Tram Town
Saturday, July 31, 2004
Category: Transport A fascinating look into the future of different transportation systems from about 40 years back! Thanks /.. |
Category: Intelligence Found at Rec-Humor-Funny, a privacy statement on a CIA website: Privacy Notice |
Category: Audio If I get a bit of time later today I'd sure like to learn more about Audio Hijack Pro. Looks interesting. |
Friday, July 30, 2004
Category: Meeja Just in from Johannesburg: Fat shoplifters on the rampage |
Category: I don't know how long this article will stay uncorrected so go look quickly: Seven Iraqi Troops Killed in PolandFrom a pointer by AEBrain who also explains the name Grauniad. |
Wednesday, July 28, 2004
Category: Blog Hitherto seen lurking around amongst commenters, the Currency Lad is now blogging himself. This is going straight to the poolroom. |
Tuesday, July 27, 2004
Category: Fiction We were talking about this this morning: Her life as a fake: bestseller's lies exposed Key point for mine: Khouri, now 34, spent much of 2003 retelling this story, reducing listeners to tears and anger, in interviews, book festivals, bookshops and other events. She toured the world with the story, from appearing on network television in the US to being selected for a citywide book club in Adelaide. |
Category: Music (and technological illiteracy?) Breaking the code: REALNETWORKS INTRODUCES HARMONY, ENABLING CONSUMERS TO BUY DIGITAL MUSIC THAT PLAYS ON ALL POPULAR DEVICES. As described on WinInfo: Harmony Technology breaks the lock-in that has been a leading factor in the success of the Apple iTunes Music Store. The iPod outsells other players by a wide margin, and iPod customers have been forced to use Apple's online music store because the iPod supports only the company's Protected Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) format. Now iPod owners will be able to purchase music from the RealPlayer Music Store, which uses a much higher-quality format--192Kbps RealAudio 10 AAC.And some comments from there: This should be fun to watch.But... The article states "iPod customers have been forced to use Apple's online music store because the iPod supports only the company's Protected Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) format." This is untrue.Well I had wondered. There seem to be many ways around this so-called DRM stuff so I don't think Real's announcement has much in the way of guts at all. |
Category: Music There's a pitcher about Gram Parsons on at the Melbourne International Film Festival. I missed the first showing on Sunday afternoon but there's another showing down at the ACMI at 9:30pm. Anyone wanna go? Dig (whatever the hell that is) has an interview with the film maker. |
Category: Important (very) French go potty over Harry's politics. I reckon the problem with the French is that they think the rest of the world are muggles. Oh and a nice crit of the original article. This also caught my eye at The Star: Police clam up on killing of Leigh Matthews. I thought it must be the next step in the AFL's campaign to even up the competition: salary cap, draft, kill lethal. Turns out it was a different Leigh Matthews though. |
Category: Weird Hey, Join the US Army and get face-lifts, breast enlargements, liposuction and nose jobs for free. Where do I sign up? |
Monday, July 26, 2004
Category: Pitchers As Tex asks: Is Warren Beatty the worst actor of all time?Tex answers: Not surprisingly, Beatty is a multiple-Oscar winner. |
Category: Audio This looks interesting, Fraunhofer Institute for Media Technology's latest and greatest audio solution! |
Sunday, July 25, 2004
Category: Net Culture Yup, now I've finally got broadband I'm tidying up my bookmarks and keep coming across weird stuff I'd forgotten about. Like All Your Base Are Belong To Us and Tourist Guy. But I'd forgotten about this. |
Category: Marijuana I am going to maintain a very important table...
