Book: Black Betty

Walter Mosley writes about a world completely outside my experience, even though his settings are (generally) America in the years just before and after my own birth. But I’ve never been black nor lived deep in the urban neighborhoods of his stories and so the emotions and attitudes expressed are as alien as the far-future humans of Iain Banks. Here’s an example, from Easy Rawlins’ narrative (p. 106):

I had reached out for the white man’s brass ring and got caught up short, that’s all. They taught me when I was a boy to stay in my place. I was a fool for forgetting that lesson, and now all I was doing was paying for that foolishness.

(Previous Mosley writeups: White Butterfly, The Wave, Fortunate Son)

Black Betty covers an episode in 1961 in which Easy is hired to track down Elizabeth Eady, the title character, after she goes missing from a wealthy woman’s estate where Eady’d worked for 25 years. There are, of course, complications: from the color of his skin, the police (corrupt and otherwise), lies and misdirections and even the threat of danger to his informally adopted children.

Further troubling him are the release of best friend Mouse from prison after five years, because Mouse is going to kill somebody for turning him in–maybe even Easy, if no other candidate is found–and an attempt to swindle him out of his modest but meaningful real estate holdings (leading to the quote cited above). And above all, the man is simply weary, tired to the bone from life’s battering.

While this is not the best Mosley I’ve read, Black Betty is still very good, entertaining and educational and thought provoking.

recommended

Dogsitting

We’ve been taking care of Dinger Dog, our friends’ black lab this weekend, and having fun. He’s nine years old and very well-behaved, although the parade of dachsunds we encountered while walking him in downtown Los Altos yesterday morning generated a bit of growling. Dinger’s going home tonight but not before we take him the dog park at Shoreline Park this afternoon. TS1, of course, is thrilled but even more anxious for us to get (two of) our own.

Dinger says he was just as disappointed as me at Liverpool’s 3-1 loss to Arsenal, dropping us from defending our FA Cup title at the first confrontation. Here’s a photo of us commiserating at the dog park:

CoachingGoRound comes all the way back

After a few years I was inspired once again to make a tracking page for the NFL head coaching changes, probably because of the quick trigger firing of Denny Green and the liar liar pants on fire behavior of Nick Saban. Page will be updated as more changes, departures and hirings, come down the tubes:

2006-07 CoachingGoRound

(Previous CoachingGoRounds: 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04)

Note that the Matt Millen watch is on, once again, despite his apparent retention of the Lions presidency as Detroit have, by far, the worst record in the league over his entire seven year tenure.

Bad (Movie) News

Wired Mag has a brief look back at the highlights of Luc Besson’s directorial career in response to Besson’s announcement that Arthur and the Invisibles will be the last time he sits in the director’s chair.

While its true that this big budget animation is based on the series of bestselling children’s books Besson himself wrote, I’m truly disappointed that he won’t bring his magic to one last action flick. Here are my almost uniformly positive writeups on two Besson-directed movies:Leon (aka The Professional) and The Fifth Element.

While I have’t written a review, since I watched it many times prior to starting this blog, his 1990 movie La Femme Nikita is one of my all time favorites. He nearly singlehandedly created the female ass-kicking heroine drama with it, all due ackowledgement to Sigourney Weaver and Alien. Good enough to be remade by Hollywood as Point of No Return with Bridget Fonda in the Anne Parillaud title role and then expanded into the made for syndication/cable TV series of the same name, LFN inspired many movies, video games and TV shows (think Alias, Buffy the Vampire Slayer or 24—from the creative team behind the LFN TV version— would have been made if not for this?).

So I really would love to see one more head-pounding, leg-breaking, big boom flick with Luc Besson in complete control.

Book: The Separation

This 2002 novel probably doesn’t belong on the science fiction shelf, where I found it in the MV Public Library, but fortunately for me it was. Barely falling within the alternate history/multiverse genres, The Separation by Christopher Priest is really more of a (successful) literary experiment set in England before and during World War II. The Daily Telegraph agreed in its review, writing: “It becomes clear that Priest is attempting something far more intellectually ambitious than a mere alternative history. In a story entitled The Garden of Forking Paths, Borges imagined a book encompassing all possible outcomes, an image of a universe that is a “growing, dizzying net of divergent, convergent and parallel times.” The Separation very nearly is that book.”

