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Archive for May, 2006

Evolving the intarweb

Published on May 31st, 2006 in No Comments »

For no good reason, I started a YouTube account today.  What I will actually do with it…remains to be seen.  I am happy to take requests though, and maybe I’ll do a video blog or two once in a while.  I’m thinking maybe the new medium will help inspire me into new things.  You know, a new creative outlet for…creative…things.  Or maybe I was just bored.  But hey, that’s how I got into MySpace, and look how well that has worked for all of you.

Surrealism and You

Published on May 28th, 2006 in No Comments »

Well, this weekend was a mixture of things.  I’m gonna have to say all good, some awesome, some unexpected, but rolled together, a shockingly welcome departure from the normal.  Mostly it was just this odd mixture of events that seemed, at least to me, a little unexpected.  One might call it surreal.  Except that’s not the right term.  But it made for a catchy subject, so we’re going with it.

I went out to Twisters for the second time Saturday night.  I do have to grant that it wasn’t as bad as the first time.  And Rachel and Amanda were fun to hang with, especially once they were drunk, heh.  Of course, we got out there only to realize that my dumb ass left my ID in my car back in town.  Sometimes my brilliance defies myself.  Or itself…you get the idea, I’m an idiot.

I spent today hanging mostly with Amanda.  Damn good time.  Got some tennis in, even if it was a little on the brutally hot side, and I picked up the director’s cut of Donnie Darko and Mars Attacks.  Best part, I got Donnie Darko for $6.99, which is a damn good deal for the director’s cut.  I forgot just how much of a mind fuck that movie can be.  Awesome.  Ooh, there were also sno-cones at one point, and I found a zen garden at the Dollar Tree for a $1!   They had some other little deals I want to go back for too.

Time for bed.

Disappointment and stuff

Published on May 27th, 2006 in No Comments »

***WARNING: The following may contain information people waiting to see X-Men 3 might want to avoid***

Well I was finally able to appease my desire to see X-Men: The Last Stand. If Brett Ratner is ever allowed near enough to this franchise to influence it in even the remotest way, I will hunt him down and deliver unto him a beating perhaps only George Bush deserves more.  Let me be blunt, the movie wasn’t garbage, but it also wasn’t on par with the first two.  It wasn’t quite so bad as when Joel Shumacher took the reigns of Batman, that practically measured as a violation of the Geneva Convention as a crime against humanity; but Ratner’s reckless treatment, and lack of compassion or appreciation for the subject is apparent almost from the word go.  The Last Stand was to X-Men as Terminator 3 was to that trilogy.

Here are the main problems.  New characters were shallower than a kiddie pool in winter.  For bad guys, I suppose that’s fine given their disposable nature (did anyone besides Magneto even make it through the final scene?).  But Kitty Pryde, Angel, and Beast were simply inexcusable.  Call it bad writing, bad editting, or bad directing, had those characters not been there, you wouldn’t have missed them.  And oh my god….a can of beans could have played Storm better.  And not those good Bush’s baked beans, the cheap ones, from Aldi’s.  Letting Magneto rip out her vocal box for no reason would have been better than making me listen to Berry deliver the lines.  I guess that’s not new news though…You know why Famke Janssen was such a good Phoenix?  They knew when to have her shut up.  I can see it now: “Okay Miss Janssen, stand right there by the green screen, now look…left….more…Perfect!  Thanks, you can go home, we’ll CG the rest around you.”  Every now and again you find yourself thinking “Oh yeah, Phoenix is just sorta….standing…over there.”

Anyway, all told, an average movie.  Glad I saw it, and I’ll probably buy it I have no doubt, but there was a lot of room for improvement.  I can only hope the Wolverine movies are handled better.

On the subject of movies, Ghost Rider, Pirates of the Caribbean 2, Clerks 2, and Nacho Libre should help fill in the gaps nicely.

I took Isis to the vet to get her allergies taken care of Thursday.  She was pissed.  Mostly it was good though, because now she’ll stop scratching, and I get to laugh as she walks around with all her paws wrapped up so that she can’t use her claws until everything takes effect.  It’s even better when she tries to jump up on the chair, but completely falls since she can’t latch on, heh.

I was full of good ideas lately.  I found this slick piece of software called KPlaylist.  Got it running on the server which is finally healthy again.  Let’s me stream my music off the server wherever I am to listen to it.  If you want access to it and think you deserve it, beg.  Yeah, you heard me, beg.  Like a bitch.

Protecting Rights Online

Published on May 25th, 2006 in No Comments »

So this past day, I have been sitting at my computer like normal.  I watch funny videos, read friends’ blogs, and keep up with the news.  It’s this latter part which has me most riled up at the moment.  The following two articles came out of the woodwork today.  They are by no means the first ones, nor do I expect them to be the last.  However, I feel the need to provide a spot of momentary reflection on them all the same.