Please let me know if any further data points come to light. Also, can anyone explain how the two "no"s of the third column expected the drug to get into their bloodstream? |
Category: Who cares? Melbourne's Greeks care very much it seems and are willing to redefine Greek-ness if necessary to maintain Melbourne's position on the League Ladder of "Greek cities". It is a sensitive topic. Melbourne's Greeks still claim they hold the title, noting that they are a very close community and mostly still speak Greek, while those in North America "speak American" and have lost some of their heritage. |
Category: Reality I'm not sure whether I should believe this story about a reality television show supposedly being made in the UK called Make Me a Mum. It certainly seems to plumb new depths. |
Saturday, July 24, 2004
Category: Madness In California: OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Four learning-disabled students sued the organization that administers the medical school admission test, alleging they were denied extra time to take the exam in violation of California's disability laws.I don't know what to say! |
Friday, July 23, 2004
Category: Space TFF NASA has recently digitised a whole stack of the Apollo 11 mission Happy Snaps, nice work. |
Thursday, July 22, 2004
Category: Skepticism The Skeptic's Dictionary has a site that contains some facinating entries. I found it while googling for Lysenkoism. It was due to Lysenko's efforts that many real scientists, those who were geneticists or who rejected Lamarckism in favor of natural selection, were sent to the gulags or simply disappeared from the USSR.Why was I looking up Lysenkoism? Because PE Philip Stott mentioned it in an article on EnviroSpin Watch. And in Russia, 'global warming' has been likened to Lysenkoism.And on Tech Central Station an article detailing some of what has been going on in Russia recently including this quote from the economic adviser of President Putin, Andrei Illarionov: 'That ideological base can be juxtaposed and compared with man-hating totalitarian ideology with which we had the bad fortune to deal during the 20th century, such as National Socialism, Marxism, Eugenics, Lysenkoism and so on. All methods of distorting information existing in the world have been committed to prove the alleged validity of these theories. Misinformation, falsification, fabrication, mythology, propaganda. Because what is offered cannot be qualified in any other way than myth, nonsense and absurdity.' |
Category: Wind Wind-Farm.org is well worth a visit. The purpose of this web site is to provide an exchange of information, news and ideas regarding the current proliferation of windfarms particularly in some of the most beautiful parts of Britain - Wales, the Lake District and the Scottish Highlands to mention but a few. |
Category: UN A nice gag about the UN by Mike H. amongst some comments at Tim Blair's site: A famous man once said, we've just declared the UN an outlaw organization, the bombing starts in five minutes. |
Category: WWW When you can't be bothered registering or you just don't want them gathering info about you: BugMeNot! Thanks to the Prof for pointing this out. |
Wednesday, July 21, 2004
Tuesday, July 20, 2004
Category: Apple Appallingly incomplete history of the Apple Desktop Interface 1979-2000. What were these folks thinking? Don't even bother clicking here! (As sighted in the SSS this morning, do they even follow the links they publish?) Bah! |
Category: Iraq Chrenkoff is now up to part six of his Good News from Iraq series. Interestingly, this part was also published on the Wall Street Journal opinion site. The good news is getting out. Also, from Iraq the Model (pointed out by Tim Blair), Omar posts: You cannot tell a man that saving him and his family from torture, humiliation and death was a mistake and it should’ve not been done because it’s illegal. This is almost an insult to Iraqis to hear someone saying that this war was illegal. It means that our suffering for decades meant nothing and that formalities and the stupid rules of the UN (that rarely function) are more important than the lives of 25 million people. |
Monday, July 19, 2004
Category: Meeja I'm surprised that this story appears to have been covered by only one newspaper. AUSTRALIAN Federal Police are waiting to interview a man who allegedly terrorised passengers on a Bali-bound tourist flight from Perth.Thanks to the GnuHunter for the heads-up. |
Category: Politics I must have been asleep the week that the job of Chief Scientist was announced, or perhaps it got as much coverage as that sarin device in Baghdad that negated the "no WMDs" claim. Still, they seem to have got the right bloke for the job; he's one of the few people who wouldn't look like a goal umpire if he was wearing a lab coat... But... he's going to die unhappy. He reckons we have to cut greenhouse emissions by 50% by 2050. Get real science dude! |
Saturday, July 17, 2004