The story is simple enough, concerning idential twin brothers who make the British team for the 1936 Olymics in Berlin and win the bronze in coxless pairs. There was no residential village in those years and the boys stayed at the apartment of the family who were close friend’s with their parents; their mother is German and has been close friends since childhood with the wife. The twins each fall in love with the 17 year old daughter, silently, neither willing to speak of it.

The family, though, is Jewish and realize they must get out of Germany and the boys become involved with the plan. Also while in Berlin, one of the twins–who both have the initials JL, one called JL and the other Joe–meets Nazi leader Rudolph Hess at a post-race British Embassy reception.

On their return home JL resumes undergrad life at Oxford, learning to fly planes in the university’s air club, while Joe drops out to work. When the war breaks out JL becomes an office in the RAF but Joe registers as a consciencious objector and drives a Red Cross ambulence helping survivors of the nightly German bombing runs.

These factors form the basis for Priest’s experimentation. His work is subtle, fracturing and reversing the sense of time, leaving outcomes unresolved and even confusing his own characters’ sens of reality. The Separation is sophisticated and imaginative and I enjoyed it so much that I spent all day last Thursday and half of Friday reading it.

recommended

Book: Skeleton Man

Because an author continues an admittedly popular series over many years and novels, readers may forgive the occasional below par effort and I’ll give Tony Hillerman the mulligan on Skeleton Man. Certainly he has many fans in Mountain View given the wear on this 2004 hardcover.

Joe Leaphorn is long-retired and only a minor player, which focuses on Navajo Tribal Police Sergeant Jim Chee in the last weeks preceeding his marriage to Officer Bernie Manuelito. Billy Tuve, whose brain was damaged in a rodeo accident when he was a boy, has been arrested in the robbery/murder of a jewelry store and Tuve is a close cousin of Chee and Longhorn’s old friend Navaho County Sheriff Deputy Cowboy Dashee; the deputy asks both for help since he doesn’t believe his cousin is capable of such nastiness.

The key reason Tuve is a suspect is he tried to pawn a fake diamond for $20 but since it wasn’t fake the pawnshop manager called in the cops, who assumed the diamond came out of that robbery. In truth, the diamond most likely came from the most infamous pre-hijacking era plane crash, a 1956 collision over the Grand Canyon between United Arlines and TWA jets (which actually occured, killing 172 people, though Hillerman simply uses it as a jumping off), from the carry case handcuffed to the arm of a jeweler.

Neither John Clarke’s body nor his case were ever officially found. Since Clarke was the only child and his father died in the immediate aftermath of the crash the family estate flowed into a charitable foundation, the terms of the father’s will saying that only direct offspring could inherit. Even in the ’50s the estate was huge and the young lawyer who captured control of it had no intention of letting go. Even though John was engaged and his fiance was pregnant, the lawyer used all tricks and tools to prevent the daughter born a few months later from recognition as the heir.

As you probably guessed, Tuve’s diamond came from Clarke’s case and the daughter, now nearly 50, comes to town hoping to recover some part of dad’s body for DNA testing. The lawyer, fat and happy on decades of less than legitimately earned foundation monies, sends a fallen scion of another rich family who’s more than willing to do what’s necessary to stop her. Dashee, Manuelito and Chee get in the middle trying to save Tuve from the murder charge.

The story has possibilities and Hillerman has his usual charm with describing New Mexico and Arizona but honestly I really feel that the story lacks sufficient tension and some characters are introduced with promise (like the thieving lawyer) and barely seen again, spreading focus a bit too wide.

not recommended, except for Hillerman fanatics

Wishes for 2007

I’m pretty crap with predictions, except in gest, so I won’t trouble you with a batch that are as likely as an elephant knocking on my second story door tomorrow morning.

Instead, to all my friends, loved ones and readers, I will send my traditional wish:

May this coming year be the best of your life so far, and yet the least of all the many yet to come.

Thank you for your friendship, love or simple interest, all important and appreciated by me.

RawSugar makes TechCrunch, Rubel

Unfortunately it’s too late and not in a positive light (TechCrunch, Rubel). Both the top tier bloggers picked up on a brief story in Ha’aretz, the major Israeli daily paper, that RawSugar has run out of money, laid off the staff and has been unable to sell the company or its major assets.

Unfortunately the reports are true. I’m unhappy because we had a great team, really good technology and sufficient funding to get to the second milestone (public availability of our product being the first and 75-100k active users, enough to justify a venture round) but for reasons I’m still not quite clear on, we never did get to that level of active use.

I’m surprised that none of the companies we spoke to about an acquisition the last few months made a real offer, because all of them would have benefited from adding our technology to their products. Using tags or labels with small hierarchical groupings is an important improvement for the second level of search and our tech would be a fast way to get there.

RawSugar had a terrific team, if a small one. TwoThree of our key engineering staff have been hired as part of the first group of employees of a new Google Israel lab (don’t ask me what they’re working on since they won’t tell me ;), as has our Haifa office manager. Our VP Engineering, Frank Smadja, has a brilliant understanding of language and semantics and will surely land easily. Our other engineers and our QA manager, I haven’t heard their plans yet but expect to be impressed when I do. Well, our QA Manager is due to give birth to her second child around the end of January and that ought to keep her happily occupied for quite some time, eh?

Our CEO/Founder, Ofer Ben Shachar, is a serial entrepreneur and after taking time to recharge batteries and get his new house complete will undoubtedly start another innovative company–I worked for him at NetDynamics and would join him again in a heartbeat. Working closely with Ofer for two years has been quite an education for me, enabling me to be involved in nearly every aspect of a startup. Also contributing substantially to my education were our bizdev manager Chris Fede and key advisor Dan Seligson.

RawSugar may be in the… well I can’t bring myself to type Mike’s group name but I have no regrets about joining or anything we did.

This does mean that I’m available for a new opportunity, short or long term, if you have an exciting product in the consumer internet or enterprise space. I’ve done big companies as well as startups and can operate effectively and comfortably in both environments. I can help you improve your customer experience in the form of community building and evangelism, product marketing/product management, or managing technical support.

Ofer and Frank will be happy to give you a good reference.

(SOLD) Buy my Sony SLV-D370P DVD/VCR combo, new in box

Got this as a throw in with the Olevia TV from Fry’s and have no need for it. Would cost you $100 or more from what I can tell online or in a store but I’ll let it go for $60. Cash or Bank Check/Cashier’s Check only, no Paypal, personal checks or credit card, and you have to pick up from me in Mountain View or nearby.

Craig’s List ad

Sony Product Page

A good post-holiday deal.

I’ll ship it to you (only within the US or Canada) but you have to cover the cost of packaging and shipping and my bank must confirm that your bank/cashier check has cleared before I send it out. My estimate–ESTIMATE–is that shipping will cost a minimum of $15 for UPS Ground (5-7 day) delivery.

Update, two hours later: Wow, that was fast! A nice man contacted me from the CL posting and we agreed to $50, I met him at the Mickey D’s by 101, he gave me the cash I gave him the box and am home again. This is why people love Craig’s List.

Bill’s Best of 2006 post

Why, don’t you want my two cents? Note that these are all chosen from what I’ve watched, done, seen or heard this year rather than what was released in 2006. So while, say, Clint Eastwood may win another Oscar for his WWII movie (or his other WWII movie) I didn’t see either so they aren’t in the candidate pool.

Moment (personal): My sister and brother-in-law walking in the door of my parents’ house with my nephew Jacob, the first time we got to meet the little guy.

Moment (technical/business): Going to Pasadena in January for the Rails Studio class. Honorable Mention: Gnomedex in Seattle, Eric Banhamou’s presentation at the July JHTC meeting.

Moment (political): Election Night, particularly watching CNN while in SeaTac waiting for my flight home from a job interview at Microsoft. Despite not getting an offer from MSFT.

Moment (sports): Liverpool winning the FA Cup after falling two goals behind, lead by Steven Gerrard’s offense and Pepe Reina’s goalkeeping.

Disappointment: Our troops are still dying in Iraq, Afghanistan is falling apart (with Somalia, the Sudan and Nigeria close behind), North Korea has several nuclear weapons and Iran is close behind and GW Bush is still president. The US team’s completely crap performance at the World Cup and USC’s last minute loss to Texas in the BCS Championship.

Purchase: Easily LittleSteven, my new MacBook, nothing else came close, which was driven home by the few days I had to go back to my WinXP Toshiba when this puppy had to go for service. Honorable Mentions: iBackup from Grapefruit Software, although since this is free/open source software I didn’t purchase it, and TextMate from Macromates, which did cost Eu40.

Gift: The longsleeve Liverpool FC jersey TS1 gave me for Hanukah and the continuing generosity of my parents.

TV comedy: Eureka (SciFi) was funny throughout its first season with good use of science fiction elements in the mystery and a very good Colin Ferguson as the fish out of water sheriff and Family Guy (Fox) was the best 30 minute show on any network. Honorable Mentions: Robot Chicken (Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim) and Viva Blackpool, a limited run musical/comedy/crime story mashup. Simpsons and Monk are still funny but not at their peak; Monk especially seems to have gotten into a rut and will need to pick it up in the winter season premiering in three weeks or lose me.

TV science fiction: Heroes (NBC) has come out of nowhere to show that major network scifi can be well done. Battlestar Galactica is still quality but the producers seem to have lost their way in regards to the bigger picture, similarly The 4400 (USA). Doctor Who is fun to watch but not first rank. Long in the tooth watchlist: both Stargates, though SG-1 is wrapping up after the winter season.

TV drama: The Wire (HBO) did a nearly complete reset this season but got terrific scripts from well-known mystery novelists like Dennis Lehane and Richard Price and consistently strong pacing from the stabl of directors. Mystery Monday (BBC America) brought us some outstanding British series including Life on Mars, Eleventh Hour, Wire in the Blood and Waking the Dead (but not all were worthy: Vincent and Murphy’s Law didn’t keep my interest for even one full episode). Honorable Mentions for Deadwood, 24, Dexter, Murder City and The Sopranos. Long in the tooth watchlist: the original CSI and CSI: Miami, the original Law & Order (when Jerry Orbach died, maybe the show should have too, though I still watch) and ER, which I did stop watching at least four years ago.

Movie comedy: Stranger than Fiction was strange, fictional and twistingly funny, best movie performance by Will Ferrell. Honorable Mention: Find Me Guilty. Classic: Eddie and the Cruisers.

Movie drama: An Inconvenient Truth may be a documentary but its also extremely dramatic and important as real life events continue to show (such as a 66 square kilometer ice shelf snapping off an island in the Candian Arctic). Honorable Mention: Hotel Rwanda. Classic: The Great Escape.

Book: Charlie Stross’s Accelerando was an amazing take on the Singularity and clearly my top read while Iain Banks was new (to me) author of the year, beginning with Look to Windward. I only seem to have read two non-fiction books but even so Jack Weatherford’s Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World is worth your time to understand one of the least well understood transformative figures of the Middle Ages.

Blog: Daring Fireball by John Gruber (note that I’m limiting myself to blogs which I first started reading this year), who I will support as soon as I start getting a paycheck again so I can get his Linked List RSS feed.

My 2006 sports predictions had some surprisingly good picks: Italy in the World Cup finals against a team that was not named Brazil, Germany or USA (though they won); Barcelona did win La Liga and the Champions League and beat an English club in the CL final; Chelsea won the EPL with Man United and Liverpool second and third and Arsenal capturing fourth on the last day of the season after a suspicious rash of food posioning struck Tottenham, the team ahead of them until that game. USC did not beat Texas in the BCS Championship game but Leinart, Bush and Vince Young did all go in the top 10 11 draft picks and both teams were in the preseason Top 10.

