August, 2010


17
Aug 10

17 books by Talbot Mundy for $1.99

I’m a big fan of the writing of Mr. Talbot Mundy, and today I bought a (digital) collection of tons of his writing at Amazon for $1.99.  I’m super amped about this, and thought I’d blog it in hopes of turning people onto this amazing writer. 

From the Wikipedia article on Mundy…

Born in London, at age 16 he ran away from home and began an odyssey in India, Africa, and other parts of the Near and Far East. By age 29, he had begun using the name Talbot Mundy, and a year later arrived in the United States, starting his writing career in 1911.

His first published work was the short story “Pig-Sticking in India”, which describes a popular, though now outlawed, sport practiced by British forces. Mundy went on to become a regular contributor to the pulp magazines, especially Adventure and Argosy .[1]

Many of his novels, including his first novel Rung Ho!, and his most famous work King of the Khyber Rifles, are set in India under British Occupation in which the loyal British officers encounter ancient Indian mysticism. The novels portray the citizens of Imperial India as enigmatic, romantic and powerful. His British characters have many encounters with the mysterious Thugee Cults. The long buildup to the introduction of his Indian Princess Yasmini and the scenes among the outlaws in the Khinjan Caves clearly influenced fantasy writers Robert E. Howard and Leigh Brackett. Other science-fiction and fantasy writers who cited Mundy as an influence included Robert A. Heinlein, E. Hoffmann Price, Fritz Leiber[2], Andre Norton [3], H. Warner Munn, Marion Zimmer Bradley and Daniel Easterman. [4] James Hilton‘s novel Lost Horizon was partly inspired by Mundy’s work. [5]

I can really see the similarity between Mundy’s writing style and Robert E. Howard’s (of Conan fame).  Which leads me to point out that Robert E. Howard was a good friend of H.P. Lovecraft, and I really believe those of you who are Lovecraft fans would adore the work of Mundy.  (If you don’t already that is.)   

[Side note: This post was composed froma mobile device.  So my writing style is going to be a bit foggy.  Sorry about that.]

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16
Aug 10

The “Pocket Veto” Explained

The Set Up:

Once again I shall regale you with an exciting tale from the life of an American High School history teacher because I’m sure that is exactly what you wanted me to do for you today.  Right?  Right!

In 1864 the Congress sent the Wade-Davis Bill to President Lincoln.  This bill proposed that Congress, not Lincoln, would be responsiblefor overseeing the set of policies known as Reconstruction.  Unlike Lincoln, many Republicans in the Congress felt that the Southern states who had broken away from the United States needed to be punished by making it difficult for them to “re-join the Union”.  Lincoln had issues with this notion…

Lincoln’s objections was that the idea that the Southern states needed to “re-join” the Union permeated the whole bill. The philosophy of the war from Lincoln’s point of view was that the Southern states were not constitutionally allowed to secede in the first place and therefore were still part of the Union, even though their return to a full participation in the Union would require the fulfillment of some conditions. But he didn’t think the war was being waged against “treasonous” States as such (since the refusal of the Union to recognize their right to secede made the ordinances of secession null) but merely to “compel the obedience of rebellious individuals”. The problem was that the language of the bill was at times undermining the Northern rationale for the war by plainly asserting for instance that the Southern states were not part of the Union anymore. [Source]

If Lincoln would have vetoed the bill it might have made him look like he was not respecting the seperation of powers outlined in the Constitution, but Lincoln was able to use a pocket veto to kill it without looking like a tyrant.

Goal of Today’s Post:

To have you (the reader) be able to demonstrate how “pocket veto” works.

Pocket Veto Explained:

I’m just going to rip off the Wikipedia here, because they explain this so well…

If the President approves of the legislation, he signs it (sign into law). If he does not approve, he must return the bill, unsigned, within ten days, excluding Sundays, to the house of the United States Congress in which it originated, while the Congress is in session. The President is constitutionally required to state his objections to the legislation in writing, and the Congress is constitutionally required to consider them, and to reconsider the legislation. This action, in effect, is a veto.

