Archive for February, 2003

Mr Rogers Dies

Friday, February 28th, 2003

Won’t You By My Neighbor.

‘Mister Rogers’ dies at age 74

PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (CNN) — Television’s “Mister Rogers,” the cultural icon and kindly neighbor to generations of American children, died Thursday at the age of 74.

Growing up I was a PBS kid. It was one of the few things my mom would let me watch regularly. I remember watching Sesame Street, Mr. Rodgers Neighborhood, and The Electric Company regularly. I still remember so many bits about the show now. There was the trolley that went to the Make-Believe land, and Mr “Speedy” McFeely (the mailman). I’m not even sure if PBS even still airs old reruns of the show, but I hope they do (it appears they do). I actually think I even have the record from the show on vinyl. Goodbye Mr. Rodgers, you’ll be missed.

[life - listed chronologically]

I was reminded tonight of King Friday, Henrietta Pussycat, and Daniel Striped Tiger. There are others of course. But those are the ones I recall particularly.

Don’t really have much to say though. It’s a pretty sad thing. Not often do you remember someone you’ve never met and wonder who you would be if they hadn’t been around.

Not as good I think. Not as good.

UK has some great sex-ed

Thursday, February 27th, 2003

This is definitely pretty high on my weirdshitometer: “Government urging under-16s to experiment with Oral Sex“. Apparently they think it’ll somehow curtail the teen pregnancy problem in Britain.

“Well, professor was RIGHT. That was fun!. Ok, I’ll call you tomorrow! G’night.”

Hmmm….. Lemme get this straight: Experiment more with foreplay as a method of avoiding actual sex. Only the British.

Might as well teach the Amtrack method ya friggin dolts.

(”dolts” referring only to the person or persons responsible for drafting such a policy with those goals in mind. This is not an indictment of the executors of such an inspired plan nor of the British people or culture at large.)

Who knows, maybe this’ll bring about a generation of brits who are a bit less pent-up (yeah, this coming from an AMERICAN! Excuse me, I’m going for a juicy succulent lunch.)

WTC Plan: A bunch of stuff I didn't know.

Thursday, February 27th, 2003

This message posted using Radio's Mail-to-Weblog feature. Another test post using the default parser:

http://www.cnn.com/2003/US/Northeast/02/27/wtc.architect/index.html

Winning WTC plan is taller than twin towers

Libeskind’s proposal featured a tower 1,776 feet tall, symbolic for the
year of American independence, that would demonstrate “the durability of
democracy,” while the top floors would be filled with indoor gardens as
a “confirmation of life.” The tower would be the world’s tallest.

The architect says that having calculated the arc of the sun, a wedge of
natural light would funnel visitors to the memorial site, and that every
September 11 between 8:46 a.m., when the first tower was struck by a
plane, and 10:28 a.m., when the second tower collapsed, no shadows will
be cast by his buildings.

[Grumpicus Maximus]

On first glance I kinda liked the other plan better. The two wire-framesque towers. I actually went through the 50 page presentation on them, how they were laid out, etc. But the subtleties of this plan are much more well crafted and elegant.

It’ll be a nice change to see that outside my livingroom window instead of this.

A good read, from either side of the fence.

Thursday, February 27th, 2003

I SUSPECT THAT THIS JONAH GOLDBERG PIECE on McCarthyism will generate a lot of, er, discussion.

Kevin Drum has already responded.

[InstaPundit]

keeping the barbarians off the walls

Wednesday, February 26th, 2003

How to block spambots, ban spybots, and tell unwanted robots to go to hell. I fight back against telemarketers who abuse my phone, and now I’m fighting back against robots who abuse my web site. (1723 words) [dive into mark]

As is par for the course from mark, this is a great treatment on blocking the leeches of the internet from sucking up your bandwidth and pouring molasses in your cpu.

I'm just good

Wednesday, February 26th, 2003


How evil are you?

See somewhere deep inside I just KNEW it was true; despite any newly formed opinions to the contrary.

Now it’s time for bed, a few hours early tonight. Tomorrow it’s off with The Lunch Club for the first time.

Lost Labor

Wednesday, February 26th, 2003

American workers in photos.

Lost Labor is an absolutely beautiful gallery of vintage photos of American laborers from the eary part of the 20th century.

Link

Discuss

(Thanks, May!)


[Boing Boing Blog]

This is really a great site. Navigation among the galleries is a bit tough. But it’s well worth the visit.

