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This is basically an interview with John Gaeta about the approach taken in the upcoming remake of Speed Racer. The movie looks great, and I’m such a fan of the Wachowski brothers that this is on my must see list. The Matrix and V for Vendetta are among my favorite movies in large part because of the visual and stylistic weight of their films.

3:56 am | 1 comment

I caught the tail end of this on NPR driving into work this morning and was touched by the parts I heard. I was bummed that I missed the beginning but then I remembered a key thing. This being an NPR broadcast, I was able to find the recording online where you can listen to the whole documentary of this remarkable series.

If you don’t know what This I Believe is, it’s basically a radio segment that airs during different NPR shows that features an essay by any person, usually American about what they believe. I never knew the history of the series, which was started in the 50s and hosted by legend Edward R. Murrow. The modern incarnation on NPR features regular folk and on many mornings I’m struck by how eloquent and honest they are.

There’s a podcast for the modern incarnation (iTunes link).

You can submit your own essay at ThisIBelieve.org, or read selected essays online or in the This I Believe book.

I’ll give you a taste of these essays here. The original 1950s show featured distinguished Americans and world figures rather than regular Americans. I’d like to leave you with Robert Heinlein’s essay, which you can listen to at the web site above or in the documentary:

Our Noble, Essential Decency

I am not going to talk about religious beliefs but about matters so obvious that it has gone out of style to mention them. I believe in my neighbors. I know their faults, and I know that their virtues far outweigh their faults.

Take Father Michael, down our road apiece. I’m not of his creed, but I know that goodness and charity and loving kindness shine in his daily actions. I believe in Father Mike. If I’m in trouble, I’ll go to him. My next door neighbor’s a veterinary doctor. Doc will get out of bed after a hard day to help a stray cat—no fee, no prospect of a fee. I believe in Doc.

I believe in my townspeople. You can knock on any door in our town, say “I’m hungry,” and you’ll be fed. Our town is no exception. I found the same ready charity everywhere. For the one who says, “The heck with you, I’ve got mine,” there are a hundred, a thousand, who will say, “Sure pal, sit down.” I know that despite all warnings against hitchhikers, I can step to the highway, thumb for a ride, and in a few minutes a car or a truck will stop and someone will say, “Climb in Mack. How far you going?”

I believe in my fellow citizens. Our headlines are splashed with crime. Yet for every criminal, there are ten thousand honest, decent, kindly men. If it were not so, no child would live to grow up. Business could not go on from day to day. Decency is not news. It is buried in the obituaries, but it is a force stronger than crime.

I believe in the patient gallantry of nurses, in the tedious sacrifices of teachers. I believe in the unseen and unending fight against desperate odds that goes on quietly in almost every home in the land. I believe in the honest craft of workmen. Take a look around you. There never were enough bosses to check up on all that work. From Independence Hall to the Grand Coulee Dam, these things were built level and square by craftsmen who were honest in their bones.

I believe that almost all politicians are honest. For every bribed alderman, there are hundreds of politicians—low paid or not paid at all—doing their level best without thanks or glory to make our system work. If this were not true, we would never have gotten past the Thirteen Colonies.

I believe in Rodger Young. You and I are free today because of endless unnamed heroes from Valley Forge to the Yalu River. I believe in—I am proud to belong to—the United States. Despite shortcomings—from lynchings, to bad faith in high places—our nation has had the most decent and kindly internal practices and foreign policies to be found anywhere in history.

And finally, I believe in my whole race—yellow, white, black, red, brown—in the honesty, courage, intelligence, durability, and goodness of the overwhelming majority of my brothers and sisters everywhere on this planet. I am proud to be a human being. I believe that we have come this far by the skin of our teeth—that we always make it just for the skin of our teeth—but that we will always make it, survive, endure.

I believe that this hairless embryo with the aching oversized braincase and the opposable thumb—this animal barely up from the apes—will endure, will endure longer than his home planet, will spread out to the other planets—to the stars and beyond—carrying with him his honesty, his insatiable curiosity, his unlimited courage, and his noble essential decency. This I believe with all my heart.

Powerful stuff.

