period Stalin and Hitler were allies (and invaded Poland together, a little known fact). This record was their take on the matter, taking the position that America should not go to war for US Steel and JP Morgan, which was of course the only possible reason it would. They changed their tune the moment Operation Barbarossa began.

I have quite a few thoughts about this topic, but in general it would seem that the human condition is indeed timeless. I've got a quite a few thoughts on the matter that I'll get into words over the next week or so.

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

The other quote of the day

As work has been very heavy lately blogging will be light, but this is a nice little quote.
"Research has been shown to cause cancer in rats."

Labels:

Quote of the morning

Probably not true, but from a commenter on Yglesias

"...I was reminded of Kurt Vonnegut's statement to the effect that the human tendency to think their problems would be solved if only they were smarter is like giraffes thinking their problems would be solved if only their necks were longer."

Labels:

Monday, May 16, 2005

I join the rest of the blogsphere

I join the rest of the blogsphere in condemning the current Newsweek crap.
Cox and Forkum put it very well here.

And it's over shadowing reports of over 700 deaths in Uzbekistan.

Labels: ,

Would you like to play a game?

Oh artificial intelligence, so like us.

Labels:

More thoughts on the Iraqi insurgency

Via Tom Palmer is this informative article "The Mystery of the Insurgency" which deals largely with the fact that the insurgents are concentrating on killing Iraqis in great numbers.

To me this seems to be no mystery. Police states produce killers and gangsters and to a man with a hammer the world is made of nails. What else are they going to do but murder and crime?

Labels: , ,

Very well put

Jesse Walker, in a recent article in Reason

But if you haven't forgotten it completely, I'd like you to think back to that last week before the ballot, when many Democrats honestly believed that the polls were undercounting the "youth vote" and that this invisible demographic was going to put them over the top. Pretend, just as an exercise, that this fantasy really happened, and that a bunch of cell-phone-wielding kids elected John Kerry last November. Imagine that for the last six months, the Republicans have been searching their souls and spinning their wheels, trying to find out how they can get those fledgling voters for themselves.

One faction would claim that the best way to appeal to the young would be to muzzle every prominent Republican with a track record of appealing to the old. Another group would argue that the GOP needs to change itself more deeply—that it has to adopt youthful concerns as its own, just as soon as it figures out what those youthful concerns might be.

Yet another would insist the Republicans are already young and hip, and that the trick is to frame their message so the kids will understand this. They'd propose ads announcing that Karl Rove sends text messages, that Dick Cheney knows some real live lesbians, and that W. may be versed in the use of powders, wink wink; that running huge deficits is risky, just like snowboarding, and that Bush's favorite judges are totally extreme.

He also raises the Mother Jones quote of "worse than conservatives' pretense of moral superiority is liberals' pretense of superiority to morals."

He omits the media creating, and the Dems going along with, this whole artificial demographic of "Evangelical" and "People of Faith" when the perfectly good term "very religious" would do, but on the whole, a very good summation, of this whole crass endeavor.

Labels: , ,

Sunday, May 15, 2005

Last of the old cell pictures

I found these old pictures on the cell phone so I figure I'll tell the story about them for prosperity.

Sometime last October Mark and I were out riding around downtown, afterwards we go to Moes' in Ansley. After we come out (this is in probably the most left-leaning neighborhood in a very Democratic city) we see this bumper sticker,



which really stood out in terms of humor and originality. All the other bumper stickers (on around 90% of cars) were fairly juvenile and stale.

We exchanged a good chuckle and I took the picture (note reflection).

Up comes a large steroidal guy who sees me taking the picture and goes "You want to see a good bumper sticker, look at this one". We then go to his car and he has this one.



He then mistook my saying "That's pretty good too" (which it is) for "Elaborate on the topic. Tell me all your feelings on immigration and how your background informed your opinion; don't omit anything. Go back generations in your family if you have to but make sure I understand your position completely."

Which he did for the next 20 minutes or so.

Labels: , , ,

I figure out Bluetooth

Yay Hosanna

To trick it into searching and detecting Bluetooth items again, all you have to do is
  1. Click on the mRouter Icon in the tray
  2. Deselect one of the virtual Com ports that Bluetooth uses
  3. Wait About 3 Seconds
  4. Select that Same Port again
That will force the Bluetooth card to scan the area again for paired devices, which will allow it to find the phone, or it does for my Nokia 3650 anyway. Oh the joy of tieing up loose ends.

Labels:

Musings

Two links for my thoughts today
  • Instapundit on the ever growing meme of Nuclear Power, which is long overdue IMHO
  • I forget how I got to this link, but it is yet another examination of RKBA and the second amendment.

On the whole a low day today, just some bland work.

Labels: ,

Saturday, May 14, 2005

Bluetooth Update

I finally got everything installed properly, the problem wound up being the drivers that came with the device; the default windows drivers work just fine. However, you have to do everything in the proper order, and reboot after each installation, which for 3 distinct pieces of software is a pain.