LCD TV: Hello HD, Goodbye TiVo

The Olevia 337H 37″ LCD TV that the Big Guy and I tried to buy on Black Friday came on sale again for a good price at Fry’s yesterday. The Big Guy had already gotten one online and has been very positive about the picture quality and performance so I decided TS1 and I deserved to have it as well. A day and a half later things are more or less set, but the experience has been a wearing one.

The connection and rationale still aren’t clear to me but Fry’s threw in a Sony DVD/VCR combo box as part of the deal. If it had HD capability… but no, it’s just a normal, $99 list price piece of equipment. Still in the box, probably going on eBay or Craig’s List.

At the store I didn’t think about how I was going to get the large, heavy box up the flight of stairs to our apartment. I could call someone for help but that seemed like overkill for two minutes of work. I punted, leaving the box in the car while I called Comcast and ran over to their office to get the necessary new HD settop box. Warned that the settop box had only a DVI output, I grabbed a DVI-HDMI cable at Radio Shack.

The box also had two of those yellow hard plastic straps around the short side and testing seemed to prove I could use the straps for a decent hold and leverage, which turned out to be true though getting up the stairs required stopping every two or three steps–the box was not only big, it was heavy too.

Disconnecting and removing the old TV and settop box were straightforward though the TV was more difficult to move than the Olevia was to get up. I reviewed all the connections and hard to read instructions and plugged everything together, then gave the cable box a half hour to activate.

Not good. All I could get on screen was black and white picture, no sound and only the basic (non-digital) channels, no matter what I tried. Calling Comcast support yielding the first disappointing news. Neither the TiVo Series1 (which I’ve had and loved for four years now) and Series2 (which I was willing to buy to get the dual tuner, new features and big recording capacity) work with the Comcast HD boxes. Unfortunately we cannot (nor would we even if we could) spend $800 for the Series3 TiVo HD recorder, plus $300 for the first three years of service prepaid.

Initially I thought this was ugly business maneuvering by Comcast, (illegally?) tying their DVR to the HD box. But then I realized that neither the Series1 nor the Series2 have HD input or output and so even if they could be used that would be missing the point of having an HD-capable TV.

The TiVo and my (10 year old) home theater receiver were removed from the wiring flow with the settop box and DVD player connected directly to the Olevia. Still no sound though and, after checking websites, documentation and calling the Big Guy, I found out that DVI (unlike HDMI) only carries video and not sound. Problem solved by adding a cable from the Comcast audio out to the TV.

Still no sound, but good picture on all the expected channels. The DVD player worked fine, sound and all. More reading of documentation yielded the nugget that I’d used the wrong audio jacks on the TV. Okay, sound finally working.

What to do about recording shows though? The only immediate answer was to go back to Comcast and trade up to their HD DVR, which I did this morning. When I asked the officeperson if a box with HDMI would be available any time soon he stopped typing, turned the box around so the back was facing me and pointed to an HDMI jack. So the expensive DVI-HDMI cable went back to Radio Shack and an HDMI-HDMI cable came home to take its place.

The new equipment all went in and, with just a little bit more frustration and annoyance, worked. All in time to watch a repeat of Newcastle-Tottenham on FSC (not an HD channel and not the live match I expected, which was on the Setanta Sports package instead). Afterwards, being energy-conscious, I turned off the Olevia.

An hour or so I later I turned it back on and the screen filled with snow rather than the pretty picture and sound from before. As an experiment I pulled the HDMI cable out of the TV, waited, and plugged it back in. This worked. After a few more minutes I power cycled again with the same snowy result. This is California, it doesn’t snow here!

I called Olevia support this time and was put on hold for over 30 minutes; the front line support rep told me I was 34th in line and 12 techs were on duty. Finally connected, only to learn that this is, er, expected behavior for any HDMI TV connection, regardless of brand, and I could turn off the cable box every time I turned off the TV, losing its recording capability, or leave the TV on.

We can thank our friends in Hollywood because this is yet another noxious DRM-related “feature.” The HDMI protocol requires all devices that can take HD content (the TV) to get an authorization token from the the supplying device (the Comcast box) before it can decode the signal. The Olevia forgets the token, or is required to get a new one, the tech support staffer wasn’t sure, every time the power goes off and on.

