• Biz,  Hoffer

    Adventures in stereotyping

    I’m sure by now all of you have heard my “balloon” anecdote, which was the origin of my useful description of someone as a balloonist (someone who is more concerned with assigning blame than solving problems, often to the point of bringing in third parties simply to have someone to blame.

    I now get a new one. For people who are perfectionists in dealing with other people, let us call them teleporters. The source of all this was a discussion of the LP‘s recent date with reality regarding Iraq. From Men’s News Daily, via Q and O, in response to something by Lew Rockwell.

    Let’s instead scrunch our eyes tight, stick our fingers in our ears, and wish really, really hard. Then we can magically teleport to where we want to be instead of doing actual work to get there. And even better, if someone takes a step towards a freer society, let’s kick his legs out from under him rather than have the ideals and purity profaned by anything resembling an interaction with real life.

    Perfectly put. To paraphrase Hoffer, most people would rather have a perfect excuse than an imperfect accomplishment.

    Teleporter has a nice ring to it doesn’t it?

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  • Photography

    I see the Luxury Kings rehearse and

    All I get was one good picture out of 15. Oh well.

    On another note, the photo framing (or treatment technique anyway) is called Southern Preserve Plaquing (where the photo is mounted on beveled black wood and then coated with a non-gloss protective coating). Has anyone heard of it?

  • Law,  Society

    Nighttime thinking

    It’s probably meaningful that I come across this article on Urban surveillance networks and this article on profiling on the same day. Both of them are worth reading.

    Consider the following statement.

    An overwhelming majority of Americans think that racial profiling is wrong. A lesser number think that racial profiling is not worth doing under ordinary circumstances, a smaller number think it’s not worth doing under any circumstance.

    The above is an accurate description of public sentiment when 100% of the factor is race. Gender and age are usually thrown in as well. The above still holds true.

    But what happens when race is one factor of 50 and the profiling is being done by a computer? Assume a surveillance server can determine, height, weight, approximate age, race, gender, posture, gait, clothes, et al. Does it become acceptable at that point?

    This line of thought reminds of the last Supreme Court affirmative action decision where it was said that it was wrong for people to discriminate, but fine for computers to do so.

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  • Weirdness

    Random things

    Mapbuilder is way cool (HT: 5150)

    Sometime over the past week Drex messed up my rear derailer on my bike so now the gears won’t shift.

    I happened upon the Wikipedia entry on ethnic slurs and my current favorite is Chernozhopiy, which is “a person possessing a black ass” in Russian.

    Curiously Russians seem to use this to indicate all non-Europeans, not exclusively black people. Very strange. Also strange is the fact that most of the Asian countries have a term that literally means “White Ghost”. Also Criminal -(UK & NZ) an Australian (see also convict)

  • Tech

    Irritating

    I finally see something I want on E-Bay, and it is very nicely integrated with both Paypal and G-Mail. So far so good.

    But, for no good reason, neither Paypal nor E-Bay are talking to each other, therefore I can’t get the book I want. A pox on thee E-Bay.

  • Photography

    I visit the Commuter Art Gallery


    I visited Clark Ashton’s Commuter Gallery today. I’m somewhat happy with the pictures, realistically most of them should have been shot as landscapes, not portraits (which is why most of them are focused the way they are). On the whole I don’t think I did it anywhere near justice. Some of them are good I suppose.

    I also got some nice shots of Clark’s neighbors Chevy Newport car, which is a mighty sweet ride.

    See the whole thing

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  • Photography

    Lenses

    I got the Olympus lens in the mail today and I have to say it doesn’t seem like it was worth it. I’m considering getting this (assuming it turns out to be compatible.

    In the meantime, here’s a close-up photo

  • Links,  Tech

    Friday Rapid Fire

    Since I’m stuck on a JavaScript bug, I’ll post some thoughts and links

    • Good Idea – In your cell phone address book, type ICE (in case of emergency) in front of someone’s name so paramedics can know who to contact. HT: Marginal Revolution
    • uncertainty – I’m not sure that this (and it’s natural conclusion) is a good idea, though I do support the sentiment, I think.
    • Backstoke of the West – Star Wars translated into Chinese, then back into English, perhaps Engrish would be a better word.
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  • Movies,  Photography

    Saw Sin City again

    At the Fox Theater no less, and it remains very good.

    On an odd note, I recently (yesterday) ordered a lens adapter, telephoto lens, and a gig of memory from buy.com for the Mighty Olympus C-8080 and for no reason that I can tell it’s coming in 3 shipments. Very strange. I’ve been extremely happy with the C-8080 so far.

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