October 24, 2003
Ironie Ambiente
Blog of the Day is Ironie Ambiente:
Fouille. Aha! Matrices! UM, j'ai déjà environ 200 matrices; ils vivent dans un vase sur ma table de café. Je ne suis pas sûr pourquoi j'ai pensé qu'I a eu besoin des autres (compte) 28. Ils sont jolis, cependant.Fouille! Haha!
J'allais signaler une information d'avertissement et suivante reçue d'une source secrète * que le poison d'une grenouille D'or-Jaune de dard de poison pourrait tuer jusqu'à 1500 personnes, et que vous devriez tous envoyer m'à de grands montants d'argent pour m'aider à éviter cette menace en achetant un bon nombre d'ordinateurs parce que nous tous savons cela qui produit des ordinateurs crée l'anhydride carbonique, qui est très mauvais pour les usines du ** de jungle d'Amazon où la grenouille D'or-Jaune de dard de poison a sa tanière. Ainsi si vous me donnez assez d'argent, je puis acheter assez d'ordinateurs pour les essuyer dehors entièrement! Et même si je puis seulement acheter un ordinateur, ce pourrait être assez pour tuer au moins une grenouille, et économiser les 1500 vies humaines.Those damn grenouilles get everywhere!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 04:19 PM | Comments (49) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
New Blog Showcase
Two picks stand out in this week's New Blog Showcase: Wally at Irreconcilable Musings on the Jihad against the Blogosphere - and what you can do about it, and Scott at Demosophia about the dangers liberal democracy faces from totalitarianism.
The other highlight of this week's showcase is the entry of the League ofPosted by: Pixy Misa at 10:47 AM | Comments (43) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 23, 2003
Oh, Yes
Dinner. I knew I was forgetting something.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 09:26 PM | Comments (49) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
One, Two, Chi!
So I took my new anime goodies back downstairs to the living room, where they can sit with the other 80-odd DVDs I have waiting for me to have time to watch them, and there I noticed something odd.
The new volume of Chobits was number 4. The existing volumes were number 1 (which I have watched) and number 2 (which I will watch, one day). Those who have taken the advanced course will see the problem here.* Well. I counted them twice, looked around in case it had crawled off to be with another genre. No dice.** So I headed off to the spare bedroom. When I'm really busy, but not really really busy, I will go shopping, and then bring the goodies home (whatever they might be) and drop the bags in the spare room. If there's something I want to read or watch or listen to or install right away, I take that one thing, and leave the rest for later. Right now, there's about six months worth of goodies bagged and waiting in that room. Surely Chobits volume 3 was among them? Well, lets see. Figurines from Love Hina, Oh My Goddess, and Dirty Pair. Not quite what I'm after. The Complete SF Novels of Fredric Brown. I really need to find time to read that, but not what I want right now. Two issues of NewType. Getting warm! A bag full of Anime DVDs! Paydirt! Two box sets of You're Under Arrest; Inu Yasha, Tiny Snow Fairy Sugar***, Noir... No Cho. No Bits. Rats. Well, not actual rats. Dig. Six Weird Al Yankovic CDs. Oh, yeah, forgot about those. A 120GB hard disk. Another issue of NewType. Scientific American. Aha! More DVDs. But no Chobits. Dig. Aha! Dice! Um, I already have about 200 dice; they live in a vase on my coffee table. I'm not sure why I thought I needed another (count) 28. They are pretty, though. Rise of Nations. The latest Sims expansion pack. And there, in a bag, all alone, Chobits 3. Oh, and if you happen to see a guy in a full suit of armour wandering around, looking lost, I seem to have this grail-looking thingy too. * "One, two, five!""Three, sir!"
"Three!"
** Well, actually...
*** Fear the power of the cute side!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 09:24 PM | Comments (44) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Call Me Anything You Like
Just don't call me late to dinner.
I just realised that I am absolutely starving. I've been trying to cut back on the meals a bit, lately, and this is what happens. 'Scuse me while I go pig out.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 08:23 PM | Comments (45) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Shopperiffic!
Went shopping tonight, which is something I just haven't done lately. My Anime-pusher had a stack of stuff waiting for me, including the latest volumes of Chobits, Card Captor Sakura (What? What?!), Inu Yasha (Hi Mookie!), Please Teacher, Full Metal Panic, Haibane Renmei (which I saw one-and-a-half episodes of at Animania), DNA2, Noir, and His and Her Circumstances (Kare Kano). Also the latest two issues of NewType... Not that I actually have time to read it.
King's Comics had the Azumanga Daioh manga - yay! I'm a huge fan of this wonderful show, but as far as I know the anime is currently not available. The fansub has been pulled from distribution now that the series has been licensed, but it hasn't actually been released yet. Not that I care, because I already have it. Ha ha! Then I took my few remaining dollars to Galaxy Bookshop (Sydney's best Science Fiction and Fantasy book store) where I found Lois McMaster Bujold's new book, Paladin of Souls. This is the sequel to her fabulous Curse of Chalion, which was nominated for the 2002 Hugo Award for Best Novel.* (The winner was Neil Gaiman's American Gods, which I didn't like at all.) Oh, and Jack Williamson's Darker Than You Think and Lawrence Watt-Evans' Something-or-Other. Sorry, LWE, I just buy your books, I don't notice the titles so much... But it's Paladin of Souls that's going to keep me away from the blogs for a couple of days. Try not to break anything, peoples, and beware of frogs. They're up to no good! * Bujold did win the Hugo for Best Novel in 1991 for The Vor Game, and again in 1995 for Mirror Dance.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 08:17 PM | Comments (47) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Frogs!
It looks like mu.nu was partially DoSed by a group of Golden-Yellow Poison Dart frogs.
No, really. I was going to post a warning, following information received from a covert source* that the poison from one Golden-Yellow Poison Dart frog could kill up to 1500 people, and that you should all send me large amounts of money to help me avert this menace by buying lots of computers because we all know that producing computers creates carbon dioxide, which is very bad for the plants of the Amazon Jungle** where the Golden-Yellow Poison Dart frog has its lair. So if you give me enough money, I can buy enough computers to wipe them out entirely! And even if I can only buy one computer, that might be enough to kill at least one frog, and save 1500 human lives. You know it makes sense. And the next thing I know, the gigabit line through wcg.net to Mu.Nu Global Headquarters goes down. No explanation, no warning, just the faint sound of ribbit from the conduit. Fortunately, gblx.net (who provide another of our gigabit lines) recently improved their frogproofing, so it was still possible to get at the goodies if you were coming from the right side of the net. Anyway, I'm never one to back down in the face of danger, real or imagined, so here's the warning:One Golden-Yellow Dart frog's poison can kill 1500 people. This menace must be stopped before they kill again. Please give generously to the World Anti-Wildlife Fund (WAWF) care of this blog. Thank you.
* An ad for the Discovery Channel.
** Actually, carbon dioxide is good for plants, but we'll ignore that for the moment.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 03:15 PM | Comments (45) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Land of the Long Lunch
I understand that France has a standard 35-hour working week. Can anyone tell me if that means 9-5 with an hour for lunch, or is it really 9-4 (or something) with an hour (or whatever) for lunch, so less than 35 actual working hours?
Just curious, since I have more experience with 35-hour days than with 35-hour weeks.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 12:20 PM | Comments (73) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Smaller Atoms
That babble I posted over at Jen's about Picotechnology wasn't entirely babble. See, for example, this page on muonic atoms:
Or this one:A muon m is a lepton with mass of 105MeV
It is possible to replace one of the electron in an atom by a negative muon.
[Scary-looking equations go here.]
Therefore muonic orbits much closer to nucleus
Since the muon (mu) mass is 206.77 times larger than the electron (me) mass,the atomic radius of muonic systems is approximately 200 times smaller than the H atom bohr radius.Since mu/mp~ 0.1,where mp is a proton mass, considerable isotope effects are expected to occur in muonic molecules.The lifetime of the muon is ~ 2 ns,which is much longer than current intense laser pulse durations,thus allowing in principle a possibility to manipulate muonic systems by superintense (I> 10 **20 W/cm2) lasers. Such high intensities are required since the ionization potentials are consequently 200 times larger than H and the muonic unit of laser intensity becomes 200**4 times larger than the atomic unit Io= 3.5 x 10 **16 W/cm2.The corresponding muonic time unit is 200 times shorter than the atomic one (24 attoseconds),ie 120 zeptoseconds. We derive scaling rules for the behavior of muonic atoms and molecules exposed to superintense laser fields using quasistatic models of tunnelling ionization and dissociaition akin to our previous work on H2+ in intense laser fields, ( Phys Rev Lett 84,3562(2000), Phys Rev A 63,,023409 (2001)). Ionization and dissociation rates for the muonic systems, ppu,ddu,ttu,will be presented for currently available superintense (I~10**22 W/cm2) 800 nm laser pulses in order to discuss manipulation scenarios such as laser induced recollision at such ultrahigh intensities where proton ponderomotive energies of 1 MeV can be now created.Zeptoseconds! Haha! Those wacky physicists! But anyway: Smaller atoms! Coming soon to a store near you! But you have to act fast. Update: This is why my lab exploded. Well, that and three hundred cases of Jolt Cola on a hot summer day...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 04:00 AM | Comments (44) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Curse You, Non-Globalisation!
I have a DVD Burner, as I've mentioned before. I use it to burn DVDs. Burn, DVD, burn! At around 4½GB a pop, and one-third the price of disk space (even leaving out the added cost of RAID), they make a lot of sense. (In fact, they're just about the only backup medium that currently makes sense, at least if you're looking at the price of storage rather than at the value of your data. Which is the wrong way to look at it... Unless you happen to have a terabyte of files that you don't value that highly but would still be terribly annoyed if you lost any of them.)
Where was I? DVDs, burn, right! So I bought a hundred blank DVD-Rs, which are conveniently white on one side so that they can be printed on and you can tell which way up they go.* So, I have a hundred DVDs, which I am working my way through rapidly. I'll probably be buying another hundred before I'm done. I have a hundred, will have two hundred... Identical disks, white on one side, silver on the other. Oops. Labels would be good. I could buy some CD labels, print them out, peel them off, stick them on, hope I don't screw it up. Or I could get a printer that prints right on the DVD! Epson sell two models that do this, the Photo Stylus 900 and 960. They look like nice little printers in general, and they're not too expensive (particularly the 900). But. Not. In. Australia. Which. Just. Happens. To. Be. Where. I. Live. In America, yes. In Canada, too. In Britain, in Denmark, in the Philippines, in Singapore. But not here, dammit. I've emailed Epson; it will be interesting to see how (and if) they respond. * No, really. Cheap CD-Rs and DVD-Rs are sometimes featureless silver on both sides, and the only way you can tell which way up they go is by studying the diffraction patterns. Or by sticking the disk in the drive and seeing what happens, which is often more reliable. Update: Epson responded this morning. Good for them. Apparently the reason the 900 and 960 are not available in Australia is that they use dye-based inks (the email actually said "die", but never mind) rather than pigment-based inks. The pigment-based inks are water-fast (which means that they won't run), but the dye-based inks are not. Epson helpfully pointed me to the Stylus Photo 2100, which is available in Australia (which I knew) and can print on CDs and DVDs (which I didn't know). It's a very nice printer, 2880x1440 dpi, 7 colours with individual ink cartridges, able to print on paper up to A3+ size with edge-to-edge coverage (no borders). It has parallel and USB and Firewire ports. (I like Firewire.) It costs $1789. Yowie.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 03:25 AM | Comments (54) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
I've Got A Theory
Most people are pretty sensible. (When I say "most people" here, I am specifically excluding teenagers, that is, women between the ages of 13 and 18 and boys under the age of 30.)
I've served on a jury, for example, and I was impressed by the common-sense, level-headed approach taken by the other 11 members. (I was just there for the free sandwiches.) It was not a case that - as far as I know - any of us had had to deal with before, but we listened to the evidence, took notes, and came fairly quickly to a unanimous verdict. Get a few guys together and they can talk about cars - or computers, depending on the generation - for just about any length of time without the least sign of animosity. Even sport, with its strong team rivalries, is usually a safe topic. As soon as the subject of politics is raised, though, the debate becomes heated, and almost invariably devolves rapidly into yelling and swearing. Unless everyone in the room happens to barrack* for the same team. I have a theory as to why this is so, and it is this:People don't know what they are talking about.People rightly recognise politics as being an important subject, and rightly have strong opinions about it, but those opinions rarely rest on any solid basis. Most often, they try to apply the principles they would like to live their life by to the running of their country. Unfortunately, that doesn't work. Consider the family. The family is, in essence, pure socialism. Mum** and Dad earn the money, and it gets spent where it's needed. Centralised planning, from each according to etc etc. This works because it is a family, and everyone has everyone else's best interests at heart.*** Obviously a good thing, right? But when you try to scale it up to running an entire country, you end up with millions of people dead. When you try to scale a process, things change. Talk to an industrial chemist about it sometime.**** Factors that might be insignificant on the small scale come to the fore. Those same factors were present in your small scale experiment, but they scale differently - some might grow linearly with N (the size of the group), but others might grow as Log(N), or as N2 - or even as something scary like 2N or N!, though such things grow so fast that theories affected by such scaling tend to get wrecked by ugly fact pretty quickly. The factors of accountability and greed and the costs of centralisation and information flow were all there in the family, but with a group that size they didn't matter. With a hundred million people, they predominate. What it boils down to is that most people have no idea about how to run a country, because they never have run a country. And because it's complicated, and it is not at all obvious how the scaling rules apply to even one element, let alone the huge number of disparate and conflicting elements needed to make a country run successfully. Which is why even the people who do have this experience mostly just muddle along, making small changes and hoping they don't screw things up too badly.***** I have a cure for this. If I get it right, it might even make me rich... If I ever get time to actually work on it. * Root, but Australians attach another meaning to that term.
