Saturday, August 16, 2003

Hey, Barrie

Deep sympathy for Roland's passing. RIP.
posted by captain davros , 12:20 PM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 10:47 AM Þ 

for some reason.

There is nothing in this world like a good dog.

Bad news.
posted by Irdial , 10:36 AM Þ 

My good friend Chris Jackie left on a vacation to Toronto about a week ago. I met his parents walking around town today (small town) and they told me that Chris was at the top of the CN Tower when the power went out. The lights, the music, the rotating gallery, all shut off instantly. Gravity helped them get down via elevator but the brakes had to be applied manually. Insane.
Another friend of mine spoke of someone he knew at Toronto Dominion bank who was working on backing up several very important files - in the middle of this the power went out, screwing up both the original and the backup. 15,000 clients were apparently lost. That should be fun. Insurance companies must be pissing their pants right about now.

Yesterday was a sad day because my family and I had to put our faithful dog Roland to sleep. He was 13 years old and was around for over half of my life. He had advancing cancer and it was time to release him, lest such a happy creature be in pain - something he did not deserve. I was prepared for it but the passing of a good dog is always hard for some reason.
posted by Barrie , 8:56 AM Þ 

I was listening to drum n bass pirate radio via scanner.irrational.org and it flipped frequency to a broadcast about conspiracy theories. I must have had this on for a an hour now, very interesting although I have been readingDer Typographische Raster and so not giving it my full attention.

Anyway, the signal is of a man talking, reading stuff and it sounds like he's outside, I can hear rain and wind. There are periods of silence when the ambient sounds take on a structured, composed feel. It all seems very Blogdial.

The first topic the man was talking about was the United Nuwabian Nation of Moors and a recent court case. Now he is talking about a man who is taking the US government to court claiming the AIDS virus was a government plot to control the Black Race.

Anyone have any idea what this is or how I will find it again!?
posted by alex_tea , 4:24 AM Þ 



THE GOLDEN MEAN GAUGE
To examine the validity of the fascinating Golden Proportion quickly and easily, an instrument, the GOLDEN MEAN GAUGE was developed to demonstrate this proportion.

The gauge shows that the numerous major landmarks on the moth's wing are in the Golden Proportion.

http://www.goldenmeangauge.co.uk/golden.htm
posted by Irdial , 12:35 AM Þ 
Friday, August 15, 2003

French Heat Wave Overloads Cemeteries

Friday August 15, 2003 7:49 PM

By ANGELA DOLAND

Associated Press Writer

PARIS (AP) - Gravediggers were called back to work on a national holiday Friday to deal with the grim aftermath of a heat wave that left up to 3,000 dead in France.

With morgues full, authorities took over the vast storeroom of a Paris farmers' market or kept bodies in refrigerated tents - as temperatures subsided throughout Europe, ending one of the most severe periods of intense heat on record across the continent.

Morgues and cemeteries have been overwhelmed in the heat wave, which the health minister called ``a true epidemic.'' A Paris regional funeral official said families would likely have to wait 10-15 days to have relatives buried.

``We're explaining the situation to families,'' said Hugues Fauconnet of General Funeral Services, the country's largest undertaker. ``Our most important mission is to preserve the dignity of the deceased.''

Funeral officials claimed the 43,000 square-foot refrigerated storage area of the Paris area's wholesale market in the suburb of Rungis. They planned to place bodies on army cots.

Complicating matters for burials: Many priests were away on summer vacation in predominantly Roman Catholic France, which all but shuts down during August.

Doctors have said many victims, who were generally elderly, died of dehydration heat stroke in the punishing heat wave that has gripped Europe, where many homes and offices lack air conditioning.

Throughout Europe, temperatures settled back to normal Friday. At times, the mercury had hovered around 100 degrees, fanning forest fires and devastating livestock and crops.

Thunderstorms cooled Switzerland on Friday, while in the Netherlands, temperatures were down to 68 degrees. The heat eased in Germany, though officials were still on watch for fires.

France's political climate still simmered with accusations the government didn't do enough to prevent the crisis.

Despite warnings from emergency room doctors, Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin waited until Wednesday to order Paris hospitals to prepare more beds and call health care workers back from vacation.

