Links

More links for you. Of note today is that Prosecutors Dismiss Xbox-Modding Case Mid-Trial, which basically means that they couldn’t intimidate the poor guy into paying a fortune and/or making a plea deal … so they dropped the case. The legal merits of the case were pretty flimsy to begin with – after all, this is a guy with a soldering iron & some electronic components who was able to make the XBox do things that the Evil Empire (i.e., Microsoft) didn’t want it to be able to do. So, break out the high-pressure tactics, the prosecutors who “lost” evidence, etc. My guess is that they didn’t want this case to ever go to a jury trial, because, hey, really, he (or his clients) owned the XBox. If it were to have gone to trial, the jury would have been hard-pressed to say what wrong had been done, and the DMCA would have been under pressure for some of its more idiotic clauses. So, they let it go. Evil creatures.

There are lots more of interest, of course, including the odd idea that Yellow-Bellied Marmots May Inherit Social Victimization. Yep: the kid who’s always picked on, at least amongst the marmots, has inherited that role. But bullies don’t inherit being bullies. Truly odd, this has some interesting possibilities for how we as humanity function. Enjoy!
Continue reading “Links”

Complaints, Conferences, and Cold

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D. helped organize his department’s conference which took place this past Wednesday and Thursday (This is why our Thanksgiving tales will come along a bit later). Running concurrent with the opening tea and first speakers was a scheduled and staged Glasgow University protest against increases in tuition. Through the quirkiness of a single idle comment from the student in charge who wanted to “check the conference room one last time,” D. and his fellow conference organizers were trapped inside the administration building while students conducted the most peaceful protest we’ve experienced. “We’ll let your people in,” the campus security told him earnestly. “Nae fear of that. But we canna let you oot.”

Soo. Whilst D. watched, trapped and a little grumpy at missing tea and breakfast, the students marched, carrying flags and banners, screaming and shouting. But: they had people in neon shirts to stop traffic for them; they only ever blocked one lane of the road; nothing was broken or damaged; and they did not even tread on the grass when coming or going from their protest!

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The Glasgow Police Helicopter followed them along their whole route – from the main gates of Glasgow University, winding around through University Gardens, down University Avenue to Woodlands Road, through to George’s Square (and the city Chambers), and back to the University. It hovered over them, as if it could accomplish something other than spending the funds not spent upon funding education (helicopter time isn’t cheap, after all). The priorities are a bit skewed in this picture, we think.

Though the whole thing seemed to be sort of rehearsed, and campus security was even a little freaked out that D. photographed things — these students were not bent on destruction, unlike the students at the tuition protest in London last week, which apparently started out in the same orderly fashion, but ended with torched cars and mounted policemen riding into the crowd. We’re grateful G.U. opted out of that.


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In the evenings, when one can draw a full breath (it burns to take deep breaths — nose, throat and lungs burn, it is so frigid out), there’s the smell of smoke in the air. Peat fires and coal smoke and the more familiar scent of burning wood. Yes, indeed, there’s a bit of a nip in the air around here: the walks are icy, the streets sparkle with salt and a fur of frost, and the fountain in the park has a layer of ice on top, to the tune of about 1 inch of solid ice at the edges, and more than that in the middle. As you can see, great entertainment was found in breaking away the ice floes from the edge and flinging them into the middle, where they broke through and stood like a temporary and ragged Stonehenge. You will be proud to note that D. flung this particular icy missile himself. Ars brevis.

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We’re expecting snow any time now, the heater is barely effective enough to combat our single-paned windows, and this isn’t even “proper” Winter yet. Our ice-cleats are ready, though, as we expect to need them at any point. We know that we’ll need our thermal underwear tomorrow, as we’re heading off to Edinburgh with the University’s International Families group. We’ll spend the morning in Edinburgh wandering through St. John’s Church (which has a gift shop and a coffee shop, so we’ll be warm after D. takes his pictures), and perhaps take a few exterior pictures of St. Giles Cathedral. We’ll then will make our way to Lauriston Castle in the afternoon. With plenty of warm-up stops along the way. And very short ambles through their gardens. Brrrr.

It’s an early trip, though — no one wants to get caught in shopper’s traffic, so we’re on our way at 8:30 and to Lauriston by 2:30. We might even get home by full dark, which is these days at ten to five, with the sun going down before four.

Hope that you are staying warm where you are, and eating well.

-D & T

Requiems

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It’s funny: somehow, we’re not nervous about this concert. 3 hours from now we have a rehearsal – the first with the orchestra instead of a piano accompanist – and … well, we’re fine with that. This choir is radically different from the University choir, in that everybody treats performances as … well, just what we do. With 5 to 8 performances a year, the idea of performing isn’t something which looms large in everybody’s mind, and they just … well, sing. It’s a refreshing change, really.

We have two little recording devices that we’re going to use to try to get a decent recording (shh! don’t tell the musicians, who expect to be paid more if they’re recorded!). Hopefully at least one of them will be worth listening to, although since we’re singing in Paisley Abbey the recording might be a bit odd, acoustically. We’ll be going down early to take some photos of the abbey, too – after all, how often do you get the chance to sing in a building which was built in 1163!?

-D & T

“Meat” Pies

With the cold coming, we’re in the mood for heartier fare. So, today we made some “meat pies,” using hot water crust pastry. In searching for a recipe, we happened upon this crust, and … well, it’s absolutely awesome! I doesn’t involve the fiddling about with cold butter of the other kind of crust, and it was just … well, fabulously easy to work with.

We varied things a bit from the recipe (of course), but only because we had far more broth than we planned on, so didn’t end up using any milk in the crust at all.

