Saturday, December 10, 2005 

Harold Pinter's speech on accepting the 2005 Nobel Prize for Literature.

I put to you that the United States is without doubt the greatest show on the road. Brutal, indifferent, scornful and ruthless it may be but it is also very clever. As a salesman it is out on its own and its most saleable commodity is self love. It's a winner. Listen to all American presidents on television say the words, 'the American people', as in the sentence, 'I say to the American people it is time to pray and to defend the rights of the American people and I ask the American people to trust their president in the action he is about to take on behalf of the American people.'

It's a scintillating stratagem. Language is actually employed to keep thought at bay. The words 'the American people' provide a truly voluptuous cushion of reassurance. You don't need to think. Just lie back on the cushion. The cushion may be suffocating your intelligence and your critical faculties but it's very comfortable. This does not apply of course to the 40 million people living below the poverty line and the 2 million men and women imprisoned in the vast gulag of prisons, which extends across the US.

posted on Saturday, December 10, 2005 11:52:20 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Via del.icio.us/popular, it's dozens of Bunny Suicides! Very twisted.

Update: Apparently, these are pirated scans from The Book of Bunny Suicides.

posted on Saturday, December 10, 2005 8:30:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, December 08, 2005 

My friend Raven knows far too much about prostates. She sent me this the other day.

Don't forget that conducting regular testicular self-exams (or getting someone else to do it for you :) is a very important part of keeping healthy. If detected early, testicular cancer is very curable:

http://tcrc.acor.org/tcexam.html

But you need to commit to doing it regularly, not to just doing it every once in a while, or when the mood strikes you.

Because as everyone knows, sometimes you like feeling nuts; sometimes, you don't.

And, on a not completely unrelated note, males with big testicles have smaller brains -- at least in the case of bats.

posted on Friday, December 09, 2005 5:26:30 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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I cannot look at a 16-digit credit card number and tell whether I've mistyped it or not. And neither can anyone else. I can, however, easily examine four separate four-digit numbers and spot typos.

1341329913245890 or 1341 3299 1324 5890? The choice is obvious. Yet most websites will not accept anything but the 16-digit string. It's a trivial matter to strip the spaces and normalize the credit card number, and it speaks to the incompetence of many website developers that they don't do this. The cognitive burden should be pushed onto the programmer, not the user.

On a related note, Irish people write phone numbers as a seven-digit string. I can't parse 6274986 at a glance either, but I can parse the US-style form, 627-4986.

posted on Friday, December 09, 2005 12:48:10 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Wednesday, December 07, 2005 

Via the Win Tech Off Topic mailing list, I learned about Pandora earlier today. It's an outgrowth of the Music Genome Project.

You create stations in Pandora by telling it an artist or song that you like. It starts playing music that it thinks you will like, based on its reasonably extensive database of carefully characterized music. You can tell it if you particularly like or dislike its selections, to guide its future offerings on that station. You can have up to 100 personalized stations.

So far, it's doing a good job.

posted on Wednesday, December 07, 2005 11:47:55 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Monday, December 05, 2005 

http://www.horsburgh.com/card/moved.jpg

(Originally posted to Home at EraBlog on Mon, 05 Dec 2005 05:23:26 GMT)

I've moved my blog again; this time to my own website. The new link is http://www.georgevreilly.com/blog/.

posted on Monday, December 05, 2005 10:29:59 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, December 03, 2005 

I was looking up the credits of Intermission on IMDB, then decided to look up my brother, David Reilly, the actor of the family. I found him.

I couldn't find any IMDB listing for my other brother, Mark Reilly, the filmmaker.

Then I looked up my own name. I wasn't there, of course, but I did find Der Spleen des George Riley, a German TV production of a Tom Stoppard play, Enter a Free Man.

I did quite a bit of work for Irish television in the mid-to-late Eighties, but it was all behind the scenes computer graphics work for such timeless gems as Murphy's Micro Quiz'M, Rapid Roulette, the Carroll's Irish Open, and the weather maps. The only thing that was of lasting value was Live Aid. The weather display software was still in use for most of the Nineties, so I can honestly say that my work has been widely seen by millions of people. I don't think my name ever appeared in the credits, though, just that of my then employer, Lendac.

posted on Saturday, December 03, 2005 8:59:50 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Friday, December 02, 2005 

Via DailyKos, Will Ferrell as Dubya making a Special Announcement on Global Warming.

posted on Friday, December 02, 2005 9:11:09 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Via Larry Osterman, Triumph the Comic Dog delivering the weather forecast in Hawai`i. Very apropos, after yesterday's snow in Seattle.

posted on Friday, December 02, 2005 7:42:19 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, November 26, 2005 

Via Emma.

Click Here to Visit Furniture Porn!
posted on Saturday, November 26, 2005 7:57:53 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, November 20, 2005 

I'm indifferent to most fantasy books, but I've been a fan of George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series, since I read the first book, A Game of Thrones, in 1997. I read the second book A Clash of Kings, in 1999. The third book A Storm of Swords came out five years ago, and I've been awaiting the fourth book, A Feast for Crows, ever since. After several postponements, it's finally out.

It's an epic tale of love, war, and intrigue. Five Kings are fighting for control, by sword, by guile, and sometimes by magic. Strange creatures are rising in the frozen North, beyond the Wall. Dragons are reappearing in the South. The young Starks, separated by fate and a cruel author, strive in vain to reunite. The Lannisters, mad and bad, seek to dominate.

I'm re-reading the series and rediscovering how good it is. The characters are clearly drawn, the plotting first rate, the writing excellent.

George R.R. Martin is on a book tour of the U.S. and appears at the University of Washington Bookstore on Monday, November 21st, at 7pm.

posted on Sunday, November 20, 2005 11:20:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Friday, November 18, 2005 

Bill Moyers speaking at the 50th anniversary of The Texas Observer:

McCarthyism was a raging plague in the 1950s and the virus rampaged across Texas like tumbleweeds in a wind storm. ... The low point, said Maverick, came when the state Senate passed a bill to remove all books from public libraries which “adversely” reflected on American and Texas history, the family and religion. Even the state teachers association endorsed the bill, in exchange for a pay raise. ...

That was the lay of the land in the 1950s. And Democrats were in charge, remember? That’s right: Texas was a one-party state; Republicans were as scarce in high office as Democrats are today. No matter the players, one-party government is a conspiracy in disguise.

...

Everything President George W. Bush knows, he learned here [in Texas], as the product of a system rigged to assure the political progeny needed to perpetuate itself with minimum interference from the nuisances of liberal democracy. ... With the election of 2000, he and his cohorts arrived in Washington like atheists taking over the Vatican; they had come to run a government they don’t believe in.

posted on Friday, November 18, 2005 8:29:00 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, November 17, 2005 

A year ago, I ran into a problem with Skype squatting on port 80, which I had long forgotten about. Today, I ran into one with Skype squatting on port 443.

I was trying to set up SSL on my Windows Server 2003 dev box. My ultimate goal is to experiment with client certs and server certs for SOAP, but that's a story for another time. I was running into all kinds of strange problems, exacerbated by the relatively strange IIS configuration on my machine.

I tried SslDiag. In hindsight, it pointed me towards the underlying problem, but I couldn't see it at the time. I did a lot of digging around on Google. Eventually, a newsgroup thread on ListenOnlyList gave me CurrPorts, which showed me that Skype was listening on port 443. I suppose netstat -anob, TcpView, or Port Reporter would have told me the same thing, though CurrPorts had the friendliest view. WFetch from the IIS 6 Resource Kit Tools was also useful in looking at raw requests and responses.

posted on Thursday, November 17, 2005 9:18:57 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Tuesday, November 15, 2005 

Last Wednesday night, Emma emailed a dozen of our friends, inviting them to join us for Thanksgiving dinner. One reply arrived the next morning. Then nothing.

By Sunday evening, I had grown exasperated enough to send out a snarky followup:

The courtesy of a belated reply would be appreciated. So far, we've got exactly one RSVP.

It served its purpose. Replies cascaded in. Most, alas, said "no"; they had other plans.

Would that this were an isolated incident. Time and again, I've issued invitations that were not responded to. A simple "yes" or "no" is ideal. A "maybe" is acceptable too, especially if you follow up with a "yes" or a "no".

RSVP is not a meaningless formality. It's a vital planning aid. I need to know ahead of time whether to expect three or thirteen for a dinner party. It's rude and thoughtless to leave me hanging in limbo. If I assume that everyone who's been invited will show up, and cater accordingly, and many of them don't come, I've gone to needless expense and effort. If I guess that only half those invited will turn up, and I underestimate, then I'm embarrassed by not being able to feed my guests properly.

It's almost as big a sin for you to say "yes", then fail to show, without a word of warning.

When the stakes are low, such as a large drinks party, the lack of RSVPs is a minor matter. For a major production, it's inconsiderate at best.

posted on Wednesday, November 16, 2005 3:11:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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The Wild Geese Players of Seattle strike again. This time, we're counterposing William Butler Yeats against Walt Whitman, the Dueling Poets. We're leading off the evening with some real dueling between fencers from the Academia della Spada.

Fri, Nov 18, 8pm
University of Washington Faculty Club

More details here.

posted on Tuesday, November 15, 2005 10:04:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, November 13, 2005 

See what Thunderbird 1.5 RC 1's spelling checker flags as misspelled words.

Seems to be a known bug.

posted on Monday, November 14, 2005 5:50:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, November 12, 2005 

I finally updated my blog to run on dasBlog 1.8. Not too painful. I unzipped the binary distribution, downloaded the content folder from my server to my local drive, ran the provided upgrade utility, and used WinMerge to update the configuration files.

The most obvious change is that I'm using a new theme (skin), which gives the site a very different look. The previous default theme had problems if your browser window was too narrow, due to some hardcoded table sizes (I think).

I also figured out how to post to dasBlog via w.bloggar. I looked for info on configuring w.bloggar a few weeks ago, and couldn't find it then.

