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What’s in a name?

Or so asked Shakespeare. Now a new web site is showing where’s a name, by mapping out where surnames occur around the world. The Public Profiler site plots eight million…

Or so asked Shakespeare. Now a new web site is showing where’s a name, by mapping out where surnames occur around the world.

The Public Profiler site plots eight million last names using data from electoral rolls and phone directories.

The site covers 300 million people in 26 countries, showing the origins of names and where families have moved to.

[…] The site – www.publicprofiler.org/worldnames – also reveals which of the five million forenames are most closely associated with different surnames and lists the top regions and cities for each surname.

 

Not surprisingly, the site is struggling to keep up with web traffic, so I actually haven’t had a chance to play with it yet. But it sounds pretty keen.

Youth (relatively speaking)

Both Barack Obama and Sarah Palin are in their 40s — which is way on the young side of the curve for the White House run (I think you have…

Both Barack Obama and Sarah Palin are in their 40s — which is way on the young side of the curve for the White House run (I think you have to go back to Dan Quayle and JFK … and that’s about all that comes to mind). Granted that Palin might be an intentional reaction/counter to Obama, is this some sort of a trend? Is the “youth vote” (on the premise that “young” people are more likely to vote for folks their parents’ age than their grandparents’) driving a change in candidate demographics?

I suspect the answer will be found based on who wins this time around, and who votes for them. Unless it’s just that my own advancing decrepitude is leading to this prelude to my 2012 rant, “Hey, you kids, get the hell off my ballot!”

A man’s gotta know his limitations

This BoingBoing article reminded me of my own actions to this end: Simple way to keep your download folder tidy – Boing Boing  From Danny O’Brien, a nice hack for…

This BoingBoing article reminded me of my own actions to this end: Simple way to keep your download folder tidy – Boing Boing 

From Danny O’Brien, a nice hack for keeping your download folder tidy — a script that deletes everything that’s more than a week old. I’d like one of these to run on my ~/.Trash folder, too.

 

I am not (for reasons that Danny himself appreciates) sanguine about third-party jobs that delete things over time. That said, this isn’t a bad idea.

One thing I’ve done on my XP machine to keep automatically keep cruft from building up is … well, nothing. But I make it easy to spot and delete when I do start getting that annoying “You are running low on space” message. 

I’ve created a separate “~Downloads” folder at the top of My Documents. The tilde causes it to sort to the top of the list, and having it in My Documents gives it maximum visibility. That way I can easily get to stuff I know I’ve downloaded recently — either to find it again, or delete it.

Beyond that, I’ve created a “~Temp” folder in the same location. That’s where I save 9 out of 10 documents, with the person rule that anything that is there mya get deleted at any time. That’s because 90% of my documents end up getting emailed to someone else, and thus get stored in the email system (and archived back out again when I do my monthly email archive). Not only does the ~Temp folder make saving docs (many of which are being passed around by email for collaborative purposes anyway) a lot easier, and it makes purging all the old stuff a lot easier, too. 

Nothing profound here. Just sharing.

Feeds and pictures

It’s educational looking at my own web feed via Google Reader. Given that I suspect the majority of my readers depend on an RSS/Atom feed of my blog (rather than browsing…

It’s educational looking at my own web feed via Google Reader. Given that I suspect the majority of my readers depend on an RSS/Atom feed of my blog (rather than browsing to my site regularly), it’s interesting to see what crops up there.

(I should also, in that case, embed a comment link in the RSS feed. Note to self.)

The one oddity I notice is that some images simply don’t show up. It doesn’t seem to be consistent. While all of the feeds from Flickr (or YouTube, etc.) show up, some images from my own page don’t show up, while others do (and they do all show up on the actual page). The Google Reader page showing them (or not) doesn’t lend itself to a View Source. 

So … any ideas from my loyal readers as to why? Do you get confused/frustrated by some images not coming through in Google Reader (or whatever RSS reader you use, if you use one), while others do?

Potpourri on a lazy Friday night

WARNING! POLITICS! McCain Ad Is Valentine to Obama on Big Day – Well, at first, I was impressed that the McCain camp were gracious enough not to get all political on…

WARNING! POLITICS!

