Speaking of pirate day

Categories: Navel Gazing

Verisign recommends innocence.com as an alternative to the following non-existent domains: innocentes.net brokeninnocence.com visualinnocence.com (actually, the guy searched for girls.visualinnocence.com) originalinnocence.com lamented-innocence.com innocenze.com blk_innocence.com www.iinnocence.com (you know, that probably was a legit typo) I’m actually kind of tempted by a couple of those. Alas, lamented-innocence.com is taken, it just has no nameserver.

September 19, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Monday Mashup #8: Beach Boys

Categories: Memes

Your Mashup, should you choose to accept it: the Beach Boys. Yeah, the surfer legends, the face of 1960s surf music, the boy band of the decade — the Beach Boys. Without pushing in any particular direction, I’d say there’s potential for romantic scenarios, ecological scenarios, fun-oriented scenarios, or even auto racing scenarios. A lot of roleplaying is oriented towards the big deadly problem. The Beach Boys… are not. What can you do with the sun-drenched teenage hormonal wonderland evoked by “Surfer Girl”? If that doesn’t tickle your fancy and you prefer the Smile lyrics, though, be my guest. That stuff is pretty cool too.

September 19, 2003 · 2 min · Bryant

Monday Mashup #7: Shogun

Categories: Memes

It’s Labor Day, and I thought about postponing till tomorrow — but nah. Let’s do some mashing up of the old pop culture; let’s dance with the memes in the pale moonlight. (Whoops, there’s one now.) Our chosen subject this week: Shogun, by James Clavell. If I was going to boil Shogun down to a sentence of summation, I’d say it was about a man plunged into a culture he considers barbaric, and how he learns to understand it. It’s perhaps the case that the book is worthwhile not so much for the plot, but for the sincere attempt to write about Japanese culture on its own ground, which is difficult to subsume into gaming. Still, the raw plot material is probably fairly fertile ground. Have at it.

September 19, 2003 · 3 min · Bryant

Oil purchase

Categories: Politics

Here’s a conjunction of stories that bears investigation. Both Chevron and Exxon are bidding for a stake in YukosSibneft (original). YukosSibneft is the biggest oil company in Russia (original), and one of the biggest in the world. Meanwhile, the US and Russia are discussing Russian oil contracts in Iraq. The obvious question is whether or not we’re seeing some quid pro quo here. Would the Kremlin speed up the Yukos/Sibneft merger and expedite the purchase by either Chevron or Exxon if the US agreed to honor Russia’s oil contracts? Would the US find it more worthwhile to make that deal if Chevron was getting a chunk of the revenues via a Russian company? ...

September 19, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Why not them

Categories: Politics

Juan Cole has more to say about the second order effects of getting too close to Pakistan. It’s unclear to me that Pakistan is that close to fundamentalist destabilization, but the effects of such destabilization would be pretty serious, so it behooves us to keep being careful.

September 19, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Credit as due

Categories: Politics

Partial credit for this one. “There’s no question that Saddam Hussein had al-Qaida ties…. We have no evidence that Saddam Hussein was involved with the Sept. 11 attacks.” — George Bush Well, 50% accuracy on those particular facts is a step up for him. But what’s that imply about his determination to go after Iraq as soon as possible post-9/11? And isn’t it clear that Pakistan had much stronger Al Qaeda ties? So why Iraq first?

September 18, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Maybe over there

Categories: Politics

More saber-rattling for the benefit of Syria the last few days. The timing is impeccable; nothing will tell Syria we’re serious like making threats at the same time we’re telling Iran to shape up (original). Cause we’ve got all those available troops sitting around doing nothing. In related news, the White House slip of the day (original) comes from Press Secretary Scott McClellan: David Kaye, who’s leading the Iraq survey group, which is — they’re interviewing people, they’re talking to Iraqis, they’re gathering all the intelligence to pull together a complete picture of Iran — of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction program and their weapons of mass destruction. ...

September 17, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Missed promises

Categories: Politics

Hey, wasn’t Ann Coulter gonna start keeping a blog (original)? The date on that first post in the archives, by the way, is a lie. That sucker’s been there since late June, when they first claimed Ann was about to start blogging.

September 16, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Domain hijack

Categories: Technology

VeriSign, the curators of the .org and .com domains, just abused the living hell out of their power. As of this morning, any time you try to look up a domain name that doesn’t exist, you get an IP for one of their hosts. In layman’s terms, this means that if you mistype the domain portion of a URL in your browser — let’s say you type http://www.yankeeessuck.com — it’ll redirect to a VeriSign page. It also means that if you mistype the domain portion of an email address, your mailer will attempt to deliver that email to a VeriSign server. Most likely it’ll just bounce… but there’s no guarantee. Hope you weren’t trying to send mail to a user who happens to exist over there. ...

September 16, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

FINALLY

Categories: Culture

I have no idea how Into The Night managed to show up on DVD without me noticing, but it’s about time. Best damned yuppie goes through hell movie ever.

September 15, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant