Archive for the ‘Entertainment’ Category

How to decide who to vote for

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

I don’t normally touch politics on this blog, but this excerpt from Matt Ruff’s novel Sewer, Gas & Electric—written in 1997, set in 2023—was too good to pass up:

…Lexa asked her computer to run a program called SumpPumpGraphics. “Working,” the computer replied, and on its main monitor drew comic strip images of the seven Democratic presidential candidates, seated as if for a debate of their own. When Lexa fed copies of their stump speeches into an optical scanner, dialogue balloons appeared above the seated figures, sized in proportion to the wordiness of the speeches. The largest balloon belonged to President Hackett, a dark horse opportunist who on separate occasions had claimed to be a native of eighteen different states, including Belgium, which had apparently been admitted to the Union when no one else was looking.

“Ready cull feature,” Lexa said.

“Cull feature ready. Average speech length at start is three thousand, six hundred, and seventeen words.”

“Cull salutations, jokes, and needless historical anecdotes. Ditto quotations and statistics that don’t directly support a platform point. Cull platitudes and non-sequiturs. Cull reiterations of obvious facts. Cull redundancies. Cull misleading statements and outright lies, but flag them for later.”

“Working,” the computer said, and the dialogue balloons shrank drastically. “Culling completed. Average speech length is now two hundred and seven words.”

“Cull and flag impossible promises. Also cull promises that fail a vagueness test.”

“What is my threshold of acceptable vagueness?”

“Let’s not be too stringent. Cull anything that rates below a four on the Thatcher Hem-Haw Scale.”

“Loading THS parameters. Working.” The dialogue balloons became tiny dots. “Culling completed. Average speech length is now twenty-two words.”

Lexa took a laser pen and pointed it at the cartoon figure that represented candidate Harmon Fox. Fox recited the bare bones version of his stump speech: “If elected, I will raise taxes against the rich, cut military spending in favor of social welfare programs, and plant one million trees.”

Lexa shifted the light beam to candidate Nan Sheffield. “If elected,” Sheffield promised, “I will raise taxes against the rich, cut military spending in favor of social welfare programs, and plant two million trees.”

A bidding war. Lexa tapped Preston Hackett next and was surprised to hear the shortest speech thus far: “If elected, I will raise taxes against the rich and cut military spending in favor of social welfare programs.”

“Nothing about trees?” Lexa asked.

“Candidate Hackett’s sole reference to trees,” the computer replied, “was that he had a plan to reforest the Great Plains. That statement did not survive culling.”

Google, why are you so cold?

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

Summary: This post has absolutely nothing to do with VortexDNA, nor with any of the topics I usually discuss. Dan Perry is giving away a Google fridge, and to win it you have to write a blog post outlining what you’d do with it. This is my entry.

I need a cold fridge to warm my beloved’s heart

To many people, a fridge is just a fridge. Some claim a desperate desire for cold martinis. Others yearn for chilly cheese. Mine, however, is a tale that goes far beyond the mundane realities of temperature-controlled foods, back to a time when people communicated by fax and Twitter was just a gleam in e-mail’s eye. It is a love story, a story of grace, a story of bitter loss and, we hope, a story of redemption.

For years, my beloved mate, Michael, had whispered to me the Legend of the Three Boys: not Manny, Moe and Jack, but Ralph, Tom and Kev. Depending on Michael’s mood, his imagination, and his level of inebriation, he might claim that these three boys grew up in the wilds of the Australian outback, on the icy cliffs of Antarctica, in the jungles of Brazil, on the savannahs of Africa. They were invariably orphans, made so by cruel parents who abandoned their babies on a doorstep, loving parents who died an untimely death during an unexpected encounter with a Black Mamba, or indifferent parents, who donated the boys to a church in lieu of a cash tithe.

Regardless.

The three boys endured an upbringing of incredible discipline with the monks high in the Himalayas. They were made to meditate for hours in the lotus position, spines ramrod-straight, necks aching and legs cramping. The Navy SEALs forced them to run for miles after rolling in wet sand, boots and clothes heavy with beach-mud. As they built the pyramids, they were whipped mercilessly for tarrying even a moment in transporting seven-ton blocks of stone from the quarry to the construction site.

And still.

They never faltered for a moment in their studies—their Nobel-prize-winning foster father wouldn’t have it. And so they stayed awake late into the night, eyes bleary and bones screaming for rest, reading literature and physics tomes and economics books. They became experts in history, geography, anthropology, and herbology. They could recite Donne, and Dante, and Darwin.

Yet.