  1. McCain Ad Is Valentine to Obama on Big Day – Well, at first, I was impressed that the McCain camp were gracious enough not to get all political on the day of Obama’s big speech — and, in fact, were congratulatory towards it. Then I read M.S. Bellows, Jr.: Crazy McCain Flip Flops In Response… and realized that not everyone in the McCain campaign got the message.
  2. McCain Veep meltdown – he’s unqualified to serve – Is Palin as bad as all that? The more I read — pro-life, anti-gay, Young Earth Creationist … it does make me wonder. And Battered Base Syndrome makes me think that it might have been a serious strategic error beyond the obvious. We’ll seen.
  3. Obama’s Posse Heads Out For The Weekend [Party Unity… – Okay, it’s just plain fun.
  4. Watch politicians age – It’s hard to actually detect any aging in the series of photos … but it’s sort of mesmerizing to watch.

WHEW! POLITICS-FREE ZONE!

  1. Stardock proposes a “Gamer’s Bill of Rights” at PAX. – It’s inconceivable that this would get any significant traction, but it does enumerate some very legitimate gripes that gamers have toward a lot of gaming companies.
  2. Comcast limits customers to 250 gigs a month – I have no idea how much bandwidth I use, or how to find out. Hrm.
  3. The English language in 3000 AD – Wildly speculative, and fascinating for all of that.
  4. Photoblog devoted to century-old piccies – I love a lot of these photo sites. Beautiful Photography is focused on Siberian wooden houses. Bridges shows … well, some amazingly keen bridges.
  5. Fighting Zombies – I will give $500 to any accredited major network (cable or broadcast) journalist who asks Obama or McCain how the US armed forces would deal with a zombie outbreak.
  6. Your genes are not yours to know about – Thank goodness that the government, and doctors, know best.
  7. Plane evacuations – I always check out the closest exits. But I suspect I would be a bad evacuee and bring my notebook with me.
  8. What If the Kindle Succeeds? | Electronic Frontier… -The concerns raised in the article are why I haven’t gotten a Kindle. But that said, I think the day is finally getting closer.

Christmas in August

Maybe the should call it the UNseasonal aisle….

Maybe the should call it the UNseasonal aisle.

Girl on a rock

At the Vistas at Park Meadows….

At the Vistas at Park Meadows.

News is news, not commentary about news you aren’t showing us

I wasn’t obsessive about watching the DNC while it was in town — though I made a point to catch Biden’s speech, catching Bill Clinton’s too, and watched the main…

I wasn’t obsessive about watching the DNC while it was in town — though I made a point to catch Biden’s speech, catching Bill Clinton’s too, and watched the main speakers on the closing night, too, particularly Gore and Obama.

As earlier noted, when I first clicked it on the other night, to CNN, which claimed it was covering the affair. Instead, it seemed to be more of an opportunity for CNN talking heads to visit Denver, or chit-chat their same theories, narrative, wild conjectures, and opinions about the election, candidates, and political zeitgeist. Ugh.

Guys, if I tune into CNN to watch the DNC (or the RNC), I’m not doing it to watch Wolf Blitzer, or Ted Koppel, or Suzie Creamcheese or Phil Phlack — I’m tuning in to watch the convention.

I flipped to MSNBC. Commercial.

I never tried PBS, but I did land on C-SPAN, which basically presented it all, in real time, as it happened — the good speakers, the poor speakers, the important speakers, the trivial speakers, plus all the music acts. 

As I was at karate with Katherine yesterday afternoon, they had a big screen TV that had the coverage from CNN (I think). As I watched, I could see that a Colorado Democratic pol (Diane DeGette) was speaking — but the talking heads were too busy talking to each other to let me hear what she had to say. Why not just stay in Atlanta, guys, and save the air fare>

My karate class let out at 8pm last night, as Obama was being introduced, so I set the DVR up around 6:30 to just start recording, and so was able to FF through the music and the speakers I wasn’t interested in hearing. Note — I made that decision, not some producer in the sound booth.

An article weighing in on this: The TV Watch – On the Small Screen, Intimacy and Welcome Silence for Obama’s Big Rally – NYTimes.com 

People do want to watch: the audience for cable news coverage this week was about double what it was in 2004. Yet despite the huge public fascination, the three major networks limited their coverage to an hour a night, a prime-time patchwork of highlight reels, catchup snippets of live speeches, and commentary.

 

And that’s fine — if you’re going to summarize, do it as a summary. That’s a legitimate way of doing it, in line with how they cover all news.

Anchors at conventions used to serve as omniscient narrators; at this convention, they mostly served as human V-chips blocking live speeches with their own palaver and predictions.

[…] And even the 24-hour cable news channels proved unreliable at times, giving too much screen time to their gassiest anchors.

 

Exactly. Cronkite talking about what’s actually happening at the convention is one thing. Suzie and Phil nattering about how it’s “playing,” or going through endless iterations of the whole Clinton PUMA* thang, is quite another.

Of the three cable news networks, CNN was the least intrusive: Wolf Blitzer and his colleagues were willing to let speakers speak for themselves.

When they were willing to let us hear them.

When Martin Luther King III spoke on Thursday, so did Keith Olbermann of MSNBC, who chose to entertain his viewers with a Doonesbury cartoon about Mr. Obama and the Clintons that also featured Mr. Olbermann and his co-host, Chris Matthews. (Fox News mostly focused on Mr. McCain’s possible choice for a running mate, but raced back to the convention when Sheryl Crow took the stage.)

It’s a bad reading of the audience. For most of the convention, CNN — staid, stable and anchored by fewer egomaniacs — won higher ratings than the other cable news channels, as well as ABC and CBS. And Wednesday, CNN was neck and neck with NBC, and for a while even ahead, suggesting that when a political event is this interesting, television commentators are less so.

 

Which is fine, though I’m disappointed that the PBS and C-SPAN coverage weren’t mentioned by the Times.

Ah, well, I’m glad it’s over … until next week.

(via Margie)

* I realized the other day I’d heard started hearing this term all over the place, had a contextual sense of what it meant, but didn’t know the actual definiton: “Party Unity My Ass”.

Party Prep

Getting ready for Margie Gras….

Getting ready for Margie Gras.

The Next Dick Cheney?

It looks like McCain has selected his VP running mate — and gone against all the punditry and received wisdom as to who the choice will be. If nothing else,…

It looks like McCain has selected his VP running mate — and gone against all the punditry and received wisdom as to who the choice will be. If nothing else, he’s deftly defused the “Dick Cheney” association, side-stepped the Huckabee/Romney debate, and made a quiet play for the disaffected Hillary crowd.

 Sarah Palin, reportedly John McCain’s vice-presidential selection, is no stranger to the “maverick” label often assigned to her Republican running mate. Alaska’s youngest and first female governor has pushed for ethics investigations of fellow Republicans in her state, and bucked the powerful oil industry on a major natural gas pipeline project. When she ran for governor in 2006, she ran as an outsider and an agent for change.

On the plus side, she’s not part of the national party apparatus, and she’s been willing to stand up to them with ethics charges. She’s not, apparently, a neocon. She’s a woman (yeah, that shouldn’t be a “good thing” per se, but it is). She has the same “I’m an outsider, not part of the problems of Washington” air about her that McCain had in 2000 (and has squandered this year).

On the down side, she a conservative Chrsitian, and “strongly pro-life” (which should assuage those GOP supporters). She’s also a supporter of drilling in ANWR.

That all said, Palin brings a breath of fresh air to the McCain party, she potentially counters Biden’s Washington knowledge with media savvy and “spunk,” and she should appeal in different ways to the conservative base, the West, younger people, and centrists. If true, it seems like a very good choice for him.

The big question is, though if Barack Obama is being lambasted for being “unready” for office, how can an someone with even less experience (two years as governor of Alaska, plus some time as a mayor of the thriving megalopolis of Wasilla, AK) be seriously said to be ready to be “a heartbeat away” from the presidency? For both the major candidates, the idea of who is the VP plays a special role — between McCain’s age/health and Obama’s likelihood of drawing out some nut with a gun, the chance of a VP succeeding has never been greater. While I look forward to learning more (hopefully good) about Palin, I don’t see her as being ready for the job.

