# Saturday, June 04, 2005

A beautiful week ahead

[Weather for San Jose, California]Tomorrow, God willing, I head out to the sunny San Francisco Bay Area to welcome Yaty, my wife, to the US and to hang out with my folks for a few days. The weather looks perfect, I'm almost done packing, I've remembered to pick up a couple of gifts for her birthday (June 10th), and another little surprise for when she lands in the airport (can't say because she reads my page).

Currently I haven't planned much for the week, but I'm hoping for a short trip to Monterey to see the Aquarium; a trip into the city to see Pier 39, the Golden Gate, and Muir woods; a dinner out with the IUC gang; and something special (map) for her birthday. That right there should take most of the time we have, I guess.

I hope I am remembering everything I need for the trip, but to be honest this should be the easiest packing I've done in a long time. Iman has school and won't be able to come along, so I'm only packing for me. And California, contrary to the belief of some, is a domestic destination and requires little more than a visit inside Virginia.

I am flying America West, but I'm not sure how that happened, I had been planning to try out DC's newest airline, Independence Air, but somehow ended up changing that. It also seems I haven't flown much domestically in a while, as I've been informed that food is available for purchase on the flight. For purchase? How cheap have American airlines gotten? Can I fly JAL to California? I'm very skeptical about this shift in the food policy of airlines, but I've been told that everyone does it that way now.

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# Wednesday, June 01, 2005

Rhapsody Fun

700190_215x143.jpgThe in-Rhapsody homepage had 2 tasty tidbits this morning when I logged in. The first was a playlist put together by Mike McGuirk entitled "25 Worst Covers of All Time", and I think he's done his homework:

1. Mexican Radio - Celtic Frost
2. Enter Sandman - Pat Boone
3. He'll Have To Go - Joe Pesci
4. Wild Thing - Sam Kinison
5. 911 Is A Joke - Duran Duran
6. Mississippi Queen - Ozzy Osbourne
7. Sympathy For The Devil - Guns N' Roses
8. Helter Skelter - U2
9. Street Hassle - Simple Minds
10. Whole Lotta Love - Perry Farrell
11. A Hard Day's Night - Peter Sellers
12. Spleen / Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds - William Shatner
13. Smells Like Teen Spirit - Tori Amos
14. Born To Be Wild - Evelyn Glennie
15. Kick Out The Jams - The Presidents Of The...
16. Send In The Clowns - Grace Jones
17. (Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay - Sammy Hagar
18. Hotel California - (Live In Japan) - Wilson Phillips
19. Johnny B. Goode - Frank Marino
20. Ramblin' Man - Andre Williams & 2 Star Tabernacle
21. Shop Around - The Captain & Tennille
22. Ticket To Ride - The Carpenters
23. Ohio / Machine Gun - The Isley Brothers
24. Anarchy In The U.K. - Motley Crue
25. Desperado - The Langley Schools Music Project

Rhapsody Playlist ]

The second tidbit is information that I wanted to know the other day, but figured it was impossible:

RHAPSODY TIP

To cue music to the mixer without playing it, hold down the "Ctrl" key while clicking a play button in the Music Guide.

Rhapsody Home Page ]

Which would have been helpful on Friday as Asjouré and I were Nostalgically playing Hip Hop and Funk tunes from days gone by.

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# Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Know your African countries?

The Africa Quiz will test you. I got a 129 out of 162.

If you really think you know them, try National Geographic's GeoSpy, click on "countries" and then on "Africa". Since it's timed, you probably won't even get through all of the countries unless you really know your stuff.

And then try this quiz:

  1. Does Africa have cows?

If you answered "That's not what I said, you are twisting my words!", then score yourself 100%

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# Thursday, May 26, 2005

Sudsy Adult Swim

Adult swim is about to get sudsier than ever:

The Boondocks, a new animated television comedy based on Aaron McGruder's award-winning comic strip of the same name, will join Adult Swim, Cartoon Network's late-night block of animation for adults this fall. Cartoon Network has ordered 15 half-hour episodes of the series, and like the comic strip, The Boondocks is a provocative family-based comedy brimming with social relevance and satire.

