26. August 2005 · Comments Off on Back From Iraq · Categories: Iraq

This from today’s OpinionJournal:

The Journal’s Rob Pollock, just back from Baghdad, and Reuel Marc Gerecht of the American Enterprise Institute assess the new Iraq constitution and the fight against the insurgency.

The program is presented by Thirteen/WNET New York. The more than 300 public TV stations around the country set their program schedules individually, so to find out the day and time when “The Journal Editorial Report” will air near you, please check your local listings or the PBS Web site.

This should be good; Pollock and Gerecht are two of the smartest middle east guys out there.

25. August 2005 · Comments Off on Movie Trivia For 8/24/05 · Categories: That's Entertainment!

This should have been a BMW, DKW, NSU, or Zundapp.

24. August 2005 · Comments Off on Movie Triva For 8/24/05 · Categories: That's Entertainment!

He was a Star Fleet Admiral. And he was falsely accused of rape. And he died yesterday.

And we are all reduced by his loss.

23. August 2005 · Comments Off on Foose Becomes Musting Tuner, Hansen Becomes Unemployed · Categories: Technology, That's Entertainment!

Steve Saleen and Jack Roush have, for several years, produced limited-production, modified Mustangs, distributed through elite Ford dealerships. Now, triple-Ridler winner Chip Foose joins the fray:

Foose Stallion

Foose Stallion
gallery

But it appears that, at this point, Foose’s work on the Mustang is more show than go:

PRE-PRODUCTION SPECS

— Chip Foose designed body with a modified hood, side molding, revised grille, fascias, custom side marker lights, side “C” pillar ducts, etc.

— Rear aerodynamic spoiler

— Custom graphics using Dupont’s Hot Hues finishes

— Chip Foose designed 20″ custom aluminum wheels

— 20-inch g-Force T/A(R) KDW ultra high performance tires from BFGoodrich(R)

— Sequential taillights (optional)

— Racing inspired front and rear coil springs, front and rear anti-sway bars, billet rear trailing arms and strut tower brace

— Baer Brakes 4-piston front brakes with Eradispeed Cross Drilled Rotors (15″ front and 14″ rear)

— JBA high flow catback exhaust with mufflers

— High flow air filter

— Quaker State synthetic lubricants

— Custom leather seats with dash & trim enhancements

In other news, super-babe Courtney Hansen seems to be out as co-host on Chip’s hit TLC automobile makeover show Overhaulin’. I was just surfing her website a couple of days ago, and there was no mention of it. But Overhaulin’s website no longer includes her in the cast, Chris Jacobs was hosting alone last week, and prankster A.J. (who is also VERY lovely) co-hosted this week.

23. August 2005 · Comments Off on Intel, Microsoft Give Customers The Fork · Categories: Technology

This from Sander Sassen at Hardware Analysis (reprinted in full):

I’ve described DRM, digital rights management, as the holy grail of the movie and music industry before; it is generally perceived as their ticket to safeguard their inflated profit margins and a tool to breathe new life into their obsolete business models. DRM protected content allows them to control exactly how this content is used, distributed, and above all, can be tracked right down to the individual end user. DRM protected content is protected by an elaborate encryption scheme and can only be unlocked and played back if you follow and adhere to the requirements set forth by the producer exactly. This could mean that he only grants you the right to playback the DRM protected DVD you bought once, or dictates that you can only do so a set number of times. For DRM to work however, especially on the PC, you’d ideally need hardware support, so that both hard- and software work together to make sure the protection scheme is in no way circumvented.

Up until now the movie and music industry has been unable to partner with the likes of Microsoft or Intel to make this a reality. Microsoft’s Windows XP featured DRM, but only on a software level and Intel has hinted at a platform with DRM for a few years now, but never followed through with the concept. With the arrival of Microsoft Windows Vista and Intel’s East Fork concept both Microsoft and Intel have however sold out to the music and movie industry and their unbridled greed. Microsoft’s Vista will, amongst other things, feature something that’s called the Output Content Protection, which is a first implementation of the NGSCB, Next Generation Secure Computing Base, the infamous platform formerly known as Palladium. This prohibits the output of protected video content unless you have HDCP, High bandwidth Digital Content Protection, support on your display. Currently a very small percentage, less than 1%, of shipping monitors support this and hence will allow you to view such content.

