Musings from Brian J. Noggle
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Saturday, December 31, 2005
Call the Guinness People: AP Finds a New Record U.S. Toll for Year in Iraq Nears '04 Mark:
2003: The United States invades in late March and faces an enemy that largely surrenders. US faces 9 months of combat and occupancy. 2004: The first full year of occupation, and the year which the "record" was set. 2005: The second full year of occupation, and the year in which the record is almost matched. There you have it; a record of long-standing. Well, we Americans are told that we're always hungering for the bigger and better things all the time, with baseball players chasing home run records every year and whatnot. I guess Associated Press is just trying to feed our interest in meeting or exceeding records every year, even if it has to manufacture those records out of whole cloth. Fertile, Not Ill (Part II) In response to my thesis that bloggers are not a sickly lot, but are a fertile lot, Kelley of Suburban Blight announces. Friday, December 30, 2005
A Totally Sucky Movie Game No One Else Will Play So when I was watching my traditional Christmas movies last week (Die Hard and Lethal Weapon), I noticed that both movies starred two different actors (or an actor and an actress) in small roles:
Tonight, we watched Coming to America, and we got a similar effect, and oddly enough it was Die Hard II:
Okay, Samuel L. Jackson is bonus credit, but isn't it weird how the Die Hard series is the touchstone in this? Six degrees of Kevin Bacon? Insert Die Hard, and you immediately knock off two degrees. I reckon it's because producers and directors prefer to work with known quantities for their projects (Joel Silver, for example, was behind Lethal Weapon and Die Hard), but it's still amusing and impressive to identify groups of actors who appear in several movies that are not sequels of each other. Gentle reader, I invite you to do the same. Drop a couple of your own eureka moments in the comments, or post such on your Web site. Or, I guess, you can bother me with the list of the obvious when you see them. I mean, crikey, I know Clint Eastwood used a bunch of cowboy actors from his films in Every Which Way But Loose. Show some originality! Book Reports: The Empty Trap by John D. MacDonald (1957) The Executioners by John D. MacDonald (1958) I bought these books, paperbacks, from Hooked on Books for $2 and $3 respectively. So that's a testament to how expensive books can be at Hooked on Books and also a testament to how much I like John D. MacDonald. The Empty Trap details a revenge-based story told partially in flashback. A hotel manager finds himself working for a syndicate-connected hotel owner and discovers that he has no way out of the business. Unfortunately, the woman telling him this is the hard-but-soft songbird wife of said owner. The hotel manager figures the only way out is to absquatulate (meaning 1) with some of the mobster's money and the mobster's wife; the mobster thinks the hotel manager and the wife should indeed absquatulate (meaning 2). The goons leave the now-former hotel manager for dead in the Mexican desert, but in leaving him only mostly dead, they set the stage for revenge. The Executioners reminded me a lot of the movie Cape Fear (or at least the promos I'd seen of the movie), and a quick glance at Amazon.com reveals why. The book was the source for the movie. Ah. As you might already know with that hint, a man and his family suffer the unwanted attention of a released felon against whom the father testified. The police and other locals provide little help, so the family goes on the run and finally has to make a stand. Both books have plots that have become stock over the last fifty years, but I read them to see how John D. MacDonald did them. He did them well and rapidly; these books weigh in at fewer than 170 pages each and respresent the best of the immediately post-pulp era. Spoken Like a True Quality Assurance Person or Media-Friendly Economist Researcher: iPod earbuds could damage hearing:
"No one really knows for sure" the levels at which iPod users listen to music, but "what we do know is that young people like their music loud and seldom worry about any decline in hearing ability," Dean Garstecki, chairman of Northwestern's communication sciences and disorders department, told Reuters. If only we had some metaphor by which we could grasp the danger so we could better clamor for government regulation, such as warning labels or a mandatory cap on the volume these things could produce.
Or we would have heard the particular chorus, if we weren't deaf. Instead, we've had to read it on the Internet. Wow, I Though He Was Dead Already Mourn a moment with me for the recently departed poet: 'Tiger' creator Blake dead at 87 I was under the impression that WIlliam Blake had died a long time ago, but you know how colleges are these days, imparting the young with bad information. Let's eligooglate the man with his most famous work:
Tiger, tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thine eyes? On what wings dare he aspire? What the hand dare seize the fire? And what shoulder and what art Could twist the sinews of thy heart? And, when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand and what dread feet? What the hammer? what the chain? In what furnace was thy brain? What the anvil? what dread grasp Dare its deadly terrors clasp? When the stars threw down their spears, And watered heaven with their tears, Did He smile His work to see? Did He who made the lamb make thee? Tiger, tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? Introspection Like Ravenwood and 40% of the people who take the survey, I have discovered: Robert Morris...-The Executioner-...You are loyal and brave(to a fault) but you are also a psychotic killing-machine. Seek professional help NOW! ;-) Which Red Dawn Character Are You? brought to you by Quizilla Wherein Brian J. Speaks Ex Cathedra About NSA Cookies As a QA dude who understands cookies, I officially call this a non-story: Despite federal ban, NSA Web site places 'cookies' on visitors' computers to track Web surfing:
"After being tipped to the issue, we immediately disabled the cookies," he said. So I agree with Jeff Jarvis that anyone trying to make hay out of this is simply happy to continue yipping the letters NSA. Kevin Aylward notes that the DNC Web site uses cookies set to expire in 28 years (the expiration date of the cookie served as "evidence" of the insidious nature of the plot). Waiting for the Christian Riots in Sweden Anti-Christian Jeans Are a Trend in Sweden:
Logo designer Bjorn Atldax says he's not just trying for an antiestablishment vibe. "It is an active statement against Christianity," Atldax told The Associated Press. "I'm not a Satanist myself, but I have a great dislike for organized religion." (Submitted to the Outside the Beltway Traffic Jam.) Thursday, December 29, 2005
What's The Right To Private Property Worth? In Clayton, it's:
Wednesday, December 28, 2005
Handy Hey, Web developers, here are some handy cheat sheets for HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and such: http://www.blogsip.com/node/45 (Link courtesy of Bucci.) Pope Extends Right to Vote to Fetuses Pope Benedict says:
U.S. Trade Deficit Narrows Well, that's what I take away from this story, with the following quote from Toronto mayor David Miller:
(Submitted to the Outside the Beltway Traffic Jam.) Monday, December 26, 2005
2005: The Year's Reading In Review As some concede defeat in the Fifty Book Challenge, you, gentle reader, have suffered through no fewer than 96 book reviews this year (and one forthcoming). Here's my list from 2005*:
Book Report: Ruled Britannia by Harry Turtledove (2002) I bought this book from the discount rack on the Barnes and Noble in New York at the end of September, and I read it in October, but I have yet to post a report on it as we gave it to my mother-in-law as a gift for Christmas. But here it is, gentle reader: my first foray into Turtledove's alternate history, as best I can remember it. The premise of the book: The Spanish Armada succeeded, and King Philip deposes Queen Elizabeth and locks her in the tower of London. A London-based playwright, William Shakespeare, becomes intangled in a plot to overthrow the Spanish and must compose a play designed to fire up the British at the same time as he's commissioned to write an elegaic play for Philip. The book's language and research undoubtedly capture a lot of the time period; the English is modern, but the sentence construction tips its hat to the middle English of Shakespeare's day. Unfortunately, the book slips into a bit of repetition that made me impatient for it to get on with the story. Also, as I was not a student of the detailed history of the era, some of the subtleties are lost on me. Still, it's an interesting question and perhaps one of Turtledove's lesser efforts--after all, the blogosphere raves about his other work. I won't totally pan it since I did give it as a gift (perhaps a passive-aggressive response for Deliver Us From Evil). However, if you're speed-reading in an effort to make the Fifty Book Challenge, this book presents a speed bump. |
To say Noggle, one first must be able to say the "Nah."
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