18 years Ago

Theories on the Poor

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

This draft was buried, nearly complete in the earthli archives. It has been published now … well because it’s still relevant.

“True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.”
Martin Luther King

How’s it Going, Mr. Bush?

 Bush Views New Orleans from Air Force OneWhy doesn’t Bush come up with a better persona for the Katrina aftermath? Americans don’t really have high standards for veracity in reporting, a fact that he’s used often before. What’s... [More]

Libertarian Dilemma

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

US citizens not interested in Freedom (Slashdot) started off a conversation on Slashdot recently that aired some common arguments for and against the libertarian political system.

Libertarians want a world with as little government regulation as possible, including drug and weapons use. The basic philosophy goes along the lines of “if it only affects your own self, you should be able to do it”. No more laws imposing a morality inherited from religion or from less enlightened systems. If you want to smoke... [More]

How to Build a Ball Club

Published by marco on in Sports

The article, Build It, Or Else (Weekly Standard) is about public funding of private gain in an arena other than the military. Sports teams have been playing the “stadium hopping, city-hopping” game for several decades now and its only getting worse. The most recent and egregious instance is Washington D.C. “issuing $535 million in bonds to build [a] stadium” for the Montreal Expos, which are moving in as soon as it is complete. The article lists a litany of other stadiums, from baseball and football stadiums to... [More]

19 years Ago

Deleting Recent Connections in P4V (Perforce Client)

Published by marco on in Tips & Tricks

The Perforce P4V client has a list of recent connections under the “Connection” menu. This is especially nice when you use more than one workspace or more than one server. However, if you select the wrong workspace, it stores that copy too and there doesn’t seem to be any way of editing the list from the UI. That means your recent connections list gets crowded with entries you don’t want—and which may fail with a long timeout when selected.

You can’t remove entries from this list through the... [More]

JavaScript Libraries

Published by marco on in Programming

If you’re looking for good advice on JavaScript programming, take a look at javascript.faqts, which offers a massive list of questions and answers about JavaScript, including many samples and snippets organized by topic.

Yahoo goes Open Source

 The Yahoo! User Interface Library offers all of Yahoo’s JavaScript controls, packaged and ready for download as Open Source. It includes GUI-level components for handling drag & drop, or building treeviews or calendars as well as low-level components... [More]

Beware of Chuck Norris

Published by marco on in Fun

I think Chuck Norris Facts is hilarious. It’s also connected to one of the most advanced T-Shirt design & ordering sites I’ve ever seen; check out this sample. Here are some of the awesome T-Shirts you could make for yourself:

  • There is no theory of evolution. Just a list of animals Chuck Norris allows to live.
  • Chuck Norris does not sleep. He waits.
  • Chuck Norris has two speeds. Walk, and Kill.
  • When the Boogeyman goes to sleep every night, he checks his closet for Chuck Norris.

Compared to... [More]

Mad for the Wrong Reasons

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

Cartoons Worse than Torture?

This is the Real Outrage by Tariq Ali (Common Dreams) slices through the nonsense over the non-issue of the recent cartoons of Muhammed published in newspapers[1] recently. He acknowledges that the right to free speech is paramount, but neither can a speaker assume that everyone will react calmly and reasonably, regardless of the message.

“[T]he cartoon depicting Muhammad as a terrorist is a crude racist stereotype. The implication is that every Muslim is a potential terrorist. This is the sort... [More]”

Water: An Exercise in Contrast

Published by marco on in Miscellaneous

 The article, Bottled Water: Pouring Resources Down the Drain (Baltimore Chronicle & Sentinel) documents the rising fortunes of bottled water. Again and again, studies have pointed out that the water in these bottles is either no different from or actually inferior to the water coming from your faucet (“roughly 40 percent of bottled water begins as tap water”). Even several years ago, a large city like New York had healthier tap water in most places than the average bottle of water. In many countries, drinking tap water in... [More]

Canada: Worst Day Ever

Published by marco on in Sports

The Olympics can be a harsh mistress:

Swiss Men’s Hockey Team Shocks Canada
Coming only two days after their stunning upset of the world champion Czech Republic, 3-2, the Swiss team shut out the defending Olympic champions in a hard-fought battle.
Japan upsets Canada in women’s curling
Curling is more popular in Canada than hockey, if you can believe that. The women’s team is favored to win the Olympics again this year; they lost to Japan today.

‘Nuff said.