Intel’s East Fork concept is the proverbial icing on the cake, adding the needed hardware support to supplement the features as found in Windows Vista. And unlike the concept platform Intel has shown us in the past, East Fork will start shipping in the first quarter of 2006, quite in time for the release of Windows Vista. The combination of the two will mean that you, the end-user, will be royally screwed in every way, shape and form. That’s right, once East Fork and Vista ship you can forget about exercising your fair-use rights, no more converting songs to MP3, no more music downloads to- and from friends and family, no more DivX movies, and the list goes on. But more disturbing is the fact that new content will only be able to playback on the new platform, there, for example, will be no (legal) Linux support or support in other operating systems. Simply because any such media player, able to playback this content, will circumvent the protection scheme that is DRM, which is illegal. Basically fair use and your rights as a consumer are out of the window when East Fork and Vista arrive.

With East Fork Intel has given the music and movie industry the tools to force the consumer to give up its rights and abide by their rules and has handed the keys to unlock the protection scheme to Microsoft. Looking at the track record of the music and movie industry and their watchdogs the RIAA and MPAA you can rest assured that when this platform is introduced they’ll use any possible legal avenue to further limit how you can use their content. And more importantly they’ll also make sure you pay a substantial amount of money for any use of their content that before was labeled as fair use, such as converting songs to MP3 for example. So thanks Intel and thanks Microsoft for selling out, you’ve now clearly shown us that these new features are meant to better your revenue and profits, not the computing experience of the end user. Or rather, you’ve sided with the music and movie industry and their unbridled greed and clearly don’t care one bit about what the end user wants. I guess money talks after all.

Check for updates, I intend to look into this further. And I expect our readers have some pithy comments.

Here’s a good piece from Charlie Demerjian at The Inquirer:

Up the river without a paddle
So, that is what it is, how does it sell you up the river? The first part is DRM. Any DRM on a machine is simply a sign of failure. It signifies that the providers cannot, or will not provide you with a good product at a fair price. People are inherently averse to getting screwed, in the way that Intel is doing mind you, and if you try to screw people, they will avoid you. If you offer them something they actually want, they tend to readily open their wallets. This crushing DRM that is being foisted upon you is the surest sign that you don’t want this product, and you will be paying too much for it. Don’t like that? Bought legislators are hard at work making sure you will go to jail if you try to exercise your rights on the issue.

Remember there was a time when something called fair use existed? Remember when you could rip a CD to your MP3 player to listen to in your car, or while out biking? That was and is called fair use. Breaking down the term, fair means equitable, and use means to use. Both are about to be stripped from you, but you get to pay for the privilege.

Here’s how it works. The record companies, and to a far lesser degree the movie studios, are rapacious greedy bastards that have a failing business model. No, really, look at the numbers, they are on a treadmill where they need bigger and bigger hits to support the 90 plus per cent of projects that don’t make dollar one. Each time, they spend more and more money making the latest plastic knuckle dragger seem cool enough so you will part with your money.

It is getting harder and harder to do, mainly because quality is declining so rapidly. So, rather than go for quality and content you want to buy, they are trying to make it so you have to buy, and crying to legislators that you are evil if you don’t consume how they want, when they want, in the ways that they want. Pay per play has these cretins drooling.

Add in the fact that they completely missed the boat for digital media, obstructed its growth at every possible turn, and sued their prime consumers when they didn’t flock to sup-par offerings at super-par pricing, and you have a recipe for failure. This is exactly what the record companies are doing, failing, and it is richly deserved. Some adapted early, Go-Kart being a prime example, are doing the right thing for the right reasons. The vast majority are not.

In their failing, they are passing laws left and right that make you a criminal for doing things that you were entitled to do up until it did not make several large corporations enough money. Don’t like it? How many Congressmen do you own?

Their excuse it that they won’t enter a market without what they deem as adequate protection. Silly me, it seems that they define adequate protection as charging more for a download than a physical product that has actual costs to produce, ship, stock and sell. It is a flat out sham, and strangely, people are stupid enough to believe it, and buy the fact that the poor record companies will lose their shirts if they so much as dip a toe in the water without DRM. They can’t come in without you giving up your fair use rights.

That is a lie, they voluntarily left, and choose not to enter without you kneeling before them and giving up your civil liberties. It would be laughable if so many people didn’t do just that. A good analogy was one I used on a person giving a speech about DRM a few months ago. I said imagine that during his speech, I walk up on stage with a baseball bat, and for no reason, start hitting him. Then, out of the goodness of my heart, I stop hitting him, does this suddenly make me a nice guy? The record companies are hitting you by not supporting the current prevailing formats, and are asking you to call them nice guys when they stop hitting you. I hope you are not that stupid.

Likely, readers of The Inquirer/i>, or even TDB, for that matter, are far from “that stupid.” The problem is, we make up but a tiny minority of the general public.