Also: McCain picks Alaska Gov. Palin as running mate – CNN.com 
McCain Chooses Palin as Running Mate – NYTimes.com 

Perhaps this would make him less scary to some

Katherine’s friend Tyler was certain that the Democratic nominee’s name was “Bronco Bama.”…

Katherine’s friend Tyler was certain that the Democratic nominee’s name was “Bronco Bama.”

Potpourri before a long weekend

GUARANTEED POLITICS-FREE! No time to think? – I make it a near-religious point to get out for a walk at work every day. Except, ironically, when I’m working at home. Dead…

GUARANTEED POLITICS-FREE!

  1. No time to think? – I make it a near-religious point to get out for a walk at work every day. Except, ironically, when I’m working at home.
  2. Dead Sea Scrolls to go digital on Internet (Reuters) – The scholarly and political wrangling over the Scrolls in the 60 years or so since their discovery is scandalous. This is welcome news.
  3. U.S. Moves Toward International Accounting Rules – I have no idea if this is a Good Thing or a Bad Thing — but I’m sure this will cause our Finance Dept. (and, thus, IT) fits.
  4. The Uncertain Science of Sleep – All I know is … I need more of it.
  5. Tropical Storm Gustav Threatens U.S. Energy Infrastructure – The biggest concern is, of course, the impact on people living in wherever it comes ashore. Beyond that, though, this could have major and catastrophic impacts on gas prices, and thus on the economy.
  6. Folks, this is the new wave: SWF file redirects continue – If you don’t know who it’s from, and it’s not something you were expecting, don’t open the frelling attachment!
  7. What people are really afraid of when they say they’re offended – Being offended is not a violation of your civil rights, nor does it call for government action. Societal action for rudeness, maybe — if you can get society to go along with you. But the delicate psyches of the chronically offended — whether based on ethnicity, religion, or ideology — are a threat to our civil liberties only surpassed by … well, the current Administration (sorry, that was political, wasn’t it).
  8. Troubleshoot a Slow Home Network [Wi-Fi] – Filed for future reference.
  9. NBC Re-ups Chuck – Huzzah! 
  10. Small gallery of old comic book ads – There’s some amazing stuff here. Sadly, my cynical nature keeps me looking for the catch in each ad (a la “Sea Monkeys”).

O NOEZ WITH POLITIX!

  1. GOP considers delaying convention – Washington Post-… – Yeah, don’t want people to think of the GOP partying while a city gets flooded or something. Oh, wait …
  2. Toby Barlow: The Great Elementary School Conspiracy – LOL
  3. Harris McDowell: They Don’t Know Joe: The Secret of… – A positive article.
  4. Fear and Loathing | Democratic National Convention… – Some nice pictures (irregardless of politics) of the unchoreographed aspect of the DNC.
  5. Man ejected from Yankee Stadium because left his seat… – I feel more secure, don’t you?
  6. Dear morons in the Press, allow me to buy you a clue – BD rips the architecturally ignorant Repunditcans a new one. Nicely done.
  7. Hentoff on Bush’s Surveillance Fetish – The chance that the Democratic Congress will actually block this seems, based on the track record, next to nil. And once a president has a power — and, sadly, I’m not sure Obama will be any better about this than McCain — he never comes up with a good reason to let it go.

Bush or Batman

Was it Dubya who said it, or the (Adam West) Batman?   C’mon, how can we not have four more years of this? (via Nick via Jim & Ginger)…

Was it Dubya who said it, or the (Adam West) Batman?

 

C’mon, how can we not have four more years of this?

(via Nick via Jim & Ginger)

DNC – The Obama Speech

1. I will vote for anyone who can actually pronounce “nuclear” correctly. Twice. 2. If Obama only manages to pull of 10% of what he promises, it will be…

1. I will vote for anyone who can actually pronounce “nuclear” correctly. Twice.

2. If Obama only manages to pull of 10% of what he promises, it will be worth electing him. I figure, optimistically, it will be 25%. But that’s all icing on the cake.

3. A great mix of stand-tough, populism, progressivism, and bridging differences while also pointing out the differences that matter. It went from strength to reconciliation, from firmness to ideals. The man’s a faboo orator, but there’s substance to the ideals he professes, and more than just pretty words to his candidacy.