** Yes, Jen, hee hee.
*** It works in my family, anyway. No, I don't want to hear about your family.
**** But don't blame me when you can't get him to stop talking.
***** And relying on the scientists and engineers to drive economic growth and generally improve things.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 03:13 AM | Comments (47) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 22, 2003
Anerobic Bacteria R Us
If you put that nifty "I'm a Flowering Plant on the Blogosphere Ecosystem" script on your web site, and then Hosting Matters gets attacked by varmints again, your blog will suffer too.
Die, varmints! Die!Posted by: Pixy Misa at 01:44 PM | Comments (52) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 21, 2003
Sure-Fire Business Idea
With world fisheries declining at a dizzying rate* one of mankind's greatest culinary experiences** is pretty much doomed.
I'm talking, of course, about the anchovy. What I'm planning to do (as soon as my friendly Nigerian financier comes through with the cash) is strike out in a bold new direction: pygmy shrew farming. Of course, we won't call them pygmy shrews, as our marketing test group rated that as the second least tasty-sounding animal, right after the leaf-nosed bat and just before the bandicoot. No, in honour of their farm-raised heritage, I'm going to call them ranchovies. Get your pizza with 100% organic free range ranchovies today! As for the shrews? It's gotta be better than the way they live now. * Due to the French.** After, for example, fried octopus.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 08:11 PM | Comments (53) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
I Like It
Hugh Hewitt, whose permalinks seem to be somewhat haphazard, uses the word demagouged in talking about a recent Howard Dean speech. Is that where you make an impassioned appeal to your audience, but just end up digging a hole for yourself?
Update: Rats, he's fixed it.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:45 PM | Comments (45) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Splorp!
The Washington Post reports on A Dislike Unlike Any Other:
Has this unassuming man in a rumpled sports shirt lifted the lid on a boiling caldron of anti-Bush fury in liberal precincts across America? Or is he just an overcaffeinated, irrational liberal, venting to a minority of like-minded readers?We report, you decide!
Ramesh Ponnuru, a soft-spoken conservative at National Review, pays Chait a backhanded compliment, writing that "not everyone would be brave enough to recount their harrowing descent into madness so vividly."(via The Volokh Conspiracy)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 12:24 PM | Comments (45) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Wups
Looks like all those other blogs that didn't make the grade to be hosted at mu.nu have gone down again. You know, Instapundit, LGF, IMAO, people like that.
I expect Hosting Matters are suffering another DDoS attack. I hate Microsoft.* * This is not in fact a complete non-sequitur, as most of the machines used to launch DDoS attacks are Windows boxes that have been hacked. Update: Back again. Maybe it was just a glitch.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 10:26 AM | Comments (52) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 20, 2003
Random Musings
All I want is a tree somewhere,
Far away from the sun's harsh glare;
I'm a koala bear!
Oh aren't these gum leaves luverly?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 01:48 PM | Comments (42) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Ways and Means
Kevin of Wizbang notes that there's more than one way to skin a large mammal.
Way to go, Daniel.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 01:41 PM | Comments (44) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 19, 2003
Live From The What?!
The Powerhouse Museum is a (very good) museum in Sydney, built inside the shell of an old power station. The Distillery is a new block of flats* built around an old distillery. The Quarry, similarly.
What would it take for an architect not to name his new creation after the old building's original purpose? Are we going to see The Abbatoir in coming years? The Brothel, perhaps? * Apartment building.Posted by: Pixy Misa at 11:07 PM | Comments (46) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 18, 2003
Liberals... You Know The Drill
Following a link from Instapundit, I ran into this morass of whining. Why do men vote Republican? Are they just stupid? Have they been seduced by Karl Rove's evil genius? Or maybe it's because they're impotent?
Look, you imbeciles, it's you. It's you. People have taken a look at the modern Democrat Party and realised that for all Bush's faults, they can at least trust him to run the country, to do what needs to be done, most of the time. They look at the seething, whining, feces-flinging monkeys that represent the Democrats and realise that handing power to these people would be the biggest mistake they could make. Better, far better the occasional corporate scandal (as if those never happened under Clinton...) than to hand America over to this feckless bunch of nogoodniks. And until you can understand this, until you stop trying to pin every Democrat electoral disaster on voter ignorance and smarten up, you will only sink deeper into this swamp of your own creation. The voters know exactly what they are doing, and that's why 60% - sixty percent - of voters in California (California!) voted Republican. Stop it. Cast the hapless loonies of the far left adrift; let them be eaten by sharks if need be. But face up to your own damn failings for a change or you will end up exiled to the political wilderness forever. I keep running into something called Jane's Law, which saysThe devotees of the party in power are smug and arrogant. The devotees of the party out of power are insane.I don't recall it ever being more true than today, but then, until this year I got my news from, well, newspapers.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at 10:56 PM | Comments (50) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Processing 0.01, elapsed 0.1609 seconds.
37 queries taking 0.1542 seconds, 80 records returned.
Page size 55 kb.
Powered by Minx 0.8 beta.