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Oceania's Oil 7/21/05 10:10 - permalink - email - category: Politics In Oceania I wrote of the current police presence escorting commuter ferries in the San Francisco Bay: Coast Guard and SFPD Zodiacs, armed to the teeth. My hypothesis painted this show of force as pure play-acting for a populace in fear. I admit a moment of delusion and hubris in the original post. The common conception most ferry commuters have of the armed escort is one of security and benevolence, that it serves to protect them as they cower in the face of "terrorism, terrorism, terrorism." The powers-who-lie encourage this self-centered viewpoint, promoting the fantasy each individual American warrants military guard, but it's not accurate. In communism you live and die for the state. Here in big capitalism you live and die for the economy. How are these positions different from one another? I learned the truth of our escorts from a friend involved in international maritime trade and port security. Apparently there is credible intelligence of possible attacks on tankers and the Bay's northern shoreline refineries, using the ferries for explosive delivery. The boats with big guns aren't here to protect us. They're here to take us out before we get to the oil. Related: Oceania OldSchool 7/16/05 16:17 - permalink - email - category: MaxMSPJitter I was pulling out bits and pieces of my Max/MSP/Jitter work, abstracting and purifying and making nice for a release to the community, when I came across this:
If you've ever used a Palm III or earlier, or one of the ancestral monochrome Macs, these controller images should take you way back. Surprisingly all of my original Photoshop files for them were intact, so I'm going to clean them up a bit, render out some nice black and white versions to go with the green-blue dazzle and include them all in the upcoming tools. This gives me an idea to fake up some even olderschool Apple IIe green on black gui works now. Brian Eno - Another Day On Earth 7/15/05 07:53 - permalink - email - category: Listen
With Another Day On Earth, Eno returns after long hiatus with a full-length comprised of strange, moody songs fronting as pop pieces but something else just beneath the skin. From the beautiful opening lift of This with it's single word signature, to the final, slow-build realization of Bone Bomb these tracks are all ambient pieces disguised as more accessible fare. Traces of Eno's tendency toward texture and sliding frames of compositional reference could be found in his earlier pop/progressive rock works, but this feels more like wrapping a thin veneer of external form around vast ambient landscapes within. Going Unconscious creates sonic fabric from melodic rhythms syncing and unsyncing, with gorgeously accented spoken word work carried aloft. The title track Just Another Day brings in mellow, ambient funk perfect for contemplative head-bobbing and occasional moonwalk. Eno's flat, almost deadpan voice has always been perfectly pitched, but vocal processing has a surprisingly prominent spot in many of these pieces. The heartache of And Then So Clear is pulled directly from your chest by the high, pitch-shifted vox-as-instument. I love his stylistic choice to leave between-phrase breaths intact and unprocessed. Vocal harmonies and multiples are everywhere. A Long Way Down has our globe of blue slowly rotating in space before you. Passing Over fills your head to overflowing built on minimal piano and the dissonance of processed rides. Bottomliners could be an endlessly flowing track from the Apollo sessions, reworked with chorused voice: And in the future new forms of romance grenade and lamplight in twilit silence You can hear it online: Rykodisc has a downloadable medley of the tracks and an interesting interview of Eno by Danny Hillis. Oceania 7/14/05 18:05 - permalink - email - category: Politics I travel by ferry to the San Francisco financial district. After the recent London bombings, commuter boats on the Bay are now escorted by small police or coast guard vessels, Zodiacs sporting gigantic guns. You must walk through police presence at either end, sometimes with a cruiser prominently parked on the pedestrian walkway or the dock. Men in uniforms keeping the people safe and secure. What, exactly, are these keepers of safety going to do in a crisis? A sleeper terrorist would have been riding this ferry for years, waiting for activation. They would walk on with a bomb in a briefcase while smiling hello to the crew. These men with big guns will simply be blown up along with the rest of us. It's the illusion of safety for a populace in fear. Here's a short list for you: searches without warrant, photography in public places prohibited, illegal public protests, rigged and rehearsed "town hall" political events, opposition groups branded traitors and terrorist sympathizers, limitless detainment and torture of "non-enemy combatants", scrubbed media unable to display coffins of returning dead, rising nationalism inflamed by the government itself, a political rhetoric devoid of actual meaning except the creation of fear and "moral" distraction while money flies from already empty public coffers into the accounts of businesses affiliated with the leaders. China? USSR? Wake up, America. This is not the path to safety or freedom. We're being used. Process 7/13/05 10:11 - permalink - email - category: Flow The fixed work is the life. The process itself is the living. When We Stop It 7/6/05 09:06 - permalink - email - category: Incantation Doug Miller recently wrote an impassioned post (okay, "pissed off" is a better description) on sex-offender Joseph Duncan and our flawed system for handling these people. Doug believes folks guilty of sex-offenses should be locked up and never let out of the clink. Doug, I absolutely agree with you. This isn't about punishment, or justice... it's about