10:49 am | leave a comment

That’s pretty much the review right there in the headline, but as I continue to stall actually finishing my work for, uh, work (I’m suffering from the coder equivalent of writers block on one problem at the moment), here’s a quick endorsement for the Logitech Harmony line of universal remotes. While a bit expensive for most casual TV viewers, it’s a great device for those of us with more than 3 things attached to the TV. I had an XBox 360, PS2, DVR, Receiver, and cable box when I bought this remote. I have the XBox 360 version which works great for the combination of devices I have. The rest of this review assumes the features of that version, though it should apply to most of them.

The best thing about this remote is that it comes with software for your home Mac or PC to configure the remote. The one thing that drives me insane about most universal remotes, including some high end ones, is trying to program the remote on the remote itself. Too often you have to point the remotes at each other and go through a manual, button-by-button programming for each remote. Ugh.

The Harmony does away with that (for the most part). It leverages a web-based service that allows your remote to pull updated definitions from Logitech. This way, they’re not limited to what devices they can fit on the remote’s memory. New TV in 3 years? Odds are that Logitech will have the device added into their DB. Occasionally, you have to verify which version of a particular model you have and that requires pointing its remote at the Logitech remote, but that’s OK because it’s easier than trying to find a revision number or firmware revision from the TV or device.

The remote also uses an “activity” based approach rather than a device based approach. So, for example, I have an activity called “Watch TV” that turns on the TV, sets it to the right input, and turns on the DirecTV DVR. I chose a couple of shortcuts I want featured by selecting them in a menu, and I have one touch access to common functions like the Guide or the List of programs on the DVR.

The great thing about this approach is that I can create a lot of activities quickly and easily. For example, I have a “Watch DVD” activity along with a “Watch DVD (no receiver)” activity. You can use either to watch DVDs, but the first turns on the surround sound and uses the receiver to control the volume while the second activity uses the TV for audio instead.

Also, because it understands typical viewing patterns, replacing devices is pretty easy. When I swapped TVs recently, I walked through a few menus and the software replaced the old TV with the new one in all the activities where it made sense.

My only complaint is really a minor issue. The remote needs to “know” whether your devices are on or off, so it’s really important that you use the remote only to turn things on and off. Takes some getting used to if you’re in the habit of hitting the power switch on the TV.

Trust me, it’s worth the money if you have a several devices attached to your home theater. I love it and can’t imagine going to another remote.

12:11 am | leave a comment

Laura Rosen making a funny observation about the leading Republican candidate. BTW, read about how/why she wrote the afterword to Valerie Plame’s book, Fair Game. That story is just bizarre, but the result of George W. Bush’s America…

11:41 pm | leave a comment

Just a quick review for now. As you may remember, our TV developed a weird display issue some time ago. The issue was covered under our Best Buy extended warranty, so they offered to replace the TV for a TV of the same or lower price as the first one. After a little bit of waiting, mostly because we were away for the holidays, our replacement TV was delivered early yesterday morning. We ended up replacing our old Samsung LN-S4095D with the Samsung LNT4071F 40″ 1080p 120Hz LCD HDTV. The Amazon page goes through most of the features, so I won’t rehash them here. Let’s just say that the TV has everything I’d want and then some. I still go back and forth on whether a slightly larger set would be better in our living room, but the 40″ TV does look great.

So far, after a weekend spent on or around the couch cleaning and coding, I can say that the TV looks awesome. Better than awesome, actually. We watched Planet Earth on HD-DVD which I gave to Heidi for Christmas on this set and it looked phenomenal. There’s a certain clarity to the picture that makes it seem like you’re either actually there or looking at an unprocessed copy of the video (almost like a soap opera or camcorder picture).

I’m now a believer in contrast ratios, by the way. Samsung claims a 25,000:1 ratio for this set, and it really makes a BIG difference compared to our old TV (6000:1). We’ve got great, rich colors with beautiful depth, great blacks, and smooth gradients. Everything I’m reading says that those areas are where the contrast ratio really makes a difference.

If you’re looking for a new TV you won’t be able to beat this one by much. The latest Sony’s are supposed to be roughly the same or slightly better, and the new LED lit Samsungs offer some tradeoffs worth considering. In the end, since I liked my old LCD TV, I decided to stick with that technology for now.

One minor complaint, which is that I don’t like the sound of the new TV. They’ve done some stuff to boost the bass, but it ends up making things sound unnaturally deep. I think in part I’m picky about this because I listen to my music on better than average headphones that have an even frequency response. You can modify the EQ settings, though, so a little time in the menus and I got the sound back where I like it.

