Yearly Archives: 2004

Funny – I've never Met a Dog named "Kevin"…

From AP:

A Brazilian legislator wants to make it illegal to give pets names that are common among people. Federal congressman Reinaldo Santos e Silva proposed the law after psychologists suggested that some children may get depressed when they learn they share their first name with someone’s pet, said Damarias Alves, a spokeswoman for Silva.

“Names have importance,” said Alves. The congressman “wants to challenge people’s assumptions that it’s acceptable to give animals human names,” she said.

If the law is passed, pet stores and veterinary clinics would be required to display a sign noting the prohibition of human first names for pets.

Brazilians who break the law would be subject to fines or community service.

Alves admitted the law’s chances of passage were slim but said Silva hoped the bill would call attention to his other efforts to protect animals.

“He’s proposed many laws to protect wildlife in Brazil, but this is the only one that has ever gotten any attention,” Alves said.

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Quake II as a Robotic and Multi-Agent Platform

A good friend of mine, Dave Costello, is co-author of a paper entitled “Quake II as a Robotic and Multi-Agent Platform“. It should also be noted that Dave is also on the top scorers list for his senior hockey league, and is very proud of that fact. :-)

We have modified the public-domain Quake II game to support research and teaching. Our research is in multi-agent control and supporting human-computer interfaces. Teaching applications have so far been in an undergraduate Artificial Intelligence class and include natural language understanding, machine learning, computer vision, and production system control. The motivation for this report is mainly to document our system development and interface. Only early results are in, but they appear promising. Our source code and user-level documentation is available on the web. The information document is a somewhat motion-blurred snapshot of the situation in September 2004.

The paper is actually a fun read, especially if you’re a Computer Science geek that enjoys Quake — much like me!.

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After 86 Years…

I love the way Boston.com put it:

AT LAST!  Pigs can fly, hell is frozen, the slipper finally fits, and Impossible Dreams really can come true. The Red Sox have won the World Series

I can actually hear church bells ringing outside…

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Leafy Sea Dragon Gallery

The New England Aquarium has recently opened a new Sea Dragon tank, and it’s now my family’s favorite exhibit. After Angler Fish and other deep sea creatures, I think Sea Dragon’s win the “bizarre looking sea creature” prize.

Check out the Leafy Sea Dragon Picture Gallery to see what I mean.

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The Blessing of Heaven is on Bush

Double oy. From CNN:

“And I warned him about this war. I had deep misgivings about this war, deep misgivings. And I was trying to say, ‘Mr. President, you had better prepare the American people for casualties.’ ”

Robertson said the president then told him, “Oh, no, we’re not going to have any casualties.”

Robertson, the televangelist who sought the Republican presidential nomination in 1988, said he wishes Bush would admit to mistakes made.

“I mean, the Lord told me it was going to be A, a disaster, and B, messy,” Robertson said. “I warned him about casualties.”

Even as Robertson criticized Bush for downplaying the potential dangers of the Iraq war, he heaped praise on Bush, saying he believes the president will win the election and that “the blessing of heaven is on Bush.”

“Even if he stumbles and messes up — and he’s had his share of stumbles and gaffes — I just think God’s blessing is on him,” Robertson said.

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TV-B-Gone

From Wired:

“Altman’s key-chain fob was a TV-B-Gone, a new universal remote that turns off almost any television. The device, which looks like an automobile remote, has just one button. When activated, it spends over a minute flashing out 209 different codes to turn off televisions, the most popular brands first.

For Altman, founder of Silicon Valley data-storage maker 3ware, the TV-B-Gone is all about freeing people from the attention-sapping hold of omnipresent television programming. The device is also providing hours of entertainment for its inventor.”

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Wall Street traders acting like zombies because of Red Sox-Yankees marathon games

Wall Street traders acting like zombies because of Red Sox-Yankees marathon games

If some traders on Wall Street have seemed a bit groggy lately, it’s simple enough to explain: the Red Sox and the Yankees.

Major League Baseball’s American League championship series between the New York Yankees and archrival Boston Red Sox is leaving Wall Street staffed with bleary-eyed baseball fans who’ve been glued to their TV sets during three marathon games in as many nights.

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Red Sox Win Game Five in 14 Innings, Six Hours

Yahoo!

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Review of "The Last Starfighter: The Musical"

Review of The Last Starfighter: The Musical:

1982. Atari Games, to celebrate the creation of their Atari 2600 Pac-Man Game (which, I might add, was one of the most pathetic, slapdash, slipshod piece of programming ever to churn out of a development studio) held a massive “Pac Man Day” in Citicorp Center in New York City. Being a confessed “Pac Maniac”, I couldn’t resist. To complete the picture, you have to know that I had that great uncontrolled 11-year-old hair of unequal length, and an old army fatigue jacket with a “PAC MAN” t-shirt transfer on the back. Now, it was me and literately THOUSANDS of kids jammed into the inadequately-planned celebration area at the Center, with all of us vying for places to stand and have fun. They had the contest, which only had maybe a dozen of us actually show enough nerve to go up on stage, and due to a REALLY LOUD chomping sound, I placed somewhere around third. Of course, this is up to dispute, because the place essentially turned into a riot (I can still recall my father up on a balcony, screaming at me to stand against a wall so I wouldn’t be stepped on) and they generally just THREW stuff into the crowd, but I was third.

This is a memory I will hold dear until all of time. It was not a depth. It was a pinnacle. It was a heady, breathless moment in time in which my own fannish interest in something led me to a situation, a unique situation, that could barely be explained to others without sounding truly off-the-wall, absolutely beyond saving. And like many such unique events, you hold a fear in your heart, beyond the memory, a fear that as time goes on you will not feel such things again.So, as I sit here typing these words to you, I know I have achieved something of equal, deep geekdom. I have attended an off-broadway musical based on The Last Starfighter.

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I'm in Good Company

From Slate’s review of Team America: World Police:

That’s the part that has Sean Penn wringing his hands and must have puzzled a lot of people who assume that Parker and Stone, with their toilet talk and blasphemy and camp sensibility, are flaming lefties. But they’re not; they’re Cato Institute-level libertarians. They actually hate liberals as much if not more than their right-wing counterparts. The biggest surprise in Team America is that there’s no Barbra Streisand to kick around (or disembowel, or decapitate).

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