Archive for November, 2003

Warp Records to Release MP3’s of their Entire Catalog

Wednesday, November 26th, 2003

According to this Pitchfork article, the highly influential Warp Records will be releasing their entire catalog of releases in high-quality mp3 format via their Bleep.com website. All tracks will be available for $0.99 each. Maybe some big labels will follow suit, but I doubt it.

House Says NO to SPAM

Tuesday, November 25th, 2003

The House of Representatives has passed a bill that will make it illegal to do many of the things common to spamming. It also legalizes some spam email, which will no doubt make geeks everywhere froth at the mouth. Overall, the description in the article seems pretty reasonable to me. The most important part in my mind is making it illegal to send spam with a misleading subject or falsified headers. That always seemed like it should be illegal to me.

Bill Joy says some interesting stuff…

Saturday, November 22nd, 2003

In this Wired interview Bill Joy, co-founder of Sun Microsystems, says some pretty insightful things about the nature of science and technology and some hard choices we all might have to make in the decades to come. He also goes on to talk about his ‘meditation wall’ being designed by world-class engineers for his New York apartment (he lives in Aspen, CO). Interesting fellow.

Review of Tony Hawk’s Underground

Thursday, November 20th, 2003

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 was one of my first few Playstation 2 games and gave me reason to worry about my future as I played it almost non-stop for the first few weeks I had it. Pro Skater 4 didn’t inspire quite the same fear for my life, but I still distinctly remember the moments as I unlocked each level.

With much excitement, I bought a copy of Tony Hawk’s Underground the other day. The series has taken a bit of a turn with this addition, going with more of a story-based format. You can read about the specifics on all the usual game review sites.

After playing it for several hours, here’s my thoughts. The addition of multiple difficulty settings is GREAT. Not everyone is a career game player and some people actually like to do their best to avoid frustration in their lives. The story mode is good enough and the dialog has made me chuckle more than once already. The skating is great (of course) and the new trick options are fun. Interestingly, some of the missions involve driving cars or running and jumping instead of just skating (strange, I know). The variety is welcome and the missions are still fun, but those parts aren’t nearly as well implemented as the skating parts. Overall, the game’s well worth the purchase price if you’re a fan of the series and if you’ve never played a Tony Hawk game before this is a good one to start with. It makes new strides in teaching you the moves as you complete the missions.

Free Cable Channels

Thursday, November 20th, 2003

I heard about this at some point a long time ago, but I never tried it out until now. If you have cable tv service, call up your cable company and ask if they have any promotions you can take advantage of. They probably will and you’ll probably get some premium channels for free for 3 months or something. Easy!

Spammers versus Anti-Spammers

Wednesday, November 19th, 2003

I got an interesting spam today that seems to perhaps be an attempt to reduce the effectiveness of these Bayesian statistics-based spam filters that have become the rage recently. The message contains white text on a white background so it appears to be blank, but the words appear if you run a selection over them all. Once visible, they seem to be all random words. Most of the words are harmless, but some of them are words that are probably common to spam. You lose either way because marking it as spam will add in non-spam type words into the filter database potentially increasing the rate of false positives, but leaving it as non-spam reduces the score of the spam words contained in the message potentially increasing the rate of false negatives.

The ever-popular Spamassassin has a Bayesian component in its arsenal, but uses more traditional content-based filters as well. Apple’s Mail client has a built-in Bayesian Junk Filter, and Bogofilter is a unix-based Bayesian filter that I use myself.

MP3.com is Dead!

Friday, November 14th, 2003

According to this message on the mp3.com site, they have been consumed by CNET and will be taking their site offline on Dec 2. They will be destroying all content so all people with mp3.com sites will need to find alternative hosting. MP3.com will return in another format at a later time. Man, the Internet’s growing up, and I don’t like it one bit.

Water Batteries

Friday, November 7th, 2003

BBC Article
Some researchers have figured out how to make small amounts (very small) of electricity by simply passing water through very small channels cut into a hunk of glass. It’s not even close to being commercially viable now, but the possibility of being able to power small electronic devices with water is very exciting.

What is the Meatrix?

Thursday, November 6th, 2003

Check out this flash movie spoof on the Matrix. It’s funny and provides information about the current state of factory farming in America. If you want to know where your food comes from, take the red pill

Interview with Jeff Hawkins

Tuesday, November 4th, 2003

A co-founder of both Palm and Handspring as well as the founder of a brain research lab, this guy’s one of the most forward thinking people in technology today. This is my favorite line, haha:
“I have some things to work on that are totally new, which Nokia would never do and Compaq and Microsoft would probably never think of.”