Hail Britannia

Categories: Gaming

I take no responsibility for the following list of eight names, other than that they’re in a notebook I own. His fault. Jack Dandy Man of Steam The Gurkha Ironclad The Boffin Bright Young Lad, his robotic sidekick/assistant Bulldog Jill Diamond Jubilee

February 20, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

My crystal ball

Categories: Politics

Huh, my predictions weren’t too bad. Kerry took 40% of the votes in Wisconsin; Edwards took 34%, and Dean took 18%. I underestimated the Edwards surge again. The undecided voters went for Edwards in a big way. This is no doubt energizing for the Edwards campaign; he’ll be in at least until March 10th. Super Tuesday will tell us a lot. He’s not going to take on Dean as his Vice President, and if he does he’ll lose — you don’t want a VP who’s going to draw controversy and in some ways outshine you. Dean will also have more influence if he converts his campaign into a 527 and becomes a political center for grassroots populism, so I’m not sure Dean would bite on that either. ...

February 18, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Another primary thing

Categories: Politics

Wisconsin is voting today. Kerry was polling (original) way high. Figure in the Edwards surge, and Kerry wins with Edwards coming in second by a decent margin (I’d say he beats Dean by around 5 percentage points). Edwards sticks in the race till Super Tuesday to see if he can beat Kerry head to head. It wouldn’t surprise me if Edwards wins Georgia, but that’s the only Southern state on March 2nd. If Edwards wins Georgia and still has money flowing, he may keep it going till March 9th to take advantage of a Southern slate of primaries. If Edwards surprises everyone, which is possible, he could catch fire. ...

February 17, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Limits of disobedience

Categories: Politics

Warning: the post ahead touches upon devil’s advocacy regarding recent gay rights events in San Francisco. Dan Gillmor wonders whether the Mayor of San Francisco should be ordering city clerks to disobey the law. Larry Lessig chimes in (original). His argument is that the executive branch has a duty to disobey unconstitutional laws. I find myself pensive. Ashcroft and Bush no doubt feel that it is unconstitutional to force them to provide counsel to Jose Padillo. ...

February 16, 2004 · 2 min · Bryant

Dire predictions

Categories: Technology

Vernor Vinge was right. Again. There is a vulnerability in Internet Explorer 5 that can be triggered by loading a bitmap image. No Javascript, no ActiveX, nothing fancy. You load the bitmap, and arbitrary code runs on your system. Or you load a page with the bitmap embedded in it. And it’s not a particular bitmap, it’s a general technique. If you are currently browsing the Internet with Internet Explorer 5, you can be owned at any moment. ...

February 16, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Ecto disappointment

Categories: Technology

It would be great if Ecto was actually working, instead of getting caught in some messed up state where it can’t remember my accounts. And losing data. Seriously: it seems like the worst thing you can do when transitioning from shareware to commercial product is to make the commercial product less stable than the old version. I’m looking forward to Zempt for the Mac.

February 16, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

In all fairness

Categories: Sports

Adriaan Tijsseling posted a comment about an hour after I bitched about ecto (original) and offered to help. So kudos; that’s good support. If I’d read the help files, I’d have found the support email address, albeit it doesn’t appear on the ecto home page. Good things about ecto: Textile (original) preview support. Customizable HTML tag insertion. Per-blog default settings. Debug console. Things I don’t like as much: Can’t see the continuation and the main entry in the same window. Still somewhat confused about the local copies vs. posted copies of any given entry. Current blog should be displayed somewhere so I don’t have to guess/remember. No free beer. ...

February 16, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

WISHes for games

Categories: Memes

Anyway, where was I? Ah yes: WISH 84 asks (original): What five games would you love to run/play if you had a willing group and a weekly time slot? I’m going to leave out games I’m in or running now, of course (yay, Champions and Buffy), and also games I expect to be able to play in soon — I’m looking at you, Star Wars and Charnel Gods and espionage game! You can also assume that I wish I could go back and play in Carl’s games again. Those disposed of: ...

February 15, 2004 · 2 min · Bryant

Keeping track

Categories: Technology

Super-nifty color chooser (that works under Safari) Forms without tables (original) (coming soon: Malazan Empire wiki) That is all.

February 15, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Misty memories

Categories: Politics

The Fog of War blew me away. Unexpected, revelatory, all that good stuff. Mostly just plain compelling. Errol Morris got Robert McNamara (original) to open up about a lot of his life, albeit not as much as one might like about Vietnam, and it’s really just a gripping picture of a man who was under immense pressure and who made mistakes. I can’t say it answered many questions. MacNamara comes about this close to saying he screwed up Vietnam, but he doesn’t really get deeply into the matter — which is interesting, considering that he flat out says he acted immorally in World War II. Vietnam is closer to him, for some reason. It framed some questions for me: was MacNamara a man with a finely developed ethical sense who acted against that sense out of loyalty to Johnson and Kennedy? Was he a man with a finely developed ethical sense who had an easy time ignoring that ethical sense in order to achieve the desired goals? ...

February 15, 2004 · 2 min · Bryant