Monday, July 31, 2006

From Fingerpaints to Fingerprints

Under new laws being drawn up in secret by the EU and subject to neither votes by the people nor the approval of parliament, British children as young as six will be subject compulsory fingerprinting and their prints stored on a central (European) database.

No word yet as to when they will have the bar codes tattooed on the back of their necks.

War of the Words

When I reviewed this.. this cinematic thing that was Tim Hine's adaptation of The War of the Worlds, I thought that it would all pass away like a fever dream, but apparently you can't keep a vile atrocity down and now Pendragon Pictures are filing suit against Darkhorse Comics over its graphic novel version of the H. G. Wells book for infringement of copyright-- despite the fact that both are faithful adaptations of a work that has been in public domain for years.

You would think that Mr. Hines would be content with having his ouvere lapse into blessed obscurity, but when one is deep in Ed Wood territory the normal rules do not apply.

Now if you will excuse me, I have to try to get some of the feeling back into the right side of my face.

Do It Yourself Scanning Tunnelling Microscope

Amaze your friends! With these handy directions, you too can construct a scanning tunnelling microscope for under $100.

DIY projects have come a long way since I was a lad. I remember a time when if you could bang a few valves and bit of wire together and pick up Berlin, you were cock of the walk. Now you've got to split bloody atoms before you even get a look in.

Mark Steyn on the Home Front

Mark Steyn looks at how we've handed over the entirety of fighting the war to the military and why this is a losing strategy.

Our enemies understand "why we fight" and where the fight is. They know that in the greater scheme of things the mosques of Jakarta and Amsterdam and Toronto and Dearborn are more important territory than the Sunni Triangle. The U.S. military is the best-equipped and best-trained in the world. But it's not enough, it never has been and it never will be.
Read the whole thing, as the kids say.

Political Climate or Soft Target?

Christopher Chantrill over at the American Thinker looks at the recent terror shooting and concludes that the reason why Seattle was the scene had to do with its liberal political climate encouraging a mindset of violent victimhood.

Perhaps, but I'm more of the soft-target school myself. I have a hard time imagining a similar attack being tried in Denver or Houston where at least one of the women in the office would have been packing heat.

Quote of the Day

In the region there is of course a country such as Iran - a great country, a great people and a great civilization which is respected and which plays a stabilizing role in the region.
French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy, just before they jumped on his head and started bawling for a strait jacket.

The Plague of Wombat Fights

I have sincere doubts that this tale of a man arrested for running a failed womabat-fighting ring is true, but it's worth relating just for the quote:

The bastard who sold them to me said they were vicious killers," said Kensington. "I paid $300 bucks for a pair of eucalyptus-leaf eating retards who just stare at each other with a dull glare."
Tip o' the hat to Fark.com.

Babyfree Bubble

Parenting is past; procreation a pestilence. The Childfree Militant Movement is on the rise as those who declare that they are childless and proud of it find their voice. Their organisations are growing, their ranks are swelling and soon they will triumph and their children will inherit the...

Hang on.

Captain Nemo, Call Your Service

Underwater Daleks? No, personal submarines.

In sporty colours, no less!

Bunker Mentality

Communist China has built a huge bunker under Shanghai big enough to house 200,000 of the city's 17.5 million people-- basically, the ratio of the city's Party elite, their families and servitors-- in the event of nuclear war.

Is Beijing expecting something that we aren't? And should we?

"To Be Honest, We're Crap at This"

From The Telegraph:

Schools will no longer have to teach teenagers the difference between right and wrong under government plans.

The move, greeted yesterday with a mixture of disbelief and fury, is outlined in proposed changes to the national curriculum, requested by ministers in an attempt to simplify the system.

Instead of a requirement to teach right from wrong, schools will only have to ensure that children between 11 and 14 have "secure values and beliefs" and are "committed to human rights".
When I read this my first reaction was "Good God, this load of PC claptrap is another nail in the coffin." However, on reflection, I have concluded that since the schools have made such an absolute and unqualified pig's breakfast in teaching right from wrong until now, this might actually be a step in the right direction.

The Egg and I

Revolution has come to the kitchen, courtesy of B&H Colour Change, in the form of an egg with a label printed on it to tell you when it's properly boiled.

But that isn't the most frightening thing, for other signs of "progress" loom on the horizon:
The egg logos are the latest application of heat-sensitive technology, which is likely to transform future kitchen landscapes. Other inventions include oven gloves that not only have temperature sensors built in, but also "talk", with phrases such as "The food should be checked in 40 minutes".
Progress or not, when my oven mitts start having a chat with me, it's time to throw in the towel and ring for a takeaway.

Terror and Timing

It's unbelievable. A terrorist attack occured last Friday at the offices of the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle. This is not only in my vicinity, but is also where my wife used to work. Great. I'm well-poised to cover the events as they unfold and even steal a march on the rest of the blogosphere with my insider's angle. What happens? I'm stuck in a cabin on the San Juan Islands without an internet connection in sight when the story breaks and only find out about it from a newspaper in the marina shop the next day.

Now that I'm back, the story is, of course, as dead as mutton and the only thread left is how the media and "community leaders" are handling this. Despite the fact that the perpetrator walked into a Jewish office declared "I am a Muslim" and started blazing away with a couple of hand guns, the local authorities and the press immediately jumped into action and dismissed any idea that this might be terrorism. Following the pattern of the El Al shootings, the DC snipers, the North Carolina SUV attack and others, this has been stamped "isolated incident" where the motives remain as much a mystery as the recent case where a man walked into a post-rave party and shot up the room before committing suicide. Disaffected infidel and self-proven anti-Semitic Muslim-- the line between is so blurred. Three days after a coldly calculated attack on an office guarded by a security system by a man with a clearly expressed identity and motive that left one person was left dead and five others, including a pregnant woman, in hospital, the "gunman's" own words have been disregarded and he has now been safely pegged as a confused loner who had nothing to do with Islam and even flirted with Christianity recently.

I would have thought that a well-adjusted terrorist is not exactly a common thing, and that by his own words and deeds it's pretty damn obvious that he'd made up his mind and chose the Religion of Peace, but according the the likes of the Seattle PI, this has nothing whatsoever to do with Jihad.

Move along, people. Nothing to see here.

On the plus side, the local Muslim community has condemned the shooting and stood with their Jewish counterparts, though the Looney Left has shown all the sensitivity of a doorknob, as illustrated by one Cindy Sherbert of the Palestine Solidarity Committee:

This clash of Seattle cultures was bitterly in evidence Friday as Sherbert and dozens of others gathered in Westlake Park to protest Israel -- even as a man was firing a semiautomatic pistol at women in the Jewish Federation building a few blocks away.

"It was just a bizarre coincidence that everything happened all at once that day," said Sherbert, who learned of Haq's attack as she was preparing to attend the rally. "I wasn't sure if we were even going to go ahead with it. I was terribly sad, and didn't want to be seen as insensitive -- I was quite devastated."

But she went, anyway, finding it impossible not to protest Israel's military.
She might have been marching through her fellow citizen's blood, but that's okay, because she was "devastated."

How will this play out in Seattle? That's easily predicted-- if you wear big enough blinkers.

"We debate, we argue and discuss, and we go on and on and on, frankly never reaching consensus," said Robert Jacobs, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in the Northwest. Everlasting peaceful debate is just as he likes it.

"This is Seattle. The issues don't get resolved."
Yes, just talk and talk and talk. Unfortunately, the barbarians we face tend to do their talking with Kalashnikovs, bombs, rockets and airliners filled with innocent people.

We might just end up talking ourselves to death.

Friday, July 28, 2006

Gone Fishing

Back on Monday

Thursday, July 27, 2006

Global Warming Alert

This just in from the University of Tasmania: global warming has struck not only Earth and Mars, but Pluto as well.

We didn't listen!

Headline of the Day

Fatal tour boat unsafe
Riiiiggghhhhttt.

Another Culinary Delight

Britain has bloodsicles, but Switzerland has meat ice cream.

Carnivores rejoice.

Virtual Coolness

ThinkGeek's Bluetooth Laser Virtual Keyboard uses a red diode laser to project a virtual keyboard onto your desktop that is not only compatible with your Bluetooth-enabled cell phone or PDA, but also makes a satisfying clicking sound as you type your magnum opus.

Now all you need is a virtual desk to project your virtual keyboard onto.

Gapingvoid Makes a Request

Well, since you insist...

Self-Healing Spacesuits

What the well-dressed spaceman is wearing this year-- or sometime in the future, anyway.

Way Too Much Time On Their Hands

Absolutely Bloody Mad.

But Fun!

Sorting Out the script

Is Israel a Goliath trampling Lebanese Davids? Or is it an overmatched bully stumbling into a quagmire?

I do wish the MSM would make up its mind.

Flying Cars? Sorry, Not Today

Flying cars are a major feature on Tales of Future Past and I've always had a certain fondness for them (aside from the prospect of having one crashing through the roof of my house, of course), but according to Mike Elgin, it looks as though we won't be seeing such vehicles in the showrooms soon.