It was their apprenticeship to a brewer that changed their lives forever. And bringing to the equation, as they did, an unflappable determination, an unwavering optimism, an indomitable sense of destiny, it was inevitable that they would take to beer like a stripper to a sugardaddy, like Bill Gates to binary, like a politician to hot air. The Pale Ale they brewed was a nectar of the gods. A whiff of their Wheat Beer would provoke rapture; a sip of it could cure leprosy. And thus Three Boys Brewery was born.

Although.

Nobody could find it. It lived in legends, known only to a select few, rumored of in brothels and speakeasies, handed down patrilinearly. To our generation, it was considered an urban legend, a bedtime story told to small boys to help them dream happy dreams.

And there we enter the story: Michael, filled with longing for the unattainable liquid that flowed with the power and the beauty of the Fountain of Youth; I, with deepest desire to make the grandest gesture possible for my beloved.

I climbed every mountain. I forded every stream. I followed every rainbow. And ultimately, where someone with less ambitious desires might find a pot of gold, I found my own Shangri-La: The Three Boys Brewery.

I purchased a case of finest Pilsner. I wrapped it up and tied it with a bow. And on the holiest day of the year (our anniversary), I presented it to him.

When he opened the box, there was a long moment of silence. He blinked at the shiny bottles uncomprehendingly, until finally a light began to dawn, and he dared to believe it could be true.

Tears welled up in his eyes. “This is a moment I shall never forget,” he vowed. “This is what I love about you. You really listen to me. You really care. You gave me THREE BOYS BEER!

And here, dear friends, here is where our story should have ended, and wouldn’t it have been a happy one if it had? The sad reality, though, is that stories such as ours rarely terminate so tidily; this one is no different.

With the tenderness of a new father Michael gingerly carried the case of beer to the main refrigerator. With the gentle touch of a geisha he began to put the precious bottles in the door.

But emotion overcame him.

Shaking with ecstasy and twitching with nervousness, his hands slipped on the glass neck of the bottle. In agonizing slow motion, it began to fall, a fall that lasted whole minutes.

Glaciers melted.

Expectant mothers went into labor and birthed babies.

We stood there, frozen, our worst nightmares realized of needing to move desperately yet being unable to do so, as the bottle tumbled inevitably towards the tile floor.

It smashed, of course, irretrievable. Michael let out a wail of agony more piercing than Hillary Clinton at an Iowa caucus.

Since that day, he sits in the kitchen, arms wrapped around his knees, rocking back and forth and gently singing to himself. While I, I scour the mountains and the streams and the rainbows, and reflect on our tragedy, and think to myself what I should have anticipated from the beginning:

If only we had a Google fridge, none of this would have happened.

If you allow us to win the Google fridge, you will not be blithely tossing a stranger a bit of schwag. You will be rekindling in someone the will to live. This is a grave responsibility you have been given, and I urge you not to make light of it.

Please do not turn your backs on us. We need you, now more than ever. It is only through your beneficence that we will be able to experience the glory that is Three Boys Beer.

We extend our gratitude in anticipation; we await word, barely daring to hope against hope, of our success in this matter; we go now, and leave you to your deliberations.

May the spirits of Ralph, Tom and Kev guide you in your task.

Search Laziness Disorder growing to epidemic levels

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

Rob Garner has a disease. I diagnosed him after reading his Search Insider piece from last January, If Search Engines Could Talk: Confessions Of a ChaCha Clickstream. In it, he describes a bass-searching encounter with one of the ChaCha Live Guides:

ChaChaGuide: Welcome to ChaCha!
ChaChaGuide: Hi.
RG: Hi.

ChaChaGuide: What can I search for you today?
RG: I need to search for ‘bass.’

ChaChaGuide: Bass fish?
…RG: No.

ChaChaGuide: Shoes?
RG: No.

…ChaChaGuide: Please be more specific as to what you’re looking for on this topic.
…RG: Okay. Let me refine a little. A musical instrument–a Fender bass.

In the end, Rob achieved the holy grail of used Fender Jazz bass searching, which is evidently one from 1960. So exciting!

Some people may have trouble figuring out what term to query, but I presume Rob is a highly capable searcher. No, his experience instead revealed the source of the problem: he appears to have succumbed to that pervasive and insidious beast, Search Laziness Disorder. I know, because I’m afflicted as well.

SLD is characterized by a disconnect between our expectations from search engines and the amount of effort we’re willing to put in to achieve those results. The outcome is that we begin to devalue the results themselves, convincing ourselves that we didn’t want the information anyway.

