Bulletproof

Categories: Politics

For quite some time, England has lived with the reality of IRA terrorists who would like to see various important Brits dead. London knows a lot more about living under that sort of threat than we do. That’s a simple statement of fact; 9/11 was of much larger magnitude, but England’s been dealing with this sort of thing for decades. In all those years, they have somehow managed to keep the Prime Minister and the Queen safe without shutting down the London Underground. One wonders what sort of a cowboy is afraid of risks the Queen of England takes on a regular basis. ...

November 17, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

First hand view

Categories: Politics

There’ve been a lot of DoD press releases (original) about deaths recently. They’re fairly abstracted, which I think is appropriate. This one (original) reports the death of Robert A. Wise of Florida. His friend Trueman, who is currently recuperating in a hospital in Germany, gives us his account of the attack which killed Specialist Wise.

November 17, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Not you

Categories: Politics

Others have made this point, but it’s a good excuse to link to a funny comic, so I’m gonna make it again. Tom Tomorrow isn’t saying you don’t have the right to comment on war unless you’re enlisted or a veteran. He’s saying — well, read the second panel. “I’m waging war on the Islamofascists — on my blog!” He’s saying that’s a really stupid thing to say. Now, that might seem like hyperbole. Who says stuff like that? Perhaps the irate blogger is really meant to represent some other class of bloggers. Warbloggers in general, maybe. Maybe he’s saying all warbloggers are stupid. ...

November 17, 2003 · 2 min · Bryant

Of the year

Categories: General

I have a strict quota on links to Flash animations. This year, the coveted slot goes to The Elements, by Tom Lehrer. (Via Rick Jones.)

November 16, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Transition plan

Categories: Politics

Juan Cole has the scoop on the new plan for transferring power to an Iraqi government. I could meander on but I think he nails the implications, pros, and cons.

November 15, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Free stuff is nice

Categories: Technology

1&1 is offering free Web hosting for three years, which certainly seems too good to be true. But hey — Metafilter confirms that it’s a valid offer. Apparently these guys are a huge European hosting company, and they want to make a splash in the US. So it seems safe to go wild.

November 15, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

And Larry Niven thought you'd

Categories: General

And Larry Niven thought you’d need teleportation to get flash crowds. The Washington Post ran an article about the crowd dynamic created by cell phones. Yet another example of the information revolution hitting us in ways we don’t expect.

November 14, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Directed listmaking

Categories: Culture

The Guardian lists the 40 best directors and is fairly good. David Lynch should be swapped with David Cronenberg, however. Also, Ridley Scott is missing from the list (he ought to be somewhere between 30 and 40), and Peter Jackson’s absence is wholly inexplicable.

November 14, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Nice gorilla

Categories: Technology

RFID just succeeded (original). When Wal-Mart wants manufacturers to use a technology, they will use it — Wal-Mart’s leverage is just that big. The privacy implications are horrendous (original), but the applications are fairly neat.

November 14, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Leaderboards

Categories: Politics

Handy Democratic primary link of the day: Poll Roundup, from a Daily Kos denizen’s diary. There’s a clearer but less detailed version here.

November 13, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant