just watched part of a 1933 documentary about life on the african plains. there are two more this afternoon starting at 130, although these are specifically about hunting where this one was more ethnographic. all of this is on
tcm. also some interesting stuff tonight including a 1923 film that chaplain directed, a woman in paris, and queen kelly directed by von stroheim and starring gloria swanson. also late night, orson welles version of othello. and cant forget our old friend meet john doe.
Argo aims guns at more than iPod
I think this is very bad news for Apple. As technology develops, there's a certain gravity towards "integration points". The "office suite" absorbs word processing, spreadsheets, etc., etc. The DSL settop becomes a network gateway. The cell phone subsumes the PDA, a camera, an MP3 player, etc. The portable media/game player seems like another integration point. The iPod is pretty cool, but will this MP3 player niche remain a stand-alone product? Only as a commodity would be my bet.
I'm trying to get worked up about this network neutrality stuff. I firmly believe the big telcos will try to screw the small guy if they can. Discriminating against VOIP clients - by introducing jitter, or whatever - seems to be the common example since obviously the telcos don't want you making free VOIP phone calls over their lines. But in that case we'll just encrypt our VOIP streams and run them on non standard ports. This is exactly what BitTorrent users are now doing to fight ISPs starting to throttle BT traffic. And given the robustness of client CPU power, encrypting all our communication streams would be very easy. It would also have all sorts of follow on advantages for the user in terms of security.
But maybe I'm wrong on this? Can the telcos somehow still discriminate against types of services if all traffic is encrypted? Probably I'm missing something, but this just sounds like another arms race that the forces of control will never win. I'd like to have some law protecting us, but I'm skeptical that we really need it.
Unless they outlaw encryption? Seems pretty unlikely. Or what am I missing?
Intel aims for 32 cores by 2010
Multicore/multithread approaches are common among processor startups. Many are taking the approach of having a large array of very lightweight processors. This sometimes goes by the name of stream-processing, as the programming model is to stream data from processor to processor. Intel is taking the less radical approach of using a smaller array of their CISC processors.
Three weeks after being let go by CBS, the former anchor has agreed to launch a program called "
Dan Rather Presents" on HDNet, the high-definition channel owned by billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban.
George W. Bush's
surprisingly good linguistic skills from 10 years ago.
does anyone happen to know of any good places to eat on staten island?
Welcome to the
Savory New York Restaurant Guide. We provide comprehensive restaurant listing information, links to reviews and, for a growing number of restaurants, video profiles. New restaurants are added each week so check back regularly to find out what's new and notable in NYC dining.
Yesterday afternoon around 3:00 I noticed that ABC, NBC, and CBS were all showing golf (women's match play championship, men's senior tournament, and men's tournament.) Weird. That's got to be some kind of first.
farmers market on my block now. i think it will be every sunday. the street is blocked off between broome and delancy. unfortunately i have a fresh direct delivery due any minute. d'oh.
world series pop culture on vh1 now.
Korea Rising ... I'm shopping to replace a dead Panasonic DVD player, and a
Samsung DVD/VHS recorder has risen to the top of the heap. While DVD recorders have gotten dirt cheap, huge feature gaps remain. The Samsung unit works with every DVD format (except DVD Audio). Why is that so frickin' hard, Philips, Sony, Panasonic and Toshiba? I'm hoping this is the last SD-only DVD gizmo I ever have to get.
Telecom industry blogs I read:
GigaOm
telepocalypse
Future Bright For Home Media, Analysts Say
Two separate analyst reports released Thursday paint a rosy future for home media servers and the networks that they will use to pipe content around the home.