Bottom line: Love it, happily recommend it.

On a random topic, this is the first Sunday where I’ve watched football at home in a while. Sunday Ticket is pretty nice, especially since we get many of the games in HD. DirecTV has done a good job with the package, including the enhanced menus and scoreboards in the package. Didn’t know the set top box had the ability to do enhanced menus and on-screen widgets.

Update: Forgot to post this little tidbit: The biggest complaint about the TV is something people are calling the “triple ball effect” where the Auto Motion Plus function creates ghost images for small, fast moving objects (e.g. balls when watching sports). Samsung has a new firmware update out for the TV that helps mitigate the problem when Motion Plus is set to low (the default) or medium.

6:07 pm | leave a comment

Good advice for those of you who, like me, are in the startup mode.

4:47 pm | leave a comment

Try to guess what song it is before he tells you halfway through.

(via Boing Boing)

11:27 am | leave a comment

He’s right, and it’s sad that he’s also right that we won’t do anything about this…

4:04 am | leave a comment

And these are only the top 10… there are probably dozens more.

9:15 pm | leave a comment

Good summary of the situation in Pakistan.

8:54 pm | leave a comment

Oh, joy. This comment attached to the HuffPo post sums up my view of this one:

My concern with NYT hiring Kristol is not that he’s neo-conservative or whatever, but that he’s almost always wrong. Seriously, can anyone on HuffPo name a major columnist/commentator who over the last 6 years has been wrong more times on major issues than Bill Kristol?

No, I can’t. Can you?

8:12 pm | leave a comment

It’s time to impeach. Seriously. Not kidding, not hedging, not using hyperbole as a rhetorical tactic. This. Is. F’ing. Stupid. Mr. President, sign it or don’t, don’t grandstand with passed legislation.

And, let’s not kid ourselves. The only reason Congress hasn’t yet is because there are many Republicans who put party above country. They should be ashamed of themselves not for this individual action, but for the pattern that has come before this. More on this later.

After you’re done reading that bit of administration ridiculousness, look at some of the abuse going on inside the Smithsonian. Overt corruption is becoming acceptable, and that’s a sign of decay for great nations throughout history.

7:00 pm | leave a comment

I found this track on the Mr. & Mrs. Smith soundtrack. It’s only available via iTunes, not Amazon, but it’s a great, mellow song. Here’s a preview:

4:53 pm | leave a comment

First, Giuliani:

Exhibit A

Exhibit B.

Read away. Both are quick reads and informative in their own way. While Peggy Noonan struggles with the concept of reasonableness, I’ll set the bar at basic honesty. None of these Republicans can even meet that.

Then, we have the ridiculousness that’s the Romney campaign, best summarized by this quote:

But I do not think I have ever seen a candidate who has moved so far, so quickly, so shamelessly and so cynically across the political spectrum as Mitt Romney. I say “cynically” because that’s what it is; it should be painfully obvious to anyone with clear political vision that Romney’s political conversion was borne out of nothing so much as pure calculation. He thought he could win as a conservative, so he became one. If he thought he could win as a pirate, he would have become a pirate.

Sure, that last sentence is the funniest and most accurate description of the Mitt Romney, the candidate. But, the best observation in that post has to be the final line:

But if Mitt Romney does wind up as the GOP candidate, it will be an immensely revealing election for those who had the gall to deride John Kerry as a flip-flopper.

Well, duh… but you’ll NEVER see that on the evening news or the Sunday talk shows or the political press. After all, IOKIYAR. After all, it’s not just Romney. McCain and Giuliani have some pretty egregious flips, too.

(the quote found via Atrios)

2:22 pm | 1 comment

With the state of work being the way it is (busy, busy, busy) and the holidays being what they are (busy, busy, busy), this is the only comment I’ll make on the items covered in the linked post: This is a big deal, bigger than many Americans will realize. When you look at how the world perceives us as a nation, understand the background here. We brought her back into Pakistan. We pinned hopes of a renewed, democratic Pakistan on her party. People over there are at least vaguely aware of this, and undoubtedly more aware of this than we are over here.

Watch this stuff closely. History may look back at this as an important moment.

5:11 pm | leave a comment

This looks to be a must read if you want to understand the mortgage crisis. I haven’t read it yet, so this is just a reminder for me to give it a look later. Leave a comment and let me know if it was worth reading.

2:55 pm | leave a comment