Saturday, January 28, 2006
posted by Irdial , 11:34 PM Þ 
Friday, January 27, 2006

tiananmen - Google Image Search.

tiananmen - Google Image Search in China.

Everyone is bellyaching about Google censoring its service for the Chinese market.

I call bullshit.

If you were Sergei, what would you do? Let M$ run you out of China, or establish a foothold now with a reduced /censored service knowing that maybe in ten years China will open up completely and not censor anything, leaving you at the top in the most populous country in the world?

If Google plans to be here in ten years time, then they want to be in China when it becomes censorship free. The only way to do that is to get in there now, whatever the cost. It makes perfect strategic sense to the long term thinker.

People who whine about this should be paying FAR more attention to what is happening in their own back yards, instead of minding the business of complete strangers who they would not invite into that same back yard to escape the 'terrible lives' they are living 'over there'.
posted by Irdial , 3:35 PM Þ 

Canadian label/artist management group Nettwerk Music Group has announced it is taking on the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in the controversial battle over suing individuals for illegally downloading songs online via file-sharing networks. "Suing music fans is not the solution, it's the problem," Nettwerk CEO Terry McBride simply said in a statement.

Teenager Elisa Greubel recently contacted Nettwerk client MC Lars, whose new track "Download This Song" tackles the file-sharing issue, on his Web site, writing, "My family is one of many seemingly randomly chosen families to be sued by the RIAA. No fun. You can't fight them, trying could possibly cost us millions. The line 'they sue little kids downloading hit songs,' basically sums a lot of the whole thing up. I'm not saying it is right to download but the whole lawsuit business is a tad bit outrageous."

In response, Nettwerk has agreed to pay all legal fees for the Greubel's family, which is challenging the RIAA's suit. Chicago lawyer Charles Lee Mudd Jr. will represent the Greubels. Mudd has represented multiple individuals who have been sued by the RIAA since 2003.

"Litigation is not 'artist development.' Litigation is a deterrent to creativity and passion and it is hurting the business I love," added McBride. "The current actions of the RIAA are not in my artists' best interests."


http://www.fmqb.com/Article.asp?id=168427"
posted by chriszanf , 2:24 PM Þ 

Clipmarks

How much do I trust a developer whose website doesn't give you scrollbars - some of us need small windows!(

DownThemAll... is THE Firefox download tool as far as I'm concerned.

-

Another study group member, Dr. William Turner, described studies done by American psychologist John Calhoun, in which Norway rats, under conditions of overcrowding, formed what were termed ``behavioral sinks.'' Here a pattern of extreme behavior changes emerged, such as cannibalism and rape, reminiscent of human psychopathology. This behavior emerged among 5% of the rat population. He indicated that similar effects might be expected of humans under crowded urban conditions.

(research)
posted by meau meau , 9:42 AM Þ 

Firefox is better than ever with 1.5, which i just autopackaged into my Fedora Core 4, since it hasnt shown up in up2date yet.

These are the extenstions that I have just installed, which are great; some of the ones I already ran have been updated, like Session Saver, which is brilliant, and adblock.

Adblock Plus With Filterset.G Updater

The original Adblock extension isn't just popular; it's THE reason why some people switch to Firefox in the first place.

Tab Mix Plus
Firefox has spawned a whole category of extensions devoted to tweaking one of the browser's most popular and practical features: tabbed browsing.

Download Manager Tweak
Some extensions are so well-built, practical, and just plain smart that it's a pity they aren't built into Firefox itself. This is one of them: With Download Manager Tweak you can choose where the Download Manager opens,

PasswordMaker
The Firefox password manager is acceptable, but you can do better -- thanks to an extension based on some high-powered applied mathematics. The fact that PasswordMaker delivers this cryptographic complexity in a package even a head-injured monkey could use just makes it even more impressive.

snarfed from here.

And now, for the ones not from that page:

Bugmenot is priceless, and they have a cool new page with AJAX fades....great stuff.

X-Ray is a great extensino (yes, 'extensino') that shows you the markup in a page; its great when you want to debug some CSS that is screwing up.

Clipmarks is like Higher Thought, but without the linking. Worth a mention, and not essential.