QOTD

Tuesday, February 25th, 2003

“The world is a tragedy to those who feel, but a comedy to those who think.”
- Horace Walpole

Ipecac for the soul

Tuesday, February 25th, 2003

Proof it’s even worse than it appears.

You mean this isn’t an Onion story?

[The Doc Searls Weblog]

Resume Response Spam

Tuesday, February 25th, 2003

I just got this form letter:

A review of your online resume on ZillionResumes.com indicates that you may possess some of the skills, aptitudes, and/or experiences needed for success with our company. We are looking for a select number of ambitious individuals who have the capability of becoming Supervisor Executives and who are seeking new opportunities to enhance their income. If you are interested in becoming a part of our team, please visit our web site at: http://www.nottherealurl.info/
Please doNOT reply by e-mail. You must go to our website and download the information. We use this screening process to eliminate those candidates who are not serious or qualified to be part of our team.

Best Regards,

The Dare to Succeed Group

My resume over at “ZillionResumes” huh? That just makes me feel unique and special. No no, really, it does.

:-/

Number 90… Number 90

Tuesday, February 25th, 2003

Subscription #90.

o.p.b.a.m.b.. or other people bloggin about my blog… i have this thing set up called . I dont even really understand… [CHOKERSANDWICH]

Blogfame’s a bitch (not that I’D know of course.) Welcome aboard Martin Diggs.

Collective Consciousness or The Drummers Live

Tuesday, February 25th, 2003

It’s tough not to look on the Japanese youth culture as being 20 minutes into the future. I
envy them this.

Ming
and target="_blank">Smart Mobs talk about the prevalence of
intercommunicative cell phone technologies, and it paints a fascinating
and admittedly enviable picture of the way personal communication is
changing. Read their posts first. But then come back if you will. I’ve
got a template to put over that picture.

Stand back from the
Japanese girl taking pictures in the store with her camera and sending
them to her friends in another mall. Stand back just enough to see the
other 10 girls in the store on a Saturday afternoon getting ready to go
out, all doing the same thing. Then step back farther and into a
different kind of abstraction and watch the pictures and the text
messages flowing at the time through the same system, across multiple
(largely) orthogonal circles of friends. Gadgets, outfits, music,
commentary on television shows, movies, actors and songs they’re hearing
at that very moment.

Imagine collecting all that information,
mining it for yeas and nays, the whys and why nots. Don’t pictures of
goods imply approval of a sort? Merge RFID tags so that there’s concrete
information about what’s being snapped. Instant feed back. “They like,
don’t like, want, don’t want…” All of a sudden the racks of clothes
themselves somehow seem like an anachronism. An old, cold way of
presenting options and choices to these intelligent agents of fashion
approval.

Pull out the personal identifiers, the names and
addresses, or just make it an opt-in network. But continue to slurp all
the aggregate information, as google does. Sell it or give it to
clothing manufacturers, network producers, marketing directors, or just
post it online. Let people mine it themselves the way they do with
google, amazon, RSS feeds, ebay, and the big bad web at large. Hell,
grant access to the opt-in participants as a reward for behaving as a
data-collector.

Close the loop so that stat graphs and charts are
displayed on cell-phones in real-time, reflecting choices of people
“just like you” who you will never meet. Then watch. The
Connectors, Mavens, and Salesmen
will emerge. What else
will?

I’m not enough of a futurist to know. I’ll leave that to
the people who seeded me with the ideas I’m just tying together. I just
watch.

Is there anything in here that’s not just flat-out old-news
technologically?

This is the sound of society developing it’s own
collective consciousness.

Do the privacy concerns of the
individual users amount to the shotgun tied to the head of
Wintermute
?

Are these Japanese girls really the
Drummers
?

More Engrish

Monday, February 24th, 2003

You’d think they’d hire a consultant for stuff like this…

Butt Skirts… debunked

Monday, February 24th, 2003

OK, this story is all over the net, but these skirts are just super-sexy. [Adam Curry: Adam Curry's Weblog]

Debunked :-(. This now has an entry over at Snopes. I saw the original over at Accordeon Guy a couple days ago and was discussing it with a friend of mine and we came up with the observation that they were just a little too perfect in their perspective. But I WANTED TO BELIEVE so bad that I just kinda ignored it.

So there ya go folks. It’s a lie.