If the Congress overrides the veto by a two-thirds majority in each house, it becomes law without the President’s signature. Otherwise, the bill fails to become law unless it is presented to the President again and he chooses to sign it.

A bill can also become law without the President’s signature if, after it is presented to him, he simply fails to sign it within the ten days noted. If there are fewer than ten days left in the session before Congress adjourns, and if Congress does so adjourn before the ten days have expired in which the President might sign the bill, then the bill fails to become law. This procedure, when used as a formal device, is called a pocket veto.

The Pocket Veto Explained Further:

The fact is that the Congress has to be in session (present) in order to consider the objections to the bill that the President has put into writing for them.  Adjournment means that Congress is out of session; it is closed to business.  Ergo, if Congress is adjourned it obviously can’t consider the objections the President had to the bill.

If something is not done by the close of business the Congress has to start over from square one when they re-open with a new session.

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14
Aug 10

Thaddeus Stevens, 1792-1868


While preparing to teach a US History class on reconstruction I came across the name Thaddeus Stevens.  That name rung a bell. I knew I had learned about this man at some point, and I knew he was important. I just could not remember what made him important.  So I looked him up.

It turns out that not only was Thaddeus Stevens really important, he was also really interesting!  From the Wikipeida article on Stevens…

Thaddeus Stevens (April 4, 1792 – August 11, 1868), of Pennsylvania, was a Republican leader and one of the most powerful members of the United States House of Representatives. As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Stevens, a witty, sarcastic speaker and flamboyant party leader, dominated the House from 1861 until his death and wrote much of the financial legislation that paid for the American Civil War. Stevens and Senator Charles Sumner were the prime leaders of the Radical Republicans during the American Civil War and Reconstruction. A biographer characterizes him as, “The Great Commoner, savior of free public education in Pennsylvania, national Republican leader in the struggles against slavery in the United States and intrepid mainstay of the attempt to secure racial justice for the freedmen during Reconstruction, the only member of the House of Representatives ever to have been known, as the ‘dictator’ of Congress.”

Other information I have gathered about this guy makes me think that he is one of those extremely interesting personalities who is only well known with in the niche of American history buffs and those who study the American Civil war in particular.

In an effort to bring this fascinating figure to your attention, here are a few little things that I think are interesting:

  • The discription of Stevens in the text book my students sometimes use says “[Stevens] had a commanding physical presence- piercing eyes, a thing-liped mouth, and a tall thin body.  In spite of a deformed foor, he was an expert horseman and swimmer.  He was also famous for his quick wit and sarcasm.”
  • Stevens wanted to prevent former slave owners from being able to have political power by making / supporting legislation that would prevent wealthy plantation owners from taking the oath needed to regain the right to vote after the end of the American Civil War.
  • Stevens was a uber-abolitionist, who saw anyone who would permit slavery to continue as an institution as “a traitor to liberty.” In addition to this, I found out that Stevens had his last will and testament state he was to be buried in an integrated cemetary to show “the principles which I advocated throughout a long life: equality of man before his Creator.”

What a guy, eh?

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14
Aug 10

The Best of Pop-Culture: Gorden Gekko

The other day someone made a reference to Gorden Gekko.  It turns out that most the people in the room did not know who Gorden Gekko was.  Truth be told I knew I had heard the name, but could not remember where, so I looked him up on Wikipedia.  Here are a few of the highlights from that article…

Gordon Gekko is a fictional character and the main character and antagonist of the 1987 film Wall Street and the 2010 film Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps[1], both by director Oliver Stone. Gekko was portrayed by actor Michael Douglas, in a performance that won him an Oscar for Best Actor for the first movie…

In 2003, the AFI named him number 24 of the top 50 movie villains of all time.[4]

In 2008, Gordon Gekko was named the fourth richest fictional character by Forbes who attributed him with 8.5 billion dollars.