pruning the tree. After incarceration, we return sex-offenders to a society they can never be part of, and pretend they will not do it again simply because they have been jailed for awhile. From Google's cache, Joseph Duncan blogged about it: Monday, March 01, 2004, Daily Torment, 8:47 AM Just got back from Florida visiting my friend and his family. I had a lot of fun and I felt very welcomed by my friends family even though they know full well about my past. We Spent a day in Epcot Center at Disney World, that was a lot of fun. Then we drove to Tampa (where he lives) and I got to eat at some great local restaurants having terrific seafood. We also went to the Strawberry Festival which was a pretty big fair and also a lot of fun. I like traveling because I feel more "normal" because of the anonymity of being a traveler. For example, at the Tampa airport they called my name over the intercom to ask me if I wanted to switch to an emergency exit row seat, I did not cringe when they called my name the way I do when I am around where I live. In fact, when I got to Minneapolis to change planes and continue home, I immediately started feeling self conscious. At the gate where we were boarding for the last hop every time I saw someone looking at me I thought they recognized me (as a sex offender) because they might remember me from the police web site or newspapers. I don't know how the courts can pretend this law does not penalize sex offenders. It is a daily torment for me. Did Duncan deserve his daily torment? Sure, if you hold him to the standards of a "normal human living in a normal society." But a normal person wouldn't do what he has done. All we accomplish with Megan's Law and community notification is the creation of conditions for further tragedy, blinding ourselves to the real problem. These people aren't reformable, they're broken. A frustrated broken person eventually tries to break the machine they cannot fit into. Statistically, crimes of this sort are on the rise. Those who commit them generally have a history of being abused in some fashion themselves. People like this aren't just born. It's easy to think that way, to draw a simple line which separates us from them, but in truth there is nothing more than a fuzzy smudge to represent where they begin to deviate socially from others, and some black spots in their past where someone warped their development by abusing them. Doug calls them "monsters" and "filth", which is valid from the majority's view, but obscures the truth. We're creating these people. We've created a society awash in violence and sexual objectification of youth, one of uncaring parents ill-prepared for kids, parents who must focus on money rather than their children. It's a society of people without the slightest understanding of social responsibility because they have no connection to any society other than the one shown on their televisions and the devastating emptiness of their own family. We made Joseph Duncan. We're the responsible parties, you and I and all of us. Don't believe me? Go to Victoria's Secret and answer this: how old are these models? Flip through the pages of any grocery store beauty magazine and consider the ages of the women you see in ads for skin care. How old are the main characters in violent video games? What, almost to a film, is the backbone of any Hollywood blockbuster today? Sex and violence as power. Better yet, just make a bet with yourself for how long and in how much lurid detail the media will cover this case and shove it in the faces of every viewer. We gorge ourselves on it, and then call foul to cover our own sick fascination. "But wait," I hear you cry, "he had a choice! He chose to do these terrible things. He's responsible, not I." This line of reasoning requires a further acknowledgment for your position: there are people out there right now, walking around free, capable of committing these same acts but choosing not to. And on a bad day, they'll choose to harm, just as Joseph Duncan did. I'd prefer a society where people are not capable of harming children like this, wouldn't you? A society where it's not a choice, because it's an action people wouldn't even consider. They consider it because it is part of their culture, and this brings it home to you and to me as active forces within that same culture. Don't misunderstand: I'm not advocating banning sexed-up advertising, or placing restrictive laws on movie content, or censorship of any form. The more you hide something, the more desire you create for it. Censorship won't work. But neither will the "Hang 'Em High!" of the Old West or the complacent naivete of Ike-Land. We need to face up to our own responsibility. We are society. We are the ones who can continue to say this is acceptable as a substrate for our existence or who can work to slowly change it. If you have kids, you might start by paying more attention to them, and explaining all of this even if it's difficult, even if you fumble. Ignoring it won't make it go away, and they swim in it every single day. Teach them of the goodness of family and love and even (gasp!) that sex is not dirty, not violent and is definitely not power. Most importantly, be a shining example. If you don't have children but want to be a parent, you might start by waiting until you are more capable of raising them properly, until you are mentally and financially stable and understand the above concepts yourself. You might start by acknowledging that yes, we do have a problem. You might start by getting your own fascinations with youth as beauty and violence as power in line. It starts with abused children and poor parenting. If we end those, we end all of this. My own emotions say the same thing Doug says: this guy is "filth." But if we think of it in this way, we'll never see the real problem, of which we are all a part. Until we see the real problem, we'll never get a real