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The Media

Journal Journal: V for Vendetta: You mean people PAY to watch this? 6

SPOILERS!!

Saw the latest Wachowski bros. tip a couple days back. Bleagh! Not good. Very not good. It was like a two hour beer ad. A not very original beer ad. No content, slick colors, by-the-numbers directing. A few flashy visual tricks. Several intrusive bits of special effects business. But the thing that got me most is how reliably they didn't even really believe their own shtick.

The Internet

Journal Journal: So when will online formats match online production? 2

So back in the day, all these folks came out with web content sites of one sort or another. Online magazines, what we now call blogs, comics, and so on. And damn near all of them built their UIs around a structure that assumed that a neatly matched unit of content, be it a journal entry, a movie review, comic strip, or item of medical advice, would be added to the system on a regular and frequent schedule, just like legacy print media.
Communications

Journal Journal: VoIP Security, etc. 1

Nice little thred developing in Ask /. on VoIP security issues. I figure that I'll wait a few weeks for the posts to stop, drop by, and read it all properly.

Just looked today at the package that Vonage is pushing through (gag) CompUSA. No signup (+$50, get back $50), pretty looking Uniden two line system, supposed discount on rates thoough it didn't sound that great to me.

United States

Journal Journal: The U.S. Civil War: What A Deadly Bit Of Progress 11

As most of you know, I'm in the midst of completing my chronology of U.S. warfare and these days my attention is committed to the Civil War. Well, not to sound like a northerner or anything[1], but as far as I can tell, on the large scale, this was truly a war between philosophies and it really came down to self-centered romanticism versus get-the-job-done modern pragmatism.
Upgrades

Journal Journal: Guerrilla gardening 1

geek + easily amused + annoying neighbors in endless committee hell = Heh, heh, heh.
(Starting at about 1:30 in the morning for fewer witnesses.)

What does that mean? Well, this neighborhood in specific and New York in general has huge quantities of planters, big 'uns three or four feet to a side, that are, at best planted with some ill-cared for single species or in many cases, simply empty, with the occasional empty bottle, a few cigarrette butts, and the like.

Slashdot.org

Journal Journal: I am scared. Why is /. PINK?! 1

I'm obviously missing something. WTF is going on with these pink bits? I don't come to /. for pink bits. If I want pink bits online I'll go to GBOTW or something.

If I want girly I'll go somewhere like this.

A girly /.? The mind boggles.

-Rustin

Slashdot.org

Journal Journal: It feels like 2002 1

There's a nice space travel thred in yesterday's top stories. Actual facts and analysis in the comments, good signal to noise ratio. I've been through the first and third pages so far and plan to go back in a few weeks and save an offline copy of the whole thing.
United States

Journal Journal: According to the U.S. Army, Journalists have no IP rights 5

Evidently an ex-military, right-wing, self-styled "adventurer" by the name of Micheal Yon took some photos in Iraq. A U.S. Army guy got a copy and circulated it worldwide, getting it on the front page of Stars&Stripes and all over the commercial media, all without paying a nickel to Yon.
Yon sued, saying that he never gave reprod
Power

Journal Journal: good Foreign Policy overview article on Iraq

I came across a piece in Foreign Policy Magazine that I think is worth a look.


What's Next For Iraq

A talk with Nir Rosen who just got back from a year there.

-FOREIGN POLICY: What does the current stalemate over the appointment of a prime minister say about the political process in Iraq, and whether the tensions on the ground can be discussed and eased at a political level?

User Journal

Journal Journal: Working away at my Precision Turbo Soapbox 1

The list of jobs to do sure isn't getting any shorter these days.

Now that I'll at long last have a site for my naked cogitations I need to actually create the muckin' thing. Section heads, topic pages, listings by title and subject and date. Designing a new end-of-page log box, choosing new naming conventions, determining needed graphics.

This is all suspiciously similar to work.

US Plans Lunar Motel 355

OffTheLip writes "The US is planning to build a permanent lunar base which will support future visits to Mars. The living conditions on the moon presents a variety of challenges from medical to construction. Contingency planning would be critical but some feel the challenges presented on the moon will be less than Mars. The moon is closer to Earth, the atmosphere is less harsh and, unlike Mars, water does not exist. Is this the start of the next space race?"

Sony Ceases Production of PSOne 159

Gamespot has the news that Sony is no longer manufacturing the PSOne. From the article: "Despite the news, Sony representatives noted today that the end of production does not necessarily mean the end of availability. PS hardware and software are still selling in countries around the world. Even if original PlayStation systems and games are becoming slim pickings in the US, gamers likely won't be going without for long. As part of its PlayStation Business Briefing 2006, Sony last week announced that it is working on an emulator that would allow gamers to play PS titles on the PSP."

Homeland Security Okays Closed Proceedings 281

CNet is reporting that a newly created branch within the Homeland Security Department that brings together many different federal agency employees and private sector players has been given the go-ahead to disregard a law requiring meetings to be open and proceedings public. From the article: "The 1972 law generally requires such groups to meet in open sessions, make written meeting materials publicly available, and deliver a 15-day notice of any decision to close a meeting to the public. The last is a particular point of concern for Homeland Security officials, who anticipate that private emergency meetings may need to be scheduled on short notice."

Germany Accepts Strict Piracy Law 478

A beautiful mind writes "The TimesOnline is reporting that Germany has accepted a new piracy law, currently the toughest in Europe, which comes into effect on January 1, 2007. From the article: 'Germans risk two years in prison if they illegally download films and music for private use under a new law agreed yesterday. Anybody who downloads films for commercial use could be jailed for up to five years.' Many politicians defended the new law, amongst them Günther Krings, the Christian Democrat legal affairs spokesman, who claimed: 'There should be no legal distinction between stealing chewing gum from a shop and performing an illegal download.'"

First 3G BlackBerry Announced 89

An anonymous reader writes "The Register is featuring an article on Research In Motion's first 3G BlackBerry, due shortly for release in the UK via Vodafone. The big news is that it contains an integrated 3G data modem - meaning UK addicts will be able to connect from the device and their laptop (via USB/BlueTooth) at 3G broadband speeds. No EDGE so the US will have to carry on waiting, but for those in the UK and Europe, short of integrated GPS, is the BlackBerry 8707v finally the first example of mobile device convergence everyone has been waiting for?"

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