Thursday, November 08, 2007

In Support of Writers

In support of the writers out there on the picket line, We at Beach Ninja Blues (okay, so it is just me) will be going on strike in support.

With one note, the studios and producers got out of paying writers their fair share for video sales, claiming that the market was "too experimental" and there was, at the time, no proof that there would be any profit.

They are still claiming that today, and saying the same thing about Internet distribution....yeah, there is no profit in on-line video...like from iTunes. Makes you wonder why NBC wanted to start their own net video store/service if there was no profit?

nuff said.

Friday, November 02, 2007

Leopard- It is the little surprises

So, I am recovering from a terrible hard drive crash, I got things up and running again and upgraded to OSX 10.5 Leopard.

And I have to say, there is a lot of great things I am finding...But some of the little surprises--

While my old drive was severely dying, I popped it into an external enclosure to see if I could save any of my docs or photos. So, while TIme machine was backing up, software was updating and spotlight was indexing, I plugged it in.

Now, I knew a lot was going on, so I was only slightly concerned about how slow everything was going....And then I got a little more concerned....

and then suddenly a message pops up.

"We were unable to repair the disk Mac Sapphire. You have limited access to it. We suggest you back up your data immediately."

Wow! That was cool...I was able to yank off all my pics and all but a couple docs that were corrupted in the crash.

The new activity status in Mail is nice. Also, the streamlining for saving attachments -- Clicking save, saves to your folder without opening the directory menu. Same for clicking download from the context menu. Adding RSS feeds to mail is great too.

Of course, spaces and stacks have already become a natural part of my use, and I am even thinking of adding .Mac for the added functionality of remote access to your home computer. Apple may have actually made the serves worth the money finally.

Well, as I discover more little tweeks, I will keep you updated. I am sure every other tech news writer has gone on and on about the big changes, so I will spare you the yadda-yadda.

And as for problems and bugs, I have not had any major problems. I think they need a new flash player plug-in to address some problems (A few myspace pages will crash Safari and the warning points the finger at Flash), but I haven't had the problem consistently.

Until later.

Monday, May 14, 2007

How did that happen?

So I was listening to the podcast of Real TIme Bill Mahr and they started talking about the how the President should be put up on charges and sent to jail.

And I agreed with them.

Last week, I signed a ACLU petition against the REALID regulations being proposed by the American KGB...I mean...Homeland Security.

What the hell is happening? Am I becoming a liberal?

For a moment I was scared. Then I realized, no, I am just beyond the normal brainwashing of liberals and conservatives. I just realized that just because I am conservative(read not a liberal) doesn't mean I can't be pissed off on how this Administration has fucked things up, lied (no big surprise there), and betrayed American soldiers and values with a farce of a war.

I will admit that I supported the war, originally, when we were going after bin Laddin. I even agreed that Iraq was a threat and Saddam had to be removed before he did something bad with his WMDs. But, then we spent years wasting time, find out intel was bad. THe WMDs were already gone. Where or when, we still don't know. And damn it all, we still can't get a deal on a barrel of oil. At least the French were getting some in their little scam.

So, my position on the War has shifted, and as we learn more, I believe rightly so.

However, mine is not the only opinion moving around here.

Back when the Patriot Act was named the Anti-Terrorism Omnibus Act (written by the Clinton Administration), you never heard the ACLU whisper one word about how it would violate the Constitution and privacy rights. When they were burning down Waco or sniping up on Ruby Ridge, there was no word on lies or abuse of power. When they started illegal search and seizures for the "War on Drugs" and made it Guilty until proven Innocent even if they raided the wrong house, the Liberals thought that was all right.

But, suddenly there is a Republican in the White House using all the "cool toys" that Clinton had, and suddenly the Liberals are all jumping on the Constitutional bandwagon with me. Back then, when I complained about this, I was a paranoid radical. Today, I am just another one who has finally come around to what the Liberals have been saying all along, or at least since 2000.

But I don't expect it to last. Let's face it, in another year or so, the Democrats will be back in power and will return to their agenda of ruining this country and turning us into a third-world country so we will fit in nicely with all the other countries and no one will be able to point to us and say "Look at the Americans. They make so much more money than us. They buy gas so much cheaper than us (Although the Republicans are doing a fine job of picking up the slack for them on that one.) They has so much more freedom than us." Hard create a world-wide populace of peasants when one guy is making $15/hour for something the slave children only get 15 cents for.