22. August 2005 · Comments Off on Support Our Troops – Respect Them As Adults · Categories: Military

A very good Chicago Sun-Times article from Mark Steyn:

They’re not children in Iraq; they’re grown-ups who made their own decision to join the military. That seems to be difficult for the left to grasp. Ever since America’s all-adult, all-volunteer army went into Iraq, the anti-war crowd have made a sustained effort to characterize them as “children.” If a 13-year-old wants to have an abortion, that’s her decision and her parents shouldn’t get a look-in. If a 21-year-old wants to drop to the broadloom in Bill Clinton’s Oval Office, she’s a grown woman and free to do what she wants. But, if a 22- or 25- or 37-year-old is serving his country overseas, he’s a wee “child” who isn’t really old enough to know what he’s doing.

I get many e-mails from soldiers in Iraq, and they sound a lot more grown-up than most Ivy League professors and certainly than Maureen Dowd, who writes like she’s auditioning for a minor supporting role in ”Sex And The City.”

The infantilization of the military promoted by the left is deeply insulting to America’s warriors but it suits the anti-war crowd’s purposes. It enables them to drone ceaselessly that “of course” they “support our troops,” because they want to stop these poor confused moppets from being exploited by the Bush war machine.

[…]

Casey Sheehan was a 21-year old man when he enlisted in 2000. He re-enlisted for a second tour, and he died after volunteering for a rescue mission in Sadr City. Mrs. Sheehan says she wishes she’d driven him to Canada, though that’s not what he would have wished, and it was his decision.

22. August 2005 · Comments Off on Captain General De Leon, Your Fountain Is Ready · Categories: Science!

Some interesting developments in stem cell research:

The technique uses laboratory-grown human embryonic stem cells — such as the ones that President Bush has already approved for use by federally funded researchers — to “reprogram” the genes in a person’s skin cell, turning that skin cell into an embryonic stem cell itself.

The approach — details of which are to be published this week in the journal Science but were made public on the journal’s Web site yesterday — is still in an early stage of development. But if further studies confirm its usefulness, it could offer an end run around the heated social and religious debate that has for years overshadowed the field of human embryonic stem cell research.

Since the new stem cells in this technique are essentially rejuvenated versions of a person’s own skin cells, the DNA in those new stem cells matches the DNA of the person who provided the skin cells. In theory at least, that means that any tissues grown from those newly minted stem cells could be transplanted into the person to treat a disease without much risk that they would be rejected, because they would constitute an exact genetic match.

All fanciful speculation about a fountain of youth aside, this is exciting enough on its own.

Hat Tip: InstaPundit

21. August 2005 · Comments Off on Clue #2 For Movie Trivia Of 8/20/05 · Categories: That's Entertainment!

A whole freaking day, and not even one guess? Jeeze-Louise.

Ok, here’s a clue: The director of this film was often parodied by Steven Spielberg’s Animaniacs.

Update: Reader Taj broke down and googled the answer.

20. August 2005 · Comments Off on Pleased To Meet You… · Categories: That's Entertainment!

…Hope you guess my name.

I’m just watching (again) FX’s Nip/Tuck: Agatha Ripp. And I can hardly wait for the new season premiere on the 20th of September. After Battlestar Galactica, and the last season of The Shield, they have a high bar to hurdle. But one thing I hope they don’t change: the killer freaking soundtrack. It’s like the are consulting for their music with somebody from Radio Paradise.

20. August 2005 · Comments Off on It’s War Man – You Live; That’s Proof You Right – You Die; That’s Proof You Wrong. · Categories: Military, That's Entertainment!

For those of you that wrote-off Steven Bochco’s Over There on FX, after the somewhat abysmal pilot, I invite you to take a second look. While still having its share of technical errors and Hollywood silliness, it has gotten MUCH better.

20. August 2005 · Comments Off on This Is An Interesting Concept: · Categories: World

This seems to be a common theme among the weekend talking-head shows: If the Palestinian Authority is successful in creating a state on Gaza, their primary benefactors will not just be the United States and Western Europe, but Israel.

This says something.

20. August 2005 · Comments Off on What Makes A Great Bond? · Categories: General

After my last Bond post, I find myself rewatching Thunderball (undoubtedly the best Bond ever), and You Only Live Twice (arguably the worst of the Connery Bonds, only saved by that drop-dead-gorgeous Toyota 2000GT).

Anyway, as said in comments on the earlier post, I think that, while Dalton did the best Fleming Bond, Brosnan’s Bonds have, overall, (while Goldfinger and Thunderball rise above the fray), best executed the cinema Bond formula.

Comments?