And while we are at it...

Mt-Daapd is a simply great way to serve up iTunes music shares from your Linux box. Forget running iTunes on Crossover as a way of sharing your music library from Linux, Mt-Daapd is the way to do it. It is totaly rock solid and ..... you can stream video from it also! It will scan and serve up all your mpg files so that you can watch them on your Mac iTunes...now that is REALLY cool. Its also very easy to set up, unlike all the other absurdly complex 'solutions' out there.

Now, if only someone would solve the problem of printing TO a printer connected to a Linux box from a Mac/PC.
posted by Irdial , 12:26 AM Þ 
posted by Irdial , 12:22 AM Þ 
Tuesday, January 24, 2006

York International Cello Weekend

Friday 17 to Sunday 19 February

[...]

Saturday 18 February
2.00pm – 3.30pm

CHARLES MEDLAM

The Baroque Cello: Some thoughts on the history of the cello from c1530 until Beethoven including: the emergence of the viol and violin families; the five-string cello in the seventeenth century; the influence of the viol on early cello technique and expecially on the Bach suites. With excerpts from pieces by Simpson, Marais, Abel, Gabrielli, Bach, Boccherini and Haydn played on bass viol, five- and four-string baroque cello.

[...]

Saturday 18 February
4.00pm – 5.30pm

ZOE MARTLEW

The Contemporary Cello: An informal recital and discussion looking at the broad range of contemporary and mid-twentieth century cello repertoire, including Xenakis, Jonathan Harvey, Kaia Saariaho and Morton Feldman; extented string techniques; aspects of improvisation and theatre. Zoë will also perform excerpts from her one-woman cabaret show, ‘Z Unleashed’ (featuring ‘a girl, a cello, a whip and a lot of digital playback’) to demonstrate how the aspects illustrated can be used to create a new medium.
[...]

posted by Alun , 10:13 PM Þ 

In the country of the blind, a one-eyed king is totally out of touch with the needs of the populus.

....



Lately we have watched:

Bom yeoreum gaeul gyeoul geurigo bom

, by Ki-Duk Kim
La Grande Illusion; Jean Renoir
Les Quatre Cent Coups; Francois Truffaut
Todo Sobre Mi Madre; Pedro Almodovar
Une Femme est Une Femme; Jean-Luc Godard
Jules et Jim; Francois Truffaut
Cinema Paradiso; Guiseppe Tornatore
X-men2; Bryan Singer
The Simpsons; Season 5

Last night we made the best saag paneer I have ever tasted. It was a Madhur Jaffrey recipe, from this essential book.

At the weekend we ate at Vanilla Black, and had tea and cakes at Betty's, and at home drank Chateau Ducru-Beaucaillou 1996, Groot Constantia 'Grand Constance', Billecart-Salmon Brut Rose and a good Savenierres.

Chateau of the earth of the beautiful pebbles! Mmmmmmm...
posted by Alun , 10:40 AM Þ 
Monday, January 23, 2006

The proposed Iranian oil Bourse

The Iranian government has finally developed the ultimate "nuclear" weapon that can swiftly destroy the financial system underpinning the American Empire. That weapon is the Iranian Oil Bourse slated to open in March 2006.

Krassimir Petrov, Ph.D.
Abstract: the proposed Iranian Oil Bourse will accelerate the fall of the American Empire.

I. Economics of Empires

A nation-state taxes its own citizens, while an empire taxes other nation-states. The history of empires, from Greek and Roman, to Ottoman and British, teaches that the economic foundation of every single empire is the taxation of other nations. The imperial ability to tax has always rested on a better and stronger economy, and as a consequence, a better and stronger military. One part of the subject taxes went to improve the living standards of the empire; the other part went to strengthen the military dominance necessary to enforce the collection of those taxes.

Historically, taxing the subject state has been in various forms-usually gold and silver, where those were considered money, but also slaves, soldiers, crops, cattle, or other agricultural and natural resources, whatever economic goods the empire demanded and the subject-state could deliver. Historically, imperial taxation has always been direct: the subject state handed over the economic goods directly to the empire.