Sharing a Printer Between Windows Machines

Published by marco on in Tips & Tricks

Sharing files

It’s no longer as rare as it used to be to have more than one computer in a home. That means that home users are going to need to run networks—which is no mean feat for Windows machines. Getting two newly-installed[1] Windows machines to see each other is relatively easy.

  1. Just right-click a folder, select “Sharing” and tell it the folder is available.
  2. Users on other computers will need to log in with a valid account for that machine in order to access the folder. If you have... [More]

John Dvorak: A Cautionary Tale

Published by marco on in Technology

Simply put? John Dvorak is a troll. He is a click-through slut who will write anything to get people to visit his site. Since he doesn’t seem to get sued for libel and he garners ratings, PCMag hasn’t fired him yet for constantly making predictions that fail to come true. His latest opus is called Will Apple Adopt Windows? (do not click, see below), in which he predicts that Apple will abandon their OS X in favor of licensing Windows for their hardware. Here’s a good example of his... [More]

Copying != Stealing

Published by marco on in Miscellaneous

In a recent discussion about Bill Gates’ Letter to the HCC (Slashdot)[1], an unusually astute comment (Slashdot) was logged by 808140[2]. It put into clear terms the difference between copying software, media or other digital bits and the actual legal definition of stealing. Stealing means to deprive someone (the “owner”) of something to which they have purchased title. Making a digital copy of that “something” does not in any way deprive the owner of their property, so it can hardly be called stealing, can it?

“What [the... [More]”

Figure Skating Does it Again!

Published by marco on in Sports

 Last night saw the Olympics pairs figure skating final unfold in Torino. Unusually, things were going quite well and there had been only one judging anomoly for most of the evening. That one occurred when a Russian couple mysteriously got enough points to maintain their 8th place position over a 9th place Polish couple that outshone them completely. Figure skating is complicated to judge and the most unnoticable things (like which edge you’re using and so on) are quite hard and get marked... [More]

Natural Environments

Published by marco on in Video Games

Neverwinter Nights 2 is a role-playing video game coming to the PC sometime in 2006. It hasn’t been that long since a “check out these awesome screenshots” article[1], but I like screenshots. The last batch[2] were of a hyper-realistic racing game set in real cities around the world—a very angular, metal and concrete world. Neverwinter Nights 2 takes place in a much more organic, open world with trees, grass and other bits of nature as the main backdrop to the adventure.

Using Those Pipelines

... [More]

The Funeral of Coretta Scott King

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

As George Bush mentioned at the beginning of his State of the Union speech, Coretta Scott King, wife of Martin Luther King, died last week. She was almost 80 years old and had been in poor health after suffering a stroke and heart attack last summer. Throughout her life, she was a champion of civil rights for minorities—especially the poor—and was an outspoken pacifist. She was laid to rest with a six hour funeral ceremony during which “almost three dozen people spoke”, according to the... [More]

Speak Up … We Can’t Hear You

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

It’s been five years now since the President stopped caring whether we knew he was lying to us. It’s been five years since the office dropped the facade of caring what the American people think of what it does. It was harsh when it first happened, but by now it’s really hard to work up a good batch of indignation about it. So, yeah, you kind of just get used to it. It’s an attitude that is eminently manipulable by supporters of this president, this desire to ignore news of his repeated... [More]

Puppets

Published by marco on in Quotes

“I’ll show you politics in America. Here it is, right here. ‘I think the puppet on the right shares my beliefs.’ ‘I think the puppet on the left is more to my liking.’ ‘Hey, wait a minute, there’s one guy holding both puppets!’ ‘Shut up! Go back to bed, America. Your government is in control. Here’s Love Connection. Watch this and get fat and stupid. By the way, keep drinking beer, you fucking morons.‘”
Bill Hicks

Cartoon Violence

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

 Piss Christ by Andres SerranoAt least one embassy has been brought to the ground because of some childish cartoons published in a newspaper in Denmark. Or, shall we say, ostensibly because of these cartoons. The causal nature of the publishing of the cartoons and the burning of a Danish embassy is as plain as the nose on your face, most would say. Is that really so? A quick recap is probably in order for those that have only heard bits and pieces of fact mixed in with hyperbole from all sides, describing typical behavior... [More]

Project Gotham Racing (Xbox 360)

Published by marco on in Video Games

Project Gotham Racing 3 (Ars Technica) reviews the latest racing game from Bizarre Studios for the Xbox 360. The previous incarnations were known for their graphics. This one will be known for its photorealistic graphics. I’ve seen a couple of movies of the game in action and it is nothing short of breathtaking. Even when the action stops for a quarter of a beat as a Ferrari slews around in a 360º turn, the city backdrops are so perfect, you can’t tell you’re not watching a movie. The cars are perfectly... [More]

What Dicks!