Martin is Cool

Monday, February 24th, 2003

Martin Diggs likes Blogs



if you live in the LA-area, you may have seen a TV ad for Drive Time, an auto dealership/financial institution for folks with less than stellar credit. in it, a rather rotund black man munches on potato chips while wearing a wanna-be gut-zapper known as ”Gut-Be-Gone.” recently, i happened to stumbled upon this “Gut-Be-Gone” star’s very own blog. his name is Martin Diggs, and he likes peanut butter. on ChokerSandwich, Martin talks about going on auditions, offers up his part in an ad for Prozac for black men called ”Brozac,” and recalls shooting hoops with George Clooney. Martin is cool. how many bloggers can bost a clip of themselves flying through the air c/o GEICO?

[the reverse cowgirl's blog]

Where else but from Kowgirl? This gave me a much needed break from what I was working on. Back to my regularly scheduled writing. Thanks again K.

(no title)

Monday, February 24th, 2003

The Great Pirates. Some hundreds of years ago the technology of ship building advanced so that it became practical to travel the oceans for extended periods of time. Thus whole new territories were opened to exploration and possible domination.It became clear that it was impractical to assume that the law and order of the land could be applied to the sea. Thus the oceans became a zone of lawlessness and a battleground for whomever chose to enter the arena. It also became clear that those who fared best were those who mastered all the elements of survival at sea and who did their business under the veil of secrecy. It is those who mastered this game that we can call The Great Pirates.A Great Pirate succeeded because of his comprehensive command of a whole set of different disciplines. He had a high proficiency in dealing with celestial navigation, the sea, the storms, the ship, the men, economics, biology, geography, history, and science. The better the Great Pirate could understand and anticipate the whole scene, the better he would do.Great Pirates would travel, bargain, plunder, plan, negotiate, battle, and much more. He would use the science of ship building to amass a fleet, he would use his people skills to manage his crew and to negotiate with representatives of far away lands. He would do his activities out of sight of people on land and of his competitors.A Great Pirate would naturally want to maintain his position, and he had to sleep once in a while. He therefore at first surrounded himself with dull-witted but loyal men of muscle. Only he himself planned and coordinated his operations, and his men simply did what they were told. However, when the Great Pirate expanded his operations it became clear that he needed something more than that.The Great Pirate invented the brilliant scheme of specialization. It is both the way to expand his empire with skilled assistance and at the same time the assurance that only HE will ever know the full picture of what is going on.The Great Pirates started to encourage and employ people of great skill in specialized areas. There might be, for example, a greatly skilled and experienced Navigator. And there might be a master Weapon Builder, an accomplished Master Historian, a Politician, a Ship’s Captain, a General, and so forth.Each of those people were cultivated to a high level of skill. But also, it was made clear to each one that they had better stay within their specific field, or they would lose their head.The Great Pirate himself would be the ONLY person who knew the whole picture. He would know the plan, he would know where ships would go and why, he would know what they would find, who they would meet, he would know what to trade and what to steal, he would know who to trust and who not to. None of his people would ever be allowed near the full picture, and none of them could therefore possibly replace him. And thus his position was safe from any coup by those close to him. He always kept the true full picture in utmost secrecy and kept the skills and knowledge of all his people perpetually compartmentalized.Through the ingenious scheme of specialization and compartmentalization of knowledge, the Great Pirates were able to expand their business immensely. They were able to expand their influence into different lands through carefully chosen and educated front people. They would chose local strong men in different territories, supply them with what they needed to assume power, educate them to present a proper public facade, but never giving them the knowledge of all the pieces in the game. The local strong man might be maneuvered into a position of King, assumed by his people to be the utmost authority, but in essence simply being another of the specialized agents of the hidden Great Pirates. The Great Pirate would naturally also cultivate agents in the fields of religion, education, science, military, banking, and so forth, and would naturally be able to play them out against each other if any one of them ever got ambitious beyond his assigned role.The Great Pirate knew the world was round when everybody else were kept in the belief that it was flat. He knew about grand logistical schemes, he knew about international exchange media and trade balancing, and much more. He was the only one who saw the whole picture of the planet and its resources, and was therefore able to play his game totally unnoticed by the vast majority of the population of the planet. All through the magic of specialization … — The above is my shortened rendition of what Bucky Fuller described in his book “Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth“, in the chapter “Origins of Specialization” [Ming the Mechanic]

(no title)

Monday, February 24th, 2003

Monday, February 24, 2003 7:09 AM.
PETAL-FALL SOURCECODE, 9.20.01

Wrote following for THE NATIONAL POST, September 20, 2001, where it was published as “Mr. Buk’s Window”:

All that terrible week I would think of the very small display window of E. Buk, a marvelously idiosyncratic antiques dealer in SoHo. E. Buk is never open. There is no shop directly behind the little window in a side street. A locked door, and, one assumes, stairs. A tarnished brass plaque suggests that you may be able to make an appointment. I never have, but when I happen on Mr. Bukâs window (somehow I can never remember exactly where it is) I invariably stop, to gaze with amazement and admiration at the extraordinary things, never more than three, that heâs dredged from time and collective memory. Itâs my favorite shop window in all of Manhattan, and not even London can equal it in its glorious peculiarity and Borgesian potency.