Of course, this is going to continue happening to until people realize that Democrats and Republicans/Liberals and Conservatives are the same side of the counterfeit coin they have been selling us for too long. It is smoke and mirrors, folks, and for all of you who think your side is different, time to pull your head out of the donkey/elephant ass and see the truth before we are living in the USSA.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Why do Mens Magazines always get it wrong?


So, I was over at dailygeek.tv ranting about this 21 cheep, cool things you can buy. It was an article from men.style.com (which I guess is suppose to be a cool name for GQ on the web),

And I have to stop and wonder why these magazines always seem to get it wrong. Either they expect every tom, dick and joe to have a couple extra Gucci Attache cases filled with $50,000 in unmarked, non-sequential bills laying around the trunk of their Porsche or they are pointing out some stooopiiiidd junk that just isn't worth the over-priced mark up.


Go Read the article

http://men.style.com/features/big_story/cheap_chic/slideshow/h/042007CHEAP?loop=0&slideshowId=slideshow41012&iphoto=0&nphoto=21&play=false

Now here are my thoughts:


Timex - many of us don't have the $1000s it takes to get a good watch, or even one of the semi-cool $100+ ones. Timex is a good brand, but this is a lame watch.

Shaving Brushes and Art pads? Why are these on the list?

Who the hell cares about somebody's Egg McMuffin knock off from a place in New York? I live on the Beach. This isn't cool, cheap or worth the print. My bet is somebody had to come up with one more item for the list before deadline, and this was on his desk.

DVDs?

Underwear? The only cool underwear are the naughty little panties your date was wearing last night and are now living in that special hidden spot with other mementos of previous nights. Mens underwear haven't been cool since we got too old for underoos.

Cheap ($90) shoes from the UK? Not cool. That simple.

And as a final point...

THere is nothing cool in the Gap and definitely not $50 bucks worth of cool. I think if you fall into the gap, they tie you up and waterboard you until you think that wearing pink Polo shirts with the collar turned up will be much cooler now than when it was lame in the 80s.

Mac Hacker gets no attention, wins $10k

So, there has been a lot of news about this hacking into a Mac.

First, let me remind everyone that the CanSecWest security conference was holding a contest to win a Macbook if you could hack into a Mac from a remote location. No one could do it, so they had to change the rules, allowing physical access to the Mac. So the winner of the MacBook basically “allowed” this access by physically typing in the address of the web site. So, this was not someone taking over a computer but more like giving up control.
Now, that is not to say that Zovi, the engineer behind the actual hack did not come up with a critical flaw that needs to be fixed. I will admit Macs are not perfect, but that is one hack compared to the thousands in Windows.
Speaking of thousands of hacks, here is the real point that they seem to get wrong in every “Mac isn’t so tough” security story.”

(I will explain after the excerpt)

Security experts not surprised the Mac was hacked
Jim Dalrymple - MacCentral
Thu Apr 26, 3:09 PM ET

Security researcher Dino Dai Zovi sent a shudder through the Macintosh community late last week when he successfully hacked the Mac with an exploit that he sent to a friend attending the CanSecWest security conference. By gaining shell access to a Mac by pointing the Safari Web browser at a specially-constructed Web page, Dai Zovi won a $10,000 prize from 3Com’s Tipping Point division—and took a lot of Mac users by surprise.

…snipped for space…check out the whole story at http://news.yahoo.com/s/macworld/20070426/tc_macworld/securityexperts20070426_0 ...

“If a hacker turned their attention to the Mac, it would suffer just as much as Windows,” [Ray] Wagner, [Gartner’s managing vice president in the secure business enablement group] said. “Attacking the 95 percent of the market gets them more attention.”


Really, now, read that last line again? When was the last time a Windows hacker got any attention? I can’t remember, can you? But, I can remember the attention those two guys got when they hacked third-party wireless drivers on a Mac (note: They didn’t hack the Mac, just someone else’s software, and there is still some question as to how much was BS and how much was real hacking). And Zovi, here he is getting tons of media attention, like this blog and the MacWorld article I am citing, and thousands of other tech news sources. Not only that, HE WON $10,000 for finding it!!!

When was the last time a Window hacker got that kind of attention? Even the Vista hackers that have already busted the DRM and Authentication routines in Microsoft’s brand-spanking-new cheap rip-off of OSX haven’t gotten as much attention as this one hacker who devoted his time to OSX.

Therefore, Wagner, this security expert contradicts himself by being quoted in one of the many articles that give attention where none should be had.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Apple's DRM-free movement just another poke at Windows

So, it maybe completely beside the point that most Vista ready computers aren't, and that drivers aren't ready, and it is going to take 4 gigs of Ram to run Vista and a word processor, but after reading/listening to this security/cost analysis paper that explains how Microsoft has made DRM the true reason for being of Vista and how it hands security decisions over to Hollywood and literally degrades performance if your hardware is too good.