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

’Marshall Plan’ for Iraq Fades (LA Times) hove its bedraggled carcass into view, reared its ugly head and expired with a wheeze that sounded like: “the America we learned about is dead and probably never existed”.

The story interviews several American officials whose crassness is beyond caricature—previously found only in the diseased imaginings of a died-in-the-wool marxist. And yet, quotes from these people are sprinkled throughout a story that shows no sense of outrage whatsoever. As far as the LA... [More]

Irish Case Mod

Published by marco on in Technology

The Whisky PC is a PC inside a whisky bottle. It’s about the size of a Mac Mini and looks pretty cool.

It’s apparently not so easy to do, as the guy (I’m assuming) who made the case had to get it professionally done:

“I tried to cut and drill couple of similar bottles at home but I realized that my tools are not good enough for it, then finaly a professional glass grinder man prepared the whisky bottle for me. He made two holes: one at the back of the bottle for CPU cooling and one at left... [More]”

Government Work is Wet Work

Published by marco on in Quotes

“Why shouldn’t I work for the N.S.A.? That’s a tough one, but I’ll give it a shot. Say I’m working at N.S.A. Somebody puts a code on my desk, something nobody else can break. So I take a shot at it and maybe I break it. And I’m real happy with myself, ‘cause I did my job well. But maybe that code was the location of some rebel army in North Africa or the Middle East. Once they have that location, they bomb the village where the rebels were hiding and fifteen hundred people I never had a problem... [More]”

Shiira OS X Web Browser

Published by marco on in Design

 Shiira is a KHTML-based web browser. If you visit this web site, you don’t waste a lot of time looking around for a Windows version, as it’s relatively clear that this is a Mac OS X product. Why is that? What is it about Mac products that demands a different level of graphical design quality and attention to detail? It can’t just be because everything’s shiny, can it?

No, it’s also the good use of the oversized header graphic that’s becoming quite vogue, both flaunting and reinforcing the... [More]

How’m I Doin’?

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

That’s the question implied by the smirk on George Bush’s face every time he speaks to the American people—not that he’s particularly interested in the answer. Bush dragged himself from the depths of his bubble to a dais (or rostrum, as his speechwriter put it) he’s visited six times before to deliver the 2006 State of the Union (Washington Post) address. The speech had all the earmarks of a committee effort delivered by someone who only understood about half of it. There were a good dozen different large... [More]

Ignorance Abides

Published by marco on in Quotes

“I have never won a debate with an ignorant person.”
Ali ibn Abi Talib

GTA San Andreas 100%

Published by marco on in Video Games

The third edition of Grand Theft Auto, San Andreas, is chock full of dozens of different activities. There are three large, main cities, a whole countryside with several smaller towns and a number of rivers and bays to jet around on. There are naturally the story missions, but also jobs to be had around the city as well as more collection missions than ever. The number of things to do seems to have tripled since Vice City. The game is far from linear, but neither is everything available all at... [More]

A One-Party Republic

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

Much of the chatter from Washington these days is about corruption, misplaced values and partisan politics. This has probably ever been so, but it’s the last one, partisan politics, that truly colors everything one hears about the centers of power in the United States. Almost without exception, issues are discussed as if there are only two possible sides and those sides are adequately represented by the Democrats and the Republicans, whose opinions on all issues are diametrically opposed. It... [More]

Modern Communication

Published by marco on in Quotes

“Never write when you can talk. Never talk when you can nod. And never put anything in an email.”
(New York Attorney General) Eliot Spitzer

Sammy “The Eel” Alito

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

 Most likely only those with the best endurance survived all 18 hours of the senate confirmation hearings for Samuel Alito. The entire transcript is also available online and runs to hundreds of pages. Reading 50 pages lends a strong feeling of deja vu whereas reading over 100 inspires more a feeling of disenchantment and nausea. Read The Shameless and Spineless by Will Durst (Alternet) for a comic synopsis of the entire transcript (see The hearing so far… (Plastic) for another). Democrats actually did ask pointed questions,... [More]

Going Along to Get Along

Published by marco on in Quotes

“What [people] are mostly interested in, lad[ies] and gentlemen, is going along to get along. Which only shows up for what it is—monstrous—if you pull back and take the long view.”
Stephen King (Dark Tower, pg. 289)