Life....aggregated Info....gathered

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

FONEJACK


Ok, so I have been back in the US for about 2 weeks now, and have been a bit lax in posting stuff (not that it matters, since not to many people really look at this :) I have a few impressions about being there then coming back here, but I'll get into those in a later post.

While I was in the UK, I found this great prank call show called Fonejacker. One guy does all the voices, and has a bunch of different characters; from a Nigerian bank account scammer to an Indian telemarketer who tries to sell everything from internet service "providings" to online "datings." Really funny.

The show comes on Channel 4 in the UK, and you can watch full episodes on the Channel 4 website, except that you have to be in the UK to do so; or make the website THINK you are in the UK. You can go to a site like DaveProxy, and enter the URL at the bottom of the page, close the ads, and volia! the site now thinks your computer is located in the UK.

OR...you can just got to YouTube and watch clips from the show there. Just do a search for Fonejacker, or Click Here.




Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Memorial email??? re-word first please....

I received this chain email from a friend today; needless to say, I had some problems with the author's note at the end of the cartoon. My response is listed at the end...


Begin original message------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


May we not forget… It won’t be long and they will all be dead. Let’s not learn the lesson again the hard way.

In MEMORIAM - 60 YEARS LATER?...?

Please read the little cartoon carefully, it's powerful. Then read the comments at the end.?
I'm doing my small part by forwarding this message. I hope you'll consider doing the same.

In Memoriam?

cid:001201c9559d$e7eb3e30$9A57B94F@FWHemmingerPC




It is now more than 60 years after the Second World War in Europe ended. This e-mail is being sent as a memorial chain, in memory of the six million Jews, 20 million Russians, 10 million Christians and 1,900 Catholic priests who were murdered, massacred, raped, burned, starved and humiliated with the German and Russian Peoples looking the other way!
Now, more than ever, with Iraq, Iran , and others, claiming the Holocaust to be 'a myth,' it's imperative to make sure the world never forgets, because there are others who would like to do it again.

This e-mail is intended to reach 40 million people worldwide!
Join us and be a link in the memorial chain and help us distribute it around the world.


Please send this e-mail to 10 people you know and ask them to continue the memorial chain.

Please don't just delete it.
It will only take you a minute to pass this along -Thanks!

"A wise man asks questions, a fool is afraid of knowledge"

End original message--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


My response:


I'd forward this, but I don't agree with the wording at the end of the cartoon. I feel like I'd be forwarding the same kind of ignorance that, in part, led to the Holocaust. The writer is making some awfully big generalizations, which should not be done when dealing with a subject like the Holocaust. "While the Russian and German peoples looked the other way???" They didn't all look look the other way, and at the writers own admission, 20 million Russian died; were they looking the other way? I think not....Not all Germans agreed with Hitler, nor did they sit idly by while he committed the atrocity that was the Holocaust; many died fighting against Nazi policies. Saying "while the German and Russian peoples looked the other way," dishonors the memory of those who were brave enough to stand up, be they Russian, German, or otherwise, many of whom were killed as a result.

Then, the author makes another mistake of over generalization by saying that "now, more than ever, with Iraq, Iran, and others, claiming the Holocaust to be a 'myth'." There is a minority of people in those countries who may beleive this, and get attention for saying it, but the author seems to beleive that the entire populace of each of the named countries holds this beleif, which is simply NOT TRUE. Thats like saying that all Muslims are terrorists, when it is only a small percentage of Muslims who take to extremist ideals. The cartoon is nice, but the following commentary comes off as a bit ignorant. Here is a generalization that was made during WWII:

All the Jews are responsible for the world's problems, and therefore should be exterminated.

See where generalizations about an entire group of people can lead??
It's good to remember the Holocaust, but a little critical thinking would seem to be in order when sending out an email like this, especially if you intend it to be forwarded to 40 million people.....

A wise man also knows that you cannot judge an entire people by the actions of a select few.....
None of us can honestly say what we would have done in such a situation, there is no way to know, we weren't there; and let us hope that the world never has to go through something like that again.
Think about it.





Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Where are you wearing?


Most of us never give a thought to where our clothes come from. Fact is, the majority of the clothes we in the US wear, come from factories in third world countries. Kelsey Timmerman explores this in his book "Where am I Wearing." Picking out his favorite wardrobe items, Timmerman travels to various countries where each of these items were produced, meeting the people, and the families who make the clothes we wear. Most of them work for less per month than that new pair of jeans cost you.


Thanks Jus
From MentalFloss

Sunday, December 7, 2008

"Spruce" up your apartment


Kill some time.

The folks over at Apartment Therapy are always coming up with ways to improve the space in which you live. I found this one particularly appealing and plan on adding it to my list of planned weekend projects (housewarming gift Ashley! ;)

For more ways to fill up your weekend doing something more productive than playing videogames or nursing a hangover, shoot over to Lifehacker's Weekend Projects section.