SLD’s primary symptoms include one-word search queries, the failure to find relevant results, and the throwing-up of hands in disgust, before stomping away to watch whatever reruns network television has dragged out of the box while they staunchly sit on their extra 4 cents a DVD or whatever it is.

Sufferers of SLD also spend inordinate amounts of time yakking, gossiping, wailing, moaning, and complaining about why search engines suck, and urging, encouraging, threatening and entreating search engines to disambiguate queries and get with the semantic program, already.

“Why do I have to go to ChaCha at all?” a Sluddite—as they’re known—might bemoan. “Why can’t Google simply read my mind?”

The outbreak of SLD, which didn’t exist at all prior to Archie, is growing to epidemic proportions, and doesn’t seem to show any signs of slowing. It is highly contagious, and exacerbated by successful one-word queries. “They knew who I was talking about when I typed ‘Britney’,” complained one Sluddite. “How come they didn’t know who I was talking about when I wrote ‘Jack’?”

Treatment for SLD consists of installing the mywebDNA Firefox plug-in immediately, or turning off your computer.

Losing the RSS-feeds battle

Friday, December 7th, 2007

I confess to an increasing amount of guilt over the increasing amount of information clogging my Bloglines account. At present, I’ve got 2,373 unread posts sitting in there, with another 82 marked as new—a pretty optimistic thing to do, if you think about it, since I’m never going to get through the unread stuff to make it back to the stuff I marked.

This past year, I managed to dramatically improve my email read-and-respond habits, keeping my inbox clutter to a minimum (less than 100 new). Yet in order to give the 2,373 Bloglines posts even a cursory glance would take hours, hours I don’t seem to be willing to dedicate.

The situation is rapidly getting worse. The unread number is growing faster than the posts are being consumed. Soon it will be the size of a small planet, and then it will blot out the sun.

The only thing protecting the Earth right now is my waning defense against the many other blogs out there that I should be subscribing to, but am not.

I agonize over existential questions. Is it better to devote my pure attention to a chosen few than to scatter my online moments amongst so many blogwinds? If a blogger posts and nobody reads it, does it still use bandwidth?

The price I pay for access to infinite information is a greed to devour it all. I must be informed. I cannot let a development pass by unnoticed. I need to become ever more knowledgeable until I know one million things.

Dr. Evil

Can you save me before it’s too late?

No bubble in the tech market

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

Thanks, Ben!

If you like piña coladas

Thursday, September 20th, 2007

La dada DA dada DA da…

Rupert Holmes’ ‘Piña Colada Song’ was prophetic, if you go by a story in The Daily Telegraph, via Marc Andreessen:

A married couple who didn’t realise they were chatting each other up on the Internet are divorcing.

Sana Klaric and husband Adnan, who used the names “Sweetie” and “Prince of Joy” in an online chatroom, spent hours telling each other about their marriage troubles…

The truth emerged when the two turned up for a date. Now the pair, from Zenica in central Bosnia, are divorcing after accusing each other of being unfaithful.

“I was suddenly in love. It was amazing. We seemed to be stuck in the same kind of miserable marriage. How right that turned out to be,” Sana, 27, said.

Adnan, 32, said: “I still find it hard to believe that Sweetie, who wrote such wonderful things, is actually the same woman I married and who has not said a nice word to me for years”.

For those of you who missed the lyrics of the original song:

I was tired of my lady
We’d been together too long
Like a worn-out recording
Of a favorite song
So while she lay there sleeping
I read the paper in bed
And in the personal columns
There was this letter I read

“If you like Pina Coladas
And getting caught in the rain
If you’re not into yoga
If you have half a brain
If you’d like making love at midnight
In the dunes on the Cape
Then I’m the love that you’ve looked for
Write to me and escape.”

I didn’t think about my lady
I know that sounds kind of mean
But me and my old lady
Have fallen into the same old dull routine
So I wrote to the paper
Took out a personal ad
And though I’m nobody’s poet
I thought it wasn’t half bad

“Yes I like Pina Coladas
And getting caught in the rain
I’m not much into health food
I am into champagne
I’ve got to meet you by tomorrow noon
And cut through all this red-tape
At a bar called O’Malley’s
Where we’ll plan our escape.”

So I waited with high hopes
And she walked in the place
I knew her smile in an instant
I knew the curve of her face
It was my own lovely lady
And she said, “Oh it’s you.”
Then we laughed for a moment
And I said, “I never knew.”

That you like Pina Coladas
Getting caught in the rain
And the feel of the ocean
And the taste of champagne
If you’d like making love at midnight
In the dunes of the Cape
You’re the lady I’ve looked for
Come with me and escape