Well. I know how I’m voting come November 4th …

Interview with McCain

This is … just odd. A current Time Magazine interview with John McCain — one held aboard his campaign plane. [Your] campaign today is more disciplined, more traditional, more aggressive….

This is … just odd. A current Time Magazine interview with John McCain — one held aboard his campaign plane.

[Your] campaign today is more disciplined, more traditional, more aggressive. From your point of view, why the change?
I will do as much as we possibly can do to provide as much access to the press as possible.

But beyond the press, sir, just in terms of …
I think we’re running a fine campaign, and this is where we are.

Do you miss the old way of doing it?
I don’t know what you’re talking about.

Really? Come on, Senator.
I’ll provide as much access as possible …

In 2000, after the primaries, you went back to South Carolina to talk about what you felt was a mistake you had made on the Confederate flag. Is there anything so far about this campaign that you wish you could take back or you might revisit when it’s over?
[Does not answer.] 

Do I know you? [Says with a laugh.]
[Long pause.] I’m very happy with the way our campaign has been conducted, and I am very pleased and humbled to have the nomination of the Republican Party.

You do acknowledge there was a change in the campaign, in the way you had run the campaign?
[Shakes his head.] 

You don’t acknowledge that? O.K., when your aides came to you and you decided, having been attacked by Barack Obama, to run some of those ads, was there a debate?
The campaign responded as planned.

The whole interview comes off as … cranky is the least of it. Defensive. Vague. Resentful. Tired. Unresponsive.  But, once again, really tired. And, I mean, it’s not like the Time guys ambushed him on his doorstep — this was an arranged appointment aboard his own plane. There’s a sort of weird bunker mentality about the whole thing that you’re not supposed to see until after a person’s been president for a while.

Though I’m also surprised to hear that Iraq is a “peaceful and stable country” and that the counter-insurgency “has succeeded.”

The text on the web page is an excerpt (though a substantial one). The full interview audio can be clicked on at the site. The excerpt is pretty accurate as to the overall tone.

(via J-Walk)

An Emergency Room is not “health insurance”

Except that John McCain’s health care policy advisor thinks it is. (emphasis mine) But the numbers [of uninsured Americans] are misleading, said John Goodman, president of the National Center for Policy Analysis,…

Except that John McCain’s health care policy advisor thinks it is. (emphasis mine)

But the numbers [of uninsured Americans] are misleading, said John Goodman, president of the National Center for Policy Analysis, a right-leaning Dallas-based think tank. Mr. Goodman, who helped craft Sen. John McCain’s health care policy, said anyone with access to an emergency room effectively has insurance, albeit the government acts as the payer of last resort. (Hospital emergency rooms by law cannot turn away a patient in need of immediate care.)

“So I have a solution. And it will cost not one thin dime,” Mr. Goodman said. “The next president of the United States should sign an executive order requiring the Census Bureau to cease and desist from describing any American – even illegal aliens – as uninsured. Instead, the bureau should categorize people according to the likely source of payment should they need care.

“So, there you have it. Voila! Problem solved.”

 

Yup! Let them eat cake! Or, instead, let them get eye care, dental care, preventive care, vaccinations, medications, and treatment for disease before it becomes life-threatening … at the ER! Yeah, that makes a whole lot of sense.

According to Mr. Goodman, only people who are denied care are truly uninsured – everyone who gets care is effectively insured by some mechanism. “So instead of producing worthless statistics that people fling around in vacuous editorials and pointless debates, the Census Bureau should produce meaningful numbers, identifying all of the sources of funds people will draw on if they need medical care,” he said.

 

Um … those who are denied care are uncared for. Not uninsured — which means not having health insurance. 

Now, granted, Goodman (and McCain) don’t actually seem to be saying that people should just get their health care at the ER. But understanding that people don’t have insurance to take care of stuff that is short of disastrous isn’t a “worthless statistic” — ER care is not just a “payer of last resort” (the emphasis on who’s ponying up for the money is telling), it’s simply not adequate or suitable to keep people healthy, just to (after sitting in the waiting room a dozen hours) deal with emergencies. It’s certainly of value to identify who’s picking up the tab — but that’s a secondary statistic (and, conveniently, a lot less embarrassing than identifying folk as “uninsured”).

