Friday, September 29, 2006
Software designers should rule
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Mastodon @ Slims 25 September 2006
I was glad I went to this show, but I'm glad it was at a small venue like Slims (official capacity 470). It was packed for an appearance by up and coming metal band Mastodon. Every time I have been to Slims the floor is sticky and they still don’t seem to have cleaned it. Mastodon is a four piece with twin guitarists. They played very enthusiastically. Their singer looks like he should play a dwarf when Peter Jackson eventually films The Hobbit. I kept being distracted by the merchandise stall: if I was going to wear a band tee-shirt I would choose one like this.
I was near the front and I ended up being on the edge of the mosh pit. It was full of BIG guys who hastened to pick up anyone who fell over. I’ve tried hard to like this band but when I think of modern metal bands I keep comparing them with Opeth who have such a beautiful guitar sound. Mastodon keep things simple: no acoustic guitars here (good), but somehow I wish they had more dynamics. This piece about how modern recording are too compressed mentions Mastodon as offenders. But even live they don't vary things all that much.
Use the Windows Vista tone
Use the Windows Vista "tone" to inspire confidence by communicating to users on a personal level by being accurate, encouraging, insightful, objective, and user focused. Don't use a distracting, condescending (for example, "Just do this..."), or arrogant tone.I'm not sure I'm ready for my computer to communicate with me on a personal level.
Friday, September 22, 2006
Talent Spotting
I wanted to be an astronaut when I grew up. Grace wants to be a teacher. Teaching is an honourable profession. It's low paid so it won't be outsourced to India too soon.
What's it like to be a teacher and have a talented pupil? What would it be like to have Lily Allen in your class? Or to be Dizzee Rascal's music teacher?
Thursday, September 21, 2006
Banlieue 13 (District B13)
I liked this lightweight, fun, action movie. There is this guy, David Belle who invented this French 'sport' of jumping around buildings with your shirt off.. In the film he is one of the good guys. There is lots of fighting and jumping around buildings while shirtless. Not since the A-Team have so many machine guns been fired at our heroes with so little effect. It lasts only 85 minutes (this is a good thing). It reminded me a bit of Ong-Bak, (which I also liked), another movie based around the talents of a particular guy. It is possible that action films are better in foreign languages
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
Starting over with Cat Power
I was moved by this interview with Cat Power in the NYT. She seems very honest about her problems. I walked out of one of her concerts a few years ago, it wasn't a train wreck, it was just boring. I've had no time for her since then, but maybe now we can try again.
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
The sad tale of the Bhundu boys
Monday, September 18, 2006
How dangerous is terrorism?
S E V E R E
Driving off the road: 254,419 Falling: 146,542 Accidental poisoning: 140,327 |
H I G H
Dying from work: 59,730 Walking down the street: 52,000. Accidentally drowning: 38,302 |
E L E V A T E D
Killed by the flu: 19,415 Dying from a hernia: 16,742 |
G U A R D E D
Accidental firing of a gun: 8,536 Electrocution: 5,171 |
L O W
Being shot by law enforcement: 3,949 Terrorism: 3147 Carbon monoxide in products: 1,554 |
Friday, September 15, 2006
Please make a backup
JK Rowling, returning from a charity book reading in New York just days after the security clampdown, was confronted with a demand that she consign the unfinished manuscript to the hold.She disclosed that the manuscript was largely handwritten and with no back-up copy.
And don't forget to make a backup.
Another conspiracy
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
I see more conspiracies!
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
Photography under sodium lights
Fortunately Amy's major in college was photography. She told me that Sodium lights have a very narrow spectrum and that I should try flattening the images to grayscale. So now instead of a bad interior shot I have a cool black and white picture.
Monday, September 11, 2006
Sunday, September 10, 2006
Oceanside Water Pollution Control Plant
We went on a family outing to the Oceanside Water Pollution Control Plant in San Francisco. This was great, I felt like I was on vacation. After the water is treated it goes into the Pacific. The egg shaped things in the picture are digesters, where anaerobic bacteria are eating solids from the water. Enough methane is produced by this to power 20% of the plant.
Saturday, September 09, 2006
Japanese New Music Festival tour
Last night I went to the Bottom of the Hill to see this show. The venue place is a wonderful 300 capacity dive in a San Francisco neighborhood where it is easy to park. There were three musicians:
- Kawabata Makoto: guitarist and main man of Japanese psychedelic band Acid Mothers Temple
- Yoshida Tatsuya: drummer and main man of progressive rock duo Ruins
- Tsuyama Atsushi. player of “monster bass” in the Acid Mothers Temple
These all played in different combinations. Each section was announced carefully in cod Japanese accents: “Wercome to Jarpanese Muzik Frestival”. I laughed a lot during the shows. This is one of the best gigs I have been to in a long time. There were seven combinations:
SEIKAZOKU (Kawabata/Tsuyama/Yoshida). Kawabata played violin and guitar simulteously while Tsuyama played his pink toy guitar.
ZOFFY (Tsuyama/Kawabata) played a drone song (showing off Tsuyama’s throat singing) but mostly played covers of various classics: Smoke on the Water in the style of Captain Beefheart and Bob Dylan. They did three Miles Davis electric numbers where Kawabata played funky guitar for a minute, then Tsuyama (as Miles) plays a single note, and that’s the end. This was the only section I thought went on too long.
RUINS ALONE (Yoshida) was a fantastic experience. Yoshida is such a great drummer, he has the skill of a jazz drummer with the power of a metal drummer. Basically Ruins sounds like all the twiddly bits off every prog rock record ever made, accompanied by live drumming from Yoshida.
ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE SWR (Tsuyama/Yoshida/Kawabata). There were no roadies or guitar techs and so equipment problems forced Kawabata to play Tsuyama’s “toy” electric guitar for some of the time. On record I find AMT a bit samey but live they make complete sense.
AKATEN (Tsuyama/Yoshida). These two improvised by manipulating everyday items using some sort of amplification that I couldn’t see. They did a duet with scissors and a piece involving brushing teeth and grating a radish. This sounds silly, and it was, but it was musical too.
ZUBI ZUVA X (Yoshida/Tsuyama/Kawabata) All three playing a cappella, there was a lot of difficulty trying to keep a straight face here.
SHRINP WARK (Kawabata/Yoshida) This actually sounded like Ruins, except with Kawabata provoding the twiddly bits.
Friday, September 08, 2006
Please Don’t Make Me Read Your Blog
To see you smile I’d drink
30-day old egg nog.
But, please,
Don’t make me read your blog.
Jetpacks!
My first ever political donation
Wednesday, September 06, 2006
Cows vs. Humans
Country | Cattle | Chickens | Pigs | Sheep | Aid per poor person in developing world |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EU 15 | $179.28 | 1¢ | $9.24 | $28.93 | $16.11 |
Australia | $17.12 | 39¢ | $6.49 | 94¢ | 54¢ |
Canada | $68.59 | 15¢ | $18.99 | 0¢ | 95¢ |
Japan | $163.23 | 21¢ | $3.92 | 0¢ | $2.38 |
New Zealand | $2.66 | 13¢ | $2.14 | 19¢ | 8¢ |
Norway | $965.72 | $1.48 | $39.98 | $94.06 | 83¢ |
Switzerland | $987.58 | $7.63 | $139.62 | $16.11 | 61¢ |
United States | $29.06 | 58¢ | $9.03 | $4.12 | $7.67 |
All | $92.59 | 38¢ | $10.58 | $12.85 | $29.17 |