Monthly Archives: September 2003

Photoblog Addendum

In addition to Bull the Dog, the City of Pullman and the Palouse historical pictures archives has great pictures of floods. Select “Floods” from the predefined search list to see some amazing flooding, including one picture that notes that you can judge the depth by the water level coming up to the knees of a man on horseback!

Filmed in Depress-o-vision

More sad and not entirely surprising information about our government: government publications are being removed or “updated” to reflect administration goals rather than reality. Similar reasoning is behind the battle over what questions will and won’t be asked on the census forms.

Trying to leave the ghetto?

The Dixie Chicks "don’t feel part of the country scene any longer," and "now consider ourselves part of the big Rock ‘n’ Roll family." I didn’t know it worked that way. Are they going to stop recording country music? Will anyone care? I admire them for their willingness to speak their minds, and I don’t even hate their stuff, but I had somehow imagined that you couldn’t just declare yourself a rock act.

Turing's testy spiritual children

The Loebner Prize is an anuual Turing test. The BBC tells us mostly about the only UK finalist, Jabberwacky, whose purely adaptive methodology is unique in this year’s field: "Nothing is hard-coded, nothing is fixed, and it changes slightly, on its own, every day. Jabberwacky doesn’t have just one personality, and to a reasonable degree, tends to reflect the users back to themselves." You can chat with the bot at the Jabberwacky site, though it seems to be a little busy just now. Looking for a third win is Alice, which won 2001’s event, taking home the annual bronze medal (silver and gold are one-time prizes for (respectively) text-based and audio-visual fooling of all the judges). Ella, last year’s winner, doesn’t appear to be playing this year.

It may be legal where you come from, but we don't cotton to that sort of thing around here

Canada’s most celebrated gay married couple refused to compromise in filling out customs forms, and were therefore denied entry to the Defended Homeland. It’s a shame there’s no international full faith and credit clause. No predictions on whether this leads to a reduction in stupidity, since I’d like to be optimistic, but I hate to predict the wrong thing.

Just lie back and think of England

Okay, so anonymous sex in public places is risky. Got it. But how cool is England, where people engaged in it are ‘committing no offence unless they are witnessed by a member of the public who can be defined as “outraged” in the eyes of the law.’ I have no idea (and I’m the least research-inclined blogger here) what the laws regarding public sex are in the various states, but I have a hard time believing any of them is that liberal.