Gekko has become a symbol in popular culture for unrestrained greed (with the signature line, “Greed, for lack of a better word, is good”), often in fields outside corporate finance.

For those of you who are interested in seeing Mr. Gekko in action, here is a great YouTube clip for you.

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13
Aug 10

Summer series: Interesting People, Pt. 3: Tim Coyne

For the third post in my series on interesting people (inspired by Bob Goyetche) I’ve got … people I want to call your attention to. 

~Tim Coyne~

True story:

I was first introduced to Tim when my friend DDR Matt told me I should check out a series of podcasts he was doing called “unkempt” where Tim talked about his life totally unfiltered.  In the first show I listened to I heard Tim talking about how he was sleeping on a pilates mat because he “does not deserve a bed”.  In that episode Tim outlined a litany of horrible things that had happened to him.  when I heard this stuff I thought it was a joke…  Like there is no way that this is really happening… because it is just to fucking tragic!  I thought that if this were happening to someone for real there is NO WAY he would talk about it like this for all the world to hear.  So as I listened I laughed and laughed, and laughed till my guts hurt so much I had to turn the podcast off and recover for bit. 

Fast Forward a bit.  I see DDR Matt and I tell him, “I listened to that Tim Coyne dude.  I laughed till I hurt.” 

DDR Matt says, “What?  You laughed?  Seriously?  You know that he is like… for real.” 

I think DDR Matt is totally fucking with me so I say, “Whatever dude.  There is no way that he is for real. 

And DDR Matt gets all serious on me and says, ”Uhm… I guess I can see why you would think that, but I’ve been talking to [Tim], and I can tell you for sure that he is 100% for real.” 

“Seriously?”

“Seriously.”

Then I felt bad for laughing. 

The Scoop:

To this day believe Tim Coyne is with out a doubt one of the best personalties working in new media because he’s one of those rare people who can be totally honest about himself, and do it in public, even when it doing so is completely self deprecating.  In effect Tim shares personal stories, sometimes these storys make me laugh and sometimes they make want to cry (for real), but regardless of how they make me feel I know that the stories are genuine…

When Tim spoke at Podcaster Across Border in 2009 I told him that when my own life took bad turns I would que up some of his unkempt and listen to it, because they made me feel like I was not alone. 

In addition to this Tim is one of the most talented storytellers, interviewers, public speakers, and stand up comedians I have ever had the pleasure to listen to. 

 As of this writing I’ve been lucky enough to say that I’ve meet, and hung out with, Tim on a number of different occasions.  I say that because I don’t only find him interesting, I consider him a friend. 

 If you read this and you don’t take the time to check out Tim’s stuff you’re really missing out on something grand.  Just saying. 

Links:

1. Tim’s podcast: The Hollywood Podcast.
2. Tim’s IMDB page.
4. Tim Coyne on Twitter.  (Tag this with #ff #followfriday)
4. Wikipedia article on Tim’s work
5. Tim’s LinkedIn Profile.
6. Tim’s got some Google juice.

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13
Aug 10

Advertising in Ebooks

High McGuire has a really interesting post about advertising in ebooks.  He has some interesting thoughts.

As with online book reviews that link to an online retailer (with affiliate fees), there is no reason an ebook about, say, rugby shouldn’t link to somewhere where I can buy tickets for the World Cup. If it’s a proper ebook – I mean, not just a book I can read on a digital device, but a proper ebook that is cloud-based and dynamically updated – then the link/interaction will point to 2011 tickets today, and in 4 years it will point to 2015 World Cup tickets. If I am reading about knitting I may well want to buy needles, and there’s no reason an ebook that makes me want to buy knitting needles shouldn’t help me do that (and make some money for the publisher, as well as the needle-maker, in the mean time).