And below is an interesting photo from last year, it is from the photo shoot I did with Julie at Georgia State.

Labels: ,

Dreamcatcher Guitar Workshop

The Lawrence Juber workshop at Dreamcatcher was interesting. There's no denying that he's an incredibly talented and innovative player, as well as a master of different tunings. He seemed to be playing a bit too much for the guitar nerd (which is his market) and it wound up being something of an acoustic Satriani, which is good, but not to my taste.

Labels: ,

It must be the phone

Or possibly all Bluetooth software. It's surprisingly difficult to find proper drivers for all this. Oh well.

Labels:

Friday, May 13, 2005

Darth Vader Blogs

at the Darth Side.

Labels:

You can't beat cool

Tim from Neighbor's Heating and Air (I did the site some time ago) just left after fixing my air conditioning and I have to say; quality really shows. The other two people I've had over here over the years both were constantly going back and forth to the outside unit and inside, before pronouncing that I had a Freon leak somewhere.

Tim (who also pronounced the Freon leak) just pronounces "Oh it's a Lennox A-83" twists some knobs on the inside unit and does everything from there. And then it got very cold....

Labels:

Thursday, May 12, 2005

China and India

While various members of the Commentariat (I'm looking at you Charlie Rose) talk quite a bit about the "peaceful rise of China" articles like this one about Indian Medical Vacations make me think that it will be India that will rise much higher. China seems to be putting a lot of effort into posturing lately, and their currency machinations will come back to bite them big time.

Labels: , , ,

Unbelievable

I just pulled a chicken bone out of my dog's throat. Who doesn't know that dogs choke on those?

Here I am walking my dog (on a leash, as always) on my private (but physically accessible to outsiders property) and I notice my dog acting a bit funny. After a quick check his mouth seems a bit strange so I open it up, see the bone, and then have to pull it out of his freaking throat. He's fine now but who doesn't know that chicken bones kill dogs? And what the hell are they doing littering on private property anyway?

No one who lives in this condo complex ever actually parks there (it's not that convenient to any of the units) and the only person I've ever seen there is some woman checking a map, though I've seen her do that several times.

Labels: ,

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Oil Books

Via Instapunit, Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy - which has the theory that the Saudis are running out of oil (not likely IMHO, if they were their behavior would be much different)

Via the too shrill Huffington Post, Secrets of the Kingdom - which has as one of it's major points the contention that the Saudis have rigged the entire country with explosive and radiological material as an incentive for everyone to stay on their good side. Again, not that likely, but interesting. It is written by Gerald Posner who usually does fine work.

Labels:

Something worth reading

Radley Balko had an excellent post on the abhorrent Soviet Chic trend that is spreading in some circles. It all goes to show the importance of marketing and identity to people I suppose.

Labels:

Thoughts on Self Selection

While picking some with JP this evening he brought up some new show on CNN that feature two people reading headlines from the blogosphere. Oddly enough the Daily Show on Comedy Central also had a piece on that as well.

JP also said something to the effect that with all of our technology we aren't any better informed. After some thought, here's what I think about that.

For the purposes of this post, there are three kinds of information
  • Identical Knowledge - this is information that is seen and believed identically. Example are Columbus landing in this hemisphere in 1492, Water boiling at 100 degrees Celsius, etc. Generally this is value neutral.
  • Shared Knowledge - Knowledge that is generally attached to a point of view or some moral value where two people can know basically the same facts but arrive at different conclusions. Examples are the designated hitter in baseball, politics, conspiracy theories, etc.
  • Personal Knowledge - this is knowledge that one person knows, but that other people in his or her social group do not. An example are highly specialized data that comes from hobbies or one's job.
I think that with the ever present technology Personal Knowledge has increased dramatically in relation to the other two types, giving the appearance that we all know less since Identical Knowledge (which is largely verifiable) is an ever smaller percentage of what people know.

Labels: , , ,

Monday, May 09, 2005

Worth Reading

Is this article on the practice of rendition in the Weekly Standard. It's written by a a former CIA officer who argues against it mostly on efficiency grounds.

It's worth reading all of the article, if only for insight on what a strange topic this is, and how important self image and membership in the group is to some people.. I'm reminded of the old South Park insight of "America is a big enough country to go to war without wanting to".

Labels: , ,

Iraqi Insurgency

Some very interesting reading; Tom Palmer refers to this WAPO article on the goals of the insurgency in Iraq, and it raises some interesting thoughts.

The article breaks it all down into 3 groups: al Qaida in Iraq, headed by Zarquai, hardcore Baathists, and non-hardcore Baathist sympathizers. It's all very good reading, most particularly the goals of the hardcore Baathists, which are to regain control of Iraq should the US leave. They thing they have the capability to do so based on their superior organization and ruthlessness.