For the first time in history, in the twentieth century, America was able to tax the world indirectly, through inflation. It did not enforce the direct payment of taxes like all of its predecessor empires did, but distributed instead its own fiat currency, the U.S. Dollar, to other nations in exchange for goods with the intended consequence of inflating and devaluing those dollars and paying back later each dollar with less economic goods-the difference capturing the U.S. imperial tax. Here is how this happened.

Early in the 20th century, the U.S. economy began to dominate the world economy. The U.S. dollar was tied to gold, so that the value of the dollar neither increased, nor decreased, but remained the same amount of gold. The Great Depression, with its preceding inflation from 1921 to 1929 and its subsequent ballooning government deficits, had substantially increased the amount of currency in circulation, and thus rendered the backing of U.S. dollars by gold impossible. This led Roosevelt to decouple the dollar from gold in 1932. Up to this point, the U.S. may have well dominated the world economy, but from an economic point of view, it was not an empire. The fixed value of the dollar did not allow the Americans to extract economic benefits from other countries by supplying them with dollars convertible to gold.

Economically, the American Empire was born with Bretton Woods in 1945. The U.S. dollar was not fully convertible to gold, but was made convertible to gold only to foreign governments. This established the dollar as the reserve currency of the world. It was possible, because during WWII, the United States had supplied its allies with provisions, demanding gold as payment, thus accumulating significant portion of the world's gold. An Empire would not have been possible if, following the Bretton Woods arrangement, the dollar supply was kept limited and within the availability of gold, so as to fully exchange back dollars for gold. However, the guns-and-butter policy of the 1960's was an imperial one: the dollar supply was relentlessly increased to finance Vietnam and LBJ's Great Society. Most of those dollars were handed over to foreigners in exchange for economic goods, without the prospect of buying them back at the same value. The increase in dollar holdings of foreigners via persistent U.S. trade deficits was tantamount to a tax-the classical inflation tax that a country imposes on its own citizens, this time around an inflation tax that U.S. imposed on rest of the world.

When in 1970-1971 foreigners demanded payment for their dollars in gold, The U.S. Government defaulted on its payment on August 15, 1971. While the popular spin told the story of "severing the link between the dollar and gold", in reality the denial to pay back in gold was an act of bankruptcy by the U.S. Government. Essentially, the U.S. declared itself an Empire. It had extracted an enormous amount of economic goods from the rest of the world, with no intention or ability to return those goods, and the world was powerless to respond- the world was taxed and it could not do anything about it. [...]


http://mathaba.net/0_index.shtml?x=507537
posted by Irdial , 4:48 PM Þ 

no room for debate.

Debate is fine, and always has been. What we absolutely detest is when our food is permanently poisoned without debate. What we detest is being forced to take medicines against our will without debate. If there were honest debate, and as a consequence, real choice, there would be no problem.

I very much doubt that anyone involved with the GM testing that has poisoned the environment (for example) would have been stopped by simple honest debate, because the people who want to do the tests don't consider that anyone other than them has a grasp on the entire picture, hence they troll out sniping and pointless straw man examples like that breakdown of tea, designed to illustrate the 'ignorance' of people who have not studied chemistry. The GM equivalent is the straw man that humans have been breeding plants for thousands of years. Utterly irrelevant in the context of GM crops. Then they go right ahead and spill thier filth on everyone's food without any avenue of redress when it all goes wrong, like it has done.

This is unnaceptable to any decent human being.

Everyone knows that the origin of a product is not necessarily related to its toxicity; you can be killed by eating an organically grown mushroom and be as dead as if you had swallowed a cup of bleach. That isn't the point of people's rejection of artificial products, and the chemists know that. They are being disingenuous when they bring out these childish and stupid PR tricks to reclaim their high status in society. People have cast them down and are rejecting their artificial products and medicines because they want to live in nature, not in opposition to it.

This is why companies like 'The Body Shop' and others are so sucessful. You can wash your hair with products that are not in opposition to nature, and have hair that is just as clean and sweet smelling as if you used artificial surficants manufactured by Unilever. Everyone now realizes that there is no extra utility/value to be gained by heeding the words of chemists and buying thier poison. The fish love it better. The animals who don't get tortured to see if the doses are correct love it better. It makes sense. It's more human. Thats why the world is changing and turning its back on brute science.