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13
Aug 10

I Like Maps

The Set Up:

For as long as I can remember I have loved maps. I can clearly remember getting an atlas of the world as a Christmas gift one year and being totally awestruck. I can remember taking long car trips with my parents (prior to their divorce) and flipping the pages of the Rand McNally.

Why do I find maps so engaging? Why do I adore them so much? Don’t really know, to tell you the truth… and I stopped asking why a long time ago.

One of the things the internet has shown me is that I’m not the only non-cartographer map enthusiast in the world. I am, in fact, one person in a somewhat large (but widely dispersed) subculture.

And it is as a member of this map-head subculture that I bring you…

Four Links for Map-Heads:

1. A very good list of links to interesting maps via Kottle.org. Jason Kottle is one of those early bloggers who continues to put out really interesting stuff via his “liberal arts 2.0″ blog. This list of maps is one of the many great things you will find there on a daily basis. If you enjoy this list you should consider becoming a regular reader of Kottle.org.

One of the mpas ffrom the list at Kottke.org's "Ahoy maps" post.

2. The Strange Maps site of Frank Jacobs is rather awesome. From the about page of that site…

Frank Jacobs loves maps, but finds most atlases too predictable. He collects and comments on all kinds of intriguing maps—real, fictional, and what-if ones—and has been writing the Strange Maps blog since 2006, first on WordPress and now for Big Think. His map “US States Renamed For Countries With Similar GDPs” has been viewed more than 587,000 times.

Via: Strange Maps

3. The KICKMap is something that I heard about via one of the many RSS fees I read.  It is something that is truly wonderful.

From the about the KICKMap page…

The Kick Map is designed to get more people to ride New York City’s subway system. Created with clarity and ease of use, it allows riders to navigate this vast system easily and without uncertainty. The subway map is the key to understanding this most complex subway in the world, which has 26 separate lines and 468 stations. A well-designed map not only welcomes and empowers novices to use the subway but also encourages additional use for regular “home-to-work-only” commuters to use the subway for recreational destinations where they might otherwise take a car. For this reason the design of the subway map can directly influence ridership numbers and can indirectly have an effect on New York’s traffic congestion and pollution. In short, a better-designed subway map will make our subway system more open and accessible.

This can be downloaded as an iPhone app.  There is a “lite” free version and a “full” paid version, and even though I don’t live anywhere near New York City, I bought it.  Why?  Because I’m a map-head.  I’m totally blown away by how great this map is, and I wish that there was a KICKMap for Chicago.

KICKMap

If you find the idea of effectively mapping complex cities (or maps in general) even remotely interesting you should at the very least look at the map comparison section of the KICKMap site.

4. The last thing I want to link to is a book from O’Reilly Media called Beautiful Visualization.

Book cover of Beautiful Visualization

From the discription of this book…

With contributions from more than two dozen experts, this book demonstrates why visualizations are beautiful not only for their aesthetic design, but also for elegant layers of detail that efficiently generate insight and new understanding. Think of the familiar map of the New York City subway system, or a diagram of the human brain. These older examples have been surpassed artists, designers, commentators, scientists, analysts, statisticians, and others who show how visualizations using today’s digital capabilities can help us make sense of the world.

Maps take many forms but are essentially visualizations of information.  This is a really interesting book if you are a map-head.

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12
Aug 10

The Terminal Illness of Fashion: A Review of the Blog “Attempted Style” by Neil Gorman

The evolution of style since the dawn of humankind consists of a long, tortuous transition from garb of utility — the skins and furs that girded our ancestors against an unforgiving Ice Age and the often ferocious wildlife that inhabited the era — to dress meant primarily as decoration.  The latter turn along the road of fashion can be traced with great accuracy back to the ancient Egyptians, who in 3000 B.C. and before adorned their bodies with sumptuous jewelry and painted their faces in a vast array of gaudy colors now reserved for stage plays and transvestites, but recent archaeological finds suggest these stylistic underpinnings, notably facial paint and primitive jewelry, may date back to the aforementioned era of utilitarianism perhaps even as far as the Neanderthal.  If this assumption is indeed correct, the introductory sentence of my review may prove worthless, and worse, almost totally inaccurate.  To begin such a piece with a potentially false assertion that narcissism and superfluity were somehow acquired during the ravages of our “advancement” as a species would be perilous when, in fact, all evidence suggests these traits to be not only well-established but innate.

