Consideration: gone the way of the dodo

People have complained that we are no longer willing to make any effort to minimize the impact of our actions on each other. This has become so embedded in our conciousness that Hollywood has made a big budget film about the consequences of a fender bender (although I have to say that from the linked trailer the film probably will suck). Even in my own neighborhood I saw a prime example of it, a moving van sticking out of a driveway and blocking half of the street even though the truck could have been backed up a few more feet with no problem:

Moving van blocking half of my street

Elections do make a difference

Columnist David Broder weighs in on President Bush’s Stealthy Pursuit of a Partisan Agenda. Safe workplaces, using law enforcement to make points on a social agenda, gutting ghetto programs that make a difference. Thomas Friedman, writing in the NY Times, makes the same point from a different angle. Important reads, this is precisely why I didn’t want Bush elected. Thank you very much, Supreme Court Justices.

Death of the West

Sounds kind of Lord of the Rings-ish, but Patrick Buchanan is writing about us in his new polemic. His new book “contends that the U.S. will be a Third World nation by the year 2050 [and…] predicts Europe will be inundated by an Islamic-Arab-African invasion and most First World nations, including Japan, will have begun slowly to vanish from the earth.” Lots of demographics to back him up but then we get to the crux of his explanation:

“Buchanan argues that the death of the Christian faith in Western countries is a primary cause of their dying populations. Whenever faith dies, the people die. A new atheistic civilization is arising, he argues, and is using its dominance of the culture and the courts to drive Christianity out of the temples of our civilization.”

MS: Work for us, get threatened?

Microsoft of course sees Linux as a threat to their business, particularly on the server side of things. So they do what any large business would and set up a group of people with extra knowledge and tools to support the sales team. And its true that execs would prefer competitors/targets find out too many details about such an effort. But the part I find really creepy about this memo from Windows division VP Brian Valentine is his threat to monitor whether his own staff are forwarding his internal email to outsiders. Which must have happened for The Register to get a hold of it, eh?

“PS: I used to run Exchange — so if you think I am not tracking this message, think again. Don’t forward it! And if you have forward rules that have forwarded this message, then perhaps you should think again about forwarding internal email with those rules. I want to give you folks all the information I can in a very open way. If we continue to have bad apples or careless people out there, I will not be able to help you by sending this kind of information!”

Paces, routes, Fates

[In lieu of some more prosaic thoughts on the turn of the year, I offer this poem]

Take in the breath of life around you

Feel the joy and challenge and sadness

Is it cold and crisp or hot and wet?

Hammer or feather, what is your choice?

Or do we have a choice to make?

The Fates lay claim to that right

To measure the paces and map the routes

Each day, each minute turns a new page.

A deep pit where gleaming towers once stood

Say otherwise as the children and widows cry

To Hell with the Fates and their plans made real

Away with the heart, dig deep with knives.

Other folk stand up, ready to be counted

Ready to make some difference if they can

Barriers to the goal must be swept away

If these burning hearts can be made true

Fates take a seat, listen to the cries of Men

Watch for the blooming flowers in the crisp Winter

Feel the trees sway in the heat of Summer

Waiting to feel again the winged energy of delight.

Inspired by rainer marie rilke’s as once the winged energy of delight [via dangerousmeta]

Lord of the Rings: Fan fiction

Fan fiction has been around for a long time, mostly inspired by science fiction series like Star Trek and Star Wars, but others have taken the Lord of the Rings as their source. Tales from the Prancing Pony is one such story, allegedly recounting the 1886 vacation in Middle Earth by three English civil servants and includes photographs and other illustration. Gil Williamson wrote it in 1998 and posted it to the web the next year. Interesting effort but not having quite the appeal of the original as there is little drama in this travelogue.

Naked Slashdotters, run scared now

[Continuing the sex theme] Commander Taco, the man who launched a thousand flames, asks Slashdotters the question “So for those of us who don’t go “Out” for holidays and prefer sitting on our asses…What are you gonna do?” While he was mainly thinking of television marathons (and got mostly predictable results), some responses were quite frightening. As TomC says, “The thought of slashdotters naked is frightening.” One married poster is hopeful a Sex and the City marathon might lead to some for his own self, which leads one to wonder what kind of marriage he has.

Gettin’ biz-zay!

A Santa Cruz woman named Lish Daelnar hopes to eventually chart every sexual pairing on Earth in ASCII in the Sexchart. She also wants to get written up in Wired but Wired News will do as well, so she’s achieved that. Somehow I don’t seem to be on the chart yet–I’m not BigDaddyBill–but I’m looking it over to see if I connected with anyone listed. Should you be on here? After all, Courtney Love, Drew Barrymore, and Jello Biafra are. All it takes is a wet kiss or better with someone already listed. Note: most folks (Goddess4U, shewolf, extrabob) are shown by their online handle so if I do get on, it will be as capspace.