The workaround for power cycling the cable box is unplugging and plugging the HDMI cable, awkward due to the jack locations. The HD picture–I’m watching Florida St. beat UCLA on ESPN HD right now–is excellent, I have to say. Can’t wait for some soccer to show up on FSN HD or ESPN HD!

I still miss TiVo, though. If for nothing else the onscreen programming guide is vastly superior to Comcast’s, but also for the much better user interaction design (that is, the number and of type of clicks required for specific tasks like finding shows or setting up recordings), TiVo Suggests and all the Season Passes set up over the years.

The Comcast HD DVR settop box (though not the plain HD one), in its favor, does have dual tuners, which will be handy when the shows come back with new episodes next week month year. I can finally watch My Name is Earl again and deal with SciFi moving Battlestar Galactica to Sundays.

Maybe TiVo will pick on Microsoft’s idea and send me a Series3 to blog about? Stranger things have happened.

FYI: UCLA QB Patrick Cowan just threw an interception that was returned for a TD right after Florida State drove 90 yards for a TD and the Seminoles look to have locked up the Emerald Bowl, leading 44-27 with 2:45 left in the game. Any team that beats UCLA is okay in my book. Go ‘Noles!

Passings: James Brown

I was surprised to read Anil’s entry this morning paying tribute to the Godfather of Soul. Brown has been a star since before my birth and certainly had his share of troubles the last 20 years but still only celebrated his 73rd birthday this year. Most of his hits came before I was old enough to appreciate them; the two that did make an impression on me were Living in America and Say It Loud (I’m Black and I’m Proud).

One thing Brown said that seemed truly meaningful to me was his definition of soul, and perhaps of his own life:

“Soul is all the hard knocks, all the punishment the black man has had … all the unfulfilled dreams that must come true.

Book: The Clan Corporate

The third book in Charles Stross’s entertaining series that meshes science fiction (intra-multiverse travel), fantasy (two of the three Earths featured–so far–are 100 and 500 years behind our’s in development) and present-day drug and national security politics, The Clan Corporate starts a bit slow but perks up about 30-40 pages in and never lets up.

Still, given its place in the middle of things, the book doesn’t really settle any big questions though it does put more plates spinning at the end of sticks. Miriam Beckstein a/k/a Helge voh Thorold d’Hjorth is still in hot water from the events of The Hidden Family, and we spend much of this episode learning about her clan and its place in the politics of Neijwein.

The defection of Mattias at the end of the second volume has made everyone more than a little paranoid, you see. Plus, the Clan is still interested in bringing the royal family into the worldwalkers’ braiding scheme and there are non-Clan political players as well. The results of Mattias’ defection on our own American government, personified by DEA agent Mike Fleming, are not, er, unsurprising either; Stross puts the lever squarely in VP Dick Cheney’s hands and thereby escalates the scheming.

But Stross really does political well. Further, Miriam’s frustration and missteps build throughout and thus she becomes much more human.

recommended

Theater: The Rocky Horror Show

TS1 found this while looking for something to do on New Year’s Eve, I’m not sure how. But I highly recommend if you have a free night between now and January 6, spend the $20 a ticket and drive over to San Jose to see Actors Theater Center’s stage production of The Rocky Horror Show. We had a terrific time, the cast is very good and the show is in a cozy little theater next to a middle school.

Before I lived out here I used to go to shows fairly often, on Broadway, off Broadway and the Paper Mill Playhouse (a, it’s the official state theater of New Jersey and b, the original building was a paper mill, okay?), my parents being quite the devotees of the stage. Out here, not being a huge fan of driving up to San Francisco and the ridiculous ticket prices for big name shows (we checked into seeing Jersey Boys and the cheapest seats worth buying are $90 each, and that’s before the TicketMaster fees).