Followup: the multiword links in this post are mangled when they appear in a browser. I think this is an issue in dasBlog's XML transforms. Specifically, it only seems to happen when the multiword link contains "dasBlog": ego-surfing, perhaps. Reported as dasBlog bug 1354987.

Followup #2: the problem turned out to be one of the out-of-the box rewriting rules in site.config. Commenting out

  <ContentFilter find="dasBlog" ...
fixed it.

These rules seem to be generally useful. The default configuration allows you to convert several varieties of smilies to graphics:

:-o :-o
:-S :-S
:-D :-D
:'( :'(
;-) ;-)
:-) :-)

as well as Google searches, $g(bush sucks) → bush sucks, and dictionary.com lookups, $d(defenestration) → defenestration. (The preceding examples were escaped by bracketing the first character in the pattern with a <span> tag.)

More details on ContentFilter at the new dasBlog documentation site, dasBlog.info.

posted on Saturday, November 12, 2005 9:23:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, October 16, 2005 

On Tuesday night, Emma sent this out to our list of friends.

Subject: Decision about evacuee housing
Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2005 00:22:32 -0700
From: Emma Bartholomew <emma@...>

Hello all,

Thank you to everyone who has assisted George & me in our attempt to ready our home for hurricane evacuees.

Regrettably, I have come to realize that I'm not emotionally able to make this commitment after all. I thought I could open my home to others, but I have sunk into a depression over the past few weeks that has finally convinced me that I tried to bite off more than I could chew.

George & I are still committed to helping evacuees, but we will now be doing this through donations of time and money to a local group, Katrina Housing Northwest www.katrinahousingNW.org I have attached the latest Katrina Housing Seattle Alert to the end of this message so you can get an idea of what the group is presently doing.

We will be reimbursing those who gave us cash donations and having a party to thank those of you who gave of your time and effort. Thank you again for all your hard work on our behalf.

Warmest regards, Emma

PS from George.

This hasn't been an easy time for Emma and I know she feels that she's let you (and herself) down. I wish that matters had worked out otherwise. I thank all of you who selflessly gave of your time and money. It was inspiring to both of us.

/George


Hello KHNW supporters!

This past Thursday a meeting was held in downtown Seattle with Representatives from the American Red Cross, The Emergency Management Division, The Seattle Housing Authority and many community organizations, and private ones such as ours. A representative kept us informed of the meetings results:

The Goal: To communicate the Housing Sustainment Plan for the over 1000 evacuees in our area right now. Specifically, funding and availability of LONG TERM PERMANENT HOUSING in their own homes.

The Answer: They have not arrived at an answer yet.

True, that is frustrating, and I could spend plenty of time venting about the details of the lack of planning, or the level of frustration my families and many others have experienced. However, the immediate needs of our evacuees still remain, and our mission is to meet those needs. Wherever and however we can. I am thoroughly committed to that.

The good news for us is that I have partnered with Representatives from the American Red Cross King/Kitsap/Olympia chapters to help identify individual needs, and we are working directly with the International Rescue Committee ( www.theirc.org) who are excellent allies in the progress towards KHNW being successful in their mission to assist.

We are fortunate that we get to skip the red tape in all this. We are fueled entirely on the kindness of our local supporters. You have all been a key part of improving the lives of these people!

We still have needs for these families and our organization. Those needs are:

  • Private housing for 12-18 months (evacuee family only) i.e empty apartments in Seattle area, (services are in the city and they need to be close)

  • GIFT CARDS: For Target, Fred Meyer, Safeway, QFC, WALGREEN'S, Sears, Ikea, Rite Aid, Office Max, COSTCO for household items, etc...

  • GAS CARDS: For our volunteer drivers who are burning through the fuel to drive these folks around until they get bus passes, cars etc...

  • A Tax Attorney to offer pro-bono time to assist with the 501c (3) status filing.

  • A PT Non Profit Accountant, volunteer

If you are interested in any of these items, just email me at nhnorthwest@gmail.com and/or northwestRR@gmail.com (that is Jessica's email, our amazing admin) Want to get a group involved? Please organize support through your office, schools, places of worship, etc... we can provide you with posters/flyer's etc...!

This continues to be a very important and increasingly more organized effort. We have surpassed the point where we only coordinated short term emergency housing, and now we are in it for the long haul, providing solutions for many needs.

Thank you ALL so very very much for your kindness, support, assistance and generosity. I never know how to express enough how much it means to me, and all the people you help, that you have done so much in such distressing times for them.

Truly,

Noelle Hunt Bennett
Katrina Housing North West
North West Resource Relief
Seattle, WA
www.katrinahousingNW.org

We received some very touching, understanding responses from our friends, often acknowledging their own struggles with depression, and thanking us for doing what we had so far.

As for the basement, Chuck came over this morning and helped me frame out the 11-foot opening. The carpet layers are coming in at the end of the week, and I expect the window people to come next week.

posted on Sunday, October 16, 2005 11:55:45 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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