…to Columbus, OH, to the Origins Game Fair. Light blogging over the next few days, but hopefully pics when I return.
I am a cable god
So yesterday, Betsy and I chose to tackle the attic, in hopes of finding things that we’d stored for two years and never used that we could simply throw away (we figure, if we haven’t wanted it in two years, we probably don’t need it).
Among the boxes and boxes were three boxes full of cables. Audio cables, video cables, power cords for computers (total count: 12) and more SCSI cables than you can shake a stick at. I’ve got IDC50 cables, DB25 cables, CN50 cables, and even an HD68 or two. Why do I have so many SCSI cables?
I have no idea.
But you need one, or need a power cable for a computer or a computer like device, let me know quick. Otherwise, they’re headed for the trash.
Check out the BoingBoing 2.0
BoingBoing gets a revamp! New three column design, in order to handle a few advertisements they’ve been forced to include to handle costs. Still the place to go for interesting news of all sorts.
Anyone want Gmail?
Most of us with Blogger accounts have already signed up for Gmail if we were interested, but if anyone out there DOESN’T have one, and wants, leave me a comment. I’ve got TWO invites to give out, and I’ll send them to the first couple of people who convince me. đŸ™‚
As reported already by Betsy, we were surprised and amazed at some of the stuff we found yesterday at Southern Season. They had “Not Cool” hot sauce on sale for 99 cents each, my favorite hot sauce in the world. If you like it hot and flavorful, I highly recommend the Chocolate Habenero…it is hot (according to this comparison, 225,000 scoville units) but it’s got a great coffee/chocolate flavor underneath.
Monolith
From BoingBoing, a really interesting new test for digital copyright: Monolith. A description of the project, from the website:
“Things get interesting when you apply Monolith to copyrighted files. For example, munging two copyrighted files will produce a completely new file that, in most cases, contains no information from either file. In other words, the resulting Mono file is not “owned” by the original copyright holders (if owned at all, it would be owned by the person who did the munging). Given that the Mono file can be combined with either of the original, copyrighted files to reconstruct the other copyrighted file, this lack of Mono ownership may be seem hard to believe.
Consider this simple fact: for a given Element file and any other file of the same length (call it fileA), it is possible to choose a Basis file that, when munged with the Element, will produce fileA as the resulting Mono file. Therefore, if a copyright holder claims that she owns the information in all Mono files that are munged from her work, she is also claiming copyright over all possible binary files that are the same length as her work. For example, suppose that fileA is an MP3 of a Beatles song, and the Element file is an MP3 of a Britney Spears song copyrighted by Jive Records. It is possible to find a Basis file that, when munged with the Spears song, will produce the Beatles song as the Mono file. Jive Records certainly cannot claim copyright over the Beatles song (which is copyrighted by Apple Records), nor can they claim copyright over any other Mono files munged from MP3s of their songs.”
There’s more really interesting analysis on the site…this is exactly the sort of thing that many of us have thought for some time, put into practice. Very, very interesting, and I’m wondering if maybe we’ll start seeing munged files appearing for download as a civil disobedience issue. I’ll start looking for interesting things to mung….
Had a good conversation via email over the last few days with Walt Crawford, who discusses Perils briefly in his latest issue of Cites and Insights. While he had emailed me to warn me that it wasn’t all positive, I think that the points he makes are very valid (I’m becoming more aware of issues with Perils by the day). That said, I appreciate the complimentary nature of many of his comments.
And still, the spread and attention continues to amaze me. In the beginning of his comments, Walt says “Griffey publicized his paper widely.” I’m not sure how wide posting it to a blog and emailing it to one of the authors that I cited reasonably extensively (Cory Doctorow) is. From there to BoingBoing, and from there it snowballed enormously. I can’t say I’m not pleased, but I am still surprised.
Apple does it yet again…
…that is, inspire hot and heavy techno-lust deep within my heart.
Witness, the AirPort Express and AirTunes, a wireless 802.11g repeater with a USB print server built in that just so happens to also have both an analog and optical stereo out. Why, you ask? So that it’s iTunes ready…it will see your iTunes library, and you can push music through it. So anywhere in your house that you have speakers, you can have your complete music library. Wirelessly. Apple is really kicking some serious ass in the multimedia department these days…as far as I can tell, they pwn digital music. iTunes (the best jukebox/organizer/metadata mine for music bar none), iPod (the best small form factor portable music machine in the world), and now the ability to plug a box in the wall and make your music stream to it. The only thing better would be iPods with built in 802.11g for network syncing/streaming.
Interesting new movie trailer
For a new movie, coming out this fall: Saw. Looks like a cross between Silence of the Lambs and Se7en.
South Park
My best effort at myself, using the always fun South Park Character Generator.