Gazing into E. Bukâs window, for me, has been like gazing into the back reaches of some cave where Manhattan stores its dreams. There is no knowing what might appear there. Once, a stove-sized, florally ornate cast-iron fragment that might have been a leftover part of the Brooklyn Bridge. Once, a lovingly-crafted plywood box containing exquisitely painted models of every ballistic missile in the arsenals of the US and the USSR at the time of its making. This last, redolent of both the Cold War and the Cuban missile crisis, had particularly held my attention. It was obviously a military learning-aid, and I wondered what sort of lectures it had illustrated. It seemed, then, a relic from a dark and terrible time that I remembered increasingly as a dream, a very bad dream, of childhood.

But the image that kept coming to me, last week, was of the dust that must be settling on the ledge of E. Bukâs window, more or less between Houston and Canal Streets. And in that dust, surely, the stuff of the atomized dead.

The stuff of pyre and blasted dreams.

So many.

The fall of their dust requiring everything to be back-read in its context, and each of Bukâs chosen objects, whatever they may have been, that Tuesday: the dust a final collage-element, the shadow-box made mortuary.

And that was a gift, I think, because it gave me something to start to hang my hurt on, a hurt I still scarcely understand or recognize; to adjust one of my own favorite and secret few square yards of Manhattan, of the world, to such an unthinkable fate.

They speak of certain areas in Manhattan now as ãfrozen zonesä, and surely we all have those in our hearts today, areas of disconnect, sheer defensive dissociation, awaiting the thaw. But how soon can one expect the thaw to come, in wartime?

I have no idea.

Last year I took each of my children for a first visit to New York. Iâm grateful now for them both to have seen it, for the first time, before the meaning of the text was altered, in such a way, forever. I think of my sonâs delight in the aged eccentricities of a Village bagel restaurant, of my daughterâs first breathless solo walk through SoHo. I feel as though they saw London as it was before the Blitz.

New York is a great city, and as such central to the history of civilization. Great cities can and invariably do bear such wounds. They suffer their vast agonies and they go on — carrying us, and civilization, and windows like Mr. Bukâs, however fragile and peculiar, with them.

THIS EVENING, THROUGH THE TWEED CURTAIN

Monday, February 24, 7 pm, at Bolen Books in Hillside Centre, 111-1644 Hillside Ave, Victoria BC, 250 595 4232

“The Tweed Curtain” is a Couplandism. See DC’s Vancouver city-book, CITY OF GLASS, for the brief psychogeographic survey of Victoria in which the phrase appears. (Did you know that Victoria BC is the headquarters of global Satanism? No? You don’t remember MICHELLE REMEMBERS?)


[William Gibson]

So Tired…

Monday, February 24th, 2003

There’s a post of perhaps limited appeal over on “The Pulpit” about focus, fatigue, pride, and despair.

So Tired…

Monday, February 24th, 2003

It’s 2:00 on Monday morning, February 24. (I only say that because who KNOWS when I’m going to get around to hitting “publish” on this entry.)

I’d give almost anything for some sleep. However my violent pride and sense of intra-personal competition (think about it) won’t let me. Not until I write something. Of course, that means I’m going to have to publish all this too… But that I may wait for until tomorrow….err… later today.

Now it’s 2:38. I need to sleep, but I feel unresolved, unaccomplished, unfulfilled and frustrated. Again I’ve had too much caffeine. Although I stopped drinking it at about 5-6 o’clock tonight my heart feels like it’s going to thunder out of my chest.

I need to stop. I need to slow down. I need to take care of myself. But how can I when this is the only way I know of forcing myself to focus?

My life demands my full attention right now. Perhaps it sounds like a strange thing to say. I don’t think so. Usually, routines and habits are installed in life that allow you (well… me) to run on auto-pilot a bit. You can take a break, lean back and let the routine do it’s work for a little while.

But not now. Now I’m unemployed and that tactic will get me nothing but thrown out on the street by the end of March (April 1 is the rent doomsday date. February is paid, I currently have March’s rent. After that it’s all hope and no sleep.) Other parts of my life are in amazingly dynamic states. Everything requires my attention, my full attention. The timing for everything couldn’t be worse. But life proceeds at it’s pace, not yours and it’s rarely up to a person to decide and choose the serendipities and synchronicities that occur and when, once he’s set them up.