If the government had acted sooner, ``many lives could have been saved,'' Patrick Pelloux, head of the association for French emergency hospital physicians, told Le Parisien newspaper.

Former Health Minister Claude Evin, a Socialist, also accused the center-right government for waiting too long.

Health Minister Jean-Francois Mattei toured a hospital Friday in the suburb of Longjumeau that set up a refrigerated tent to store bodies.

``We're on maximum alert,'' said Mattei, who has denied allegations of foot-dragging. ``The crisis is not over.''

Friday was a Roman Catholic holiday, the feast of the Assumption, and most of France had a long weekend. The Paris mayor's office authorized cemetery personnel to stay on the job.

If the preliminary French figures of up to 3,000 deaths holds, the death toll would be among the highest in recent years, officials at the World Health Organization in Geneva said.

About 2,600 heat-related deaths were recorded in India five years ago, and roughly 500 people died from heat-related causes in 1995 in Chicago, according to WHO experts.

No other European countries reported deaths anywhere near the scale of those in France. Spain, for example, has recorded 42. Germany and Italy haven't issued figures on heat-related deaths, saying such figures are difficult to come by because heat may be just one factor contributing to a person's death.

The Guardian
posted by Irdial , 10:39 PM Þ 
posted by chriszanf , 6:19 PM Þ 

posted by Claus Eggers , 5:19 PM Þ 

Music for DXing

Try it mixed low against resonancefm right now
posted by meau meau , 5:16 PM Þ 

damn! nice picture, but did you know that the scorpions, they of gorky pa-ark, were a krautrock band previous to being stadium rockers? at least, according to the crack in the cosmic egg. coincidentally, the song I've been listening to all day, roy harper's another day (sung by liz fraser), was also covered by THE GODDESS KATE BUSH and peter gabriel on some TV performance. anyone seen it?
posted by Mess Noone , 4:51 PM Þ 



posted by captain davros , 4:01 PM Þ 

posted by Mess Noone , 3:12 PM Þ 

Help!
My Powerbook is showing no charge on the battery, and this seems true, but it won't charge up when plugged in. Any ideas?
Everything else seems to be working OK.
posted by Alun , 2:20 PM Þ 
posted by captain davros , 1:05 PM Þ 

Holiday memories coalescing.

In Berlin we visited the Jewish Museum, including the building designed by Daniel Libeskind. The void /holocaust tower of that building had the most profound effect on me of any structure I have ever experienced. A conduit for suppressed empathy. A belittling of the individual, in a compressed space with no end, it expands the self to become closer to all humanity, good and bad.

After this, one was left with a sense of bathos for the actual exhibition; it had become superfluous.

Berlin itself is a beautiful, vibrant, human city. The feelings it provokes in me are unlike any other place, mostly due to the past 60 years of history lying naked and honest in front of you at every turn.
posted by Alun , 10:45 AM Þ 

Music for DXing



Okay, some of you have this on CD already, but now "Music for DXing" is available here, courtesy of the kind and friendly 1104. Of course if anyone actually wants it on CD anyway, if e.g. you are on a 56k line for example, email me!

Thoughts on it are, of course, most welcome and appreciated.
posted by captain davros , 10:06 AM Þ 

If you want to backdial, please email me.
posted by Irdial , 9:45 AM Þ 

Gardens sorted. For weed?

Txt text. Contraction is the new expansion.
See also....
posted by Alun , 9:31 AM Þ 

You guessed wrong.
posted by Irdial , 8:51 AM Þ 

posted by Ken , 6:23 AM Þ 

Let me guess, you got yourself a T-610?
posted by Claus Eggers , 1:06 AM Þ 






Taken today, under Hammersmith Flyover.
Deal with it.
posted by Irdial , 1:02 AM Þ 
Thursday, August 14, 2003

posted by chriszanf , 4:15 PM Þ 

A father at 40? Sounds good!
posted by captain davros , 4:06 PM Þ 

In ten years, you will be wandering about aimlessly on a bike ride with a two-year old in tow.
posted by Alun , 3:29 PM Þ 

Ten years ago this afternoon, I was probably wandering around aimlessly.
Twenty years ago this afternoon, I was probably out on a bike ride.
Thirty years ago this afternoon, I was only two years old.

