Thursday, August 18, 2005

Warning: Your iceberg is showing

Been reading about Governor Taft in Ohio? Hear what he's being fined for and charged with?
Gov. Bob Taft became the first Ohio governor found guilty of a crime Thursday as he pleaded no contest to charges that he broke state ethics law by failing to report golf outings and other gifts.
And let's not forget that all of this came to light because something around half a billion dollars of the state's pension fund was being invested in shady stuff like rare coins.

The common element throughout all of this? A major Republican donor named Tom Noe who had his tendrils in every Republican in the state, it seemed, and who doled out and received favors, legal and otherwise, like it was his birthright. And now that he's been exposed, and we've had a follow-on scandal that seriously weakened and embarrassed the state's governor, do you really believe that's all there is to know? I don't want to sound all conspiracy-minded here, but where there's smoke, there's graft. Just look at Connecticut's governor if you're still skeptical.

Beware the party that obtains total control of anywhere. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Always.

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Oberin: Another Mac game I can't play

One of the stories I recently dugg on digg.com was about free online games. It's kind of amazing how many games of this kind are actually out there - check out the list on the site. I'm sure most of them suck on ice, it's still impressive that there are more than a few developers and players out there supporting communities like these. It's an indicator of things to come - the big games, like WoW or EQ, will still be around, but their membership will be dwarfed by those who play smaller, niche games for far less money. Game code is important, but community makes or breaks any game. When I briefly played EQ Mac, I was totally impressed with the support I got from characters in the game. People actually took the time to shepherd me through to other worlds, show me how to hunt stuff, and invite me into hunting parties. Sure, a lot of it was for their own benefit, but they didn't have to be as polite and understanding of a n00b as they were.

Which is where the free online games page comes in. The depressing part is that there was, as far as I could tell, one game out of that entire list that even supported Macs. It is, in fact, entirely Mac-only, and it's called Oberin. (Not the music school - that's with an "l".) I took a look at their site and it looks pretty professional, so I downloaded their client, thinking "What the heck? It's free." Not a huge client, so the graphics can't be stellar, but hey - if dudes take the time to develop something this complicated, the least I can do is create a character and explore.

Except I couldn't create a character, because the server was down. Hmmm, bummer. But they're not shy about announcing that it's a beta game with plenty of bugs (and probably always will be, given that it's being worked on by all of 3 people), so perhaps they have scheduled server down-time more often than most. Forgivable. Certainly they're hosting on a reliable ISP somewhere.

Except that's not true either. Seems from this forum post that the server is down because it runs on a G5 belonging to Glenn Seemann (HEE, sorry, couldn't help it), who is listed as the "Lead Programming, Lead Gaming System, Lead Graphics, Lead Webmaster, and Lead Everything Else". Apparently Glenn's G5 has crapped out in some way, and Glenn is on vacation, so whatever, no server for the weekend.

This is where I start to get a bit peeved. I mean, c'mon, what kind podunk operation is this? It's enough to put a guy off from joining a free online game. More than that, as the only free online game for Macs (that I know of), they have an obligation far bigger than most to keep up the good name of the Mac gaming community, which has been under heavy fire from the outset and is not looking altogether healthy now that the move to Intel has been announced. What, Glenn can't give remote control of his server to another developer while he's away? There actually seems to be a sizable number of gamers playing this wretched creation (which I can't even see so I'm not qualified to call it "wretched" or anything else), and it's not helping the "recruit more players" cause to have the server down on a weekend. All weekend. Sheesh.

So now I'm sitting at home on a Sunday, blogging about some stupid, junior-varsity game I've never played but want to, waiting for some guy named after jizz to come back to New Orleans, fattest city in the nation, and restart his G5. This had better be worth it. Feh!

Update, 9:46 AM: I poked around more into some of the better-looking (read: 3D) free online games, and it turns out that there are a few that have OS X client versions. Nice! Now downloading Realm Wars and Planeshift, and of course there's RuneScape, where I naturally already had an account but haven't played much owing to the somewhat slow, jerky, and strangely audio-free support of java applets in Safari. I played RS on a PC once and it was noticeably better, if only because there was music. More on the quality of the other online games once I get them installed. (Might have to do this on the dual-G4 desktop instead of the iBook G4, for fairness.)