solution. And a real solution is the only option left. Tinderfeeds For 2.5 7/3/05 17:38 - permalink - email - category: Tinderbox After upgrading to Tiger, the first thing I did was pull down the Tinderbox 2.5 update, which is rocking. (Thanks Mark!) Some necessary changes were made to quote handling in actions, rules and templates in 2.5, and as a result my swanky templates for Atom and RSS feeds have broken. Nothing too terrible, just extra quotes around date stamps which will prevent the feeds from validating. If you're using these, don't panic... they should still operate in everything except the most ticky of readers. I don't like to let cruft accumulate, so I've updated the templates and links in the original post for use in 2.5, removing the troublesome quotes and restoring both validation and swank. Here are links to both old and new versions: Update: Extra thanks due Benoit Pointet for pointing me to the Tinderbox ^version^ export code. I've updated the 2.5 templates with it. Sweet! Friends Of Mine 7/2/05 03:39 - permalink - email - category: Vegetarian As I write this, an ant is crawling across the knuckles of my left hand. After the period at the end of the last sentence I put my hand to the window ledge, allowing her to crawl off and continue the endless search for sustenance. In the summer months, the kitchen is overrun with these little red folk. They show up everywhere, perusing every nook and cranny for edibles. I know some of you readers are thinking "An ant was crawling on your hand and you calmly allowed it to walk off and continue on its merry way? I would have squashed that thing." Here's an appeal to you from me, a friend of the ants. I've been vegetarian for almost 25 years. I don't often speak or write about it because, as an issue, I've found vegetarian versus carnivore more divisive than even red versus blue, God-fearing versus non-believer or Windows versus Mac. The decision to not eat flesh or use animal-based products puts front and center the question of what, exactly, humans are. Are we animals, doing what animals do? Do we have a choice in what we do, using that marvelous brain of ours which seems to make us different from most other animals? Ants are amazing creatures. Taken as a whole, an ant colony itself is also an amazing creature. Each ant, in the way it communicates and interoperates with its sisters via pheromone traces, is both a physical neuron and the charge which travels through a neuron in the hive mind of the ant colony. From the simple actions of each ant working in concert with other ants, complex behavior and directed intelligence arise. We see individual ants, small pest insects driving us crazy with their very presence, because we're not looking at the whole picture. Watch ants sometime, up close and personal. They never stop talking to each other. It's most intense on the dense highways they create when the overmind says "Move!" but you can see it even in the sparse interactions of scouts and searchers wandering your kitchen tiles. When you kill an ant, you destroy a thought. If ants form a highway to food in my kitchen, it's my fault. I'm the higher life-form here, with evolved reasoning and the ability to extrapolate, right? If I leave food out where they can find it, who should pay the price? They're only doing what they do, going about their lives. A simple sealable bin or ziploc will keep them from devouring my morsels, as will regularly keeping my kitchen clean and crumb-free. These are real, sustainable fixes rather than extermination, which is only permanent once all ants, everywhere, are gone. A little extra work on my part allows me to coexist with the hive, rather than kill it to further my own laziness. It's a sad state we find ourselves in, in relation to other species on the world. You will likely see the extinction of all large animals in your lifetime. Your children will live in a world without bears or tigers, with no elephants or whales, simply because humans will not use our marvelous brains which make us different to control our own numbers. We kill everything around us just by expanding. Here's a current ratio to consider, indicative of our failure: 6 billion people / 5 thousand tigers. Saving a tiger is hard. For most, they're not part of everyday experience. They're big and wary and wild and you won't find them in your kitchen. But saving an ant... that you can do. They're small and local and they don't harm people, they just want something to eat. Let's start small, and work outwards: next time you see an ant, let it crawl onto a piece of paper and move it someplace safely away from you. Step over, not on. Tigerized 7/1/05 19:59 - permalink - email - category: Gear Last I night Tigerized. I'd been putting it off until the project plate was slightly less full, but Panther had been flakey of late and, honestly, is there ever a time when my project plate is not beginning to crack from its burden? I imaged the drive yesterday, and so armed opted for a standard upgrade in situ, rather than the theoretically cleaner "archive and install" option. Aside from the glacial timeframes disk imaging lives within, the upgrade itself only took about 45 minutes. I doodled and plotted world domination on index cards while watching the upgrade scripts do their thing. Everything seems to be rocking post-install, with minimal effort:
F12ing to the Dashboard for basic tasks like hitting wikipedia, working out international times, searching maxobjects.com or dictionary.com, tailing the system log... one of the best Apple innovations ever. I'm hooked. Then there's the Oblique Strategies widget getting thorough use. Spotlight == wonderful. It's already saved me at least an hour searching for various bits of code, emails and Max abstractions. I wasn't planning on upgrading for at least another month, but now I'm sorry I waited. |
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