It does one no good to have a beef with evolution, though.  Evolution is sloppy and inconsistent, a hyperactive child with a menagerie of toxic finger paints at his command who manages after billions of years and almost by utter chance to concoct a masterpiece.  If humans truly are programmed to covet oddities like neckties, bowler hats, hoop earrings, cuff links, necklaces, body piercings, styling mousse, or any other ilk of useless adornment, I defy the very foundation upon which this predilection was formed.  Fie on evolution, and fie on Charles Darwin for having explained it so sufficiently (for his time).  How could Nature, in her seemingly infinite wisdom, have made such a grave error in estimation?  How could she have instilled in us such a fatal flaw?  We were doomed all those millions of years ago when we broke from the tree, and we are doomed today as our psychological corruptions, once apparent, have now grown insurmountable.

Which brings me to Neil Gorman and his fashion blog entitled Attempted Style.  The dubbing itself is mincingly affable, dishonest in the way so many hip technoratis and (in a perfect world) unemployable culture connoisseurs are when they wield their powerful and disarming affinity for self-deprecation to mask the magmatic pit of self importance and arrogance that seethes underneath.  This sort of conceit may have played well to blog readers in 1999 when the format was still hobbling through its nascence, but in 2010, only a dementia patient could reasonably fall for what amounts to such an obvious lie.  And that is to say nothing of the content.

I’ve never been a great fan of fashion, preferring instead to invest my quickly waning time on this earth in more useful endeavors such as hypochondria and hermetic solitude, but I am famously unwilling to condemn others for harboring divergent philosophies or interests.  Everyone is entitled to his/her own stupid opinion unless they’re avid proponents of William Faulkner and the horrid dry rot some have the gumption to call writing.

But despite my cultural liberality, a quick leaf through Mr. Gorman’s inane scribblings leaves me scrambling desperately to find my trusty bottle of Metoclopramide, and I’m quite sure, had I taken the time to read all the archival material contained in his blog, the refluxing stomach acid would have burned straight through my esophagus and necessitated a grisly trip to the intensive care unit at the nearest hospital.  It’s not that Mr. Gorman is especially ineloquent nor is it his strange propensity for wearing ladies’ hats that sets my mood toward such profound foulness but the vapidity of his musings.

Take, for instance, a post entitled “Bold Red Tie vs. Subdued Gray Tie” in which he espouses the increased attention he received in his workplace after switching out a drab gray rag of a necktie for a drab red rag of a necktie.  He sets this up as an experiment with one data point, which he at least acknowledges is insufficient, and proceeds to mentally collect the compliments he receives for his red tie.  Two pictures are included in the article, one that shows Mr. Gorman with his hair down, a serious visage, and looking rather dapper in his red tie while the second shows Mr. Gorman in a ponytail with the famished leer of a cannibal and a tie unfit for Crispin Glover’s character in Bartleby.  The obvious lack of controls in his study should be enough to put him out of business; the callous disregard to compensate for observer bias (he was likely in a better mood with the red tie on) and his inability to control for physical differences (hair down vs. the ponytail) effectively nullifies any of Mr. Gorman’s conclusions about his so-called experiment and throws into doubt the reactions of his co-workers.

Further posts regarding particular outfits contain similarly inadequate musings about comfortable styles for summer weddings and an almost fanatical, possibly erotic, devotion to the stylistic sensibilities of Robert Sterling, a character from his favorite television show Mad Men, about which he, frankly, won’t shut up.