Saturday, August 13, 2005

Apple's hot, Dell's not

"Shares in Apple Computer surged to a 52-week high in late afternoon trading today, while the market posted broad tech losses led by Dell's weak second quarter and future sales forecast."

I have to say, I worry a bit about Apple's profits coming largely from the iPod. What might this do to their commitment to OS X and the Mac hardware? Now that the hardware is going mainstream and could be manufactured in bulk by any schmo with an OEM discount, I'm concerned that they're going to turn their backs on the faithful hardware/OS geeks who basically got them through all the tough times. Don't become a music company Apple - remember your roots!!!

read more | digg story

Quake 3 GPL'ed within a week

"John Carmack has confirmed that the Quake 3 engine will be released under the GPL in a matter of 7 days. The announcement was made at the 2005 QuakeCon."

I've got nothing but respect for Carmack, even though he's an egomaniac genius snob. (To wit, see the first sentences in this blog entry: "To a first approximation, I don’t really like talking to most people...")He has that in common with Steve Jobs, so how can I throw stones? The trend of GPLing old games warms the cockleburrs of my heart, because the coder and mod community is getting so good with this stuff that it's exciting to think what they could do to professional-quality code like Quake 3.

I'm also a fan of Carmack because of Armadillo Aerospace, his X-Prize inspired team that's building a rocket to carry people into space. The weekly progress reports are almost too dense to follow, but that hasn't stopped me from visiting the site on and off for a couple of years now. The bottom line is that they've been working diligently for years building this system from scratch, and the ingenuity involved and progress made is truly impressive. Good movies of their flights on their site, too.

Carmack is a Force for Good, and the dude is the last word in graphics engines and new GPU chipsets, too. Not bad.

read more | digg story

Thursday, August 11, 2005

Grow RPG


You may have seen the first GROW game from Eyemaze, which can be found here:

GROW game ver.3

I played this game for hours, and ultimately had to cheat to max out all the items. Now there's a new GROW, and it's got an RPG theme! So cool, so addictive - click the entry title to go there.

You might not get it at first - that's the cool part of this game. You have to play a few times through to appreciate the subtleties and complex interactions. Give it some time - you'll be hooked soon enough.

Fortunately, this latest version is not as complicated or difficult as the first one - I solved it in just a few hours of experimenting. Still, it's satisfying to win. (See pic above for proof!) Email me if you need a clue...

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Starblogging about extremism

Somewhat of a rude surprise that Starbucks charges for their wireless connection, but I guess it shouldn't be. So much for Starbucks being the friendly neighborhood coffee shoppe on the corner. But I had to do it, just to say that I've blogging at Starbucks while drinking a non-fat iced latte. Too bad the damn sun is washing out my iBook's screen...

I think I have a new paradigm of al Qaeda and Muslim extremism that works for me. Thanks to Fareed Zakaria for the metaphor, which is that this "brand" of extremism is a supernova that exploded within the Islamic world, and its ripples have spread throughout the religion, creating extremist hot spots that will take some time to extinguish. (Actually, he mixed metaphors and said that the supernova planted a "virus" in the Muslim community, and you can see what he was getting at, but mixing metaphors isn't my bag, baby.) So here we have the intersection of the extremist supernova - set off by whom, exactly, I'm not sure, the Saudis? bin Laden? - that has found a willing target in young, disaffected Muslim boys and men. They are taught to hate the West, scorn anyone who doesn't follow strict Islamic code, and are often described by their families as changed individuals who even came home and criticized the family's "wrong" ways of living life that weren't up to orthodox standards.