Goodwin, by the way, is the one touting the McCain plan (he helped draw up) to remove the tax-exemption on employer contributions to health insurance (but, remember, that’s not a tax increase).

Of course, this is fully in line with President Bush’s belief that the ER is a fine source of primary medical care: “I mean, people have access to health care in America. After all, you just go to an emergency room.” 

Perhaps next time Sen. McCain needs to have some skin biopsied to look for cancer, he can just have the limo drop him off at the ER for the afternoon.

Serendipity

So we’re doing a Margie Gras party on Saturday, and I wanted to get hold of the people who had indicated they were coming. Alas, though Google Calendar (wherein…

So we’re doing a Margie Gras party on Saturday, and I wanted to get hold of the people who had indicated they were coming. Alas, though Google Calendar (wherein we did the invitation) lets you email invitees, it’s an all or nothing thing … and some of the folks on the invite list had signaled that they weren’t coming, so why bother them …? What I really needed was a way to easily send email to guests based on their response to date.

… and then, as if by magic, this article came up in my reader: Official Gmail Blog: Little things that matter. Now, it appears, you can … well … send email to guests based on their response to date (yes, maybe, no, still awaiting a response), or individually pick out the individuals to send to. Spiffy! It’s as if Google were reading … my …

… hmmmm. Maybe more spooky than spiffy …

D&D 4e Character Sheets

The D&D 4e character sheets that come in the Player’s Handbook (or downloadable as free PDF — fergoshsakes, don’t buy the damned things!) are … um … sucky. I mean,…

The D&D 4e character sheets that come in the Player’s Handbook (or downloadable as free PDF — fergoshsakes, don’t buy the damned things!) are … um … sucky.

I mean, they look nice, and they are definitely more usable than the text-block based sheets we’re using with the Keep on the Whaddayacallit pre-gens. The latter are complete, and and quite readable, but impossibly organized. The standard character sheets, on the other hand, suffer from way too little space to fit way too much information, marred by gratuitous blocks of distracting black. They’re like every awful form you have to fill out where they give you the same space for your full street address as they did for your first name.

Now, my handwriting is not all that great at the best of times. But when I try to squeeeeeeze stuff into those little boxes, it’s barely legible to myself, let alone to Margie. Since we’re generating characters for a Family D&D Night where Margie and I will be trading off GMing and running our own and each other’s character (Kitten doesn’t get to GM … yet), this is a problem.

So I did some searching, and evidently I’m not the only one who feels this way. Granted, alternative character sheets is a long tradition dating back to … well, probably D&D 1e. Heaven knows I used to looooove hand-crafting such things (I enjoy form design), and, later, building spreadsheets to make something purty.

One thing I’ve seen a lot of in this version of D&D that I don’t recall from the 3.x days is “Power Cards” — putting individual powers/attacks onto their own little playing cards. The idea is three-fold — it saves space on the main character sheet, it lets you organize things ad hoc, and with the new at-will / encounter / daily structure, it lets you easily put aside (and out of consideration) things you’ve already “used up.” Yes, it’s very CCGish (another reason for the Purists to hate 4e), but useful — and, in fact, it harkens back to the old “magic item” cards I used to draw for folks in my campaigns, once upon a time.

I definitely need to try the concept.

Some resources I definitely want to point you at (and bookmark for myself) for character sheet alternatives and power cards:

  1. 4th Edition Character Sheets and Power Cards – A couple of good sheet designs here (Shado’s in particular), plus a very useful crib sheet that Doyce has been handing out, and some excellent power cards by Ander00 (though actually generating them looks to be more work than I want to screw with).
  2. 4th Edition Character Sheets and Other Resources | Dragon Avenue: a Dungeons and Dragons Community – Parallel to the previous entry, this has some added character sheet options, some wonderful “condition cards” (little items you can put in front of yourself to remind you and others that you are stunned, slept, prone, etc., and what that means), blank power cards, initiative/effect tracker sheets, and some encounter generators.
  3. My 4E Character Sheet – EN World D&D / RPG News – As stated.  A nice “retro” feeling character sheet.
  4. [4e] Neceros’ Character Sheets – RPGnet Forums – More character sheets, and some good blank power cards.
  5. RPG Sheets: Role-Playing Game Character Sheets, d20 Character Sheet, NPCs, Equipment, Swords, Magic Items – Another variety of character sheets, including an Excel-based one that looks pretty darned good.
  6. Power Cards, character sheet, etc. for 4th edition Dungeons and Dragons – Still more recommendations, including links to more groups of power cards.

