August 11, 2010

Canon 7D vs. BarbieCam



I had to order my B-cam before posting this, of course.

August 10, 2010

Strippers Turn Tables on Church

"The owner of an Ohio strip club and some of his dancers have [begun] protesting at a church that has done the same to them for four years.

"Women in bikinis sat in camp chairs Sunday outside the New Beginnings Ministries church . . . ."

(One sign says, Admitted!!!!! Adulterer Pastor Bill Dunfee and his BLIND followers!!!!)

More at newstimes.com.

August 9, 2010

Wikileaks Info Reveals Afghan Meltdown

NYU political science grad student Drew Conway has used open source tools to chart the incidents reported; the trend doesn't look good.

More charts and other details at Wired, including the one from which I made the animated gif at left.





UPDATE to add the following, excellent animation based on the same material:



August 6, 2010

Net Neutrality on the Ropes



You can sign a petition in support of net neutrality here. Note, I concur with Rep. Alan Grayson's take that neutrality should be protected by legislation, not just by FCC regulation, which can easily be revised under another administration.

UPDATE: Google and Verizon aren't waiting around for us to get our act together. Reportedly, they've now reached an agreement that would allow the partial destruction of net neutrality; see WaPo.

August 4, 2010

Rare Color, Depression-Era Photos

Click on the image for a larger version. More here.


August 2, 2010

Chris Hedges

is a Pullitzer-winning journalist who resigned from The NYT when he was told he could not keep his job there while publicly opposing the Iraq war (more at Wikipedia).

The video below is long but well worth the time. Don't stop watching after Hedges stops speaking the first time; I found the other speakers worthwhile, plus Hedges delivers additional brilliant stuff during subsequent Q&A.

A couple of Hedges' many insights:

[W]e forgot that the question is NOT, how do we get good people into power. The question is, how do we limit the damage the powerful can do to us?

Most people attracted to power are at best mediocre, and . . . often [are] venal. The true correctives of American democracy never achieved formal political power [e.g., those who fought slavery, the suffragettes, the labor movement, the civil rights movement -- none of these ever attained formal political power]. By 1968 Martin Luther King was the most important President this country [n]ever had . . . .

July 31, 2010

71-Year-Old in Wheelchair Robs Bank

Peter Barry Lawrence . . . . made his getaway in his wheelchair, with $2,000 in cash on his lap. He was headed back to his rented room at the nearby San Diego Downtown Lodge . . . police caught up with him five minutes later.

. . . . But that was all part of the plan.

The way Lawrence tells it, Monday’s robbery of a Chase Bank was just a desperate ploy to get back behind bars, where he believes he will receive better medical care than he has been able to obtain on his own.
I suppose some will respond that we need to stop coddling prisoners.

More at The San Diego Union-Tribune (if you liked this post, you might also enjoy this one.)