Perhaps the most galling aspect of Attempted Style is its author’s implicit anti-corporatism, most blatantly showcased in “Research Shows That Avoiding Logos = Success“, a post that relies exclusively upon two articles originally run in The New York Times from whom we’ve all come to expect unfettered leftist garbage parading around as real analysis.  Apparently, their propagandistic bent extends into the Fashion section as well because what follows from our well-groomed author is a woeful parroting of the Times‘ pro-regulation, anti-capitalist ethos and an article that suggests true glitterati, the real high rollers, prefer subtler expressions of their stylistic superiority as opposed to overt displays of logos and other branded graphics.  I can only assume Mr. Gorman lives in a Calcutta slum and has never encountered an employed person over the age of twelve.  Otherwise, he would have little doubt in the whorish pretenses of today’s yuppie culture, iPhones in hand, expensive TAG Heuer watches glistening obscenely, Armani suits freshly pressed the night before by a beautiful Vietnamese girl who couldn’t rightly be considered a prostitute only because she isn’t paid for services rendered.  Gorman’s shocking willingness to ignore the very real depravity inherent in the young and wealthy by substituting a legless fantasy of the existence of taste and nuance in the modern brain borders on insulting, and his mewling yet clear desire for a societal ascendance into the realm of the meta-human is at once worrisome and sad.

Only on the wide and largely untamed expanses of the web could a fashion writer such as Neil Gorman ply his haughty gibberish.  Only in the early years of the 21st century could he afford to traffic such naiveté and vacuum of thought, and as we barrel forward into what is sure to be a bitter war between telecommunications companies and the FCC over Net Neutrality, I am left to wonder whether the dissolution of a free and open internet would be such a horrible thing if it resulted in our being spared such awful, un-evolved tripe as Attempted Style.

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12
Aug 10

The Malcolm Effect

A Personal Story:

I work in a school where 100% of my students have what could be called, to use a highly politically correct term, ”behavior issues”.  As a result the administrators of this school are often creating plans to manage the behaviors of the students in such a way as to turn them away from negative social behaviors, and turn them towards pro-social behaviors.  These plans tend to be, in my opinion, be overly verbose and lacking in elegance.

When I’m lucky, which is not as often as I would like, they tell me about these plans before putting them into effect.

My response when these plans are presented to me is to…

1. Raise my hand, possibly move it around to assure that I have gotten the attention of the presenter.
2. Watch the presenter roll his/her eyes when they see my hand up, and graciously await for them to acknowledge that I should state the reason for my hand being raised.
3. When permission has been granted for me to speak I stand and say “WHAT ABOUT THE MALCOM EFFECT!?!” If I’m feeling punchy I’ll add, ”Don’t you see you have been spending so much time thinking about what you could do, that you never stopped to consider if you should even do it in the first place!”

My co-workers have grown to both hate and adore my typical response to the plans the administrators (sometimes) present to us.

You know about the Malcolm effect, right? Well just in case you don’t, let me explain it to you…

My Explanation:

There are simple systems and complex systems.  Simple systems, because they are simple, are (obviously) easy to predict, manage, and plan around.  One can normally prevent something from going wrong in a simple system, and when something does go wrong it can quickly be diagnosed and resources deployed to fix whatever the problem may be.

However, as a system becomes more complex (as it grows in size, steps, parts, spawns sub-systems, etc.) a few things happen…

1. The more complex a system becomes it also becomes harder for humans to predict how the system will behave. This in turn leads to difficulty in managment of the system.
2. The more complex a system (the more parts, steps, sub-systems, etc.) involved the greater the potential that something will break, or go wrong. i.e. the more parts there are, the greater the potential for one of those parts to malfunction.
3. When something goes wrong (when something breaks or there is some sort of malfunction) in a complex system it is more difficult to diagnose and (chances are) the greater the resources that are necessary to fix whatever has gone wrong.