Here is a link to the text:

http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.txt

And this is to the podcast feed where the reading of the document is performed by Cory Doctorow for your listening pleasure.

http://feeds.feedburner.com/doctorow_podcast

But before you go away to check this out, consider this.

Just as Vista is being released, Apple suddenly starts working against DRM. Jobs calls for DRM-free music and iTune comes out with a deal for better, DRM-free tracks from EMI. Other production companies are planing ot follow suit, with Universal and Amazon are making moves for DRM-free content.

With Vista set to screw up your HD life with its draconian, "The USSR were pussies" security and controls", there is a lot more at stake with DRM than whether you can download iTunes to you Zune. I don't hear Norway complaining about the DRM controls in Vista, strange huh? Yep. No politics in the EU, just out to "protect" their citizens.

I have to give out credit to boingboing.net for turning me on to this, and the gaget/tecb news site gizmodo.com for turning me on to the very interesting news on boingboing.com.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Growing Up With Elminster



I can’t say that I grew up on Forgotten Realms stories, but they became a big part of my reading life through out the years.
I first discovered the world of Abeir-Toril while looking for an easy read. I had spent the previous year tracking down and reading the entire Eternal Champion series by Michael Moorcock. After all the dramatic intrigue and “heavy reading” of a series that spanned the life of Elric, Hawkmoon, Corum and John Smith in a multiverse-wide battle between the forces of Law and Chaos, I was looking to take a little break.
As an elf fan, I decided that I wanted to read something about the pointy-eared race, but there was nothing on the shelf. The Dragonlance series had devolved into slapstick fantasy rote about kenders, gully dwarves and gnomes, so I had given up on that series, and there was a long gap the Shanara series at the time, at least on the bookshelves available to me.
However, there was one book in the fantasy section of K-mart. It was primarily about a barbarian in some icy land, who had a Drow as a sidekick. I wasn’t too sure. D&D-based novels had become a disappointment after the first two trilogies. But, what the Hells! I was desperate.
We now know that the dark elf sidekick became a shooting star that launched the Forgotten Realms into the bestseller lists. Originally, an adventure setting for D&D designer Ed Greenwood, the Realms would become the most successful role-playing setting in the fantasy genre and in RPGs in general.
Going along with the game material were a continuing series of books under the Realms label. Most were trilogies telling the stories of particular heroes like Drizzt or Arilyn Moonblade. A few one shots were here and there, but what really made the Forgotten Realms series a success was its continuity.
While not on the same level as comic books or other series, the Realms books evolved and grew into a chronicling of the Realms, not only in novels, but also in what happened in the game.
When D&D 2nd Edition came out, the Avatar Crisis slew gods and rocked the very foundation of the Realms. Kara-tur brought an Asian invasion to the Realms and when the world was changing again, the return of the Sorcerer ushered in 3rd Edition D&D.
Now, it was not a smooth ride for me as a reader. During the 90s, I swore off most of most of the Realms books after the Harpers series brought me a book where an orc said, “cool” or some such modern slang. I really can’t remember the exact details, but I stopped reading everything Realms, making the Drizzt series my only exception.
But I came back around, and have been a loyal reader of nearly every Realms book that comes out. I’ll admit that I haven’t been able to keep up with them all, but I try to space some out so I have something to read during the long dry spells between releases of other series.
And the one thing I have noticed is the steady evolution of Realms books over the last couple of years. Just as characters in D&D gain level and skill, the quality of novels has increases, as has the level of writing.
In the Everis Cale trilogy, we read about a Chosen of the god of thieves in a dark but still heroic story. In the recent Depths of Madness by Erik Scott de Bie, a party of “old” elves, Halflings and humans is led by a “younger” Elven shadowdancer who uses sex, lies and a bit of ruthlessness not often seen in Realms books to deal with them and the twisted evils they encounter.
It was in reading Depths, that I realized that the Realms have changes. Growing up and adapting to its growing audience of adult readers instead of trying to pander to the young’ens that were like us so many years ago.
Sure these are still high fantasy novels with heroes that have almost comic book lives, with friends and enemies that come back from the dead left and right, but it is nowhere near the painfully bad books that came out in the dark times. There is still a wide range of styles, from the indomitable Elminster to the honorable Drizzt Do’Urden to the shadowy Cale or the dominating Twilight.
If you are a fantasy fan, a Forgotten Realms fan, D&D player or a comic book fan looking for a change of pace, step into the Realms.