whiskey tango foxtrot

August 18th, 2008

i was in the reserves during the first iraq war, but i did not have to go there. i was in college at the time, and my group was not called up. i was fairly certain that we would have if iran had joined the fighting. but it was all over very quickly. now i’m fascinated with some of the reporting and writing coming out about the second iraq war, more critical and rich perhaps because this one is protracted and unpopular.

ashley gilbertson, an embedded reporter in iraq, is on a book tour with his newly published account of the war. he gave a talk at the santa barbara university of california campus, which is on youtube:

the war is so far away from me, it’s hard for me to stay connected to it. watching accounts like this occasionally, and generation kill which i’m following, is helping me stay in touch with it. maybe watching these accounts now is also a way for me to reconnect with that earlier experience in my life wondering if i would go to iraq, the fear i had and also the sense of duty that i had: the mixed emotions. it’s very hard for me to wrap my head around it even now.

imperial fleet week

August 16th, 2008

san francisco hosted the imperial fleet this week:

i feel like we’re going to get more and more video ‘photoshopping’ in the future. here’s a recent paper from the university of washington and a video demonstrating what is possible with masking and replacement in video. fun stuff:

so when will we be able to insert ourselves into our favorite movies?

my heart goes out

August 13th, 2008

so my uncle went in for a stent or some such circulation upgrade a month ago and came out with a double bypass and nearly a week missing from his life. they even had to leave his chest open for a few days — who knew they did such things? — and so they put him in a coma for awhile. he’s doing well now but it’s going to be a long road of rehab.

then this last weekend his wife of fifty years, my aunt, had a heart attack and they also decided she needed a double bypass. i hear that went well.

but now both of them are recovering from open heart surgery at the same time!

please include them in your prayers or well wishes or tonglen practice. they could use the good thoughts right now.

in honor of katherine dunham

August 10th, 2008

this news program was quite inspiring. it is in honor of katherine dunham, a matriarch of dance and a student of anthropology. it is twenty six minutes long.

she passed away in 2006, at age 96. here is the current introduction to her wikipedia article:

Katherine Mary Dunham (June 22, 1909 – May 21, 2006) was an American dancer, choreographer, songwriter, author, educator and activist who was trained as an anthropologist. Dunham had one of the most successful dance careers in American and European theater of the 20th century and has been called the Matriarch and Queen Mother of Black Dance. During her heyday in the 1940s, 50s and 60s, she was renowned throughout Europe and Latin America as La Grande Katherine, and the Washington Post called her “Dance’s Katherine the Great.” For more than 30 years she maintained the Katherine Dunham Dance Company, the only permanent, self-subsidized American black dance troupe at that time, and over her long career she choreographed more than 90 individual dances. Dunham was an innovator in African-American modern dance as well as a leader in the field of Dance Anthropology, or Ethno choreology (see also Dance Studies). In 1992, at the age of 82, Katherine Dunham went on a highly publicized 47-day hunger strike to protest what she condemned as the discriminatory U.S. foreign policy against Haitian boat-people. She died in her sleep in New York City on 21 May 2006.

ghosts in the machine

August 8th, 2008

in the last few years, there are many examples of a dead person’s myspace page or blog becoming a memorial for them after an unexpected death. i’ve also seen examples where a criminal blogged his descent into madness just before a murder, or a murder victim blogged about the person they knew who had just entered into their apartment: right before being murdered.

…incredibly creepy.

today i learned that the microbiologist who recently committed suicide bruce ivins — who is accused of the anthrax attacks in 2001 — had a wikipedia account and had edited a number of pages in 2006. he mostly edited about the kappa kappa gamma sorority, with which yahoo news reports he had an ongoing obsession, along with an obsession for fellow microbiologist nancy haigwood.

ready for some creepiness? here he adds dr. haigwood to the list of notable kappa alumnae. he argues for her inclusion: e.g. [1] [2]. he was involved in an edit war over publishing that “Ai Korai Athenes” (maidens of athena) is the official, secret hail or call of the sorority, as well as other secrets. he repeatedly tried to have notorious Angela Atwood, member of the Symbionese Liberation Army that kidnapped Patty Hearst, included on the page as an alumna.

read this short page from december 2006 where he tries to convince another wikipedia editor that nancy haigwood is a notable kappa alumni and should be included in the article about the sorority.

The editor responds to him with, “Furthermore, I can’t understand the obsession. Why do you feel the need to add all this? Why Kappa?”

Read the rest of this entry »

this is in response to mccain’s ad using paris which characterized obama as more of a celebrity than a leader. i can’t believe i’m including paris hilton in my blog, but damn she’s funny in this rebut:

“see you at the debates, bitches.” <snort>

via funnyordie

future collaboration

August 5th, 2008

every so often people imagine the technology future. i love the concept videos that are sometimes produced. my first experience of that was the knowledge navigator video from twenty years ago. this concept video by adaptive path is surprisingly similar, though much more achievable finally:


Aurora (Part 1) from Adaptive Path

notice the highlighting as objects are dragged across frames. that gave me a moment of nostalgia. this is the same feedback we developed at apple when expanding the drag and drop interface in the early 90’s. i’m on the patent for that but it’s just about to expire i think. yikes, have i really been doing this that long?

haircut today

August 5th, 2008

haven’t lost all my hair yet, but what i have is holding up ok.

haircut_aug2008

bike thief

August 4th, 2008

the neistat brothers posted their social experiment called Bike Thief, where they steal bikes in broad daylight.

i’m not sure if this is as much a statement about new york or about cultural trends generally — perhaps new york is just on the extreme end of anonymity — but it is poignant.

question, do you think people are ignoring the thief because 1) they are afraid, 2) would prefer to ignore the situation, 3) figured from his body language that he was not really a thief, or 4) something else?

is ignoring a social ill in and of itself? and what of xenia? does ignoring the impact of our consumption, economic inequity, or other social ills bear some connection to ignoring a bicycle thief?

in new york you could argue that you just cannot intervene all the time in other people’s business. it’s not only dangerous but just impractical. maybe i’m cutting nyc culture too much slack. impracticality is a reason not to say hi to everyone on the street — you’ll walk by one million people each day — but when you see someone hack sawing a bike chain? come on.

i did notice here someone apparently tagging a building, and i stopped to take his picture as evidence, and he immediately complained that he was actually spraying solvent and removing graffiti. i believed him. though in telling that story i don’t want that to imply that i’m for strong property rights and against graffiti. i do think it is quite fair to discuss property rights, public wall space, and what’s best for the common good. we all live here after all, and some of us are not born or inspired into privilege and land ownership. should only the well-off decide the aesthetic of our communities?

via laughingsquid

talking about race

July 31st, 2008

rapper jay smooth offers this interesting tutorial on how to discuss racist comments with those who say them. but he takes an interesting view i wasn’t expecting, that the reason to discuss action instead of identity is to hold someone to task - to make sure your polemic will succeed. i’m used to discussing action instead of identity as a form of non-violent communication, however, to leave space for the other person.

or watch in high def. from laughing squid

i like the way jay smooth edits his videos, lots of cuts creating a kind of frenetic speed and pace. i wonder if that’s one of the new youtube styles of making head shot videos more interesting — a kind of max headroom inspired frenetic.