What is nauseating to us is that when the public has spoken with its money, ie, not buying products from Beyer and Unilever et al, these vermin turn to the law to FORCE everyone to eath their medicine - they lost the debate, and like sore losers are trying to break the rules of the game. This is why they are lobbying the EU to have vitamins restricted to such an extent that they are for all intents and purposes banned. They did this by trying to legislate the dosages that you are permitted to be sold. Absurd, criminal and unjustifiable by any reasonable person.

It would be ok if all they did was debate and spout nonsense, like the absurd tripe statement about St Johns Wort being no good because the active ingredient has not been isolated. The problem is that they then turn to the law to coerce the public to obeying their will, to submitting to their dogma; all of which is centered on measurement, reductionism, and the microscopi quantifying of everyting without exception. Those ways of thinking, to a chemist, are good - anything that is unmeasured, unquantified, not standardiszed is bad. Thats ok. You believe whatever you want; that is your right. But you do NOT have the right to poison my land, force me to take only the medicine you prescribe and othewise control my existance.

cyclopian views

In the country of the blind, the one eyed man is king.
posted by Irdial , 3:34 PM Þ 

The image “http://www.partybox.co.uk/data/images/troll1.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Without going on too much, the main point of the Observer article appears to be, to me ...

In short, says the report, published by the charity Sense About Science, there is a wide mismatch between the public's attitudes to man-made and natural substances. People think the former lead to cancer and are responsible for many of society's woes. As a result, they try to lead a chemical-free lifestyle. The idea is nonsense, says the report. 'Claims that products are "chemical free" are untrue.'

Research chemist Derek Lohmann points out: 'If someone offered you a cocktail of butanol, isoamyl alcohol, caffeine, geraniol, 3-galloyl epicatechin, and inorganic salts, it sounds pretty ghastly. Yet it is just a cup of tea.'

By contrast, there has been a steady increase in uncritical acceptance of natural products.

When read in context, it does not come across as a "Science is God" puff-piece. Straw-man posts (to coin a phrase) like below are exactly what they claim to be attacking - cyclopian views with no room for debate.
posted by Alun , 11:47 AM Þ 

"Heating the bottle in a microwave can cause slight changes in the milk. In infant formulas, there may be a loss of some vitamins. In expressed breast milk, some protective properties may be destroyed."
...
Valentine asked himself: If an established institution like the University of Minnesota can warn about the loss of particular nutrient qualities in microwaved baby formula or mother's milk, then somebody must know something about microwaving they are not telling everybody.
(From here)

Dr. Lita Lee of Hawaii reported in the December 9, 1989 Lancet:

"Microwaving baby formulas converted certain trans-amino acids into their synthetic cis-isomers. Synthetic isomers, whether cis-amino acids or trans-fatty acids, are not biologically active. Further, one of the amino acids, L-proline, was converted to its d-isomer, which is known to be neurotoxic (poisonous to the nervous system) and nephrotoxic (poisonous to the kidneys). It's bad enough that many babies are not nursed, but now they are given fake milk (baby formula) made even more toxic via microwaving."
...
According to Dr. Hertel,

"Leukocytosis, which cannot be accounted for by normal daily deviations, is taken very seriously by hemotologists. Leukocytes are often signs of pathogenic effects on the living system, such as poisoning and cell damage. The increase of leukocytes with the microwaved foods were more pronounced than with all the other variants. It appears that these marked increases were caused entirely by ingesting the microwaved substances.
...
Of all the natural substances - which are polar - the oxygen of water molecules reacts most sensitively. This is how microwave cooking heat is generated - friction from this violence in water molecules. Structures of molecules are torn apart, molecules are forcefully deformed, called structural isomerism, and thus become impaired in quality. This is contrary to conventional heating of food where heat transfers convectionally from without to within. Cooking by microwaves begins within the cells and molecules where water is present and where the energy is transformed into frictional heat.
...
From the twenty-eight above enumerated indications, the use of microwave apparatus is definitely not advisable; and, with the decision of the Soviet government in 1976, present scientific opinion in many countries concerning the use of such apparatus is clearly in evidence.
From here