Category: History Some interesting stuff about the Ukrainian famine of 1929-33 and a journalist, Walter Duranty, in denial. In all, 10 million Ukrainians, most of them peasants, died as catastrophic, stupid and cruel collectivization policies were imposed by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin on the richest, most fertile, wheat-exporting breadbasket in the world. In the decades before World War I, its annual grain exports regularly vastly outstripped those of the American Midwest.I learnt quite a bit from this article which I found while grazing on comments at Tim Blair's site. BTW, both Tim Blair and Maureen McInerney were on the Today show yesterday morning... Snap! |
Thursday, July 15, 2004
Category: Design This ad "popped up" at some site (don't know which). You'd reckon you'd come up with a more impressive design if you were hawking these sorts of wares. |
Category: True As pointed out by The Yobbo, Reasononline's daily brickbats make great reading, e.g. The Trail Goes Cold (5/20) |
Tuesday, July 13, 2004
Category: Politics (US) 'Cos I'm a big fan of Arlo's Dad, I sorta liked this. (Warning, 3.7MB download approaching). Update: I was just humming this song to myself and it kept morphing into this song. Are they musically similar in tune? I wouldn't know. |
Category: Electronic Music Oops, about to run out of the office like a mad running thing but I'm sure looking forward to reading this! Electronic Musical Instruments 1870 - 1990. |
Category: Desktop Collaboration I really need to find out more about this (possibly with reference to a (slightly) obscure Pete Townshend song). It's sort of like desktop Video Conferencing meets PowerPoint! |
Monday, July 12, 2004
Category: Musical Theatre? History -v- Jobs -v- Gates The Musical! (no mention of Digital or Xerox as far as I can see) (possible free subscription required though as it's NYT). |
Sunday, July 11, 2004
Category: Writing An experiment in alternating paragraphs between a girl and a boy produced an interesting result which is on display over at Wicked Thoughts. |
Category: Science Sir Austin Bradford Hill was one of people who originally found strong evidence of cigarette smoking greatly increasing the risk of lung cancer. In this famous essay he sets out a mechanism for establishing causality. It's a very worthwhile read. UPDATE: I was looking for this essay because I mistakenly thought Sir ABH was responsible for the dictum: "Extraordinary claims requiring extraordinary evidence". In the best traditions of The Age newspaper, I was wrong. "Extraordinary claims requiring extraordinary evidence" is known as Sagan's Balance but at least one person thinks it should be called Jefferson's Balance. In searching for this stuff I discovered the very disturbing fact that '"crumbly but good" sagan' returned no results in Google. The "crumbly but good moment" was probably the most important moment in the whole Cosmos experience. I also came across an interesting read about Carl Sagan and "science as religion". |
Category: Lenny We had a dog named Lenny who left us for another place a couple of years ago. He was the same breed as this very old dog. |
Category: Space Yobbo points out that Skylab lobbed in the West 25 years ago today. 25 years ago today, the space station "Skylab" crashed to Earth between Perth and Kalgoorlie. Not only was this the first time a space station had crashed into the Earth, but it also marked the first time that anything important ever happened in Western Australia.My reference point for Skylab is a movie. |
Category: Motor Racing Surely the nail in the coffin for the current qualifyting sytem in F1, cars were braking at the end of their first lap to avoid expected rain at the end of the second session! This after a year and a half of dangerous race starts because the system doesn't necessarily put the fastest cars at the front of the grid. |
Saturday, July 10, 2004
Category: Microsoft OH, I love MS (like you need a "href" already?). Not only have they re-invented Operating Systems and browsers (or should that be invented?) but now they're hard at work re-defining international forms of measurement! That's cool! |
Category: Bunyips The Professor is alive again following exam-marking season at Sydney Orr. This article about |
Category: Humour If my nephew read Tram Town he would probably enjoy this. Come to think of it, he probably already reads Bacon. |
Category: Media I'm a bit late posting this one but I guess many Tram Town readers will not have noted Frank Devine's recent articles in The Australian peer-reviewing a couple of bulletins of nightly television news concluding with: Tracking the broadcaster's chronic bias is intensive work. Denials are easy because distortions derive from the wickedness that lurks in the hearts of men and women. But on its own, the way gauche reporters and presenters feel free, night after night on its 7pm news, to give a twirl to the news on the basis of personal prejudice and ideology, is symptomatic of deep-seated intellectual malaise. |
Friday, July 09, 2004