Update: Here’s an idea; how about the Felix Lieter factor? In You Only Live Twice, it always struck me how Tanaka was such a poor substitute for Lieter, and the Japanese commandos such a poor substitute for the U.S. Marines.

20. August 2005 · Comments Off on Why Are They Doing This? · Categories: General

Sears has been pushing hard, of late, its Craftsman 19.2V power tool line – a new thing, with promise of “more tools to come.”

But I find this half-step curious: 18V is the “old-tech” standard. (I bought an 18V Coleman drill kit for about $37 at Costco last year.) But the rest of the industry is going to 24V. I can’t see why Sears is putting such an investment in 19.2?

19. August 2005 · Comments Off on Oh, GMAFB · Categories: Military

There’s a thing going on the History Channel just now saying the F-14 is currently the world’s fastest fighter jet. Oh, give me a fucking break: Even relitave to the F-14D (Mach 2.4), the F-15C, the F-4, the F-104, the F-106, and particularly the YF-12 (Mach 3.2), in addition to several Russian jets, most notably the MiG-25, are all much faster than the F-14.

Oh, and here’s a claim: The narrator has just proclaimed the F-14 “the world’s most complete military fighter.” Oh, give me a fucking break: Why do you think these tom-turkeys are being retired?

Update: Well, with the switch to the GE motors. many of the costs have been contained. And, while in this era of stealth, the ante has been raised exponenially., for it’s time, the Tomcat was crazy-expensive. And flying them? WTF do you think first named them “Tomcats”?

19. August 2005 · Comments Off on An EASY movie trivia question for 8/20/05 · Categories: That's Entertainment!

The real-life names of these characters were Lefty, Geri, and Tony.

Update: What? Not even any guesses? While no aspersion on my knowledge of cinema, this is a sorry commentary on my knowledge of popular culture. I really thought someone would get this right off-the-bat

Update: Here’s clue #1:. Las Vegas.

19. August 2005 · Comments Off on Man, Moment, Machine · Categories: That's Entertainment!

No doubt, this History Channel series will get more lame, as the pickings get more slim. But, just now, I can’t think of any greater confluence of “Man, Moment, and Machine” than Jimmy Doolittle’s Raid On Tokyo.

19. August 2005 · Comments Off on But Wait A Minute Here: · Categories: General

I just heard the IDF forces are digging trenches around former Jewish settlements, to keep Palestinian squatters out, pending destruction.

But I don’t get this: Israel is perfectly fine about bulldozing the homes of suspected terrorist supporters, But they are not ok with bulldozing the homes of clearly illegal squatters?

19. August 2005 · Comments Off on No,. No – Please No · Categories: Media Matters Not

I don’t usually watch FNS’ Hannity & Colmes. But I came home today, to turn-on my TV and hear, “I’m Rich Lowery, sitting in for Sean Hannity. And Alan and I are sitting here with our thumbs up our asses, waiting for some news on the Natalee Holloway case.”

Alan: “That’s right, Rich. And, while we wait, we have some experts here, who have not just their thumbs, but their whole fists up their asses. First, from Harvard’s School of Comparitive Cultures we have…”

ARGGGGH!

17. August 2005 · Comments Off on Clue #2 For Movie Trivia Of 8/16/05 · Categories: General

This guy’s drop-dead-gorgeous Mercedes 540K Special Roadster has just been mis-represented as one of “Hitler’s Cars” (Hitler rode in the 770K), in the History Channel’s AutoManic series.

17. August 2005 · Comments Off on Clue #1 For Movie Trivia Of 8/16/05 · Categories: That's Entertainment!

It’s a bit obvious that I stumped ya’ll. So here’s a clue: This quote is particulary ironic, as our subject was the head of a studio which was a pioneer in movie sound.

17. August 2005 · Comments Off on I’d Like To Teach The World To Chill · Categories: Ain't That America?, That's Entertainment!

It is a sad commentary on our times that this commercial is such a pathetic sequel of the original.

16. August 2005 · Comments Off on Some Top Gun BS · Categories: Military, That's Entertainment!

I again find myself watching Top Gun on HBO. Not that it’s that great, but it seems like the best thing to go to sleep to right now. 🙂

Anyway, I think we all know about the fictitious “MiG 28” (really an F-5E). But I just caught that phantom narrator line from day one: “the planes you will be flying against are smaller, faster, and more maneuverable.” Well, the A-4 Skyhawk is certainly far smaller than the Tomcat. But they are subsonic, and at a thrust/weight ratio around .5, hardly as accelerative as the Tomcat. And, while certainly able to turn inside the Tomcat at low speeds, they max out at 6g; so at higher speeds, the Tomcat has the edge.