There’s a certain measure of duplication and cross-linking above, but in all it’s good resources to dive into (Google is your friend).

 

DNC – Convention Coverage

So ended up watching most of the DNC coverage this evening. About 5 minutes of CNN “Let’s Make This about What Our Pundits and Talking Heads Think” drove me…

So ended up watching most of the DNC coverage this evening. About 5 minutes of CNN “Let’s Make This about What Our Pundits and Talking Heads Think” drove me over to C-SPAN, which suffered only from not always being good about noting who was whom.

Observations:

  1. What an amazing, incredible, daunting, fantastic honor to speak at the DNC. Until you realize you’re sandwiched between five other governors / congressmen / veterans / noted guests, not to mention, oh, the folks who the media are actually covering.
  2. Harry Reid gave the best speech I’ve ever heard him make (which isn’t saying much). Nancy Pelosi was her usual awful self.
  3. Bill Clinton managed to actually get Michelle Obama smiling by the end of his speech, which tells me he said and did the right things. Which, I think, he did.
  4. Okay, I’ve bought into the Biden Kool-aid. At least to the extent that he said the right things, behaved the right way, and seems to be a fine running mate.
  5. Right. I get it that the Dems are trying to point out that they, too, are “people of faith.” The continuous matra of “God Bless Our Troops! God Bless America!” got more than a bit old. I shudder to think of what the GOP confab will be like.
  6. Obama’s surprise visit was a surprise only if you didn’t listen to any media coverage which noted that he was arriving in town and planning on visiting the convention. That said, it was reasonably staged, and the man’s ability to behave casually under the circumstances, alternating between seriousness and smiles, is amazing.

Potpourri on a cooler Wednesday night

OH, NO, NOT MORE POLITICS! DHS contractor threatens woman with arrest for wearing… – I feel much more secure knowing that women who have the web address for a support…

OH, NO, NOT MORE POLITICS!

  1. DHS contractor threatens woman with arrest for wearing… – I feel much more secure knowing that women who have the web address for a support site for lesbians cannot do so in public without threat of arrest. Don’t you?
  2. Johann Hari: If You Really Want to Understand What… – Sure, it’s armchair psychology to attribute the search for the father to the son … but it’s still interesting reading.
  3. Way to Cheapen the Sacrifice, John – McCain is either obsessive about touting his POW past in every context, or he’s transitioned into poking fun at the criticism … but in either case, it’s a mantra that’s getting terribly wearying.
  4. Scholars and Rogues » The new and improved DNC: now… – More than a bit disheartening in the context of all that grass roots schtick.

AND NOW SOME NON-POLITICAL STUFF …

  1. Search experiments, large and small – How Google improves their interface. Short answer: lots of subtle variations with zillions of samples to test it within.
  2. Chinese people discovering fortune cookies – Which, of course, weren’t actually invented in China.
  3. Train nearly runs over idiots (video) – I would simply encourage such natural selection … except I would never wish that on any railroad engineer.
  4. Photos from abandoned 1901 hydroelectric power plant – Ooooh, fun.
  5. DORK TOWER – Do Or Dive – How I feel about the Olympics.
  6. Comparing airline fees – If only this info could be more easily integrated into online travel sites. I’m waiting either for someone to sell themselves as having a simple single fare (everything else free), or else Congress mandating something in their typical hamfisted fashion.
  7. 100 things author dies – There is a certain irony that he only got to half his “things” before he died. The less on is … don’t wait, don’t put it off.
  8. English is a user-modifiable technology – I am, in fact, a stuck-up grammar snob … only because someone has to act as the countervailing force against people who ignore present vocabulary to invent something new, or who treat ignorance as an excuse to break the rules. That said, English is a living language, which means growth and change is inevitable and desirable. Just … grow smart.