Author Archives: Craig

Strict religious law

Religious fundamentalists in Indonesia have succeeded in getting an artist and his models arrested, even before they’ve gotten their desired anti-porn bill passed into law. Religious fundamentalists here already use "pornography" and "obscenity" interchangeably, implying that porn is not constitutionally protected. I’m interested to note that virtually all the coverage I’ve seen of this issue is from the Australian press, even though the pressure in Indonesia is from the same factions that are so upset about those cartoons.

Dragged into the mobile age

Via Lifehacker, the 4INFO Mobile Search service gives us yet another way to waste time (and money, for those of us who have to pay for messaging) with our cellphones. Want to know what the weather’s like where you are (may be limited to US locations)? Text “w [zip or city]” to 44636 and get back current conditions and forecast. The most useful other services I saw were airline flight and FedEx/UPS tracking. You can also set up alerts at their web site.

But when you guys do it it's "Constructive Engagement"

In a disgusting display of appalling hypocrisy, the US Congress is beating up US high-tech firms for complying (perhaps even coöperating) with the Chinese government in its attempt to gain all the advantages of modern technology without granting its people any of the concomitant freedom. Any of Washington’s Congressthings—or any who voted to give China Most Favored Nation (I of course mean "Normal") trading status—who climb on this bandwagon deserve some serious Lady MacBeth-grade bad dreams.
Partial disclosure: I am not entirely clean on this issue; I worked for several years at a large aerospace company in Washington, and while that company’s lobbying on behalf of China always irritated me, it was no more than a tertiary reason for my leaving.

More from that other Craig

The Craigslist Craig addressed the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. Lots of good stuff in there, if you have the time to read it. I’ll be interested to see whether the effort at collaborative filtering to which he refers fares any better than the countless others. (ThirdVoice may not have been collaborative filtering, strictly speaking, but it was an idea I had also had, and would have needed something like collaborative filtering in order to be useful)
Or maybe what I want isn’t really collaborative filtering so much as delegated filtering, or maybe it’s the same thing, and it all gets into trust networks, I imagine.

Make your own party novelties

For less than their price for pre-populated cookies, Tsue Chong of 801 S. King St. Seattle will place your fortunes (provided to them on 2½"x½" paper) in their cookies. It’s $5.50 per pound of cookies stuffed with your fortunes, $8.50 stuffed with theirs. A pound is about 60 cookies.

Who is johnsmithsvt?

I recently started tracking the addresses to which spammers are trying to send, and the number of addresses that have never existed in the domain, to which spam is being directed, surprises me. Most notable in this illustrious group (because I get why folks would try info, sales, admin, and the like) is johnsmithsvt. A quick Google indicates that it’s showing up in other folks’ rejection logs, too. Why? Is there some rootkit/worm/whatever that receives its orders at that address? The next message for that address that makes it through my RBLs (sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org, korea.services.net, combined.njabl.org, bl.spamcop.net, china.blackholes.us, dnsbl.sorbs.net, and dnsbl.jammconsulting.net (I have the last two set to return 4xx errors, since they’re awfully aggressive, and that gives me time to whitelist the senders, where appropriate)) will end up in my inbox, so I can see whether it’s just garden-variety spam or something more inimical.
Update: Garden-variety spam. For a variety of pharmaceuticals. I can’t imagine why they’re using that address.

I hate Pluto

Apparently the best reason anybody has for not recognizing Pluto as a Kuiper Belt Object and not a major planet is "you’d upset the schoolchildren." This, as it is with conversion to the metric system, is an imaginary problem that will sort itself out within a generation (granted, with the metric system, you’ll probably have to replace some road signs earlier than you would otherwise). Take a look at the orbits: Pluto is far more elliptical in its orbit than the genuine major planets and more like a comet than a major planet in its inclination (here’s the inner planet orbits chart for comparison).
Your assignment: find a better mnemonic than "My very excellent mother just served us nachos" (in order to qualify as "better," it must have a substantially different structure).