These days people may not remember that this was originally a stage production in London and the movie wasn’t made until two years later (though Tim Curry was the star of both). Director Jeff Hicks has done a nice job of translating it back and local theater vet Tad M. Morgan is a hoot as Frank N. Furter and David Cori does a perfect job as the narrator, handling the traditional audience responses especially well. After the curtain call, the whole cast lead the audience in doing the Time Warp (again).

It’s been a long time but I used to be a regular at the Friday midnight movie shows back in college and this was a fun time warp. If you’re still looking for a different way to ring in the New Year, this is a good bet.

recommended

Five things you don’t know about me

Oy! Karl tagged me, and like him I share too much so five things might be a little tough.

  • New people I meet always get the benefit of the doubt and will be treated as a friend unless and until they demonstrate they are not.
  • I hung out at the Mudd Club, CBGBs and a few other Manhattan punk clubs back in the late ’70s with a buddy named Brian Karlman. During the winter months I was pretty much the only one wearing plaid lumberjack shirts and, no, I never dyed my hair.
  • I’m a big Buddy Rich fan thanks to a good buddy of mine from Jersey who was also an awesome drummer (and has perfect pitch to boot). Second and third favorite non-rock musicians are Beethoven and the King of Swing, Benny Goodman.
  • My biggest regret about living in California for nearly 11 years is still the distance from my parents, sister and my sister’s family. But my biggest regret career-wise is not recognizing the opportunities in Silicon Valley when I visited here in my senior year of college for my cousin Larry’s Bar Mitzvah.
  • Like Sam, I have an irrational fear of heights and also must have the aisle seat on planes and in theaters.

Is there anyone left to tag? Well, Rob and Pam, for sure, and Rogers, Dan and Adam make an even five, go to it folks.

Book: The Difference Engine

In our English history, in 1837 Charles Babbage designed what might have been a very early sort of computer, the analytical engine, except that he never quite finished the design and manufacturing technology could not have produced even if he had. Authors William Gibson and Bruce Sterling launched the steampunk strand of science fiction in 1991 by speculating in this volume on what might have been if Babbage’s engines were built.

Gibson and Sterling (both Americans) focus primarily on the political ramifications of the invention, not surprising given the rest of their oeuvres, and the key change is a rapid rise of technocrats not unlike our own Silicon Valley elite except that in that time and place money and politics are far more directly linked, especially in light of the connection between Babbage and Ada Lovelace. Her father becomes not only Prime Minister but also the channel through which radical political changes are wrought.

The book itself is more a series of short stories rather than a novel, connected by a mysterious box of punch cards. Babbage’s engines were card-driven for both instructions and memory, with every resident of Britain having their details recorded on a bureaucratic card.

My memories of The Difference Engine were quite fond–and justified on re-reading–and so I took advantage after coming across a copy on deep discount at Tower Records’ going out of business sale.

recommended

Working on the new Blogger?

After a five hour wait my account seems to have migrated to the new Blogger. I’ll see if the new labels feature will do much for me, otherwise the main value will be the hopefully robust new code base and architecture that allows the Google squad to add or enhance features more rapidly.

Since I don’t (obviously) publish on Blog*Spot the new layouts aren’t available to my blogs and I’ll respectfully disagree with their claim on having improved the Dashboard design (the new layout uses more screen space and all blogs show as having last updated today even though that’s only true for this one).

Anyway, cheers, congrats on finally getting this puppy out of the barn.

Update: Well, those of us not publishing to Blog*Spot cannot control the labels other than what’s possible through CSS styling so they’re a pass for me for now.

Also, this change has broken my access through the Blogger API on the Book Reviews page. I’m working on fixing this but it might take a day or two as I didn’t write the underlying code.

A holiday joke

It has to be, right John? Microsoft has filed an application to patent a “content syndication platform, such as a web content syndication platform, manages, organizes and makes available for consumption content that is acquired from the Internet.” The first claim in the application specifically mentions RSS and further down ATOM and the various versions are listed.

Ha-ha-ha, mutherfuckers. One imagines there is sufficient prior art to block this but then again…

Waiting on a Sunny Day

(TS1 made this up and gave me a framed copy as today’s Hanukah present, how sweet is this?)