What on earth will I be doing ten years from now? Any ideas?
posted by captain davros , 3:15 PM Þ 

posted by Claus Eggers , 2:19 PM Þ 
posted by Claus Eggers , 2:13 PM Þ 

Today's lesson from the professionals:

Dr Kelly's immediate line manager, Dr Bryan Wells [at the MoD]...Mr Dingemans [QC] asked Dr Kelly [sic - he means Dr Wells] if he had questioned Mr Hatfield [head of personnel at the MoD] as to why a second interview was taking place. Dr Wells replied: "I just acted. I needed to be cautious about what I said on a mobile line."

Here endeth the lesson.

posted by Alun , 1:42 PM Þ 
posted by meau meau , 12:31 PM Þ 
posted by captain davros , 12:12 PM Þ 

posted by Irdial , 11:03 AM Þ 

Eigenradio plays only the most important frequencies, only the beats with the highest entropy. If you took a bunch of music and asked it, "Music, what are you, really?" you'd hear Eigenradio singing back at you. When you're tuned in to Eigenradio, you always know that you're hearing the latest, rawest, most statistically separable thing you can possibly put in your ear.

It's utterly fascinating.

I would love to hear a high resolution (128k), stereo stream of it.

Who gets the royalties?
posted by Irdial , 10:46 AM Þ 

My copy of "Quantum" arrived in the post yesterday. I have not heard it yet.

Someone is responsible.
posted by Irdial , 10:29 AM Þ 

Bought yesterday....

posted by Alun , 10:16 AM Þ 

Listen, and tell me what it is like (I can't behind the firewall).
posted by captain davros , 9:33 AM Þ 

posted by Irdial , 8:29 AM Þ 
Wednesday, August 13, 2003

posted by mary13 , 9:01 PM Þ 

posted by meau meau , 7:01 PM Þ 

posted by meau meau , 4:00 PM Þ 



Love the hot summer in Denmark
posted by Alison , 3:52 PM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 2:43 PM Þ 

n.b. It annoys me when people post responses like the one I just did to links, but on my third attempt at reading it I am still stumped. Can anyone make a precis of it for me?

Incidentally, being really picky, is it just that the text is too big to comfortably read in a narrow column like that?
posted by captain davros , 2:21 PM Þ 

Incredible. Really. Not to be ignored...

I have to say I tried reading that and couldn't fathom a thing from it. I did try, honestly.
posted by captain davros , 2:18 PM Þ 

"He who kills a tyrant (i.e. an usurper) to free his country is praised and rewarded" (St. Thomas Aquinas, In 2 Sentences, 44.2.2).

"He who kills a tyrant to 'free' a country some thousands of miles away from his own will be praised by a public who fail to understand their 'representatives'' actions and rewarded with a more lucrative and more easily governed oil profit margin." (Anon.)

posted by Mess Noone , 1:12 PM Þ 

Incredible. Really. Not to be ignored...

http://www.somewhere.org/NAR/writings/critical/whitehead/main.htm

A recent consideration of a friend of mine, who believes the United Kingdom to be on the brink of a civil war...

http://www.catholicherald.com/saunders/01ws/ws010927.htm (Specifically, the section concerning the words of St. Thomas Aquinas)

posted by Mess Noone , 12:54 PM Þ 

Investigations conducted by the network on the earlier, successful hack attempt revealed that an unknown person had posed as an AJN employee and approached the US-based firm which was hosting the website. The individual had claimed that he wanted to carry out some technical work on the site and demanded the personal identification number (PIN) of the portal.

