Monthly Archives: May 2005

I've stopped giving blood

The blood bank called today to get me to schedule an appointment, and I told the woman that I wasn’t going to be giving blood for at least a while. She was disappointed, what with me being one donation short of my three-gallon pin (though somewhere in there I got credit for a donation that didn’t happen for reasons I no longer recall), but I was surprised at how sympathetic she sounded to my reasoning: the pointless discrimination against gay men, highlighted by the recent rule change for sperm donors, does not allow me in good conscience to continue to support the system. She said something to the effect of “They’ll just ignore you; it’s like with stem cells.” And I said, “Well, they can ignore me without my blood, then.” She was perhaps the kindest blood center person I’ve dealt with, though they have by and large been caring and competent.
I’m not even really advocating that people stop giving blood, since we need it; but after you’ve given a gallon or two, why not let them know what you think.

But you said…

In their love-fest interview session included as a bonus on the first-season DVD release, the producers of Carnivàle assured us that HBO had committed to letting them finish the story. It now looks like not so much.

The more things—oh, never mind: nothing changes

The verdict from Consumer Reports is in, and, to no one’s surprise, it’s the same as every other verdict: filtering software has a high false-positive rate, and doesn’t do a very good job blocking anything as subtle as hate speech.
CR’s recommendations are sound (#1: "Talk it over"), and of the resources they cite, the ALA and GetNetWise seem to avoid the hysterical edge that’s all-too-common when talking about the net and our children.
In fact, the more I look at who GetNetWise is, the more impressed I am.

Any bets on what they'll break?

The next version of iTunes will have direct support for podcasting. I know some portion of their desire to keep people using iTunes is so they can enforce their DRM scheme, but if their success rate in keeping users on their app remains high, I can’t help thinking how valuable an audience that creates. I hope Apple knows better than to try to exploit that audience’s value in any way the audience notices.

More Futurama

I found the 2001 Futurama calendar, so I’m adding on to the Calendar Bonus Feature from previous:

Growing Up in Tier 3000 by Felix C. Gotschalk
The City and the Stars by Arthur C. Clarke
The Anti-Death League by Kingsley Amis
Kindred by Octavia Butler
The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling
The Funhouse by Benjamin Appel
The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
Earthman, Come Home by James Blish
Free Zone by Charles Platt
Quarantine by Greg Eagan
Up the Line by Robert Silverberg
Steel Beach by John Varley
Sheep Look Up by John Brunner
Dragon Masters by Jack Vance
The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick
The Zen Gun by Barrington J. Bayley
The Drive In 2: Not Just One of Them Sequels by Joe R. Lansdale
Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card
The Movement of Mountains by Michael Blumlein
Halo by Tom Maddox
The Wanting Seed by Anthony Burgess
Bill, The Galactic Hero by Harry Harrison
Crashcourse by Wilhelmina Baird
Immortality, Inc by Robert Sheckley
Snowcrash by Neal Stephenson
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

Child Migration

So I runs acrosst this mention of “Home Children” in Canada: more than 100,000 children sent to Canada during the Child Emigration Movement. I think, “Child Emigration Movement?” Sure enough, there’s a whole history of settling the colonies with orphan (or as orphan as they needed to be) children.

Many of the children were sent to “farm schools,” which lends a whole spooky air to the day care I attended of the same name (they had a sheep and some chickens).