The only way "flying cars" (operated by non-pilots and flying outside the existing air traffic control system) could come to fruition is if they were completely computer controlled by some massive, centralized system that knew the location -- and controlled every movement -- of every "flying car" aloft. But turning over control to a computer system that would line everyone up into traffic jams in the sky doesn't really live up to the "flying car" vision of total freedom, either. And, in any event, this kind of system is pure science fiction. It's decades away, at best. We're not even close to having that kind of central control for cars -- controlling "flying cars" like that would be far, far more difficult and expensive, and the demand for it is much lower.
Just as well. I still haven't paid off the Honda yet.

Leading From Behind

Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah has abandoned the Lebanese front for the safety of Damascus. Is he there out of cowardice, for a dressing down from his masters, to plea for more powerful weapons, or all three?

Now We're Really, Really Angry!

In the empty threat department we have Al Qaeda no. 2 man Ayman al-Zawahri saying that the Israeli offensive in Lebanon has cheesed him off royally and that the group now saw "all the world as a battlefield open in front of us."

I do wish Al Qaeda would hire someone to review their old press releases. When you've declared total war against all of civilisation it doesn't do much for your credibility to come back every couple of weeks and say that now you've declared double-plus tip-top total war.

Levels, old boy. Levels.

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Bedmaking II

It looks as if Omar Bakri is not an isolated case. Denmark has rescued out of Lebanon one of the imams responsible for inciting the burning of Danish embassies.

A pity that the Danes are more soft-headed forgiving than their Royal Navy counterparts.

On the Carpet

I wish I had a few yards of this outside my door. I'd probably never have to answer it again.

Irony Alert

When a spellchecking firm needs to correct a typo in its press release, then there is a serious disconnect going on somewhere.

Spying On the Spycams

For the peeping tom and the paranoid we have the WCH DD9000; a wireless webcam hunter that lets you tap into the video feeds of any wireless cameras that happen to be in the vicinity.

If you switch this on hoping to get the security camera feed from the strip joint next door and see your own living room instead, take our advice: RUN!

DIY Department

Need a really cheap fax machine? Got a couple of salmon tins lying around the house? You're halfway there.

Closet With No Door

AP headline: Lance Bass of 'N Sync reveals he's gay

Next up: Water is wet, the Sun rises in the East and Ben Afleck needs acting lessons.

When You're Number Two, You Try Harder

A portrait of ambition: Monaco is the second-smallest, yet the fastest-growing nation on Earth-- if you look at as a percentage, anyway.

Separated at Birth?

Who is your "celebrity twin?" Upload your image on Myheritge.com and pattern-recognition software will automatically provide a list of candidates based on probable matches.

The interface for the site is very user friendly and the premise is pretty neat, but I have my doubts about how well it works at the moment, as my uploading my clock produced matches that included the actress who played Ally McBeal and an obscure black female rap singer, but not Dylan Moran, who my wife claims I'm a dead ringer for.

Of course, she also claims that my behaviour is an exact match for Bernard Black's, who Moran plays on the telly, so maybe she's biased.

Headline of the Day

Saddam prefers shooting to hanging
I'm easy.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Nanny State on a Bun

Tony Blair has told the food industry that it faces the Hobson's choice of "censor or be censored" when it comes to food advertisements. According to the BBC,
"I think I used to be very much in the bracket of those who say 'the nanny state' - it is not for the state to tell us what to do," he told the BBC's Mark Easton.

But, he added, successful anti-smoking campaigns and the campaign to make school dinners more healthy had helped to change his mind.
Translation: Mr. Blair was against curtailing personal freedoms until he discovered how satisfying it was to control people's lives.

For their own good, of course. Ever and always for their own good.

A Lack of Perspective

Headline: European Nations Fight Over What Vodka Is

Maybe, but after you've killed off a couple of bottles, who gives a toss.

Powers of 10

The wonders of the Internet. This short film about scales and distances was incredibly impressive when it was made back in 1977 and I used it often when I taught university. Over the years, I've seen it adapted to a book and a web site, but now it's available in its original form on demand with just a click of the mouse.

Progress, I suppose.

Tip o' the hat to Ektopia.

Peace, Promise or Pose?

The IRA terrorist: a thing of the past?

The British and Irish governments claim that the Irish Republican Army is "no longer planning violence or illegal activity of any kind" and therefore there is no obstacle to reviving the power-sharing assembly in Northern Ireland.

This is quite a remarkable statement-- and not merely because of the IRA's recent and notorious history of refusal to disarm publicly, bank robbery, extortion, kneecapping, drug dealing, supporting foreign terrorists, spying and evisceration. The elephant in the room is that if the IRA really has disarmed, renounced all violence and ceased all illegal activity, then it has no reason to exist at all and so why doesn't it prove that its thuggish campaign is over and disband?

Perhaps this claim on the part of Dublin and London is true, perhaps it is wishful thinking or perhaps it is a cynical papering-over in hopes of getting the Stormont assembly jump-started again.

That remains to be seen.

The Writing on the Water

Scientists at the Akishima Laboratories in Japan have developed a machine that uses 50 wave generators to form letters on the surface of water.

The scientists are now seeking a major grant to figure out what the point of the bloody thing is.

Future Pistol

In the Just Plain Cool Department, we present a DIY electromagnetic coil handgun-- with laser sight, of course.

Tip o' the hat to TechEBlog.

Piscine Police

And now from Japan, it's anti-terrorist fish.

They don't look like much, but they're formidable little buggers.

Good Night, Melanie

Melanie Martinez, the presenter of the PBS Sprouts network's Goodnight Show has been sacked for appearing in ribald videos.

Having a four-year old, I watch a lot of children's television and seen from the perspective as an adult, many of the programmes seem to have a subtext that would do Kafka proud. I am convinced that the Teletubbies are the products of some government genetics project, that Jay Jay the Jetplane is part of a race of living aircraft that have somehow managed to enslave mankind and I can't watch Angelina Ballerina without wondering what bizarre, tragic prerevolutionary past the Slavic ballet teacher Miss Lilly must be covering up. As for the departing Miss Melanie, I can never decide whether she's sitting on gigantic furniture or if she's only three feet tall. Regardless, her fixed smile and way too cheerful disposition makes me suspect that she should really get out more before she snaps.

Now maybe she'll get the chance.

Biker Nuns

Two Dutch nuns in habit and on bicycles chased a suspected thief through Amsterdam.

I smell the pilot for a really great cop show here.

Headline of the Day

Alcohol may prolong life
The preservative qualities of booze. They don't call it "getting pickled" for nothing.

Monday, July 24, 2006

Hybrids: Bad Economy, Good Politics.

General Motors Vice Chairman Bob Lutz says that hybrid cars are good publicity, but little else.
Hybrids are technologically of doubtful benefit, and expensive, but necessary from a political and public relations point of view.
Maybe, but you still risk the horrible danger of Smug.

Poll Results

Flag Day

In a phenomenal and uncharacteristic burst of common sense, the British government have come down on the side of liberty and lifted the ban on flying national flags.

That unfamiliar smell you're experiencing is called a breath of fresh air. Let's hope its the harbinger of a change in the wind.

The Kraken Wakes?

First hordes of jellyfish are in Japanese waters attacking nuclear power plants, and now they're massing off the coast of Norway just waiting for the signal to strike.

This can't be coincidence, people. We've got to do something before it's too late!

Quote of the Day

We are not fighting so that you will offer us something. We are fighting to eliminate you.

Hezbollah leader Hussein Massawi on his idea of "compromise" with the West.

Thoughtpolice Guilty of Thoughtcrime

The grim spectre of Diversity marches through the police ranks with its characteristic goosestep as the government imposes its procrustean ideal of "equality" on us all and woe betide those who object or deviate. According to this opinion piece in The Telegraph (emphasis added),
Its race and diversity programme has included annual "diversity weeks", "diversity awareness" courses, a "positive action" programme to develop staff from "under-represented" groups, and "diversity training" for 15,000 staff in the Immigration and Nationality Directorate. We now know that they might have spent the time more profitably learning how to maintain a filing system to keep track of illegal immigrants.

Mr Reid has blamed Home Office staff for their failures, but the racial quotas were imposed by his Government. Many officials, police officers and others have watched in stunned disbelief while recruitment on merit has been discarded to meet ethnic targets. They quickly learnt that it was best to keep quiet, and staff who spoke up in favour of fair procedures found themselves in hot water for "inappropriate behaviour".

To make it clear that opponents of ethnic targets stood no chance of promotion, a range of "diversity-related assessments" were included in all staff selection processes from March 2005. What does this mean in practice? A 19-year-old female candidate for the police service recently learnt a hard lesson in diversity awareness. She had passed her written tests, and in her interview was asked what she would do if she needed advice. She replied: "I would go to my sergeant and ask him for help." She failed the interview for referring to the sergeant as "him", thus revealing her lack of gender awareness.
She may have been guilty of a lack of "gender awareness," but she at least gets top marks for grammar awareness.

Samizdata has also noted this episode, and regards it as a good thing-- though not for the reasons the government would approve of.

Lebanese Countdown

News from Lebanon over at the Captain's Quarters. The bad news: The IDF may have only ten days to take out Hezbollah. The good news: That may be all they need.

Update: Apparently, this has domestic implications as well.

Update: ABC News takes a less sanguine view.