Sound familiar? I'd say this is cult mentality in spades. Once again, I'm not original in this at all - I found many articles, including this one that support this view, and I think it's catching on. What I know of cults is admittedly limited, but one hallmark is that it's generally young, well-educated, middle class people who are most vulnerable to the pull of extreme views. In Islam it happens to be skewed toward men, I'm guessing because women are not as free to become educated and pull away from their families, but in general you see this sort of thing all the time. The Manson family, Jonestown, Heaven's Gate, Branch Davidians - lots of young people in the thrall of a charismatic leader who feeds them increasingly warped visions of reality until they are essentially brainwashed. Not a new phenomenon, but what's new about al Qaeda and Muslim extremism in general is that they espouse mass killings and attacks on innocent civilians as "acceptable" methods of expressing their beliefs, or rather impressing their beliefs on an evil and threatening society. Their aims, like many cults, are unreasonable and basically impossible - to bring back Islamic caliphates in as many countries and cultures as possible, and to stem the tide of modern lifestyles and views, especially in the Islamic world but essentially everywhere they can. Certainly no shortage of modern lifestyles out there!

In a strange way, the "Cult Frame" around this issue really helps me to understand it, something I've been struggling to do ever since September 11th. What makes young, educated men commit such horrible acts? How do they get to such a place where this seems rational and even required of them? Why, a cult, of course! Obviously not quite that simplistic, but at the root of it I think that's the best explanation.

Now, to extend this entry beyond the original point, I begin to wonder about cult spectrum, and whether there are lesser "cults" out there, and how I and others in my peer group fit into this. (Because it must, in the end, come back to me. Always.) After all, I'm essentially the demographic I just accused of being most vulnerable to cults, perhaps a bit too old, but still. Highly educated, early 30's, reasonably wealthy middle class background, and obviously with an idealistic streak. But hey, I'm not susceptible to the kind of cult thinking that those men flying the planes or planting the train bombs were, am I? Definitely not to that extent, but I am pretty passionate about Apple computers, and I do have a certain reverence for Steve Jobs. I even try to convince people to switch to Macs, almost daily (usually only when approached - I'm a gentle evangelist, not an aggressive one). Co-workers who "hate Macs" and call them inferior definitely raise my blood pressure and provoke me to launch a campaign to change their minds. I also believe fervently in the progressive, liberal point of view on most issues, although I'm less vocal about that outside this blog. People who spit out ridiculous conservative viewpoints like "intelligent design" and "privatizing social socurity" piss me off to the point where I feel like yelling and hitting something. Now, let me be clear, I've only hit one person in anger in my life, and he had it coming ([Rant]Alex Clavel, wherever you are, you were and probably still are a coward and a dick and a bully and I'm ashamed to have gone to Deerwood and Princeton with you. I hope you know that you had a starring role in ruining camp for me.[/Rant]). I believe that I'm far too skeptical and non-conformist to accept at face value any belief system that would have me do harm, or even make profoundly unhappy, any other members of the human race. So don't go away thinking I'm some ticking time bomb here, I'm just saying what gets me riled.

I encourage you, blog reader, to consider for yourself, assuming you fit the demographic, how you are different from the train bombers or the Sept. 11th hijackers. What are your passionate beliefs? Where did they originate? How far would you go to promote them? If loggers were threatening an old growth forest with gorgeous trees and wildlife near your childhood home, for example, would you spike trees? Live in one? Vandalize logging equipment? Stand in the way of a chainsaw? I'm just asking. Because there are people out there who get so worked up about stuff like this that they might even be willing to harm the loggers themselves, for the sake of nature and trees. How is this different from al Qaeda? How are the killers of abortion docs different? We're all human beings, and human nature is, well, human nature wherever you go. Just because a person is a Muslim who plants train bombs doesn't mean that you have nothing in common with them.

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Incredible photos you must see


I went to this site I saw on Fark.com expecting to see the usual photos of bullets caught in the middle of destroying stuff, and sure enough, there they were. Pretty cool stuff, but the dude seems to be just another German guy who's into photography, and clearly an engineer of some kind. But then I dug deeper, and read some of the most detailed, obsessed, and technical pages about modding a camera with lasers and magnets to capture pics of insects. Not just insects that have landed on stuff, or that are pinned to a board - living, flying insects in midair. Sure, most of it's in German, and most of the technical photography stuff went whizzing over my head, but this guy is the hardest of hardcore and his insect pics are gorgeous. Just insane that he was able to pull this off. This is one of them here.

