Ode to America: just another fake?

Well, LIEMails says the Romanian editorial I posted a few days back is another email hoax. The site does point out that there is no attribution to a specific newspaper or publication date. However, I published it because of the sentiment expressed, which I agree with, rather than because of who wrote it or where it was published. On the other hand, the site does link to BillSaysThis as an example of the editorial, which is nice. Say whatever you want about me, just spell my name (or URL) right and print it often, to paraphrase the old PR man’s saying.

Today’s movie: Training Day

Are you up for a powerful, nasty, angry movie? Then see Training Day, because Denzel Washington and Ethan Hawke blow up the screen in it. Aside from having Washington continually call Hawke the n-word and dog, director Antoine Fuqua makes this a movie of eyes, lots of massive closeups on the two leads as they talk. Fuqua also directed The Replacement Killers (Chow-Yun Fat) and Bait (Jamie Foxx), so he’s pretty much three for three with movies I enjoyed. Washington is always good and Hawke, well he was great in Dead Poets Society.

Amazon: No more discounts on books

Amazon.com is getting a big push of publicity today from the new view TOC, covers, and flaps feature. But what I just noticed, and I haven’t seen mentioned yet, is that Amazon is no longer discounting mass market paperback books! Random checks of some of the other Amazon stores (music, DVD, cameras, outdoor living) shows those items still being discounted. How come I am not seeing this reported by the business press or the Wall St. analysts? Of course, I could have just missed the stories but somehow I doubt it. A check of CBS Marketwatch, Motley Fool (including the Amazon discussion board) and Salomon Smith Barney research (sorry, you need to be a customer so no link) shows absolutely no mention of it. Books are the biggest moneymaker for Mr. Bezos and Company, right?

Having thought this through a little bit, there seem to be two possible sides to this. One is that Amazon so dominates the online book market, especially for mass market paperbacks, that they have pricing power, the ability to unilaterally raise prices and people will still shop there and make more or less the same purchases. Since the underlying cost structure is the same, one would expect the (generally 10%) price difference to flow fairly directly to the bottom line. There might be some reduction in unit volume but the increase in gross margin would make up for quite a bit. The second possibility is that sales are dropping through the floor and this attempt to raise gross margins is necessary to prevent a meltdown. Amazon has lost money every month it’s been in business and some commentators on the Motley Fool discussion board pointed out that they appear to be draining their cash reserves. Fewer, but more profitable, sales would be one good solution here. Certainly most Wall St. analysts are citing a significant reduction in online shopping since the attack on America. Difficult to say which one of these sides is the correct one yet, but it will be interesting to follow the situation.

Woohoo! BillSaysThis has it’s first scoop as an investigative journalist! I have sent an email to Amazon’s investor relations email contact, so we’ll see if there is more information available. I wonder if Steven will swoop in and burst my bubble.

My idea of a great tech article

WebmasterBase has published what I consider an excellent example of what tech articles should be like: Migrate your site from MySQL to PostgreSQL — Part 1 by Nathan Matias. The topic is interesting to me, since I use MySQL and have read many good things about PostgeSQL. What I really want to point out, though, is the level of technical detail Matias provides. The article avoids airy metaphors and claims of greatness and instead sticks to the precise explanation of how to complete the task at hand. When he hits roadbumps, they are described; where there are complications, he explains how to get through them. Kudos, Nathan! May we see lots more work like this.

[Update] Looking at Matias’ website I found part two of the article and a bunch of other good articles.

An ode to America: an editorial from a Romanian newspaper

[This was passed to me by email, I agree with the sentiments and think it is a lovely expression of what’s happening]

Why are Americans so united? They don’t resemble one another even if you paint them! They speak all the languages of the world and form an astonishing mixture of civilizations. Some of them are nearly extinct, others are incompatible with one another, and in matters of religious beliefs, not even God can count how many they are.

Still, the American tragedy turned three hundred million people into a hand put on the heart. Nobody rushed to accuse the White House, the army, the secret services that they are only a bunch of losers. Nobody rushed to empty their bank accounts. Nobody rushed on the streets nearby to gape about. The Americans volunteered to donate blood and to give a helping hand. After the first moments of panic, they raised the flag on the smoking ruins, putting on T-shirts, caps and ties in the colors of the national flag. They placed flags on buildings and cars as if in every place and on every car a minister or the president was passing. On every occasion they started singing their traditional song: “God Bless America!”.

Silent as a rock, I watched the charity concert broadcast on Saturday once, twice, three times, on different TV channels. There were Clint Eastwood, Willie Nelson, Robert de Niro, Julia Roberts, Cassius Clay, Jack Nicholson, Bruce Springsteen, Sylvester Stallone, James Wood, and many others whom no film or producers could ever bring together. The American’s solidarity spirit turned them into a choir. Actually, choir is not the word. What you could hear was the heavy artillery of the American soul. What neither George W. Bush, nor Bill Clinton, nor Colin Powell could say without facing the risk of stumbling over words and sounds, was being heard in a great and unmistakable way in this charity concert.

I don’t know how it happened that all this obsessive singing of America didn’t sound croaky, nationalist, or ostentatious! It made you green with envy because you weren’t able to sing for your country without running the risk of being considered chauvinist, ridiculous, or suspected of who-knows-what mean interests.

I watched the live broadcast and the rerun of its rerun for hours listening to the story of the guy who went down 100 floors [Ed. note: was really 68 floors] with a woman in a wheelchair without knowing who she was, or of the Californian hockey player, who fought with the terrorists and prevented the plane from hitting a target that would have killed other hundreds or thousands of people. How on earth were they able to bow before a fellow human?

Imperceptibly, with every word and musical note, the memory of some turned into a modern myth of tragic heroes. And with every phone call, millions and millions of dollars were put in a collection aimed at rewarding not a man or a family, but a spirit which nothing can buy.

What on earth can unite the Americans in such a way? Their land? Their galloping history? Their economic power? Money? I tried for hours to find an answer, humming songs and murmuring phrases which risk of sounding like commonplaces. I thought things over, but I reached only one conclusion.

Only freedom can work such miracles!

Today’s book: Section 31: Abyss

The third book in the Section 31 quartet is a Deep Space Nine episode, set post-relaunch and continuing from Avatar, which features Julian Bashir, Ezri Dax, Taran’atar, and Ro Laren. The quartet is ‘assigned’ by Section 31 (well, Bashir is assigned and he takes the others aling) to track down and prevent another genetically enhanced human from using a captured Jem’Hadar hatchery to unleash horror on the Alpha Quadrant in the wake of the Dominion War. In a nice touch, a few pages are used to update several continuing stories (Kassidy’s pregnancy, Jake Sisko’s disappearance, who is Commander Vaughn). Here’s an old but interesting interview with co-author Jeff Lang

Quick look at the major Islamic countries

TechnoPolitics, a website from the producers of the now off the air PBS TV series of the same name, has some interesting articles and other information. Of much current relevance is this two parter that takes a quick look</a. (part one) at the major Islamic countries (part two). Also of interest is their TP Database, a set of statistical questions and answers covering a wide range of topics, although it would be nice to get a better explanation of their information sources.

Sun admits it screwed up with NetDynamics

In a recent government filing, Sun Microsystems admitted acquisition misfires in purchasing NetDynamics, Diba, and even Encore. Duh! I think I could have told you that two years ago. We are still wondering why Sun bought us, then turned around and made the iPlanet deal with AOL, and then took a year to figure things out. Oh, it was not a stressful time at all, no! And the executives did not screw the pooch by taking so long and changing their minds 67 times. No! They did not fiddle while BEA burned us in the marketplace. At least the execs are starting to admit some culpability, to the tune of a $33 million writeoff.

Sum 41: punk rock’s Backstreet Boys?

Never heard of these clowns before but saw them on Saturday Night Live just now. What’s with the bouncing and the “you take three words, I’ll take the next three” vocals? I guess 25 years after the Clash rocked Brixton, we’re just as likely to get commercialized punk bands as anything else. But did the audience at SNL have to go quite so wild? Dayum!

On the other hand, Chevy Chase showing up on the Weekend Update segment as the Land Shark was great, excellent use of the tons of comic history SNL has made.

Gone long

I’ve never been a big baseball fan, the game just moves too slowly for me. But having grown up in the post-Maris era, there is a special place in my heart for the guys with the big hammers. So hats off and a big cheer to Barry Bonds and his 72 homers, which go nicely with the other two records he has smashed this season: 177 walks and .847 slugging percentage, both set by Babe Ruth. Bonds is 37 and you might think that Hank Aaron’s career mark, 189 away at 755, is out of reach for him but Bonds is in the best shape of his playing career and, barring injury, four more seasons are not impossible. All in all, this has been a season for breaking records, with Rickey Henderson moving past Ty Cobb with 2,245 runs and past Babe Ruth’s career walk mark. USS Clueless says Henderson is the greatest offensive player in the history of the game but I think we need to wait a few years and see how Bonds and McGuire finish their careers.

Boycott Disney

Sen. Fritz Hollings, at the behest of the Walt Disney Corp., has introduced the Security Systems Standards and Certification Act, a bill that will trample consumer rights into tiny little bits of dust. Criminal penalties for violations start at $500K plus five years as a guest of the Feds and go up from there. What’s the meat?

“It is unlawful to manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide or otherwise traffic in any interactive digital device that does not include and utilize certified security technologies that adhere to the security system standards adopted” by the Secretary of Commerce based on input from industry.

Read the Open Letter to Michael Eisner, Chairman and CEO, Walt Disney Company from Don Marti in Linux Journal.

Join the boycott

Today’s book: Section 31: Rogue

The second of four Section 31 books (and for a change really worth packaging into separate books), Rogue shows us a Next Generation mission where Picard and Data, of the regulars, are called in to clean up when a Section 31 mission goes off the rails, on a strange planet whose populace is about to vote on whether to join the Federation or the Romulan Star Empire. Seems Section 31 wants them to join the Romulans, part of a deal with the Tal Shiar, but the Romulans have a little something extra up their sleeves. Picard and Data, along with First Contact’s Lt. Hawk (the first openly gay Star Trek character as far as I can remember), must foil the dastardly plans at great peril to themselves; Hawk is the poor bastard in the film who goes with Worf and Picard out onto the Enterprise’s deflector shield and is assimilated and then killed by Worf. Cronan Thompson wrote a Mystery Science Theater version of the movie, quite funny.

This adventure is mainly set six months before First Contact–it takes only a few days to unfold–but is wrapped in a post-First Contact prologue/epilogue for some reason. Decent pacing and good characterization for the non-regular characters.

Holy Crapoli

Okay, maybe I’m just in a mood but those words were my exact reaction to Kay O’Connor in Women’s suffrage called ‘mistake’ by conservative Kansas politician. O’Connor is a Kansas state senator but does not believe that women should need the right to vote. She is paraphrased in the article as saying “if men were doing their job of taking care of women and children, women wouldn’t be required to vote.” See what I mean? Then again, Kansas is the state where politicians decided that creationism rather than evolution should be taught in the state’s public schools.

Waiting, I hate waiting

Just sitting at home waiting for the phone to ring, somebody calling back with a piece of information. But I need to go out, tick tock tick tock, getting anxious. Uggh, cannot wait call back. Sit on hold, wait wait wait. Finally, situation is cleared. Give me my coffee!!!

Talking Moose weds Britney Spears!

I’m not usually such a gossip, but this is too good to pass up! Moose, however did you win the little hottie away from Justin Timberlake? She must be looking to the mud bog as an oasis from the pressures of stardom; didn’t know she was into the au natural lifestyle, though. Cool, man, cool.

Seriously, this Mooselog is really titled “The weblog manifesto” and discusses the state of the art in weblogs and is the usual cool Moosepoop. But he does make the above wedding reference!

Beware of liquidation preferences

Jamie Earle warns those techies still looking for a piece of the IPO pie to Read the fine print before signing on. Looking to ensure returns in these post-bubble days, venture capitalists are seeking even more onerous terms than before. Earle specifically focuses on liquidation preferences, which gives an investor first cut at a predetermined piece of a sales prices. Nasty business!

United Airlines: Just trying to make a profit

In a NY Times article today, United Airlines execs are criticized by union leaders and a congressman for continuing to invest in a new venture valled Avolar. This criticism is ridiculous, undeserved, and incorrect but not surprising when thousands of the union’s members are facing layoffs. Avolar is United’s entry into the private business jet timeshare market. The company has already invested over $70 million in the venture–what does the union, which owns a majority of United’s shares, want management to do, throw that money away? Who would be helped by that? If Avolar is successful, it will only help United and its employees. Other observers have objected to this move because United is lining up to get government cash and loan guarantees but my answer is (a) they haven’t gotten any of that free money yet (and it won’t be free, the government will get equity) and (b) the losses the government cash is going to cover is for United’s existing passenger and cargo business. If the airline did not put more money in Avolar, would there be fewer layoffs?

Wired Magazine ran in-depth profile of market leader Executive Jets and this marketspace in it’s June 2001 issue: Hey, You’re Worth It (Even Now). Important note: Warren Buffett, widely acknowledged as the foremost investor ever, owns Executive Jets.