So every day requires what is to me a tremendous effort to keep on track, hit the job boards, hit the papers with a marker and some post-its, make the phone calls I need to make, and most of all to not get down on myself for not having solved the universe’s problems by lunchtime. (Of course, at this rate waking up by lunchtime would be a bit of an accomplishment.) But it’s the same thing I’ve been doing 4 days a week for close to two months. Nothing. Not even an interview. Not one. There’s something going on in the wings about which I am cautiously hopeful. But I’m not counting chickens, and it’s just not that long term anyway.

Looking in the mirror as I just did (no really, sometimes I have to do that to see if I’m lying) I understand that it’s not such a paradox. There are better ways than chemical stimulants to keep me on track, and they’ll likely do a better job.

  1. Meditation - On and off throughout my life I’ve had long periods where I’ve meditated daily as a matter of course. It’s very hard and brutal on the mind of …well… me. But the benefits are without measure.
  2. Exercise - Everybody knows this. I know this. It’s not important to go to a gym to work out. I can walk to South Street Seaport and back (a decent 5 miles) in the morning, over the Brooklyn Bridge.
  3. Eat like a human - Not an American, a Human. A healthy Human. I’ve started on this path already. Slowly but surely I’ve been adding things to my diet that will do me much more good than bad. Of course, I’m having problems eliminating the bad stuff so I’ve gained a bit of weight back (tough enough to even admit.)

Well, it’s 3:04 and I’m out for the night. I simply can’t maintain my roughly vertical position any longer.

I’m so very tired…

Can we control our lust for power?

Monday, February 24th, 2003

Speaks for itself. I’ll not interfere here.

Can we control our lust for power?.

Inspired by Clay’s claims about the power law distribution of blogs, I’ve been thinking and writing (with many others) about emergent democracy in the hopes that blogs will not create an elite ruling class, but will allow direct democracy to emerge from the chaos. The irony of my technorati and daypop rankings increasing because of this does not escape me. It feels good to get attention, and this feeling is the lust that drives people to stare at power law curve. Liz and I were chatting in IM about this today and she quoted: “One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.” So, who is the Frodo Baggins of the Internet? Are bloggers hobbits? Who can resist the power law distribution and try to create a more democratic process.

It is not just the Net that suffers from this. In my attempts to change Japan, Oki Matsumoto and I have been plotting the overthrow of the ruling elite. The problem is, to change anything in Japan, you have to be powerful and elite. Once you are powerful and elite, it is almost impossible by definition to overthrow yourself. We are thinking about setting up an organization with limited terms for leadership positions, mandatory retirement at a certain age (You can move on to the next platform.), and a variety of other measures to prevent people from accumulating too much power. I don’t know about Oki, but I definitely have the “urge” to take control and lead this thing to the end. But I know from watching all of the others that it will eventually go to your head and you won’t realize when you’re not as smart as the “followers”. It is only at this moment where I have enough power to organize, but not to control, that I must help forge the rules to prevent anyone from spoiling it for the rest of us in the future. I trust my ability to resist the urge to abuse power today, but history shows that most of us are not hobbits and this ability to resist becomes exceedingly difficult.

I would like to quickly point out here that competition is at the center of a healthy market and I would not want to question the value of competition where you have a mechanism to keep it fair. It is in power law distribution oriented situations where power accumulates beyond fairness. Bill Gates lives on the edge of this definition.

So, is lust for power uncontrollable? I don’t think so. People have sexual lusts and they overcome them to make society possible. People lust for big SUV’s but the US seems to be making it politically incorrect to fulfill this lust. We have lusts of many kinds, can’t we try to condition ourselves away from the lust for power? Hollywood movies tend to reinforce the lust for power. Maybe it starts by changing the role models in society?

What is this leadership thing anyway? Dee Hock has a great piece about how leaders should focus on managing their superiors first and peers next and that the followers are the ones who manage the leaders. Emergent leadership is not about control or taking power, it is about ethics, integrity and holding together so that you are empowered by others. A system that promotes leaders quickly as necessary and destroys leaders who retain power for power’s sake is what I want.

However, whether we promote good leaders or bad leaders depends on the people. The people will get the leaders that they deserve in such a system and the burden will be on them. (Which, I think is how a democracy is supposed to work.)

[Joi Ito's Web]