Thursday, January 8, 2009

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Alternative Energy Cars

(Los Angeles, CA) Visitors at L.A.'s Auto Show were the first to see the next generation of environmentally-friendly cars that pack a lot of punch. Kent Shocknek reports.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Don't fuck with the people that maintain your sites...

Some emails back and forth with my ex-supervisor. She got bitchy and I accidentally... well, the whole site. Anyone hiring? :]


From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:02 PM
To: mary
Subject: SOTM - Site update complete

[site url]

Look okay?

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:30 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

Tyler,

Yes and no.

I like Reggie’s video at the top.
But since we extended the deadline for the new contest to Friday,
I would rather have that next.
The plan is to announce the winners on the site on the first.
Then announce the new contest the following week.
Can you move the announcement message to second?

Mary

PS – other than that, great job. It really looks great.

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From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:32 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

So you want the contestants in separate posts?

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:39 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

No, one big long running one is fine.

That’s how Joe [last name] has his and this is what we’ve been modeling.

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From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:42 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

Really… so that’s what we’ve been modeling!? I could’ve sworn I built this whole contest system…

Should I separate Reggies post so it stay on top and put the new announcement under it and have the other winners of this months contest under it?

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:43 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

Yes, you set it up... congrats.

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From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:45 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

So, we want them separate but keep vid at the top? :) I think it looks better with the vid at the top… and it’s a short post so they won’t even need to scroll to see the next announcement.

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:48 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

Tyler,

No, I’d rather have them running.

I agree on the video.

So, like this:

Video
Announcement of new contest
Reggie’s entry (text)
2nd place
3rd place
Jennifer’s
Etc.
Make sense?

Mary

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:49 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

So basically, you want the site to be exactly like I said we should have it… Or am I confused?

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:50 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

Oh, I thought “separate” was on separate pages.

But I’m still right because I said so.

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From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:54 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

You know this isn’t just copy, paste, POOF, right? It took two hours to troubleshoot

The coding nonsense that came from taking the submissions from pdfs…

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:57 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

Just fucking do it and stop bitching.

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From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 8:03 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

OH SHI--
















I accidentally the whole website.

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 8:05 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

You accidently “whated” the whole website.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 8:10 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

The whole thing

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From: mary
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 8:11 PM
To: Tyler
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

Where the FUCK is the site Tyler?

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From: Tyler
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 8:15 PM
To: mary
Subject: RE: SOTM - Site update complete

I accidentally the whole site: [url]

Have a good night! =)

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Radical Evolution: The Future of Human-Machine Intelligence

If we don't kill ourselves out, the next 50 years are going to be incredibly interesting... it's worth just shutting the fuck up and stopping all wars just to see what amazing things we come up with. Well, we should really do that anyway. Our technology has become so incredible it's worth living just to see what we can create now. There's no longer a need for service-based economies, with our science we can truly exist as resource-based societies. We should look to begin the transition immediately, if we want to truly see the potential of the human mind begin to blossom.

SCIENCE - FTW.

Read this great article by Ray Kurzweil:

Ray Kurzweil sees a radical evolution of the human species in the next 40 years. The merger of man and machine, coupled with the sudden explosion in machine intelligence and rapid innovation in gene research and nanotechnology, will result in a world with no distinction between the biological and the mechanical or physical and virtual reality.

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Friday, November 21, 2008

The evolution of the benevolent alien

In its bid for our ticket-buying dollars, Hollywood has long sought to reach into our pockets by giving us films that appeal to our current sense of hopefulness or fearfulness.

Over the years, one of the most reliable mechanisms for doing that has been the alien, the evil, destructive invaders hell-bent on laying waste to everything we hold dear (The War of the Worlds, say) or the inquisitive visitors curious to make our acquaintance and see what they can learn from us and our experience (Close Encounters of the Third Kind, maybe).

And to many, the extent to which these film aliens have been friend or foe has had a great deal to do with our general emotional state of mind.

"I think that it goes in waves," said Yair Landau, the former president of Sony Pictures Digital. "There was a wave of benign aliens around E.T. and Starman...Then there was a wave of, 'They're out to destroy us' aliens, like in Indepdence Day and the remake of War of the Worlds. It depends on whether we're looking for fear or reassurance as a society."