“Meat” pies:
Meat Pies 1.4

  • 12 oz imitation chicken
  • 1 large carrot, diced
  • 1 large potato, diced
  • 8 green onions, diced
  • A dozen mushrooms, quartered
  • 8 oz mature cheddar cheese, grated
  • 8 oz goat cheese, with rind removed
  • 8 oz soya beans
  • vegetarian broth
  • water
  1. Simmer your ingredients (except for the cheeses!) until tender (approximately 1 hour).
  2. Assemble your hot water crust, using the simmering liquid.
  3. Add cheeses to your vegetables & chicken, stirring well
  4. Form your crusts
  5. Fill, and top with dough, crimping the edges tightly closed
  6. Poke a few holes in the top, so that any gasses may escape
  7. Bake for 40 minutes, if doing small pies; bake for 55 minutes, if doing large pies

These are so tasty, and so easy, with most of the work being the chopping of vegetables. D. shall eat well at work this week!

-D & T

Charity? Really?

A friend of mine pointed me to The G.E. ecomagination photo project, which purports to be donating money to charity (at the rate of $1.67 per photo) should a Flickr user contribute a photo under the themes of “wind,” “water,” or “light.” “Wow,” I thought, “this sounds too good to be true!” Imagine my surprise when it turns out that the Flickr Group Rules state, among other things, that:

…you hereby irrevocably grant to GE the unlimited, non-exclusive, perpetual, worldwide, irrevocable, sublicensable, assignable, royalty free right to use, redact, republish, modify, crop, adapt, edit, copy, create derivative works of, perform, distribute or otherwise modify your Photograph including any intellectual property contained therein, together with your name, Flickr user name (if applicable), image, likeness and identity of your hometown, in advertising and/or promotional materials for GE, in any medium now known or hereinafter developed (collectively, “GE Advertising”) in perpetuity, without payment or compensation to you, and without seeking any further approval from you.

Not only too good to be true: we’ll pay you less than a stock photo company would! Way to go, General Electric!

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Perhaps I should bust out my credit card and donate to a charity – say, $33.40? Now I’ve done 20 times what you would have done, and I haven’t bilked anybody in the process!

P.S.: the image I’ve posted here? Let’s call it “light.” I believe that it’s shining down upon G.E. and asking that you let some enter the souls of your marketing and legal departments now. If they still have any souls left.

-D

Rational Discourse

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US Capitol Building

Election Day in the US comes tomorrow. It’s a bit strange, for us, because we voted months ago, so when we hear about such-and-such a ballot measure looking good in the polls, we have to think back to what we answered on our absentee ballots, do some research into the measure, and … well, think about it all over again. It’s also a bit nice, because we don’t have to actually participate in the discussion of the issues: we’ve already voted, so cannot be convinced of the rightness or wrongness of an issue any more, or not so that it “counts” for anything. Another strange thing about being so far removed from the US media is that we don’t have to hear the advertising. This has been quite nice, because it doesn’t look like any of the discussion taking place is … well, very nice.

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4th of July Parade, Virginia

I don’t know if you’ve been following along with the Rally to Restore Sanity and its meta-discussion about political discourse, but it’s worth having a look, and a think. The whole thing has gotten me to thinking a bit about political discourse and the role it plays in today’s world as compared to the way it used to be incorporated into the world* 30 years ago; that is, the world prior to Reagan’s policy of “deregulation,” which began the changes which were eventually incorporated into the Telecommunications Act of 1996, whose results are summarized quite nicely by Molly Ivins.

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US Embassy, Oakland, CA

The world of my childhood, as I remember it, contained quite a rich element of both discourse and debate. It was the world of the McNeil/Lehrer News Hour, which usually included a round-table debate between 5 or 6 people who held different views; these were lively discussions between people who could actually discuss an issue without attacking each other, and their arguments served to bring out the nuances of the situation. It was also the world where every political candidate was guaranteed access to a certain amount of air-time on whichever news outlet was appropriate: if they were a national candidate, they were carried on a national news channel; a local candidate, they were carried on a local channel. The world is now a different place: the type of debate of today seems filled with vitriol and hatred, and politicians must buy their access to television.

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Vallejo Marina & Yacht Club, Vallejo, CA

These two differences, I think, have made the world a poorer place. The Rally to Restore Sanity is an effort to address the vitriol and hatred. However, it isn’t addressing the (perhaps far more important) issue of access to media; when access to media requires the outlay of huge sums, the messages presented will necessarily be shorter, and the politicians will necessarily be driven into being beholden to large donors. So, our politicians are not only not able to engage in the type of dialog which would encourage understanding, but they are selected for success by the wealthiest in the nation.

Perhaps the reason the discussion has degenerated is because that selection process has given us candidates which represent no section of society – perhaps we are frustrated and angry merely because of this fundamental change in the way the world works.

True, I am always willing to have a rational discussion. But, there again, I’ve stood somewhat outside of the political system, recognizing that all of the politicians presented were those who, on some level or other, were endebted to people whose aims and goals went opposite to my own: the ruling elite / the ultra-wealthy.

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Downtown St. Helena, CA

When I became old enough to think rationally about politics (my mid-20’s – being able to vote doesn’t imply being able to be rational about it), I realized that there were no politicians which embodied my own views. This allows me to step back a bit and have a meta-discussion on the way the system is constructed.

Perhaps those tens of thousands who attended the Rally have started something huge: a change to the fundamental political structure in the US. We can only hope, because the change that is needed is more than just a change in the way people speak, but in who has the ability to be heard.

-D

* Note: this article is about US politics, so let’s just agree that when I say “the world,” here, I’m talking about that context. I have no idea what goes into political discourse outside of that context, except within the very narrow confines of Scottish Academia and perhaps a bit about the political discourse of Germany as presented by Spiegel International (having read that for several years now).