From Apartment Therapy:

Here is how Kevin describes the process:

- Chose the branches I liked

- Cleaned them up by removing all the little twigs that werent attractive
pulled of any loose bark

- Placed the branches on my dining table so that when I stacked them I could do it to match the table, and the bottom was "flat" when it was hung

- Screwed the branches together - first drilled a pilot hole - and used small "bullet" head wood screws

- Bought some lamp cord, small candelabra sockets, some 1/4 IP nipple, and a light canopy at Cliff's Variety hardware store here in SF (any good hardware store would have the parts)

- Drilled a shallow hole a little smaller than the 1/4 IP nipple and twisted them in to the hole

- Wired the all the candelbra sockets together ("daisy chained") and screwed them onto the nipples

- Covered the sockets with plastic candelabra "candle" covers

- Suspended the whole thing using thin plastic-coated cable....the hanging wires were passed through 2 small pulleys and attached to the light in four places so I could balance it back and forth to get it level.

- Ran the electrical to a canopy I bought...connected to the "daisy chain" on the lamp with small wire nuts, and hung it up

The whole thing cost me $35 in lamp parts from my local hardware store and about a couple of hours to make!

We think it looks amazing - nice job, Kevin and congrats on the new chandelier!



Thanks to Apartment Therapy & Craft Magazine

Yet another use for your iPod.....


My brother sent me this story and picture that he found on Flickr. Apparently this soldier was on patrol when he rounded a corner only to come face to face with a man holding an AK-47. He was shot at close range in the chest before killing the man with the AK. His iPod prevented the bullet from completely penetrating his body armor, which would have happened otherwise at such close range. He was not injured at all, can't say the same of the iPod.

How's that for a marketing pitch: "Buy and iPod, it could save your life....."

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Gonzo is Back!


A new documentary by Alex Gibney entitled Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson chronicles the fantastic and fanatic career and work of Hunter S. Thompson. Thompson always had an affinity for sex, drugs and alcohol, and the documentary consists of a series of rare home movies, audiotapes and other unreleased works to take a closer look at the man, the legend. Set to release on Dec. 19th in the UK, the documentary is already available in the US.

You might also be interested in Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride, another Thompson documentary by Dir. Tom Thurman. It features a series of interviews with and story tellings by people who where close to Thompson.

Karaoke gone wrong......

In Malayasia a man was stabbed to death after hogging the mic for just a little too long. Abdul Sani Doli would not give up his 5 minutes of fame at a coffee shop/karaoke bar in the town of Sandkan, Borneo. Two men have been arrested in relation to the stabbing.

The local police cheif said that--according to witnesses--Sani sang several songs and refused to yeild the stage to anyone else, causing people to become increasingly irritated. He was confronted by three men at a nearby table outside the venue, where witnesses reported seeing a heated arguement develop. Soon after, Sani was stabbed in the chest with a knife and died.

Was he that bad???

Apparently, "karaoke rage" is not all that uncommon, particularly in Asia. There have been several reports of singers being shot, stabbed or otherwise assaulted mid-verse, usually because someone else thinks they are butchering a perfectly good song.

Frank Sinatra's My Way has caused so many problems in the Philippines that some bars don't offer it on the karaoke menu anymore.

In Thailand, a gunman shot down eight people after getting sick of hearing endless renditions of a John Denver tune.

I'm wearing my bulletproof vest next time I go to a karaoke bar........


From The Guardian

City of the future?




Dutch design firm MVRDV won a competition to design the city center for a new town in Korea. This really takes "green building" to a whole new level. The intention is to have a self sufficient city capable of housing 77,000 inhabitants. Pretty cool.

From Dezeen

Friday, December 5, 2008

Paint me invisible




The series “Camouflage” and “Surveillance Camera Project” by Dutch artist Desiree Palmen give you a small glimpse at what life would be like were you to own your very own invisibility cloak. The result are some slightly ghostly looking photographs......

Head over to Environmental Graffiti for more cool stuff....




Red Meat

I love this Comic, it's wonderfully sarcastic, sadistic, and just plain funny. Apparently Max Cannon is doing a web series for Comedy Central, should be good. Here's a link to Max Cannon's website: http://www.redmeat.com/redmeat/
Visit Shadow Rock at ComedyCentral.com

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Just plain strange....but funny


This seems particularly fitting since I was just in Barcelona a couple weeks ago, which is the capital of Catalonia, a province in north west Spain.

These figurines are called Caganers, and traditionally represented a Catalan peasant wearing a red stocking cap. These, however, represent world leaders in a less than professional position.....I mean, who doesn't want a figurine of Hitler taking a shit for Christmas???