SHERRY DARLING was her name
She worked at the CADILLAC RANCH
Alas she had a rich boyfriend and friends would tell me
YOU CAN LOOK (BUT YOU BETTER NOT TOUCH)
I wanted to say these words to her “I have a CRUSH ON YOU”
SHE’S THE ONE
Sherry, I WANNA MARRY YOU
I finally confessed my feelings to her OUT ON THE STREET
She Tells me to meet her down by THE RIVER
There we made love, TWO HEARTS beating
We saw each other for some time and I later find out
She’s getting married
That THE PRICE YOU PAY
When you are from the wrong side of the tracks
Leaving in a STOLEN CAR..DRIVE ALL NIGHT

I’M GOING DOWN TO DARLING TOWN
Men WORKING ON THE HIGHWAY
Met a cute lady at the local bar, name was BOBBY JEAN
There was NO SURRENDER in those blue eyes
She loved DANCING IN THE DARK
As we danced close she whispers LET’S BE FRIENDS (SKIN TO SKIN)
BABY I’M ON FIRE and I will PROVE IT ALL NIGHT
Those were GLORY DAYS

Drove down THUNDER ROAD Needed a place to stay
Went to grab a bite to eat at a cafe’ called CANDY’S ROOM.
WHEN YOU’RE ALONE on VALENTINE’S DAY
Oh what a LONESOME DAY.
Hiding the pain and sadness. What a BRILLIANT DISGUISE
Watching people making out in the TUNNEL OF LOVE.
It’s just TOUGHER THAN THE REST.

Passing through towns in THE PROMISED LAND
RACING IN THE NIGHT. Driving in DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN

Pulled off the road. ACROSS THE RIVER,
I could see MY HOMETOWN far in the distance
Looking up at the EMPTY SKY, no clouds, just blue skies
Break time is over, need to continue for a just a bit more
Thinking to myself, I’m COUNTIN ON A MIRACLE for rain
FURTHER ON (UP THE ROAD), my final destination
MARY’S PLACE

Liverpool rampant, ready for Arsenal

The Reds moved decisively into third on the EPL league table yesterday with a comprehensive 3-0 win over bottomdwelling Charlton. Alonso opened with a third minute penalty kick after former LFC man Djimi Traore put his boot into Jermaine Pennant’s forehead inside the box and then Craig Bellamy and StevieG went net twice in the last 10 minutes for a quality road win. Eleven goals in their last three league games with none allowed.

Arsenal could have stayed a place ahead of us but gave up two early goals to Portsmouth and had a scramble to manage a point at home. Gunners’s results have been far below par since they beat us 3-0 five weeks ago, winning three, drawing three and losing four matches; in fact, that was the last time Liverpool allowed a goal in a league match. They are missing star striker Thierry Henry through injury, and he’s not likely to return until after the new year.

The stage is set, then, for a major clash Tuesday night when Arsenal visit Anfield in a Carling Cup quarterfinal match. In the last round Rafa fielded more of a reserve squad, with Dudek, Paletta, Peltier, Agger, Warnock and Fowler getting starts and beating Birmingham 0-1; Arsene Wenger put a similar type of lineup out, with Almunia, Song, Walcott, Song, Denilson, Traore and Aliadere getting chances to feature, and they beat a full strength Everton 1-0 on a late goal from Emmanuel Adebayor.

Different managers have different practices, and both teams have injuries and tight scheduling, so I can’t say what the starting XIs will look like. Benitez has let the reserves take them team as far as they’re able the last two seasons so I wouldn’t be surprise to see most of the same side from the Birmingham match though Zenden and Sissoko are of course unavailable through injury and Bellamy may be replaced by Crouch and Gonzalez by Guthrie due to changes in regular first team selections.

The teams meet again the first Saturday of the new year, this time in the FA Cup, and Henry says he’ll be ready for it.

Note: Gerrard was made an Honorary Freeman of the borough of Knowsley this week, for his outstanding contribution to national and international football, the first such award in nearly 20 years. A key benefit of the title is that Steve can run his flock of sheep through the town’s roads. Baa-aa-aa!