Friday, January 28, 2005

Lawrence Lessig sees Gil Gilberto in action

Lawrence Lessig: "I walked out of my constitutional law class, climbed into a car to go to a plane to fly to Chicago to fly to Sao Paolo to fly to Porto Alegre to get into a car to come to this. Brazil is hosting the World Social Forum, and Barlow and I will be on a panel with Manuel Castells and Gilberto Gil on Saturday. But Thursday night, we visited the Youth Camp, which in part this year is devoted to demonstrating and developing tools to support free software and free culture.

We arrived in the middle of a concert. Gil was asked to speak. As he went to the mic, the tent fell silent. Hundreds were packed into a tiny space. Gil began to describe the work of the Lula government to support free software, and free culture, when a debate broke out. I don't speak Portuguese, but a Brazilian who spoke English translated for Barlow and me. The kid was arguing with Gil about free radio. Two minutes into the exchange, about 8 masked protesters climbed onto chairs on one side of the tent, and held posters demanding free radio. A huge argument exploded, with the Minister (Gil) engaging many people directly, and others stepping in to add other perspectives. After about 20 minutes, the argument stopped. The band played again, and then Gil was asked to perform. For about another twenty minutes, this most extraordinary performer sang the music he's been writing since the 1960s, while the whole audience (save Barlow and I) sang along. When the concert was over, Barlow, Gil and I were led out of the tent. It was practically impossible to move, as hundreds begged Gil for autographs, or posed for pictures. At each step, someone had an argument. At each step, Gil stopped to engage. Even after Gil was in the car, some kid rapped on the window, yelling yet another abusive argument. Gil, with the patience of a saint, opened the window, and argued some more.

This was a scene that was astonishing on a million levels. I've seen rallies for free software in many placed around the world. I've never seen anything like this. There were geeks, to be sure. But not many. The mix was broad-based and young. They cheered free software as if it were a candidate for President.

But more striking still was just the dynamic of this democracy. Barlow captured the picture at the top, which in a sense captures it all. Here's a Minister of the government, face to face with supporters, and opponents. He speaks, people protest, and he engages their protest. Passionately and directly, he stands at their level. There is no distance. There is no 'free speech zone.' Or rather, Brazil is the free speech zone. Gil practices zone rules.

Even after the speech was over, the argument continues. At no point is there 'protection'; at every point, there is just connection. This is the rockstar who became a politician, who became a politician as a rockstar.

I remember reading about Jefferson's complaints about the early White House. Ordinary people would knock on the door, and demand to see the President. Often they did. The presumption of that democracy lives in a sense here. And you never quite see how far from that presumption our democracy has become until you see it, live, here. 'This is what democracy looks like.' Or at least, a democracy where the leaders can stand packed in the middle of a crowd, with protesters yelling angry criticism yet without 'security' silencing the noise. No guns, no men in black uniform, no panic, and plenty of press. Just imagine."

Thursday, January 27, 2005

Miles Electric - A Different Kind of Blue

I can't tell you how exciting it is to finally have a visual record of the era Miles is the most entertaining to watch! You can really see these guys COOK while playing. The electric Miles, especially around In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew, is amazing stuff!

Digital Gravel

cool site full of all the great gear. Hook it up!

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

'nuff paid!

Stan Lee wins "Marvelous" payout as co-creator of Spiderman!

Stan Lee, who was a co-creator of Spiderman and many other
"Superheroes" for Marvel Enterprises, has been told by a Manhattan
court that he is entitled to 10% of the profit his characters produced.

Stan Lee, who is 82, sued Marvel in November 2002 for failing to honour
an agreement giving him a 10% interest in the profits. Lee signed a new
agreement with Marvel in November 1998, after the company was bought by
ToyBiz Inc, but because of an "accounting" problem, they refused to pay
this percentage.

The court decision will result in an a payout expected to run into many
millions of dollars, although the exact figure is not yet known.

Lee also created the Incredible Hulk and the X-Men and although he was
happy with the decision made by the Judge, he commented "Since I am
deeply fond of Marvel and the people there, I sincerely regret the
situation had to come to this"

Both Spiderman movies have taken more than $800 million each at the box
office and sales from related goods will add another $100 million to
this figure.

Sunday, January 23, 2005

LaMa's ISS Weblog - seeing and hearing the International Space Station

for the space freaks in the crowd. It's kinda geeky I know but I like this stuff!