A crappy day in the NFL

If you are a Bay Area or New Jersey football fan, it sure was. 49ers, Raiders, Giants, and Jets all lost winnable games. So the Giants are out of the playoffs, the Jets must win next week, the 49ers are likely to lose any chance at hosting a wildcard game, and the Raiders, who’ve played like crap for the last month, need a win next week to assure a first round bye. The Jets could have backed in with a Seattle loss today, but of course Flutie wasn’t up to that task. And off course the Jets play the Raiders next week so both can’t get what they want.

B2B: Not as dead as all that

Well, this has surely been a crappy year for Internet related stocks, a bad 16-18 months even, but the market appears to be developing some legs. VerticalNet is acquiring Atlas Commerce for their collaborative sourcing solution, a multi-party private exchange platform. Verticalnet is only paying around $24 million for Atlas’ expected 2001 revenues of $9.7M; Verticalnet’s CEO sees “remarkable synergies with Atlas Commerce in terms of our shared vision, rich technology assets, target markets and geographical proximity.” Ha ha ha, he said synergies.

Brent gets busy with the dozens

Down through the years, the fine art of the nasty insult has had many names. Brent gives us a fine year end list. Back in the ’70s, comedian Gabe Kaplan specialized in these in his standup act, featured on the Holes and Mello Roles record in cuts like “Up Your Nose with a Rubber Hose,” and they landed him Welcome Back, Kotter. Brent’s are mean and funny, like the dozens are supposed to be.

Micro-advertising experiment, days 15 and 16: the party’s over

Well, two weeks of amusing myself with the MetaFilter text ad are over and all 5,000 impressions have been served and through the ad 72 visitors came to this site, a clickthrough rate of 1.44%; a graph shows the entire run of the ad. The last two days had four clickthroughs out of 304 for a 1.32% CTR. Matt, thanks for the fun! And if any of you are new regular or semi-regular visitors, welcome to the party–the party’s over, long live the party!

MetaFilter TextAd results, 12/30/01

Another happy note: the BillSaysThis visitor counter went past 5,000 last night and is up to 5,022 as of this writing. Talk about your woo-fucking-hoo!

Buffalo: still snowing

As this AP Photo shows, them people are just swimming in it! As of Friday night over 83 inches of the cold white stuff (as opposed to the hot white stuff) was on the ground and more is coming! garret didn’t need to go all the way to find some, good for him!

Proof we’re getting older: Radio

I mainly listen to three stations, all of which play a variety of album-oriented classic rock. The station out of these three which probably skews to the oldest demographic is KFOX – The Classic Rock Experience!, which plays a moderately softer version of ’70s classic rock. When I was listening just now in the car they played an ad for a digestive system aid product generally only useful to people well over 40!!!

The other two stations are KFOG and 101.7 The Bone (KSAN). All three stations will play Led Zeppelin, the Beatles, and U2. KFOG appeals to the youngest audience of the three, you’re going to hear Dave Mathews Band and REM, and some bands that made their first record after 1990. The Bone rocks the hardest, with lots of AC/DC and Black Sabbath. KFOX is the only one that will play the Eagles, Elton John and Billy Joel and breaks away from the music to broadcast Sharks home games.

None of the three play anywhere near enough Springsteen!

p.s. While we’re on the topic of rock and roll, Neil Young has finally made his new song Let’s Roll available online. Talk about getting old but Neil made his first record 35 years ago!

Micro-advertising experiment, day 14

Pattern continues with the expected up day getting six clickthroughs out of 358 views for a 1.68% CTR and a total of 66 views from 4,698 views for a cumulative CTR of 1.45%.

Why Europe and why not China?

A year ago I was lent and encouraged to read Jared Diamond’s fascinating book Guns, Germs, and Steel. Diamond, an evolutionary biologist and not a historian, attempted to apply the tools of his discipline to understanding the larger path of human economic development and did so quite successfully. He made visible certain aspects of biology (especially botany) and geography that can be seen as significantly responsible for the larger strokes of human events. A short version of his history is available online.

But thinking never stops on this planet. Gale Stokes, writing in the November issue of Lingua Franca surveys the latest thinking in the realm of World History (macrohistory) in Why the West?. Stokes, professor of history, is quite readable in looking at the four most important authors, post-Diamond in this field: David S. Landes, Andre Gunder Frank, Kenneth Pomeranz, and R. Bin Wong. This article points out that the latter pair quite easily outdistance the first two authors in both sophistication and utility.

Cutting to the chase of the question I posed in the title of this entry, “Wong and Pomeranz agree that the coal revolution was the defining moment of the modern world.” Up until the end of the 18th century, both regions were very similar in their exploitation of (Adam) Smithian resources and the future, at that point, could possibly have gone either way. The Europeans, and especially the British, were able to exploit the huge increase in energy made available by coal and the race was, for the time being, over.

Good reading for the interested non-professional historian, well worth the time. One question not well-answered by Stokes, possibly because the answer isn’t terribly interesting to her intended audience, is whether either Pomeranz’s or Wong’s books are as accessible to the reading public as Diamond.

Update: Steven differs with the conclusion given here; he makes an interesting argument that the key factor differentiating Europe from the rest of the world is “there is a very close correlation historically between the power and wealth of a nation and the efficiency with which it is capable of moving soldiers, information and bulk cargo.”