In any event, I was pleasantly surprised to learn that the Navy’s Top Gun aggressor squadron is now flying F-16s – IMHO, the best dogfighter this country has ever produced.

Oh, and this is another thing that’s always got me: Miramar is a good 30 miles or so from the ocean. And there’s another 50 miles or so of piney woods between it and the desert, where we see them doing their maneuvers (well below the supposed “hard deck”). But then, on day two, Maverick goes into a flat spin, and is “heading out to sea.” Further, in the next scene, we first see that the canopy (a single assembly on the Tomcat) clearly blows, allowing Maverick to eject, and then Goose ejects into it. Stupid Hollywood BS.

Anyway, goodnight.

15. August 2005 · Comments Off on Memo To Sgt. Mom, Make Sure We Get Our Slice · Categories: General

A VERY interesting article from Fred Vogelstein at Fortune:

Julie Roehm has more than $2 billion to spend this year, and the way she’s been spending it worries executives at News Corp., the Washington Post Co., and virtually every other media company on the planet. As Chrysler’s director of marketing communications, Roehm, 34, oversees a budget that Advertising Age ranks as the sixth-largest pool of ad dollars in the nation. She decides how many minutes of the carmaker’s commercials appear on networks and cable channels nationwide and how many pages of its ads turn up in magazines like this one and newspapers such as USA Today. Here’s the scary part: Roehm rarely misses a chance to talk about how delighted she is with online advertising. Last year she spent 10% of the budget online; this year she is allotting closer to 18%; next year, she says, she will allocate more than 20%. Do the math: In 2006 roughly $400 million of Chrysler’s money that used to go into TV, newspaper, and magazine ads will be spent on the Internet. Says Roehm: “I hate to sound like such a marketing geek, but we like to fish where the fish are.”

No wonder media executives are concerned. One of their headaches is Googlemania—Google effectively reinvented online advertising with the targeted, classified-like text links that you now see everywhere. Soaring profits from selling those ads have helped drive Google’s stock market capitalization to some $85 billion, making Google the most highly prized media company in the world. But while the old guard is keeping a watchful eye on Google, the company it really fears—and the one advertisers like Roehm increasingly love—is Yahoo.

Hat Tip: InstaPundit

15. August 2005 · Comments Off on More Must See On Discovery Times Channel · Categories: That's Entertainment!

I had previously alerted you to Bride Kidnapping of Kyrgyzstan. It is playing again, through 5pm (EDT) tomorrow (check your local listings) It is playing in a block with Seoul Mates, about American GIs taking Korean brides (not really a must see, particularly for seasonened military people, who have seen this IRL several times, but still a good view), and the so-so Russian Brides.

15. August 2005 · Comments Off on Movie Trivia For 8/16/05, Take 2 · Categories: General

As I predicted, Sgt. Mom got the last one without breaking a sweat.

This one should be MUCH more challenging:

To what Hollywood bigshot can this infamous quote (concerning the proponents of “talkies”) be attributed?

They fail to take into account the international language of the silent pictures. And the unconscious share of each onlooker in creating the play, the action, the plot and the imagined dialogue, for himself.

(from an AP story of 9/03/1926)

BTW: I have to agree with our subject. There is a quality to silent films, shared with radio drama and books, in that, by compelling one to use their own imagination, the story becomes more engrossing and enriching.

15. August 2005 · Comments Off on Movie Trivia For 8/16/05 · Categories: That's Entertainment!

(I bet Sgt. Mom gets this one right off the bat.)

This famous Beverly Hills estate, named for Hollywood’s first “celebrity couple”, was sold by Buddy Rogers, to Lakers owner Jerry Buss, in 1979.

Update: As I predicted, Sgt. Mom got it. see comments

14. August 2005 · Comments Off on More On The Home Network · Categories: General, Technology

Well, it seems hooking up the Airlink101 802.11g home network was more a problem in my mind than in reality.

First: While my two-to-three year-old information told me ISPs were hostile to home networks, I found Earthlink quite helpful, and not at all worried about having two nodes running on a single account.

Second: As shown by my previous post, the amount of misinformation and confusion out there, even among so-called “professionals” is rampant. I therefore volunteer to be your cyber-rabbi, should you have questions along this line. I need to know more here – and I always find I learn more by being a teacher. And I promise not to feed you any bullshit.

So, the home network is running: router hooked to DSL modem (and handling the dialer tasks), my computer hooked to router via Eithernet, and Dear Brother’s computer hooked to router via 802.11g. I have to train him – I just drew a diagram. I have to learn myself.

No encryption yet. That’s the next step.

Chime in if you wish to learn with me.