Read how he modded his camera
See the insects he captured

You've got to recognize the skills.

Sunday, August 07, 2005

Yay! Victory Day!

You know how, back in the dark ages of the 20th century, our country used to celebrate Victory over Japan Day? V-J Day was, on its original day of August 14, 1945, a celebration that Japan had finally agreed to surrender after being atomic bombed twice, horrifically but, as some say, necessarily. Some wanted to call it V-P Day, for Victory in the Pacific Day, to bring it in line with V-E Day, which refers to Europe and happened the previous year, but Japan was pretty much the only enemy going in the Pacific, so it didn't make a heck of a lot of sense. According to this page, President Truman changed the official designation to "Victory Day" in 1946 (!), to basically be nicer to Japan. By 1975, nearly all states had abolished the holiday altogether, 30 years after its original celebration.

All states, that is, except for my newly adopted home state - Rhode Island.

Little Rhodie continues to be the lone holdout, officially celebrating it as "Victory Day" but apparently still unofficially referring to it as "V-J Day," much to the chagrin and offense of local Japanese Americans. According to that page I linked to above, which has proved to be my primary source for all this, the reason for the holdout has to do with the disproportionate numbers of WWII vets in the state and their inordinate political clout, which has vehemently blocked attempts not just to abolish the holiday, but even to change its name to something less suggestive and provocative, such as "World Peace Day" or "Rhode Island Veterans' Day." None of the legislation introduced in this vein has stuck, and some of it has been shouted down using terms like "Jap" that haven't been heard in most places here since the middle of last century. Articles such as this one reflect the subtle but real support Rhode Islanders express for maintaining the status quo. The author seems to be proud of it, saying "Rhode Island has some precedent in the holdout department; it was the last of the original 13 colonies to adopt the U.S. Constitution." Hunh?

I don't know what the latest efforts have been to change the name of or abolish Victory Day in Rhode Island, but it's high time we tried again. The Veterans' groups who oppose this, though I fully respect their sacrifice, need to be persuaded to fade into the background on this issue, because the day and the name itself encourage a hostility toward the Japanese (borne out by racially motivated incidents in the state in recent years) that is simply out of date and out of step with modern culture. The war may have been unavoidable and noble, and the Japanese may have been our blood enemy 60 years ago, but one of the imperatives about war, any war, is that it must be ended at some point and not kept alive in spirit any longer than necessary. If "war is hell", as vets are fond of saying, then peace must be as close to heaven as we can make it to clean the karmic slate and expunge the visceral hatreds, but not the memories, that talk of war conjures up.

Friday, August 05, 2005

Krugman on Intelligent Design

Blogging from bed on a school iBook, not much to say other than click the title of this article and read what Krugman has to say about the devious scheming of the "intelligent design" crowd. It articulates what I've been trying to say very well.

Russian submersible needs rescuing

The story about the trapped Russian submersible (click title to see it) reminded me of thoughts I had about the shuttle and their repair EVA's they've been doing. So far, manned space travel has all been close enough to Earth that heavy ground support is possible. Witness the extensive help the shuttle crew has been getting from NASA's engineers - launch, orbit, payload deployment, docking with the Space Station, taking pictures of every square inch during this launch, and all of the simulations and contingencies they planned for the latest repair EVA, which amounted to pulling cloth out of a crack. If this were a seafaring mission, they'd never be able to get more than 10 miles from shore! They'd need to stay within smoke and fire signal distance...

The poor guys on the Russian submersible are in a similar situation. Six hundred plus feet underwater, too deep for normal divers to go, and snagged on stuff that's keeping them trapped on the bottom. Talk about nightmarish! And yet they're still in communication with the surface, still able to radio for help, still connected an external source of salvation that, despite their best efforts, may or may not get there in time.

