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Archive for November, 2004

Who is Nancy Zerg? / What is H&R Block?

Tuesday, November 30th, 2004

And the Question is “Who Defeated Ken Jennings”. and “What was the Question that defeated Ken Jennings”

KenJen has been voted off the Island. Well it actually happen, as reported by Jason Kottke, Nancy Zerg, a Los Angeles real estate agent, on November 30 2004 beat Jeopardy titan Ken Jennings in his 75th appearance on the trivia game show.

The Globe and mail has a piece on The woman who brought down Jennings

(H&R Block is making sure he’ll always remember the company for other reasons: It has offered him free tax preparation for life.)

Congratulations to Nancy and Ken! (okay so he didn’t last to January 17, 2026)

Update: You can watch Mr Jennings final moments here, in case you havn’t seen it enough!

Copyright Reform is Not a Spectator Sport

Tuesday, November 30th, 2004

University of Ottawa law prof/copyright fighter Michael Geist writes in a commentary of November 2004 “Bulletin Online” of the Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) :

The education community has the opportunity to emerge as a positive force for change by actively supporting a uniquely Canadian vision of copyright that compensates creators, facilitates access & embraces Canadian culture. Michael Geist argues it is time to get in the game.

Category:Law

‘Howl’s Moving Castle’ by Hayao Miyazaki

Friday, November 26th, 2004



Japan Today reposts that Howl’s Moving Castle’ sets 2-day box-office record (1.48 billion yen in box-office revenue and an audience of 1.1 million people), a record for a domestic film.

Hayao Miyazaki is best know in North American for his film “Sen to Chihiro no Kamikakushi” (Spirited Away) in 2001. Looks like the Japanese region DVD will be out January 19, 2005. No current Northern America distribution date for the cinemas.

Here’s the offical website, (Japanese) : http://www.howl-movie.com/ and a (english) review from The Japan Times.

Plot Summary:

Sophie Hatter, the eldest of three, is apprenticed to make hats for the people of Ingary, a place where spells, magic cloaks, and seven-league boots exist. She and all the young girls are warned to stay inside or be taken by Howl, the evil wizard whose black castle can be seen moving through the hills. After an encounter with a witch and with a spell cast on her to make her an old woman, Sophie goes to seek adventure. She heads towards Howl’s moving castle where she will encounter things she had never imagined.

Categories Movies/Asian

update : The Animated Life, Hayao Miyazaki, (Howl’s Moving Castle’ & Spirited Away ) in The New Yorker, Jan 16 2005

Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi

Thursday, November 25th, 2004



Via The New York Times: Hi Hi Puffy Ami Yumi, which debut on November 19th on the Cartoon Network, is an animated series based on two real Japanese pop stars, Ami Onuki and Yumi Yoshimura, a k a Puffy Ami Yumi.

However it is NOT a Japanese import,and it’s not anime. Ms. Onuki and Ms. Yoshimura also appear in each episode, doing live-action skits in a mixture of Japanese and accented English, with songs in the original Japanese (without subtitles).

You might already be a little familiar with them cause they sing the Theme song for the Teen Titans show on the Comedy network

You can hear more samples of their music on the Sony Music Japan site or the Sony Japan PuffyAmiYumi site.

Category: Asian/Art/Music

Update The Pop Duo in the New York Times Style Section Jan 16 ‘05

Interview With Asterisk Creator Mark Spencer

Thursday, November 25th, 2004

Via Slashdot comes this interview With Asterisk (an Open Source PBX - Private Branch Exchange - running on Linux) Creator Mark Spencer at SineApps.

Category Asterisk

Canadian Musicians call for ANOTHER update on copyright law

Thursday, November 25th, 2004

Via CTV.ca . (I saw this on the Telly) Also here’s the same news reported by the CBC and Canada.com

There were a few intersting quotes that stood out for me, 1)implying the the Canada Copyright was out of date and “third world”;2) the industry is being destroyed.

Some of Canada’s best-known musicians appeared on a different stage Wednesday — Parliament Hill — to band together and lobby politicians to toughen up Canada’s outdated copyright laws.

The musicians say the industry has hit a low note because of Internet piracy and bootleg CDs. The musicians, who included Blue Rodeo’s Jim Cuddy and rocker Tom Cochrane, say the Copyright Act, which was drafted in 1908, is ill-equipped to address the issues of the 21st century.

“We’re basically like a Third World country right now, with our copyright law,” said Cochrane.

Graham Henderson, who heads the Canadian Recording Industry Association, says the Act has massive loopholes. He says it’s damaging the industry, the economy and the careers of artists.

“Downloading, file-swapping, peer-to-peer networks — these are all euphemisms for piracy, pure and simple. It is devastating to the Canadian music industry.”

Henderson says the recording industry has seen music sales drop almost $500 million in just a few years. That’s about a quarter of a million records a month.

The industry tracked illegal downloads of the Tragically Hip music for one month. They found 2.8 million attempts to download the music, compared with 1,000 legal purchases through the online music store Puretracks.

Cochrane says their fight is not about money; it’s about what’s right.

“I don’t want the press to spin things like: ‘Here’s rich Jim Cuddy and rich Tom Cochrane coming along to make more money.’” Cochrane said. “We’re here because it’s a right, it is stealing.”

Marianne Goodwin, a spokeswoman for Heritage Minister Liza Frulla, said the minister met early Wednesday with representatives of the musicians and discussed the issue.

Goodwin said her office is working on copyright reform as recommended by a joint report from the Heritage and Industry departments. The plan is to seek authority from cabinet this fall to begin drafting amendments.

But Prof. Michael Geist, Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law and a law professor at the University of Ottawa, disagrees with the musicians that there’s a problem with music downloading.

He says millions of music lovers don’t download and doubts online music swapping is putting much of a dent in the industry.

“File sharing is certainly here to stay and the lawsuits and attempts at new legislation are attempts to put the toothpaste back in the tube.”

There is a discussion thread over on Digital Coypright Canada, from which I’ve gleamed a few interesting facts, here and here:

  • Althought the orginal Copyright act in Canada dates from 1908, it was it was updated as recently as the spring of 2004, and had made major changes made in 1997 because of recording industry lobbying (this is when downloading of music from P2P networks became legal in Canada, as well as creating a levy on blank media that goes to the industry).
  • It’s claimed that music sales may have dropped by a third in a few years, but most of that drop was in 2001-2002, when sales of just about everything dropped dramatically.If we look at the most recent sales statistics, we see that Canadian CD sales have been increasing (by 2% in 2003-2004), not decreasing. Also various other reports on the impact of downloading have questioned the music industries claims

Maybe the real reason for all of this (via Canada.com): The artists, members of the Music in Canada Coalition, also noted that the three-year, $95-million Canada Music Fund expires this year. They called on Ottawa to provide long-term sustainable funding to the music industry.

But it’s not about ” rich Jim Cuddy and rich Tom Cochrane coming along to make more money.”

Category:CopyRight

Update: from November 26 2004 “UK Music Industry Sees Record Sales” via SlashDot.org : “Despite the claims of gloom and doom from the BPI (the UK equivalent of the RIAA) the BBC is reporting that ‘UK record companies are celebrating their best ever year for album sales, with a record 237 million sold in the 12 months to September…also said sales of single tracks were up thanks to the availability of legal download services.’ It looks like music sales will continue to climb if the customers get something they like. The article also discusses adding music downloads to the charts.”

Ship High In Transit

Thursday, November 25th, 2004

Via Despicable Horses :Historical information you need to know about shipping Manure:

In the 16th and 17th centuries, everything had to be transported by ship. It was also before commercial fertilizer’s invention, so large shipments of manure were common. It was shipped dry, because in dry form it weighed a lot less than when wet, but once water (at sea) hit it, it not only became heavier, but the process of fermentation began again, of which a by-product is methane gas.

As the stuff was stored below decks in bundles you can see what could (and did) happen. Methane began to build up below decks, and the first time someone came below at night, with a lantern, >BOOOOM! Several ships were destroyed in this manner before it was determined just what was happening.

After that, the bundles of manure were always stamped with the term, ” Ship High In Transit” on them, which meant for the sailors to stow it high enough off the lower decks so that any water that came into the hold would not touch this volatile cargo and start the production of methane. Thus evolved the term “S.H.I.T,” which has come down through the centuries and is in use to this very day.

I would love to verify this, but too funny!

Anda’s game

Wednesday, November 24th, 2004

Cory Doctorow latest short story Anda’s game and as per the review, cutting edge as expected. He promises more (soon-ish?)

Categories: Cory/SciFi

The Chinese Century:

Monday, November 22nd, 2004

The Chinese Century, written by Dana Blankenhorn, a Fictional-Non-Fiction (ala Tom Clancy), ripped from today’s headlines or at least adapted as each chapter in the online novel is released.

Army developing Liquid Body Armor

Monday, November 22nd, 2004

Via Military.com, bringing Science Fiction to Life !?

Sounding like something right of Larry Niven’s RingWorld novels, The U.S. Army Research Laboratory is developing Liquid armor for Kevlar vests.

Once a bullet or frag hits the shear thickening fluid, composed of hard particles suspended in a liquid, transitions to a rigid material.


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