[ Animation Insider - CN Announces 'The Boondocks' ]

A quick scan of the Sunday comics quickly reveals that the only one worth reading is The Boondocks, and this deal will ensure that I can continue to shun all newspaper based information.

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# Wednesday, May 25, 2005

Crazy Afghanis?

I've seen and heard quite a bit of people remarking on the savagery of the Afghani people for killing over a silly thing like the poor treatment of a book. Many seem to think that such crazy behavior is a purely Islamic response. Tom Regan rebuts this assumption quite well:

"Christians, Jews, and Buddhists don't lash out in homicidal rage when their religion is insulted. They don't call for holy war and riot in the streets. It would be unthinkable for a mainstream priest, rabbi, or lama to demand that a blasphemer be slain."

The above paragraph makes an interesting point. There's only one problem with it - it's wrong.

[ Christian Science Monitor Blog | My American Experience Archive May, 2005 ]

In my opinion it shouldn't even be that surprising. Why aren't we asking who died? Or why did they die? One story offers clues, but most shy away from reporting the actual news and instead focus on the news that triggered the news:

Protesters threw rocks and police shot back Friday as violent anti-U.S. protests spread to more Afghan cities, leaving at least eight people dead and threatening a security crisis for the government.

ABC News ]

So it would seem likely that the deaths were not the Afghani's flying to Guantanamo and killing the soldiers that they believed were responsible for the act. There are accidentally deaths related to crowd control. Why can't they do a better job at crowd control? Perhaps you didn't realize that the US has yet to complete the rebuilding of Afghanistan, and that much of their infrastructure still remains to be repaired. Why should the US even be involved? Besides the fact that we invaded to oust the Taliban who protected the criminals responsible for the 9/11 attacks, we also embroiled the country in years of war as our pawn during our cold war with Russia. After training and arming their resistance against the Soviets, we beat feet when it was clear that the USSR wouldn't take Afghanistan. That's right, we trained and armed them and then left them to their own devices.

What kind of ally have we truly been to the Afghanis? Perhaps we are trying to make up now for how we've treated them in the past, but the first step to improving that relationship is taking hundreds of their countrymen, flying them to Cuba, torturing them or close to it, and finally hearing that the Qu'ran was placed in a receptacle meant for waste, you would expect the Afghani people to ask questions and show their displeasure. So, naturally, you'd expect the Afghani's to log on to AOL and type a heated message to their congressman, right? I think we all know that Afghanistan is not America.

Oh, and one more thing, where is the example of the riot that happened with no destruction or casualties? Or if that's in the nature of riots, where is the plan to eradicate the entire world of riots for all time?

Lets instead look to cooler heads on all sides. Lets find out if the Qu'ran was used in a less than respectful manner during interrogations, and make policy that no religion should be disrespected in such a manner. Lets not stop there and get to the bottom of the entire situation in Cuba and the prisons of Iraq. Lets continue to assist the Afghani people to build their fledgling nation into something they can be proud of. Lets continue to resist the forces of darkness that may have prompted the people of Afghanistan to go too far. And last, but not least, lets all redouble our efforts to better understand each other, since we'll have to share the Earth for many years to come.

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# Tuesday, May 24, 2005

I've got a job...

...and therefore insufficient time to pull off hacks like this:

This page is a list of mirrors to the various DS games Nintendo was broadcasting at E3 2005 to anyone who came by their booth with a DS. These games are distributed in .nds format, and can be multibooted to a DS via Firefly's wireless multiboot program if you have a compatible wifi card.

[ akkit.org/DS/E3 - DS at E3 2005 - and others! ]

Of course, maybe some of these folks hack for a living, but I can't determine how they'd make any money at this. Not only have they captured the DS demos that Nintendo had at E3 but they've linked up to "WiFiMe", which is a server and set of drivers to make your compatible WiFi card into a broadcast station for your DS.

And looking for a cheap easy WiFi card that is supported by this, I found the cute Buffalo USB "Key Fob" 802.11b/g [WLI-U2-KG54-AI] which is rather cheap, and tiny, and WiFilicious.

Update: My bad, props to Nick at 4 Color Rebellion.

Update: ChiefValue has a compatible card for just over $20.

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June 5th

Just so there are no more surprises, consider this the official announcement.

Yaty has cleared all DHS and DOS hurdles, has purchased her tickets, and should land in San Francisco's International Airport on June 5th at 6:50 PM. And, of course, I plan on meeting her there.

We'll be spending the week in California, visiting family, and maxing and relaxing.

If anyone has any suggestions on what to see and do in the San Francisco Bay Area, feel free to speak up.

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# Monday, May 23, 2005

Stocking my Indonesian Kitchen

Want to make authentic Indonesian food in your home? Do as the Indonesians do and use spice packets:

Bamboe available flavors include gule, kare, opor, rawon, nasi goreng, semoer, rendang, soto madura, soto ayam, ayam goreng, bumbu bali, bumbu rujak, sup, sayur lodeh.

[ Instant Sauces ]

Well, some Indonesians still make their own, the old fashion way, but many use these convenient "bumbu" packets. With these, a rice cooker, and a little time you can have an authentic Indonesian feast in your home.

Update: Indofoods also has a selection of bumbu.

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# Friday, May 20, 2005

Daara J is Hot

Rhapsody doesn't have this yet, but I liked it:

"The first time we heard Grandmaster Flash rapping on a hip-hop track, everybody was like, 'OK, we know this because this is tasso [the rhythmic oral history in Senegal]," he says.

[ NPR : Daara J: Senegalese Hip-Hop ]

Why should you care? Maybe you shouldn't, but I don't want to forget their name.

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SPF is gaining steam

Too bad it's a bit confusing. Pobox.com has a handy wizard to help you piece a proper SPF record together:

Most domains send outbound mail through a relatively small number of servers. Domains should describe that set of servers in an SPF record in their DNS. Internet email receivers can then reject forged messages which don't come from an envelope sender domain's approved servers.

[ The SPF Setup Wizard ]

I've tried to determine where all of my mail might be coming from, and added my first SPF TXT records to the davidkearns.com and geekprime.com domains. I'm also taking the step on a few of my less used domains (dak4.com, k34rnz.com, yatyanddavid.com, etc.) of adding a very restrictive "v=spf1 a mx ~all" SPF record. My hope is that this will cut down on a large part of the undeliverable email messages that I get each day. If not, perhaps I'm just being a better netizen.

Anyone else jumping on the SPF bandwagon?

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# Thursday, May 19, 2005

Stupid Surveys...

Candy tastes sweet! People like money! Skunks smell bad! And:

The US could improve its image among Muslims if it listened more, adopted a humbler tone and emphasised its aid programmes, a report says.

[ BBC NEWS | World | Americas | US 'could win over Muslim world' ]

Though it wouldn't surprise me if the US government did pay for studies on those first three. But did we really need that study to tell us what should be obvious? More importantly, shouldn't we just do that anyway? I think we could improve our image among everyone by listening more, being more humble and emphasizing aid programs. Though when we did that we would spell emphasize and program correctly... (And now the UK will hate us...)

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# Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Square Enix are Nobody's Fools

Which is why this puzzles me:

"We would like to strongly support Nintendo's next-generation networking plans," said Yoichi Wada, president of Square Enix. "The Revolution may embody a new platform beyond a portable or console, which makes possible a new structure in the network gaming system, changing the ways communities are built and supported. This is the kind of direction we've envisioned, and we will challenge ourselves to provide immersive interactive content in response to what Nintendo offers."

[ Wire: Square Enix Announces Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles ]

Both XBox 360 and PS3 support networking and will have an XBox Live like system to dial into. What about the Revolution is so different that Square Enix is jumping on the Revolution bandwagon so early? What is so special about their WiFi? Certainly Nintendo is putting a lot of time and thought into their next platform, and they've been hyping it big time, but what do they really have up their sleeve?

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