My point is, it's a long way from here to interplanetary exploration! Sending a crew to Mars or beyond requires them to be utterly self-sufficient for long stretches. Sure, communication with Earth is possible, but of course the further away they go the longer they have to wait for a reply. So if the Mars lander suddenly develops, say, an airlock leak upon entering Mars' atmosphere, there's no radioing for help - they've got to fix it themselves or die trying. All the brilliant engineers and simulations in NASA's stable won't do them a lick of good at that moment. Up until that point they've relied upon those folks' ingenuity in designing their craft and planning for all foreseeable circumstances, but if there's a lesson to be learned from nearly half a century of space travel, it's that there's always a circumstance that can't be foreseen. Apollo 13 got home through a combination of luck and clever improvisation, but it was not at all certain that they would live to tell about it. (Ask William Safire.)

I heard an astronaut on NPR the other day compare today's space travel technology with the days of clipper ships. We had the ability to sail the seas, but relative to what we've got today the technology was crap. Navigation was dicey, as was equipment reliability, and going very far meant taking a huge risk that you wouldn't make it back. We're going to have to make a lot of advances in space travel before we can safely send a crew to Mars, or even man a station on the Moon. Until those advances happen, I expect to lose a lot more astronauts to the dangers of outer space.

We have Foot Grabbing


As many of you know, we have a nearly 5 month-old baby in our house, and he's terminally cute. Above is a recent pic. Here's what's doing with the little guy, or "Smally" as we call him:
  • He's started to grab his feet while lying down or in the bathtub. This is a key milestone for any parent because it solves the "what am I going to distract him with now??" problem quite nicely. His hands found their way to his mouth long ago - he managed to suck both thumbs this morning, much to our amusement - and that provides minutes of entertainment and self-soothing, but hands + feet = toys that don't fall to the ground, and that's a Good Thing.

  • His chatter has grown by leaps and bounds in the past few weeks. Not only does he produce consonants and multi-syllabic statements, but he does it for long stretches, especially in the tub. Something about the warm water and my face hovering over him just gets him going, and he relates his entire day in very inflected, adorable gibberish, punctuated by squeals of joy and, of course, fingers jammed in the mouth. Bathtime, as our recent visitors can attest, is a time of High Cuteness.

  • He's going to daycare three mornings a week now, and Wednesday he came home with a note that read, in part "Today was my best day at school!" Mommy was so proud of him! He napped 1.5 hrs, (his normal max naptime is 45 min.), he drank two 6 oz. bottles, and he had "tummy time" in his crib for a while without crying. They said he seems to be getting more relaxed and settled in, which makes us feel much more sanguine about dropping him off. Of course, yesterday he backslid completely and gave them hell for most of the morning, but whaddya want out of a Smally?

  • He loves books, and we can read a good 3-4 of them in a row to him before he starts to lose interest. He reaches for the pages, touches the pictures, and occasionally squeals in delight when we hit a funny page or read an exciting passage. It's about the cutest thing ever, and it's extremely gratifying for two parents who are such bookworms to have a baby who sits entranced when being read to.
And that's today's Smally update. Tune in next time for stories of copious spit up and loud, non-solid bowel movements.

Thursday, August 04, 2005

Cum and knock on our door...

So we live in a little town called "Cumberland", which is actually really historic and cute and we like it very much. Trouble is, the town has three very unfortunate letters at the beginning of the name. And the natives, bless their hearts, have been known to use those letters (sometimes including the fourth, a silent "b") as shorthand for things. Take the event happening this weekend, for example: Cumberland Fest. A great hootenanny of food, bands, dog shows, balloons, cars - you name it.

Except there are signs all over town advertising it as "Cumb Fest."

This is a bit embarrassing, to be sure, but the "b" at the end sort of saves it visually. But try Googling "library cumweb" and see what you get. Here's the link to save you time:

Google "library cumweb"

Note the first link that comes up. Note the nature of all the other links. Case in point.

They seem to have modified their library system recently to remove this unfortunate short-cut, but still. Someone ought to keep watch for these things. Librarians don't get out much.

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

Bush's brain weighs in on Intelligent Design; no scales sensitive enough to report results

I really hope, decades from now, that this period in our history is looked upon as a sort of Great Awakening of the 21st century. And I don't mean that charitably. The forces at work to undermine science, human rights, and freedom of speech are organized and gaining ground with scary results.