Category: Transport In today's Hun, Ashley Gardiner, Transport Reporter, had the following to say (typed, by the way, with me own 'ands because I can't find it online): E N G I N E E R S have cleared the air in the Burnley Tunnel by finding a better way to suck out the fumes.I don't even know where to start with this. What is the method of determining a state of visible haze? Which of the many possible definitions of "smog" is being used? Has this supposed 85% smog reduction had any positive effect other than reduction of visible haze? Is degree of visibility of the haze related in some sense to toxicity or general safety? Did any engineers get the sack for not trying to do something about this "smog" sometime earlier in the life of the tunnel? There are many questions that should have been asked by AGTR before publishing a good news story on behalf of CityLink. The lesson for me is that I should stick to the web version of the Hun because it has way fewer articles by light-weight AGTR and, thereby,.way fewer reasons for me to get angry. |
Wednesday, July 07, 2004
Category: ScienceHalf of women infertile 'in a decade'That looks like an attention grabber, doesn't it? Particularly given that the issue, higher incidences of Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS), seems to be associated with the greatest of modern evils, obesity: Australia's already low fertility rates would plummet as obesity rendered more women unable to fall pregnant.But it did seem a touch overcooked when I read the whole article so I did a bit of research myself. There's no doubting the credentials of Dr David Knight so, even though I can't find anything about Dr Robert David with a bit of rough Googling, I assume him to be similarly qualified. The gist of the report is that, because obesity is a cause of PCOS and obesity rates are going through the roof, we should expect fertility rates to drop. No basis is given for the headline claim, however. But... Looking at pages that discuss PCOS, I constantly came across suggestions that obesity is a symptom not a cause, for example from here: Polycystic ovaries are two to five times larger than normal ovaries, and they have a white, thick, tough outer covering. This condition is commonly called Stein-Leventhal syndrome, and usually develops shortly after puberty.It looks to me as if Knight & David are putting the cart before the horse and making extreme claims as a means of gaining publicity. It would also appear that they are being very unfair on true long-term sufferers of PCOS suggesting that what they really have is a weight problem. Disgusting journalism! |
Tuesday, July 06, 2004
Category: Fillums My Girls went to see Spidey2 last weekend, they thought it was a bit long but generally liked it. Boy, were they sucked in! Fools! |
Category: Uranium Remember all that fuss about Niger's lack of uranium trading? It increasingly appears that Tony Blair wasn't lying after all. At least according to the Financial Times. Thanks to Tim Blair for pointing this one out. |
Sunday, July 04, 2004
Friday, July 02, 2004
Category: Climatology This quote is from page 774 (chapter 14) of Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis Contribution of Working Group I to the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In sum, a strategy must recognise what is possible. In climate research and modelling, we should recognise that we are dealing with a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore that the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible [my emphasis]. The most we can expect to achieve is the prediction of the probability distribution of the system’s future possible states by the generation of ensembles of model solutions. This reduces climate change to the discernment of significant differences in the statistics of such ensembles. The generation of such model ensembles will require the dedication of greatly increased computer resources [my emphasis, again] and the application of new methods of model diagnosis. Addressing adequately the statistical nature of climate is computationally intensive, but such statistical information is essential.Paraphrased: The day may come in the future when we can have a guess about human effects on the climate but it will require serious computing power which we don't currently have! Think for a moment about how much money has been spent on the IPCC to conclude that we know very little at this stage of the possible existence of a threat of unknown proportion. This is the same IPCC, you will remember, whose chairman called Bjørn Lomborg a nazi. Oh, and by the way, the IPCC is a UN body. Thanks to the folks at Bizarre Science for the location of the quote. |
Thursday, July 01, 2004
Category: Transport I really like monorails and now I could go on one, if I was in Las Vegas at least. |
Category: Technology Hey, iPod watch out! I've had a VIC20 for 20+ years but this could be the Apple Killer, or this or this. C64 emulation might be next. |
Category: Film maker I think this article gets The Don Lane Show James Randi incident wrong. It suggests Uri Geller was the fraud being exposed; I think it was Doris Stokes (ahh, yes! confirmed by an article by black-shirt Phillip Adams who I would otherwise deem to be beneath contempt). Neither here nor there really but looking at the James Randi site brought the incident to mind. Why was I at the James Randi site? In one of the forums RichardR dissects the Charlton Heston speech as carefully edited in Bowling for Columbine and places the bits the dishonest film maker elected to include in bold. It is fascinating to see quite how dishonest a documentary maker can be. Thanks for the pointer John Ray. |