In 1951, Twentieth-Century Fox released director Robert Wise's The Day the Earth Stood Still. In that Cold War-era film, we meet an alien, Klaatu, who has come to express, in the most soothing terms possible, that if we proceed with our nuclear weapons proliferation and are seen by the galactic consortium Klaatu represents as presenting a threat beyond our own atmosphere, we will be destroyed.

Even as he delivers this mortal threat, Klaatu, played by Michael Rennie, comes across as sympathetic, even benevolent, as he really, really wants to give us humans some say in what happens to us. He seems really to care, as expressed by his budding friendship (would it have become romance?) with Helen Benson, played by Patricia Neal, and the urgency with which he strives to deliver--even in the face of a belligerent U.S. military--his message that we have some say in our fate.

Next month, Twentieth-Century Fox will release a remake of the film, this time directed by Scott Derrickson and starring Keanu Reeves as Klaatu.

This time around, Klaatu is here to tell us that the galactic consortium has had it with humans' mistreatment of our own planet, and he has come to explain that, effectively, his colleagues have taken the side of the Earth over the humans. Large-scale explosions and destruction ensue.

Why would these beings from outer space care so much about the health of the third rock from the sun? That's not entirely clear, said Seth Shostak, a senior astronomer at the SETI Institute who worked for a time as a scientific adviser on the film.

"The (aliens) come down...trying to save the planet, but saving the planet requires them to obliterate the problem threatening the planet," Shostak said, "and in this case, that's not just SUVs and coal-fired plants."

In the 57 years between versions of The Day the Earth Stood Still, aliens covered a lot of evolutionary ground, so to speak, in how they've been portrayed. Some of that ground has had to do with the world's emotional makeup and some has had to do with what has been possible from a technological perspective.

For example, the look and feel of the aliens in a film like the remake of The War of the Worlds have almost nothing in common with those of the original. What originally had to be built using crude models and special effects is now done to exacting detail with computer graphics. And these advances put a lot of pressure on filmmakers today to keep the audience's attention with a story while those in the old days could do so much more with the novelty of on-screen aliens, no matter how rudimentary they looked.

"Anything you can conceive of can be (computer generated)," said Landau. "Just blowing stuff up, or just having an alien creature itself, is not very compelling...We're (now) able to give aliens a much higher complexity, so you can imbue them with character...Now you can make us believe almost any physical destruction you can think of and you can make us believe in any sort of 3D CGI environment. So it's all about whether you can drive compelling story and performance."

Our friends the aliens
Further, as Landau put it, the story has to fill in gaps left by the fact that people view aliens--who have long stood in for foreigners, or the "other"--as less threatening. And while that presents writing challenges to filmmakers, it also opens doors to a whole new era of stories in which aliens can more easily be presumed to be friendlier than in the past.

An example of that might be Contact, the 1997 Robert Zemeckis film in which Jodie Foster plays a scientist scanning the skies for intelligent life. Upon discovering a far-away civilization, Foster interprets messages sent to us as instructions on building a monumental transporter that will allow us to travel to the aliens' distant world. And while the film gives a nod to the inevitable military suspicions of the aliens' motives, it is the optimistic view that carries the day.

"Aliens in fiction are exaggerations of our hopes and fears about ourselves," said Mike Kuniavsky, a co-founder of the ubiquitous computing device company ThingM. "If they were genuinely alien, they wouldn't be particularly interesting because we wouldn't be able to understand them."

To Allan Lundell, a co-founder of the DigiBarn computer museum and a former editor of Byte magazine, the question of how aliens are depicted has very much to do with the financial considerations involved in how people's fears and hopes resonate at any given moment in time.

"Arnold Schwarzenegger was popular as a good Terminator, keeping us safe from the evil sentient machines and the ever-present Skynet," Lundell said. "But soon, he will be facing serious competition from a new hero, Ramona, a sentient cybernetic being hatched from the inventive mind of Ray Kurzweil, in his upcoming feature release, The Singularity is Near. Much cuter than Arnie, she saves the world from a nano grey goo attack while showing us what love beyond biology is all about."

The question here, Lundell poses, is whether an artificial intelligence construct can be considered an alien. Given that the term "alien" in this context is generally assumed to be a creature from another world, that's open to debate. But his point is a good one, as Ramona, as Lundell described her, is certainly the other.