IL School District to Monitor Student Blogs
Student Faces Expulsion for Blog Post

With that out of the way, I shall continue.  MySpace is one of many blogging-oriented, socialization sites.  Without repeating too many things that have been said already, I think it’s important to note, and pass on several things.  First, one should not have to lie about their age to keep their profile and data confidential from prying eyes.  Tom, take note, an additional layer of security is well deserved there.  But at the same time it is a shame that people feel it is necessary to actively hunt out information and use it against them.  Two, if you happen to be someone prowling for information on students, potential employees, or current ones, keep in mind that people’s private and professional live are two entirely different things.  Most people know how to keep them separate.  All the same, it is important for us as users to employ a bit of common sense.  Don’t be specific about people or particular activities in public posts.  Keep things limited to your friends where appropriate.  We must temper ourselves, show intelligence and understanding ourselves before people outside will buy in.  But why should you have to worry that voicing a particular political opinion on something might keep you from getting a job somewhere?  Such things you want to air publicly, but anymore, it is getting more and more risky to do so.  Stupidity breeds contempt.

But most importantly, as emphasized in the articles above, schools have no right to police sites like MySpace, Xanga, LiveJournal, etc, for things students post that are non-threatening.  I agree, that outright, or clearly implied threats are one matter, but literally trying to control what a student can say, off campus, after hours, is insane.  A line is being crossed, and people are allowing it to be crossed.  This is no different from if a school tried to say that a student couldn’t post the same thing in a Letter to the Editor in a newspaper.  All that is different is the medium.

Everyone as users has a responsibility to protect the rights of the rest of the community.  To stand up and point out that if a line is crossed over there, it won’t be long before another is crossed over here.  How long before colleges, companies, city governments, etc decide to follow the same suit?  Who decides what is “inappropriate?”  Everyone is so afraid of the internet, that they don’t realize they have handed over the keys to the Kingdom to lawyers.  We dish out what 1st Amendment rights we have left for that little bit of piece of mind, and it makes me sick.

Be aware of what having a public internet presence means, but also be active in defining how that can be used.  Protect your rights, but more importantly, know your rights!  And just because you might disagree with how someone executes those rights, know that your ability to disagree is granted under the same freedom.  Pass this on, and attach your name, first and last, to the list below.  Show that you aren’t afraid to stand up for what you believe in.

“To speak his thoughts is every freeman’s right, in peace and war, in council and in fight.” ~ HOMER

Current Events 3

Published on May 22nd, 2006 in No Comments »

First on the chopping block, I direct your ever-keen eye to the halls of Slashdot.  Go read that posting, the accompanying article, and some of the comments.  I see no reason to reiterate most of what was already said on /. since most of the readers cover the important bases. But I do feel the need to join the chorus voicing it’s concern on the matter.  Essentially what the Attorney General is saying is that the 1st amendment is a great right, so long as it doesn’t embarrass or inconvenience the Federal Government, in which case they can prosecute journalists to stop them from printing things.  While he says it applies to “classified” things, I see no reason that that really creates a legal brightline, especially given some of the silly things that are classified (or not occasionally).  And that just creates a qualification to keep press from printing anything.  Don’t want it out, classify it.  Then if it’s leaked, prosecute whoever mentions it.  So, put on the tinfoil hats and be prepared to kiss goodbye the days of free press, if the AG has his way that is (since he gets to trump the Constitution whenever it suits him, right?).  I would love nothing more than to see Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine claw and dig their decayed asses out of their graves and put the definitive undead beatdown on Gonzales.  “I got yer freedom of press right here, bitch!”

This next bit sorta surprised me at first.  I have a newfound respect for, of all people, the Dixie Chicks.  Yeah, I know right?  That’s about as expected as Bush getting up on stage in a skirt and singing I’m a Little Teapot.  Which I would pay to see.  But their music is much more tolerable of late, and the news attention they’ve gotten since their new album came out has really put them in a new light with me.  I remember when the deal came down about their comments on Bush.  I didn’t think much of it at the time.  Now though, I’ve realized that they are really making  good point: just because they are famous artists, they should be allowed to have and stand by an opinion.  The media treats them like they should busy themselves with placating to the public and be good, conforming artists.  I tend to be of the mind that they have earned a soapbox to stand on, and if they want to use it, more power to them.  In fact, those that have that kind of power have an obligation to do so I think.  And it’s not like the blindly patriot, overly drunk, and often divorced country singers are fooling anyone.  Yeah you love Bush and America.  You love them because you love your paychecks, you sold-out bastards.  Let’s see you stand tall and be that unshakable when a Democrat is back in office.

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