Now, I am not entirely happy with my inability to find a proper research paper from a peer-reviewed publication, but the simple fact that proteins and nutrients are being broken down into less useful forms is all the convincing I need. But likewise I'm also not entirely happy with my inability to find proper studies proving that microwaving nutrients is harmless.
Now let's look at the wikipedia entry:

Cooking food with microwaves was discovered by Percy Spencer while building magnetrons for radar sets at Raytheon.
This article makes no mention of the synchronous (not uncommon by any means) discovery in Germany of the technology.
There is a great deal of technical talk afterwards, which I won't quote here, and under the "dangers" all we get are how microwaves have a tendency to be incompatible with metal. This rather violent reaction however doesn't really seem to make any connect in the writers' head about the fact that this strong force is also being applied to things we ingest into our bodies. Oh SNAP, am I sounding like a HEALTH NUT? Better get the straight-jacket and haul be away to the funny farm! Sounds like Barrie is going against SCIENCE!

Some people claim that there exist more subtle dangers than the ones listed above associated with cooking in a microwave oven.
Admittedly they give a decent amount of space to this topic but it's all annulled by one simple sentance:
Here are some examples of anti-microwave websites. Most claims made on these websites lack any scientific value, such as their explanations of electromagnetic radiation.
Yeah, shit, there's no scientific value in anyone who doubts technology. Those anti-microwave zealots. That is basically a brush of the hand, a roll of the eyes. "disregard those kooks."
This is exactly the kind of attitude displayed in the story Akin quotes in his last post. This is the fetishization of technology. It's sophisticated and convenient, it HAS to be good for us, regardless of the fact we disregard any kind of investigation into its true effects. This kind of thinking just further convinces me to ignore my microwave and reject the convenience. It's not that big of a deal in the long run.
Food tastes better when it's reheated in my simple toaster-oven, anyway. Bah.
posted by Barrie , 6:40 AM Þ 
Sunday, January 22, 2006


Trust chemicals, beware of nature

From make-up to medicine, scientists warn that people are wrong to think natural must be best [...]

The Guardian up to its pay for play PR tricks again.


Translation: We are your Gods. Only what we prepare for you may you eat. All else is outside of Science and is therefore sin.

Research chemist Derek Lohmann points out: 'If someone offered you a cocktail of butanol, isoamyl alcohol, caffeine, geraniol, 3-galloyl epicatechin, and inorganic salts, it sounds pretty ghastly. Yet it is just a cup of tea.' [...]

This is of course, a lie.

Tea is a leaf that you steep in boiling water, nothing else. You take the tea that you reqire. It does not need to be subjected to brute reductionism, deconstruction, analasys or any other useless procedure so that you can make a straw man point. Go back to your place of work and do somethign for the good of humanity instead of trying to destroy everything that does not conform to your false religion.

Henry also warned about the use of traditional medicines such as St John's wort: 'There is no doubt that it can be effective for treating depression, but it is difficult to administer. We do not know what its active ingredient is and that means you cannot assess its dosage.' [...]

This is typical; because we cannot measure it, you should not take it. This is total and utter rubbish, and a fundamental part of their dogma. I've got some news for these people, NO ONE is buying anything they have to say anymore. THEY are responsible for the large scale ills of the world; building factories that leak pollutants without a single care for human safety (Bhopal for example) and they have never been made to account for this and the many other crimes they have comitted. Even now, the EU has drafted a law allowing food to be marked as Organic even though it has been accidentally contaminated with GM material. If scientists were responsible human beings with due care for their fellow man, they would never have conducted these GM crop trials in the open air where they could despoil nature. This is pure arrogant evil at its worse, and no paper begging the public to trust these people will change the truth; they are fundamentally UNTRUSTWORTHY and indeed trust must be EARNED and not granted after wimpering please and straw man logic.

My advice to these people; stop planting these amaturish PR exersizes designed (badly) to change public perception of what you and your religion are. Abandon your relgion and join the human race; that is the only way you and your crimes will be forgiven. If you carry on as you have been doing, you will be shut down completely and no amount of PR will be able to rescue you.
posted by Irdial , 1:55 PM Þ 
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