In short: the more complex a system the more likely it is that something will go wrong, and that said something will go very wrong.

It should be obvious that people can’t plan for everything that can go wrong, but the more complex a sytem becomes the greater potential there is for something to go wrong, and it is more difficult to see (and thus more difficult to create contingency plans) for when a malfunction does (inevitably) occur.

[Side Note: I know this might be beating a dead horse, or preaching to the converted, but I just can't help myself... See the second law of thermo-fucking-dynamics!]

File:Carnot heat engine 2.svg

Ergo: There is a clear benefit to creating simple systems as opposed to complex systems.  Simple systems are easier to predict, maintain, and repair.

Do I think that a simple system should always be used?  No.  There are times when a complex system is necessary.  However, when those situations arise / have arised it is important… no VITAL… that we realize and recognize (rather than ignore) the inherent flaws of complex systems.

Or to put it another way, when working with / within a complex system never assume the system is perfect.  When something goes wrong, as it inevitably will, realize that chances are your system is screwed up someplace.  Then start the difficult task of error detection and correction.  Gather data and use it to improve your system.  Also, remember that the best improvements move a system towards simplicity and away from complexity.

One Web Explanation States:

Pay attention and start the difficult process of diagnosis.

the malcolm effect states that small changes in a complex system can change rapidly and unpredictably.

ex. you are sitting on a shoreline and you see in the distance a storm coming slowly closer. It’s heading right for you. You see lightning flash out across the water and the waves come towards the shore at an increasingly violent rate. At this point the storm has two options. One would be that the storm would race straight towards shore and continue its rampage there which would seem to be the logical choice. Instead however, before the storm reaches land it changes it’s direction and shoots down the shoreline instead. This is the malcolm effect, you cannot predict how the storm will react because it is a large complex system dependent on very small changes that it encounters in the natural environment.

Other Links of Interest:

1. Economic Equilibrium, Chaos and the Malcolm Effect

2. The Malcolm Effect on Flickr.

3. Wikipedia on Dr. Ian Malcolm.

4. Wikipedia article on Chaos Theory.

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10
Aug 10

Thoughts on the Mobile Web, Pt. 4: “If You Can’t Tell I’m Pissed…”

I fucking hate Verizon and Google right now.  Seriously.  Maybe it’s because I’m having a shitty week, maybe it’s because I’ve been reading some of Warren Ellis’s writing, but I don’t think so.

The reason I hate Verizon and Google is that they (and to be fair: many other mega-crops) are attempting to totally screw up net neutrality.  Verizon has always been attempting to kill net neutrality so they can make more money.  That’s their M.O.  But until recently Google has appeared, at least to me, to be committed to defending net neutrality.  I say “until recently” because Google has now teamed up with the evil cunt wasp empire that is Verizon…

(Exhibit A) After much speculation, Verizon and Google on Monday unveiled a proposal for how they believe the issue of net neutrality should be handled. It backed an open Internet for the Web, but would exempt the wireless industry from any regulation at this time. It also provided an exemption for emerging technologies.  [Source: PC Mag]

(Exhibit B) The other big news in today’s announcement was Google’s clear retreat on network neutrality when it comes to wireless networks. As Susan Crawford, professor at Cardozo Law School and an expert on all things Internet, explains: ”That’s a huge hole, given the growing popularity of wireless services and the recent suggestion by the Commission that we may not have a competitive wireless marketplace.” [Source: Salon.com]

I believe that John Gruber (of Daring Fireball fame) put it best when he said…

And who doesn’t agree that wireless is going to be to the coming decade what wired broadband was to the last?

Fucking A dude!  The fight for net neutrality is MORE important in the wireless space than it is in the wired.

Yo Google.  Change your shit up.  Rather than saying “Do no evil,” you should be saying “Do know evil.”

You get what I’m saying you Machiavellian shit birds?

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