Quark VS InDesign

a great site to watch the sinking of the Titanic... And the band played on....

so far so good

There seems to be an awful lot of people who are angry at IE, and for us Mac users, it's ncie to have a Safari alternative. I've been running it for a few weeks and I like it, though there are a few things I miss about Safari, Spell check on posts like this for example.

Get Firefox!

Sunday, January 16, 2005

Amazon.com: Books: But Beautiful: A Book About Jazz

... and finally this book, bought at City Lights Bookstore. With Archie Shepp blaring the background, how could I not buy a prose driven book about jazz. (These days, for me, Free Jazz is the real punk rock) Looks good, I haven't cracked it yet though.

Frequent Flyer: Bombay

Almost reaching critcal mass onthe Indian flavour compliations and dance tracks with curry. Almost to the point of derivative. But still some very nice stuff on here to justify buying

Selwa

Another one of those listening posts finds, where you have to buy before you forget! Peaceful stuff!

Amazon.com: Music: Selwa: "It's been seven years since Minnesota-born guitarist Steve Tibbetts and Ch�ying Drolma, a sweet-faced, crop-haired Tibetan nun, released their first collaboration, Ch�. On this sophomore effort, the two have created another series of placid sonic journeys, wherein Drolma's nasal yet pristine alto-to-mezzo soars amid a restrained blend of guitar, electronica, drones, and overdubbed voices, augmented by Marc Anderson's hand-drums and occasional hints of whispery chimes touched by nothing human. Ch�ying Drolma is a proponent of Vajrayana Buddhism, in which obstacles to enlightenment are proactively cut free via intense forms of meditation that can take place in graveyards and other provocative locations. No passive convent recluse, she has founded a school for nuns and continues to reach out to the world via the beauty her voice, while remaining aloof from its frenzy. The album leaves a strangely energetic peacefulness in its wake; a profound relaxation that also encourages action toward betterment."

Amazon.co.uk: Music: This Is Everybody Too

one of my finds in the huge Dance/techno dept in Virgin. Ugly cover art I would never have given a glance to, on the listening post it reveals itself as a top top mix!

My MacWorld gallery

snaps from the MacWorld 2005 show. Had a gas!

Thursday, January 06, 2005

Macworld : Macworld Conference & Expo

Yes it's true. I am off to San Fran next week to attend the 2005 Macworld Expo! You can not imagine the anticipation behind this trip, should be a great action packed week! If you watch the key note watch for me waving in the back!

Starbucks Drinks Simplified (kinda)

explaining what extactly is in that $16 dollars of foam and expresso

Wednesday, January 05, 2005

Firefox config tips!

MonkeyFilter | Curious frustrated George: "finally, do you know about using 'about: config' to tweak the hidden settings in Mozilla, firefox, and safari? They increase browser speed immensely.

http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum21/8007.htm

(from that usenet article)


'...To get started, type 'about:config' in your FireFox address bar. The settings you're looking for are:

1.) network.http.pipelining
2.) network.http.pipelining.firstrequest
3.) network.http.pipelining.maxrequests
4.) network.http.proxy.pipelining
5.) nglayout.ititialpaint.delay

Set #1, #2, and #4 to 'true'. Set #3 to a high number, like 32. Set #5 to 0.

Enabling the pipelining features allows the browser to make multiple requests to the server at the same time. The 'maxrequests' is the maximum number of requests it will send at once. I've heard that 8 is the most it will send at once, but setting it higher won't hurt, just in case. The initialpaint.delay is the length of time (in milliseconds) after the server response before the browser begins to paint the page.'
"

Google Search: inurl:"MultiCameraFrame?Mode="

Hit the title for the link to a string that reveals 2000 unprotected net based webcams from all over the world!

yes we are being watched everywhere, so why not watch back!?

Monday, January 03, 2005

new Chem bros kicks ASS!

I might be the only one I know who think these two guys do some pretty freaking amazing work. Let's just say I stumbled upon an advance copy of Push The Button and it KICKS ASS! I will a copy simply cuz you can't get all that bottom end on some shitty MP3's, you gotta own the CD. Galvanize is the single and it's damn catchy!

Sunday, January 02, 2005

BookCloseouts.com Bargain Books - Bookstore - Book Sale

could be a great source for cheaper books... Or not.

Saturday, January 01, 2005

Stencil Revolution

Very cool resource for making stencil art. This is cool shit!