From top to bottom: Gordon Brown, Barack Obama, Angela Merkel, Hugo Chavez, Nicolas Sarkozy.




To boldly go where no beer has gone before.......


Damn the Japanese! They stole my ingenious idea of growing barley in space, then using it to brew some space beer!

Japanese based Sapporo Breweries has just released a beer brewed from the aptly named "Space Barley," (also the name of the beer.) So that's what they're doing up there.......Clearly the head honchos over at Sapporo are not all that concerned with the main selling point of the beer though, here's a quote from Strategy Managing Director Junichi Ichikawa:

"There's really no beer like it because it uses 100 per cent barley. Our top seller is the Black Label brand, using additional ingredients such as rice. This one doesn't, and is really a special beer."

Wow, how about, I dunno; the fact that it's primary ingredient was grown in SPACE! Jeez. Maybe some people are simply impressed by the fact that it's made of 100% barley (in my experience beers that are heavy on barley tend to taste like shit,) but I think people are more likely to get on board with the whole space thing........

This was truly a great achievement for mankind, which will go down in the annals of history. If you brew it, they will come. Last one to the space shuttle is buying the drinks!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Songbird 1.0 official release



If you are like me, you have bumped into the limitations of iTunes on more than one occasion. Whether it be the ability to have the program organize your music folder the way you want it to, or managing and converting different types of audio files. Songbird 1.0 may just be the answer to this dilemma. I have tried previous beta releases from about a year ago, and as recently as a few months ago. At that time, the program left a lot to be desired, and had a lot of bugs. Now, with the first full release, word is that most of these bugs have been fixed, which leaves us with a potential iTunes killer app. This is especially good news since finding an iTunes replacement that functions across platforms is a challenge; Thankfully, Songbird 1.0 is available on Windows/Linux/Mac for free since it is a open source project. Being based on the Mozilla platform, it is fully extensible and customizable, just like FireFox. When I was using Windows, MediaMonkey was a very good substitute for iTunes, and allowed me to manage my iPod to a greater extent than iTunes did; Songbird promises to do the same. Hope it can live up to that promise, because I am VERY sick of being tethered to iTunes on my Mac. Download it and try it, I know I'm going to. Check out this Lifehacker article for more info.


12.3.08 @ 10:24PM GMT
Since the above post, I have had the chance to download and try out Songbird. I have to say, I like it, but there is still much to be desired. One thing that I have encountered, and am keeping an eye on is the fact that the wrong artwork and info is being displayed for the currently playing song. I seem to remember one of the beta versions messing up my album art as well....It seems that the problem is the shuffle button, when it is pressed, the album art and the info displayed when changing tracks is shuffled, but the song that actually plays is just the next one on the now playing list. If you turn shuffle off, then the correct info and artwork is displayed when you skip ahead. Strange, and annoying. The interface is a bit sluggish, and unresponsive at times. Several times I have tried to use the scrolling motion on my laptop's trackpad, and it hasn't worked. Also, the actual scroll bar in the application itself has failed to work on a couple occasions. There is no scan/rescan feature, instead, if you scan a folder that has already been added, then rescan it (say there are some new files in the folder,) you end up with duplicate files in the library. Very frustrating. MediaMonkey had a "folder monitor" utility that actively monitored folders of your choosing, and kept track of when new files were added to said folders, It was also capable of locating moved/missing tracks, something which Songbird can't do.

On the upside, I like the fact that it is both a web browser and a media player. I am typing this right now from inside Songbird while listening to some tunes. All the media controls are right here, as well as access to my entire music library. No need to switch between apps. I also like the mashTape add-on, which displays information about the currently playing artist, pics, links to the artists site, and a few other useful tidbits of info. There are also add-ons for finding duplicates (iTunes duplicate finder is terrible,) and a plug-in for identifying dead tracks. However, I noticed on a couple occasions, that I had seen duplicate entries in my library, but the duplicate add-on had not found them. I had to locate and delete them manually. Also, if you do end up having multiple dead tracks, and you try to play one, you will receive an error message, then Songbird will try to play the next track, which if there are many dead tracks, will leave you stuck not being able to do anything until Songbird has tried and failed to play every track on the list. Also very frustrating. I've had to force quit the app several times since I started using it this morning. I have also been unable to locate an option to have Songbird automatically arrange files in the music folder by artist and album, like iTunes does, or automatically move files to the music folder when they are added into Songbird--another thing iTunes does.

So.......iTunes killer app? Not yet, but the potential is there. Maybe after a few more releases. Guess I'm stuck with iTunes for now, since Songbird is still not reliable enough for me to trust it managing my 12,000+ song music library. Definitely a program to keep your eye on though.....
Updated whenever Max Cannon feels like it, usually every couple weeks.

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