Yet even as cybernetic others will be increasingly making their way onto the silver screen, it's almost certain that malevolent aliens of a traditional kind will also be making regular appearances, despite the fact that we, as a people, are becoming more and more comfortable around those with whom we aren't familiar.

And why?

"Aliens have a bigger role today as bad guys in film," Shostak, of the SETI Institute, said, "because once the Soviet Union collapses, who are you going to make as bad guys? You can make certain (nationalities be) bad guys, but it's a little hard because everybody's so culturally sensitive. And aliens don't have any advocacy organizations that are going to protest (outside) your theater if you make them the bad guy."

Today, it seems, Hollywood has decided to apply that approach even to well-worn stories like The Day the Earth Stood Still.

For where the Klaatu of 1951 adopted a concerned facial expression as he explained to humanity that he wanted to save us, Reeves' 2008 Klaatu seems content to dispense with us as the only way to save our planet.

And while there might be some truth to that conclusion, it's not very benevolent, at least from the humans' perspective.

Perhaps, suggested Lundell, that's because we haven't been in a very optimistic mood the last few years, an idea backed up by opinion polls showing that vast majorities of Americans, at least, think things have been going very badly. But if things begin to look up, then perhaps the benevolent alien will return in force.

"From my perspective," Lundell said, "ultimately the greatest revelation about aliens is that 'they' are 'us.' It's just that some of us don't quite know that just yet."

source:

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Dear Red States,

If you manage to steal this election too we've decided we're leaving.

We intend to form our own country, and we're taking the other Blue States with us.

In case you aren't aware, that includes California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois and all theNortheast.

We believe this split will be beneficial to the nation, and especially to the people of the new country of New California. To sum up briefly: You get Texas, Oklahoma and all the slave states.

We get stem cell research and the best beaches.

We get the Statue of Liberty. You get Dollywood.

We get Intel and Microsoft. You get WorldCom.

We get Harvard. You get Ole' Miss.

We get 85% of America's venture capital and entrepreneurs.

You get Alabama. We get Hollywood and Yosemite, thank you.

We get two-thirds of the tax revenue; you get to make the red states pay their fair share.

Since our aggregate divorce rate is 22% lower than the Christian Coalition's, we get a bunch of happy families.

You get a bunch of single moms.

Please be aware that Nuevo California will be pro-choice and anti-war, and we're going to want all our citizens back from Iraq at once.

If you need people to fight, ask your evangelicals.

They have kids they're apparently willing to send to their deaths for no purpose, and they don't care if you don't show pictures of their children's caskets coming home.

We do wish you success in Iraq, and hope that the WMDs turn up, but we're not willing to spend our resources in Bush's Quagmire.

With the Blue States in hand, we will have firm control of 80% of the country's fresh water, more than 90% of the pineapple and lettuce, 92% of the nation's fresh fruit, 95% of America's quality wines, 90% of all cheese, 90% of the high tech industry, 95% of the corn and soybeans (thanks Iowa!), most of the U.S. low-sulfur coal, all living redwoods,
sequoias and condors, all the Ivy and Seven Sister schools plusStanford, Cal Tech, Berkeley, UCLA and MIT.

With the Red State
s, on the other hand, you will have to cope with 88% of all obese Americans (and their projected health care costs), 92% of all

U.S. mosqu
itoes, nearly 100% of the tornadoes, 90% of the hurricanes, 99% of all Southern Baptists, virtually 100% of all televangelists, Rush Limbaugh, Bob Jones University, Clemson and the University of Georgia.

Addit
ionally, 38% of those in the Red states believe Jonah was actually swallowed by a whale, 62% believe life is sacred unless we're discussing the war, the death penalty or gun laws, 44% say that evolution is only a theory, 53% that Saddam was involved in 9/11 and 61% of you crazy bastards believe you are people with higher morals than we lefties.

Final
ly, we're taking all the good pot, too.

You can have that dirt weed they grow in Mexic
o

Peace
out,
-- the Blue State
s

source: http://www.craigslist.org/about/best/sfo/80714812.html


Friday, October 24, 2008

Iraq Vet Crushed by Police Horse at Presidential Debate

Shocking video shows former Army Sergeant Nick Morgan at the moment his head is crushed to the sidewalk under the hooves of a police horse. Morgan lost consciousness immediately as bones shattered in his face. Visibly bleeding, he was tugged, dragged, arrested, and thrown in a police van, where other arrested veterans say he was denied medic...

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