This comparison of the owning experiences of an AK-47, an AR-15, and a Mosin Nagant is well worth your time — I mean, if you have more than a passing familiarity with what any of those things are. (Don’t miss this, Frank.)
“The Barack Obama of Automobiles”
Go read this longish Atlantic article on what could very well turn out to be the first real game-changer in the automotive world — produced, improbably enough, by General Motors. The GM people my age know is a company made of Fail; few folks in the Heathen orbit and generation have ever even considered a GM product outside of the odd Corvette or Camarao (hi, Edgar) — especially if you eliminate the early, independent years of Saturn as an aberration — GM eventually absorbed the division and destroyed its independence and with it, its value.
Well, that may change. The Volt is a new kind of hybrid that GM is in very-nearly-bet-the-farm mode over. It’s electric-first — there’s an on-board gas engine, but its job is to run a generator, not drive the wheels. The wheels turn with electricity, never gas. Set to go 40 miles on a charge (i.e., more than the average commute), the Volt will mean that most owners buy gas only once in a blue moon. And GM wants it in showrooms for 2010.
They might just make it. And if they deliver on these promises and manage to escape their seemingly inevitable Fail gene, Heathen might just buy one.
McCain hates you
Or, at least, he’s upset that he won’t have the right to detain you forever on his say-so. Make no mistake about this: McCain will be a continuation of Bush’s regime in every way that matters.
Scalzi Wins
John Scalzi weighs in on the baby-momma thing, and takes ZERO prisoners.
“If at first you don’t secede…”
This Word segment from the Colbert Report is absolutely spot on in re: Southern Confederate Battle-Flag fetishism. Watch.
This Video Rules
So, it’s for a David Byrne song, right? And it’s comprised entirely, at the first level of analysis anyway, with naked dancers. However, the real meat of the video is what they do with the black bars covering the dancers’ naughty bits. Just watch. Really.
UPDATE: Well, shit, the video’s gone. I’ll see if I can find another copy.
This may be the best PowerPoint EVER
Go watch this presentation and, if you like, then peruse the accompanying PDF.
(Note: Familiarity with this cartoon may, or may not, help.)
As it turns out, Fox News CAN be stupider and more offensive
They keyed a graphic of Michelle Obama as the Obama’s baby momma. Screenshots at the link.
Please, Fox, continue with this sort of thing. We want everyone to know just exactly who you people are.
SCOTUS to POTUS: Drop Dead
As it turns out, at least five Americans still believe in the Constitution:
The Supreme Court ruled today that foreign terrorism suspects held at Guantanamo Bay have rights under the Constitution to challenge their detention in U.S. civilian courts.
In its third rebuke of the Bush administration’s treatment of prisoners, the court ruled 5-4 that the government is violating the rights of prisoners being held indefinitely and without charges at the U.S. naval base in Cuba.
The fascist wing — Scalia, his mini-me, and Bush’s twins — dissented.
Heh.
Bowdlerization as provocation. (YouTube; SFW, mostly.)
You never know. You might need these.
At work? Band’s day off? Next time someone comes a-calling with a bad joke, or perhaps a tale of woe, you’ll be prepared — thanks to the Intarnets!
LOLZ
Remember the Denon cable? There’s a satirical Amazon review:
A caution to people buying these: if you do not follow the “directional markings” on the cables, your music will play backwards. Please check that before mentioning it in your reviews.
I was disappointed. I consider myself an audiophile – I regularly spend over $1000 on cables to get the ultimate sound. I keep my music-listening room in a Faraday cage to prevent any interference that could alter my music-listening experience. Sending any signal down ordinary copper can degrade the signal considerably. While ordinary listeners might not notice, to somebody with even a rudimentary knowledge of sound, the artifacts are glaring. Denon should have used silver wiring (hermetically sealed inside the rubber sheath to prevent any tarnishing, of course), which has a significantly higher conductivity than copper. Furthermore, Denon needs to treat the wires they use in the cable with a polarity inductor to ensure minimal phase variance.
Needless to say, I returned the cable and wrote an angry letter to the so-called engineers at Denon.
Wonder how long that’ll last?
Um.
These hairdos make me vaguely uncomfortable. (Thx, Rob.)
How to tell if you’re an idiot
You paid FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS to Denon for a network cable.
And we wish him luck
In late 2003, Khaled al-Masri, a German citizen, was detained in Macedonia (en route to vacation) by local officials because he has the same name as some terror watchlist person. The Macedonians eventually released him (1/2004) — at which point he was snatched off the street in Macedonia by Americans, who stripped and beat him before flying him to Baghdad and then, eventually, a CIA interrogation facility in Afghanistan where he was repeatedly beaten and interrogated. By March, he was taking part in a hunger strike to protest his detention. At some point, American officials realized that perhaps they had the wrong guy, but refused to do anything about it. Finally, in late May, they flew him to Albania and released him at night on a deserted road.
al-Masri has brought suit against the US for his kidnapping and torture, only to have the suit dismissed on national security grounds. He has now gone to court in Germany to force his government to seek the extradition of the CIA agents who kidnapped him in 2004; we hope very much he succeeds, but we’re cynical enough to know he won’t. Justice isn’t something our government is particularly interested in when it’s inconvenient.
Heathen Greatest Hits
Ten years ago this summer, I went hunting with some pals from Dallas. The article I wrote for a now-defunct web zine used to be on the old NoGators, but with that gone it’s been offline for a while. In response to a flood of demand (ok, maybe not), I’ve republished the approved, corrected text here.
Update: Link fixed.
Apple: Made of Win
The WWDC keynote was today, and Apple has just raised the bar for the entire mobile phone world in a way even more threatening to the smartphone status quo than the intro of the iPhone 1.0 last year. Even if we skip the SDK — and you shouldn’t, since what you can do with an iPhone makes all the other smartphones look stupid — it’s still a gamechanger.
The new software, for all iPhones, includes:
- Bulk copy/move/delete operations
- Contact search
- Full iWork document support
- Complete support for Word and Excel documents
Thereby closing some glaring usability gaps in an otherwise tremendous platform. (To be fair, most people don’t have 600 contacts in their phones — but I do, and that made me really miss search.)
Add to this a new service called MobileMe (replaces .Mac; $99/year) that provides over-the-air sync of not just email but also addresses and calendar data. It works with native Mac tools (iCal/Address Book) as well as PCs running Outlook, and includes access to incredibly rich web apps for all that data, in case you need it. Exchange + Blackberry Enterprise Server? Who needs that?
Additionally, iPhone 2.0 includes optional support for Exchange and Cisco VPNs out of the box, including the ability to remote-wipe a lost device.
That sound just then? Someone in Canada shitting their pants.
And that’s not all. The new iPhone 3G, as expected, got introduced today. It includes data speeds approach Wifi as well as an integrated GPS. It’s also slightly slimmer, has a flush headphone port, and the 8GB model is only $199. Available July 11 in the US (and 21 other countries; 48 other countries to follow).
I said I wouldn’t upgrade immediately, and I really meant it. I just got my iPhone a few months ago. But at $199 for the speed bump and GPS, it’ll be hard to say no. I’ll still wait for a month or two post-launch to ensure no problems surface, but DAMN.
We’re late on this. Sue us.
Order of the Day, June 6 1944, 64 years ago this year.
Death of the Wild
The backyard has been reclaimed. We thought we might find a lost civilization back there, or at least George Lucas’ long-gone sense of shame, but it turns out it’s just dirt.
New plants are the next step.
More Catholic Chicanery
Douglas Kmiec, an otherwise Republican law prof at Pepperdine has been denied communion by his priest because he expressed an endorsement for the pro-choice Barack Obama rather than the (presumably) pro-life McCain. Kmiec remains pro-life; he’s just done the math this time around and believes that on the whole, Obama is the better candidate for our country in spite of his disagreement on the subject of abortion. In other words, like most voters, he knows he can’t get everything he wants, and he’s happier with the set of values promoted by the Democrat this time around.
And for that, his priest and church are punishing him. They are of course free to do so, since the church is a private entity, but it is very, very difficult to see how this should not result in an immediate re-examination of this diocese’s 501(c)(3) status. Churches pay no taxes on their income, but to keep it that way they must stay out of politics; from IRS.gov:
Currently, the law prohibits political campaign activity by charities and churches by defining a 501(c)(3) organization as one “which does not participate in, or intervene in (including the publishing or distributing of statements), any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for public office.”
And more from here, also at IRS.gov:
…[V]oter education or registration activities with evidence of bias that (a) would favor one candidate over another; (b) oppose a candidate in some manner; or (c) have the effect of favoring a candidate or group of candidates, will constitute prohibited participation or intervention.
Let them, and any church, behave any way they want — but they shouldn’t get a free ride if they decide to ignore the rules under which they operate.
Dept. of GAAAH
Leave it to the Germans to create a giant waterslide with a 360 degree loop that begins with a trapdoor chamber. Warning: Speedo alert.
It may or may not be funnier or more interesting if you speak German.
Holy Crap! or, Full Circle
I just got actual useful information from Houstonist. This is shocking and, frankly, almost unprecedented.
Near my house, or near-ish, anyway, is something called the Carolina Collective. It’s a virtual office for the self-employed and work-at-home types who may need office-type support on an ad-hoc or less-than-renting-a-space basis, or who crave the occasional water-cooler aspects of office life. I can actually conceive of using this from time to time, especially since it appears to include available meeting space if you become a member.
Casual, ad-hoc use is free. Usage more than a couple times a week appears to mean you need to pony up $125 a month, but that includes nontrivial benefits like access to food and the aforementioned conference rooms. There are other packages available as well.
WANT
This cube toy is made entirely of rare-earth magnets, and therefore requires no mechanism other than magnetism.
Dept. of Important Parenting Resources
Ask Calvin’s Dad. The accumulated HeathenNieces can expect us to use the dickens out of this. Our favorite:
Q. How come old photographs are always black and white? Didn’t they have color film back then? A. Sure they did. In fact, those old photographs are in color. It’s just that the world was black and white then. The world didn’t turn color until sometime in the 1930s, and it was pretty grainy color for a while, too. Q. But then why are old paintings in color?! If the world was black and white, wouldn’t artists have painted it that way? A. Not necessarily. A lot of great artists were insane. Q. But… But how could they have painted in color anyway? Wouldn’t their paints have been shades of gray back then? A. Of course, but they turned colors like everything else did in the ’30s. Q. So why didn’t old black and white photos turn color too? A. Because they were color pictures of black and white, remember?
And:
Q. What causes the wind? A. Trees sneezing.
How To Tell If You’re An Idiot
You buy or sell books explicitly as home decor without regard to what’s inside.
Our Danish printed, European imported books are sold specifically with interior design in mind.
Many people feel that it’s silly to purchase books for pure decorative value. While we certainly understand this, we also savor the opportunity to change the mind of such individuals! Our books are so beautiful on the outside that their interior ceases to be important.
Jesus wept.
EFF on Orphaned Works proposal
They like it. It sounds reasonable. Take a look if it interests you.
Best sunset picture EVAR
Check it out. It’s on Mars.
Apropos of today
Dear Baby Boomers: Please go away now, kthxbi.
Bush III
Meet the new Russians. Same as the old Russians.
On a talk show last autumn, a prominent political analyst named Mikhail Delyagin offered some tart words about Vladimir Putin. When the program was televised, Delyagin was not.
His remarks were cut and he was digitally erased from the show, like a disgraced comrade airbrushed from an old Soviet photo. (The technicians may have worked a bit hastily; they left his disembodied legs in one shot.)
Delyagin, it turned out, has for some time resided on the so-called stop list, a roster of political opponents and other critics of the government who have been barred from television news and political talk shows by the Kremlin.
The stop list is, as Delyagin put it, “an excellent way to stifle dissent.”
More:
And it is not just politicians. Televizor, a rock group whose name means television set, had its booking on a St. Petersburg television station canceled in April, after its members took part in an Other Russia demonstration.
When some actors cracked a few mild jokes about Putin and Medvedev at Russia’s equivalent of the Academy Awards in March, they were expunged from the telecast.
Political humor in general has been exiled from television here. One of the nation’s most popular satirists, Viktor Shenderovich, once had a show that featured puppet caricatures of various politicians, including Putin. It was canceled in Putin’s first term and Shenderovich has been all but barred from television.
Senior government officials deny the existence of a stop list, saying that people hostile to the Kremlin do not appear on television simply because their views are not newsworthy.
Ha!
Via Rob and in light of candidate Clinton’s ongoing behavior, we bring you A Sports Parable.
Best Trek Wedding EVAR
In the wake of the California ruling, George Takei and his partner of 20 years will wed in September. His best man? Walkter Koenig. Matron of honor? Nichelle Nichols.
Linc Chafee on the tax cuts and the early days of the Bush Administration
Months before 9/11, those in Congress knew well what sort of president the newly-sworn-in Bush would be in how he handled his irresponsible and absurd $1.65 trillion dollar tax cuts; former Republican senator (and Obama endorser) Lincoln Chafee tells the story:
But even back in June, before we knew the president would soon lead our response to the murder of nearly 3,000 American civilians, something very disturbing came through for me in his demeanor and attitude in the Oval Office. I want to describe it as insecurity, but even that is not the right word.
Several times, the president went out of his way to remind me that he was the commander in chief. You don’t have to keep telling me that, I thought. I know who you are. Like others, I have been around people who are good at wielding power. They never have to tell you they are in charge. They just are, and you know it. What I saw and heard that day really unsettled me. I’m the commander in chief… I’m the president… I’m the commander in chief… It was unpresidential.
That September, as I watched the Twin Towers collapse in smoke and dust, I had a sinking feeling about the president’s capacity to respond wisely.
What’s not to like?
Someone has created a loving parody of WoW as a sidescroller. Check it out.
This is bizarre and wonderful
And, unsurprisingly, also a Clayton Cubitt find. Check out Death to the Tin Man, a 12-minute undergraduate film by a 24-year-old director. Really. Close your office door and watch this thing.
As long as we’re talking about Cubitt…
He also found this fine poolside photo of, we kid you not, Tippi Hedren, her pet lion, and her daughter Melanie. We will not make the obvious why-didnt-the-lion-bite joke.
Goddammit.
Fellow Mississippian (b. McComb, 1928) Ellas Otha Bates died today. You knew him as Bo Diddley.
Clayton Cubit found this video, which you should watch, and ideally dance to, as a memorial.
At least we still have BB.
That’s great, man, but it’s not like Lucas could fuck up Star Wars MORE now, is it?
Harrison Ford, in answer to the unasked “now that you’ve shat all over Indy, will you do the same to Han?” question, says no more Star Wars.
Dept. of Wacky Chemistry
NYT: A Tiny Fruit That Tricks The Tongue:
CARRIE DASHOW dropped a large dollop of lemon sorbet into a glass of Guinness, stirred, drank and proclaimed that it tasted like a “chocolate shake.”
Nearby, Yuka Yoneda tilted her head back as her boyfriend, Albert Yuen, drizzled Tabasco sauce onto her tongue. She swallowed and considered the flavor: “Doughnut glaze, hot doughnut glaze!”
They were among 40 or so people who were tasting under the influence of a small red berry called miracle fruit at a rooftop party in Long Island City, Queens, last Friday night. The berry rewires the way the palate perceives sour flavors for an hour or so, rendering lemons as sweet as candy.
The “magic” substance in the berries is a protein called — we’re not making this up — “miraculin”, which we think is hilarious. Get us some.
The Stupid! It Burns!
In Utah, there’s a move afoot to make it a crime for a teacher to answer unapproved questions in sex ed.
No idea how long this will stay true, but it’s cool anyway
There are still tribes in the Amazon with no contact with the outside world.
Just go read it
What Every American Should Know About the Middle East. Some highlights:
- It’s not a homogeneous region; sectarian and ethnic divisions abound. Sunni are not Shia; Arabs are not Persians.
- Iraq is predominately Arab and Shia, but Saddam and his ruling party were from the Sunni minority.
- Iran is NOT Arab and is almost exclusively Shia.
- Palestine, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Jordan are Sunni and Arab
Special bonus fact that makes the invasion of Iraq even more obviously stupid: Al Qaeda is a Sunni group.
MLB: Still douchebags
They’re suing Chicago little leagues for using team names in common with MLB teams. Not logos; just the names; MLB is insisting they own the idea of a baseball team named, for example, the Giants, or Tigers, and that in order to use those names the little leagues must buy their uniforms from MLB’s much more expensive provider. Gee, thanks.
Fortunately, Techdirt and Stephen Colbert are on the case.
YES.
Dear Intarwub: Please make for us one of these.
Creepiest Thing EVAR
Apparently, the oldest mamallian cell line is a transmissable canine tumor spread sexually. Yup: this means it’s an immortal, cancerous STD. Yikes.
Unlike most other contagious cancers such as cervical cancer in humans, CTVT isn’t spread by a virus but (as recently proved) by cancerous cells themselves. Genetic analysis suggests the tumor originated in an individual wolf or domesticated dog, probably in east Asia, between 200 and 2,500 years ago. This long-dead canid’s much-mutated cells are still alive and being passed along during coitus (or sometimes through casual contact) centuries later, making it the longest-lived mammalian cell line known.
Mmmm, snarkalicious
Mohney provides three three-word reviews of “Crystal Skull:”
- “Big dumb puppy”
- “Jar Jar Lebeouf”
- “I miss Nazis”
All spot on.
Dept. of Picturism
While you weren’t lookin’, I took a bunch of pictures.
- From May 10, The Art Car Parade; and
- From last week in Albany, FirstNiece Washes The Car
Enjoy.
Billion-dollar onanism
We used one of our spaceships on Mars to take a picture of another of our spaceships on Mars.
Dept. of Crap You Might Want
Did you know that Leatherman makes a multitool that lacks a knife, explicitly so it can be carried aboard planes? (Actual Leatherman.com page here.)
It totally sucks that our TSA can’t screw up this way
The Japanese police hid a bunch of dope in some random traveler’s bags and then turned loose the dogs to train them — and then lost the hash. Score!