All of which makes me wonder, the US death rate seems to be holding at around 15 or so per week, with a variance of 5 or so. However they seem to be coming in offensive action, not random murder, and the number of insurgents killed has been skyrocketing lately. Hopefully this is a good sign.

Labels: , ,

Sunday, May 08, 2005

Irish Gypsies

Who knew they actually existed, Irish Gypsies are distinct from regular gypsies (or the Roma), most notably in that they are ethnically Irish, but they have a gypsy lifestyle and are only in the UK, US and Ireland. This was who Brad Pitt was portraying the movie Snatch.

Labels: ,

Weird Things You Find On Wikipedia

In this case, an entry on the last major Nazi war criminal believed to be alive, Alois Brunner. Evidently he's hiding in Syria which is not great surprise I suppose. The strange thing about him (besides still being alive and unpunished) is that he has lost several fingers and an eye from letter bombs sent to him by Israeli intelligence. It's good that the Israelis still go the extra mile in these matters but it's astonishing that after losing an appendage to a letter bomb, Brunner would still open suspicious packages.

Thursday, May 05, 2005

Outlook fixed

After 10 hours of importing, exporting, and much other crap. I finally have Outlook working again. I still don't know the cause of the original problem, though I did learn that when Microsoft puts a limit on Outlook file size, they really mean it.

Labels: ,

Innovations in Capital Punishment from Japan

As I wait for Outlook to archive it's way to being fixed (hopefully) I peruse the web and see this post by Gene Healy about capital punishment in Japan. Basically it's by hanging (no great surprise) but they don't have a set date. The prisoner is on death row, and then some random day they come and hang him.

Labels: ,

This should be our national motto

As I wait for the Outlook repair tool to truncate my email file, here's some stuff I've been meaning to get on the web. The below should be our national goal.

From Between the Devil and the Dragon by Eric Hoffer, the diary entry from February 11, 1959
I live in a society full of blemishes and deformities. But it is a society that gives every man elbow room to do the things near to his heart. In no other county is it so possible for a man of determination to go ahead, with whatever it is he sets his heart on, without compromising his integrity. Of course, those who set their heart on acclaim and fortune must cater to other people's demands. But for those who want to be left alone to realize their capacities and talents, this is an ideal county. It is incredible how easy it is in this county to cut oneself off from what one disapproves--from all vulgarity, mendacity, conformity, subservience, speciousness, and other corrupting influences and infections.
Perfectly put.

Labels: , ,

More SATA Madness

So I get the new hard drive installed after flashing the bios, and finding a not quite recent SATA driver for windows, after that it installs fine and seems much faster, all well and good.

However, for some reason my Outlook quits working (I cloned my C drive over the new hard disk.) by not displaying any new messages. By some weird coincidence my outlook.pst file has reached the maximum size and once it reaches that point you can't delete anything nor see new emails (even though it says you can). So now I have to make a backup copy and truncate that, hopefully not lose anything, and see if that works. The backup is copying over now.

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

So I get the new hard drive

And I get it in only 2 days, which is really very impressive, its' my first foray into SATA, and as it turns out, it requires a special power adapter to get it to run. GRHHHHHHHHHHHHH.

Labels:

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

Stuff you could not find any other way

Where else but the blogosphere can one find this strategy theorist's explanation of terrorism, not to mention the often troubling but always interesting Belmont Club thoughts on the nature of modern social networks and numerous other thing, not to mention Asymmetrical Information. Really this information is not available at any price in any other form. It's truly remarkable and I wonder where it will go as the technology improves to include more live events. The function really is everything.

Labels: ,

Google Maps just keeps on getting better

Now they have Area 51 from the satellite view.

And in another Defense Tech link, is this article on installing windmills in Guantanamo Bay, which is really cool when you think about it. I suppose we're reaching the point at which some alternative energy sources are actually viable, though that oil prices will stay this high for too long.

Labels: ,

Funny

This article details the trials and travails of unions facing layoffs. The most interesting parts were
Cochran said the MNEA gave its MPSO members a paid work day Aug. 28 to work on the issues as a union.
and

Cochran said the current employee benefits package includes up to 25 vacation days, 25 compensation days, five personal days, religious and bereavement leave and up to an $80,000 salary.

Cochran said she believed the employees receive a good contract. She added that half of the MPSO members are at the top of the MNEA's salary schedule.

which seems like quite a bit of money to jeopardize by striking.

Labels: ,

Monday, May 02, 2005

A good counterweight

While coming back home today I was listening to "Free Speech Radio News" on Radio Free Georgia and they spoke of some of the usual May Day celebrations across the world, all delivered in their usual pretentious tone.

Then along comes Catallarchy's day of remembrance article, which put it all into perspective. RTWT.

Labels: ,

Pulp Hockey

http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2669692

Not safe for work at all. But very good though. HT: Mike

Labels: ,

Attack of the Fried Food

I'm not sure if it was food poisoning, or if it's just that I haven't had any fried food in about six months, but man , last night's pub grub did a number on me.

Blech.