Archive for November, 2005

Physics, online, for free.

The textbook from Motion Mountain:

The project aims to produce a simple, vivid and up-to-date introduction to modern physics, with emphasis on the fundamental ideas of motion. ‘Simple’ means that concepts are stressed more than formalism; ‘vivid’ means that the reader is continuously challenged; ‘up-to-date’ means that modern research and ideas about unification are included.

The text is free - under two conditions: that (1) you do not charge money to others for anything containing any part of the text; and (2) you send a feedback email to fb @ motion mountain . net (without the spaces) with your comments on the sections you looked at. In return, I will answer every email with questions or suggestions. For an email with good questions or suggestions you will be mentioned in the acknowledgments or receive a reward - or both.

motionmountain.com

Become an Activist and Don’t Make Me Be the Only One

Keith Boykin talks to Gay.com about his experience in becoming an activist and how this has caused some problems for him in his desire to represent himself. It’s easy to ignore the world around you and live a hermit life away from the problems of the real world, only concerned with what’s impacting your corner of space, but at the same time any activist will tell you it’s also disarmingly easy to get sucked into being ‘the voice’ for many people. If you’re personable, presentable, goood looking, media-savvy, chatty, intelligent or just eager then you’ll likely get volunteered to be the mouthpiece for yourself and your friends.

I’m not an activist at the moment, because I don’t know yet what exactly I care enough about to campaign for. I don’t know where my efforts would best be focused. When I find out though, when I come to some epiphanic conclusion, you can be sure I’ll be out there fighting, just don’t assume that’s the only thing I care about. What I care about is as varied as the people on the street, the books in the library and the autumn leaves blowing across my feet. Activism is only fun when you’ve got others to share the experience with, to laugh at the highs and mellow in the lows. If you care about as many things as I do, if you care at all, think about who you’d like to campaign for; we all should have a cause.

I have no regrets about my experiences, but I’m eager to find new leaders who can learn from their own experience. In recent years, I’ve spoken to LGBT high school students, recruited talented college activists to join the board of the National Black Justice Coalition and opened my Web site to new expressions from young columnists. But the more I did, the harder it was to get others involved.

Unwittingly, I had become an obstacle to my own recruitment plans. The more visible I became, the more difficult it was for others to become visible. Whenever I suggested that others should speak, I continued to be called on to speak instead. So last month, I decided to take a stand. I shut up. After the Millions More March, I got calls from CBS News, Essence Magazine, the Boston Globe, The Advocate, National Public Radio, Air America Radio and numerous other media outlets looking for a comment, and I told them all the same thing: Talk to someone else, please. I don’t want to be pigeonholed solely as black and gay. I’m proud of who I am, but I’m more than the sum of my identities.

Gay.com: Developing the next Rosa Parks

UPDATE:

This reminds me of an article I read earlier in the year, from the Seattle PI, where one of their columnists bemoans the lack of representation and public concern for gay rights legislation in Washington State. In a State that’s perceived as one of the most liberal, West-Coast hippy places in the country, the Democrat led legislature and executive can’t put through any legislation protection citizens from discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation. Why? Because people in the state don’t think it’s an issue to get worked up about. People are so apathetic or so accepting that they don’t think of gay rights as something that needs fighting for; it’s already there. But because there’s a lack of profile for the issue and pressure on the politicians, elected officials are able to shirk off their responsibilities to their constituents.
This is why we need activists: someone needs to shepherd every cause along. Issues don’t come to prominence by themselves, there needs to be push, profile building and argument to get those who don’t care to at least understand.

The Democrats rule the House. Democrats control the Senate by a slim margin. They have even got their candidate, Christine Gregoire, in the governor’s mansion.

Yet despite this, two conservative Democrats in the Senate joined Republicans last week to derail a civil rights bill that would prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation. …There’s [a] disturbing wrinkle arising from last week’s vote: apathy from the mainstream. People did voice anger on Capitol Hill, but that’s to be expected from a Seattle neighborhood that is the heart of the region’s gay community.

Just as bad is the deafening silence about the bill’s fate from quarters that should know better. Civil rights groups such as the ACLU, the NAACP and Equal Rights Washington are familiar with the pain of injustice. These organizations have mewled instead of roared — if they have said anything at all.
The quiet is unnerving.

Seattle PI: Robert L. Jamieson Jr: Who will stand up for gay rights? Anyone?

Hi!

Continue reading ‘Hi!’

Go Organic With Your Wardrobe

The average 100% cotton T-shirt contains only 73% cotton. The rest is made up of chemicals and resins that were used to grow and make it. Yet, we all think cotton is one of the most natural things around. The truth is, it’s not as nice as we’d all like to think.

It may be a little bit more expensive, but having organic clothes is not only good for the environment, since a good 25% of all pesticides sprayed in the Western world are to keep the cotton crops ‘healthy’, but also the ethical thing to do for yourself because you’re not wearing those pesticides against your skin. It’s the 100% natural way to go. If only some real retailers would adopt this…

Howies: ‘100% cotton, 73% true’

Where’s the concern for others gone? Why does the big guy always win?