"Officials at the company asked him for the AJN website password and this person claimed that he had misplaced it. For some reasons, they allowed him to access the server and he hijacked our domain," Abdulaziz added.

here
posted by meau meau , 11:13 AM Þ 



I just love the meaty, massive chunks of sound that these two get out of their guitars and they spin them round so delicately, there's so much grace in 'moving' the fragments so slowly and countered by flowing bluesy licks - no wonder I keep returning to it.
Very cooling - soothing on a hot day (failing to get gnome installed)
posted by meau meau , 10:19 AM Þ 

posted by Mess Noone , 9:43 AM Þ 
Tuesday, August 12, 2003

posted by captain davros , 4:16 PM Þ 
posted by captain davros , 2:55 PM Þ 

posted by meau meau , 2:51 PM Þ 

Honeywell, Airbus Build Anti-Crash System

Six Sigma is an integrated, disciplined, proven approach for improving measurable results for any organization. The Six Sigma method and message is literally improving our lives. (located after the Honeywell site)
posted by meau meau , 12:00 PM Þ 
Monday, August 11, 2003
posted by Alun , 9:28 PM Þ 

fux0r... who woulda thunk it?
posted by alex_tea , 6:23 PM Þ 
posted by meau meau , 2:02 PM Þ 

posted by meau meau , 12:29 PM Þ 

too much summer yet... Miss the blogdial...
posted by Alison , 11:35 AM Þ 

You Are Beauty
You are Beauty.

You are beautiful, whether it be on the inside, the
outside, or both. People are drawn to you as
strongly as you are drawn to the beauty in the
world around you.


What Emotion Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla


posted by Alison , 11:28 AM Þ 

Holy shit. If I had a label, this is the first place I'd start digging...

John Levy Archive (Scottish Studies)

The John Levy Archive is a primary ethnomusicological resource of international importance, and is held in the Sound Archive of the School of Scottish Studies. It consists of nearly 700 original field recordings of music from various parts of the world, several thousand photographs, and about 20 cine films. There is also Levy's personal collection of approximately 400 commercial LP discs (including some he produced himself), books, papers and miscellaneous artefacts, plus some copies of other fieldworkers' recordings. Levy's field recordings, which are generally of excellent quality, were made on a Nagra-S tape recorder between 1958-1972 in India (223 spools), Sri Lanka (55), Bhutan (48), Taiwan (101), China (81), South Korea (34), Iceland (35) and the UK (107). The scope of the recordings is wide, and features the religious musics of these Asian cultures (and related communities in Britain, including Sufi and Sephardic), as well as court musical traditions and indigenous folk musics. Further information can be found at http://www.sss.ed.ac.uk/archives/index.html

http://www.lib.ed.ac.uk/resources/collections/specdivision/cas.shtml


posted by Mess Noone , 11:10 AM Þ 

Mrs Gunderson. Whahaooaoooa. Mrs Gunderson. This is about Mrs Gunderson and it gets dirty.

You know she's got to be in her fifties but whahaooaoooa, what is it about her that's got you thinking? She's got great posture. She dresses like some kind of royal person or something, like that American lady who married the king of Jordan. What was her name? Queen Someone. Mrs Gunderson's prettier than her, though, and her earrings are so delicate. Hoops like rings you'd reach for if you were very small, and riding around her head on some kind of crazy miniature floating carousel. How old is she, anyway? Fifty? Sixty? Man, you just do not know. You'd love to be one of those guys who can guess ages. Your friend Naveed is pretty good at it; when you met him he knew you were a year older and you hadn't told him dick - he just guessed you were 10 and... you were 10! And you've been friends since, three years now, even after he threw a rock at your head while aiming for a cop car, and you still have a red mark that looks like the one you get from your booster shots - round red dots just under the surface that hardly hurt at all...

posted by Mess Noone , 9:45 AM Þ 

I haven't read that whole article yet, cos it's 4am and I'm going to bed, but this caught me eye Comic books, traditionally what we think of, are for kids.

I just don't get this type of argument, that a particular medium is restricted to a particular demographic. I hate demographics in general anyway. But if this is the case, then the whole history of comics has been disregarded. From an abstract history in hieroglyphs to a more direct influence from political caricature over the last few centuries. Were these for kids? Is Punch for kids? Are the illustrations in nearly every newspaper globally for kids?
posted by alex_tea , 4:02 AM Þ 

Disgusting.

But what do you expect... it's Texas. OMFG SAVE THE CHILDREN OMG
posted by Barrie , 3:50 AM Þ 
Sunday, August 10, 2003

You Are Lust
You are Lust.

Every part of you screams "Do me now!"
You exude sexuality and while others sometimes
view you as a slut, you see yourself as only
giving into your base desires.


What Emotion Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla
posted by Ken , 12:02 AM Þ 
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