Their latest coup is to get Bush to mention "intelligent design" as a legit theory to the press, and refer to the alleged "debate" between it and evolutionary theory:
"Both sides ought to be properly taught . . . so people can understand what the debate is about," he said, according to an official transcript of the session. Bush added: "Part of education is to expose people to different schools of thought. . . . You're asking me whether or not people ought to be exposed to different ideas, and the answer is yes."
He's the master of making the irrefutable statement, that one.

Originally I had a whole passage typed out about critical evaluation and considering all perspectives, but I deleted it. To try to "refute" a "theory" that has no scientific support and is based solely on faith is futile. And that's what makes me want to break things whenever I read or hear anyone who supports "intelligent design" (which I'm never going to dignify by removing the quotes). Like this guy. It boggles the mind the lengths these "scientists" go to cobble together articles about evolution, poke "holes" in them, stitch it all together in an important looking "paper," then go on to explain how they are refuting what scientists have been studying for hundreds of years and "proving" their theory that's been around for, oh, a couple decades. And hasn't held up well at all under scientific scrutiny.

The truth is, there's no point in arguing with someone whose mind is made up. It's the reason that scientists declined to attend hearings in Kansas to "defend" evolution from the "ID" crowd. The way this "debate" has been framed in the press and in these backwater, ignorant communities, that evolution is something that needs to be proven true or else it's false, is sobering. The question is not how to argue creationism in all its guises, but how to properly educate the minds that remain open to reason before it's too late and the forces of the irrational win the day.

Is this what underfunding American schools for decades has gotten us? A country full of ignoramuses who are willing to discard reason and believe in anything put in front of them? I just hope that someday we look back on this the way we look back at the race conflicts of the 50's and 60's, and shake our heads at how corrosive and dangerous pure ignorance can be.

Update: Sam Harris's post on The Huffington Post says it much better than I could. Awesome.

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Apple's Mighty Mouse

I have to laugh. Not because Apple has finally done it - they've built a two-button mouse! - but they've done it in such a way that it still can be called a one-button mouse. Best comment from Slashdot here.

I guess they didn't want to completely shut down the single-button mouse haters.

I do worry that it will be less than intuitive for those who indiscriminately click with fingers other than the index. The touch-sensitive feature is aesthetically very cool, but how the hell to explain this to the noobs who've never experienced a normal multi-button mouse? As someone who does tech support for some frighteningly ignorant users, I don't look forward to that. Touch sensitivity has proved to be a bit of a sticky wicket on the Apple flat-panel displays in the past, in that they're so sensitive they had to come up with a way to disable them. It's a bit of a non-intuitive technology, if you ask me.

Still, I expect that Apple did their homework and tested this mouse on normal users. It's such a typically cool Apple implementation of an existing technology and design. I hope it's not a flop.

A convert with a crush on his Mac

Click the title of this entry - this article is the perfect example of a principle I've seen borne out over and over again: Give someone a Mac to use in their daily computing for just a week or two, and they're hooked. This guy switched for security reasons, but the rest of the OS won him over as well, not just the lack of vulnerabilities (and, let's be honest, the lack of viruses, trojans, and malware).

It's hard to state this without sounding rapturous or snobbish about Macs (even the article's title speaks in romantic terms), but the truth is that most computer users have been settling for McDonald's when, for not a lot more money, if any, they could be eating gourmet food cooked by a professional chef. When I'm rich and eccentric I'm just going to buy a bunch of Powerbooks and loan them out to Wintel users for weeks at a time. I think Apple should give me kickbacks for the number of switchers I've inspired.

Monday, August 01, 2005

Recess disappointment

The fact that Bush is expected to appoint Bolton to be the U.N. ambassador during a Congressional recess shows just how far this president and his administration will go to get their way. The U.N. may be in need of some modernization and reform (at the very least, their headquarters needs it), but thumbing one's nose at such an important institution is, once again, stunningly arrogant. Do not be fooled by their "what, me?" reactions to everything - they are the asshole kid in school who gets away with everything he can while the teacher isn't looking, and intimidates all the other kids into not telling by threatening to beat them up at recess.

Heh. Recess.

These inflated, narrow-minded bullies need their come-uppance, and soon. Where's it going to come from?