In the television mini-series Band of Brothers, one of the commanders, Major Richard Winters says to another CO who he’s instructing, “Don’t ever put yourself in the position where you can take from these men.” This isn’t a new ethic, a moral code that was pumped into the show in order to display courage or great moral upstanding by those in charge during World War II. The idea that the leaders should be in all other ways as one with their men isn’t astonishing, it’s Primus inter pares: First among equals.
One of my CO’s came past where I was lying one day to check on how we were doing, since we were meant to be getting some rest before our 04:00 sentry. And all I can think is… ‘how tired is she going to be when we’re up again?!’
They put themselves last, give up their equipment for the good of the platoon, bring extra kit just in case someone has forgotten their own. And my question is this: when was it that this ethos evaporated from the civilian world? When was it that it became alright for the boss to have a salary 140 times that of the average employee? When was it that the big guy doesn’t look after the little guy? When was it that we decided a tax cut needed to go to those paying most tax rather than those who actually needed the money most?

People so frequently see the Armed forces as a hostile force, as something to be regarded with suspicion, but where else to you see examples of such egalitarian and honourable behaviour? There may be mistakes, but at least they aren’t the standard operating procedure.

UPDATE:

Obviously I didn’t know about this story when I wrote about this.

DTV: RSS Video for your computer

dtv application

It’s like an open source Tivo on your computer. It’s sharing Bittorrent files without worrying about the legal hoop-la because it’s all actually legal! It’s new and it’s online and you’ll love it because it’s what so many people love; television. Using the power of P2P, this new application allows users to subscribe to video feeds that can automatically download, via the Bittorrent ’swarm’ protocol, the newest and most current television or video content.
This isn’t meant to be network television, such as would be the case for the new RSS subscriber Tv Tad but for legal content. The idea is to spread citizen journalism, publicly owned content and free content that users are interested in, rather than the highly publicised and promoted content that media networks own. This isn’t about tv episodes as Digg.com described TV Tad, but free video content.

The creators of this software, the Participatory Culture Foundation have created alliances with publishers of video content who would like to have their content distributed to the masses via the internet. They create ‘channels’ for the content from these allies, one of which is called ‘telemusicvision’:

A new music video channel [that] plans to use DTV to broadcast videos exclusively from independent music groups.

This is great news for me because they include music videos from some of my favorite artists of the moment, like the Postal Service and Azure Ray. Alternative music’s use of P2P downloading has been found to increase significantly the fanbase and sales of small and independent artists, while marginally decreasing the sales of the most popular mainstream bands. This is a great example of the alternative viewpoint getting a voice.
Other examples of DTV friends include Current TV, the new network started by former US Vice-President Al Gore, and Pancake Mountain, a educational film provider.
It’s not available on Windows yet and the the Mac OS X version is currently in beta, version 0.7. However, the group expect Windows support soon and the Linux version is anticipated in the next weeks. For anyone with a Mac, check it out.

participatoryculture.org: DTV

Miquita Oliver Live! On Stage! Doesn’t Work!

miquita oliver at smash hits poll winners party 2005 t4 channel 4She’s great when she’s in the close quarters of television because it’s intimate. She’s great when she’s horsing around with co-hosts because her infectious laugh fills the television studio so well. They chat, the laugh and they play silly games with each other all while viewers are watching live, and that’s why she’s excellent. She cultivates a mood that becomes the selling point of her shows, however when she’s on stage for an award show… everything’s wrong. You can’t be intimate with 10,000 people all at the same time. While the TV camera provides the opportunity to be ‘in the room’ with her, a stage just makes it all the more obvious how unusual her style is.
Smash Hits Poll Winners Party 2005, just before introducing Jack and Kelly Osbourne, she says to the crowd, quipping,

Can you say Boo?

It’s hilarious because it’s so like… eh?! WTF?! It’s funny for us ‘at home’ because the crowd are still screaming in anticipation for the next act and they didn’t really hear her, meaning all they could really do is go on screaming; Yah! They couldn’t understand what she’d said and so it was even more silly. No-one understood what on earth she was on about!
Lessons for the future: When on a live stage, speak clearly and don’t make clever side remarks: nobody hears them!

FoxTrot: The New TV

foxtrot comic image

As the advertising industry in television reacts to our increased use of downloading tools and a reticence to submit to ad-breaks on network television, skipping over them with Tivo-like video recording devices, the use of product placement in popular shows has exploded. Reality style shows are labelled as employing the guerilla style of promotion more than other forms of show, but the whole sphere of television is at risk, not just American Idol and the Amazing Race… Writers are up in arms because they have to do extra dog-work to incorporate shoddy ads for products into their storylines, regulators are alarmed because of the blurring between content and advertising, while viewers are peeved because they have to submit to tedious and (normally) very obvious advertising in the middle of shows.

BBC: Union Call Over Product Placement US writers and actors are calling for a code of conduct to govern product placement in TV shows and films.

Continue reading ‘FoxTrot: The New TV’

NBC & Wurld Media screw you for your internet connection

From CNET news comes the information that NBC has decided to license some of its films for distribution on a paid P2P service. The Peer Impact service is apparently going to only carry ‘authorized content’. This is fine and a great step forward but the devil is in the details. It seems that though users are going to be able to host and share the movies for a 30 day period, allowing faster initial download speeds for all (and cheaper distribution costs for the companies involved), the files will only be viewable for 24 hours from the initial ‘play’ command.
They’re all for making sure that people can pay for their services, but allowing people to actually use them when they want to use them? No!

CNET:NBC Universal licenses films to P2P firm

Really terrible jokes of the day: I love it!

Two elephants walk off a cliff…boom, boom!

Two fat blokes in a pub, one says to the other “Your round.” The other one says “So are you.”