Blog posts
Collected posts from the various blogs I’ve contributed to since 2002.
Collected posts from the various blogs I’ve contributed to since 2002.
Writing the other day about West Wing reminded me that I’d meant to throw in a comment on the development of DVD boxsets. Having decided against getting either cable TV or an antenna, we’ve been getting all of our TV on DVD (or through certain other means) for a couple of years now, primarily from netflix or by adding to our collection. In the past few months I’ve begun to notice a new trend. ...
Listening to the news this morning, with all the build up to today’s Oscar nominations, I was thinking about the blog entry I’d write to lament the fact that Ryan Gosling was cheated out of an Actor In A Leading Role nomination for his part in Half Nelson. I’m very happy to be wrong, and to see him on that list! It’s an interesting list of nominees this year. Ryan Gosling has been displaced in my ‘cheated’ list with Children Of Men, which really should be up for the sound design awards (and perhaps something higher profile). But it’s good to see Pan’s Labyrinth and The Queen taking such a high profile. I suppose it was inevitable that the Pirates Of The Caribbean franchise would get a nod to appease the big money studios but it’s gratifying to see that they’re limited to technical categories. ...
Following on from the acclaimed (and Oscar-nominated) The Story Of The Weeping Camel, Byambasuren Davaa’s new film The Cave Of The Yellow Dog retains the simple premise, quiet pace and flirtations with sentimentality. Following a nomad girl, Nansal, who finds a puppy hiding in the cave and petitions her parents to let her keep him, the film uses its setting to explore the challenges and decisions facing nomadic families in Mongolia as their lifestyle becomes harder to maintain, and parents have to prepare their children for a radically different future. ...
With concerns over global warming finally having reached a critical mass in 2006, this year has seen a deluge of blog posts on the subject. A couple of interesting contributions this week have come from “Lunch Over IP”, such as this piece covering a speech on urban design by Sir Norman Foster, and a follow-up to last week’s announcements by Tescos and Marks and Spencers: the “emission labels” and other carbon footprint news. ...
As a Christmas present, we treated ourselves to the complete West Wing box set. We already owned three seasons on DVD, but the price gap between buying the set and buying the four seasons we were missing was slim enough and the packaging so enticing that we gave in, and have been working our way gradually through it ever since. Season Five remains, unfortunately, just as weak as I’d remembered. There was some decline in Season Four as Rob Lowe departed and Aaron Sorkin was aware of the impending end of his tenure, but Five was where that really sank in. Too many scenes lack the pace and the intensity of the show’s earlier days, and the writers seem to lack the insight into their characters that viewers expect by this stage. But that’s not what really lets it down for me. ...
This is one of those stories that really ought to be huge, but probably won’t make many waves in the US. The BBC’s Newsnight has been told by a former senior US government official: Tehran proposed ending support for Lebanese and Palestinian militant groups and helping to stabilise Iraq following the US-led invasion. Offers, including making its nuclear programme more transparent, were conditional on the US ending hostility. But Vice-President Dick Cheney’s office rejected the plan, the official said. ...
As usual I’m spending some of the morning at Common Ground Coffee Shop. This morning a crew from local news providers, Wood TV 8 channel turned up and filmed those of us making use of the wifi service for a piece they’re preparing on WiFi in the City of Grand Rapids. When they asked to film me, I told them about my WiFi site and they said they may interview me. But they didn’t. Instead they talked to every other customer using a computer, asking entirely wrong-headed questions about security issues those customers were clearly not all that familiar with. They were suggesting that other customers could be sniffing the network and stealing, for example, banking information. They skipped the fact that every reputable banking site encrypts that data from the web browser to the bank’s server. ...
I’m already beginning to think I should try and block out all mention of Neon Bible, the new Arcade Fire album, for the next couple of months as not only is it getting heavily hyped in the world of blogs, but it’s getting really well hyped. For an example, check out the (most likely “V for Vendetta” inspired) video embedded in this post at I Guess I’m Floating. Then head to the band’s site and check out the song “Black Mirror”. ...
While working on an API interface I’ve been playing around with XML::Mapping, an XML-to-object wrapper for ruby. The main reason to use it is that it allows me to easily build an interface similar to that used in Cody Fauser’s Ebay API client which will also be used in the same application. Generally I’ve been very happy with the library, though at some point it would be nice to have a class generator which will take the XSD file and write most of the code for me, but scour the documentation as I may I couldn’t find an easy way to add attributes to a standard text-holding node. It’s easy enough to get: ...
There’s some irony in the fact that in the same week that the death of former US President Gerald Ford is leading to a slew of obituaries mentioning his pardoning of Richard Nixon, Saddam Hussein has been executed. You don’t have to draw any moral comparisons between the crimes of Hussein and Nixon to suggest that if most historians agree that Ford was correct to let Nixon off the hook for his crimes in order to begin a process of reconciliation within the US, then perhaps there’s a better way forward for Iraq than a rushed verdict and sentence on Saddam Hussein. Especially when that sentence looks set to lead to a significant increase in violence. ...