Jason gets the boot: Seattle Times

The Seattle Times: Bumbershoot favorite busted, then banned

A brief article on Jason’s banishment from Bumbershoot. You know, the reasons to live here are thinning out.

I sent a note to the address provided here expressing my disappointment in the situation, but someone’s having DNS trouble, it bounced from the info@onereel.org address.

Just to add insult to injury: I COMPLETELY forgot that Jason was playing a couple of shows this weekend. Dammit. So I missed them.

(The DNS trouble was local: there’s some sort of persistent problem in Apple’s implementation of lookupd and DNSAgent that causes it to just stop looking when it gets a timeout from a domain name server instead of continuing to query the next server on the list, or restarting the query at the top of the list.)

OH for TWO

Crap. I misremembered the Newton version I have – it’s a 120, not a 130. Unfortunately, that means that NOS 2.1 won’t work on it, so no WiFi driver either. 2000’s and 2100’s only, thank you very much.

I know someone who hoards old computer crap as badly as I do. Perhaps he’d be interested in a couple of 100mb SCSI Zip drives? Or even a lovely APS-enclosure 1gb Jaz? Hmmm? Sorry, got rid of the SE, finally.

I do have a nice Power Computing 604, though. Easily upgradeable to a g3 or g4. It’s just the ticket.

I obviously need to read the trades more often

A&E’s Lathe of Heaven came as a total surprise. I had no idea that an adaptation was in the works; I was surprised that it was on A&E and not scifi; and I was surprised to see respected B-list faves leading the cast.

We clicked into it about halfway through, and I immediately wanted to take the costume designer to task for absurdity; shortly, however, it became apparent that the costumes were necessarily wacky because it was one of the primary ways that the plot was moved forward.

The plot concerns an unhappy young man who lives in a dystopia; he believes his dreams change the world around him. The changes are signified partially via the costumes.

In addition to the lead, George Orr (…well, no accident), played by Lukas Haas; we had Lisa Bonet, James Caan, and the music of Angelo “Twin Peaks” Baldamente. The flat, unsettling tone of the music, combined with the monochrome mise-en-scene employed in the dystopian sequences very nicely captured the flavor of the original work, one of the true greats of 70’s SF (by Ursula K. LeGuin, whose body of work I must reread soon).

I have vague memories of reading the work, originally, but I do recall the deep sense of unsettlement I had on completing it. I suppose it helped form my tastes for more than a few of the great dystopians of seventies SF.

Unfortunately, the A&E site is flash based and does not link easily to detailed production info. I was reminded of some european sf comics.

However, the subdued, flat quality of the actors’ delivery, combined with the score and the inherent dystopian subject matter made for what I would characterize as appropriately leaden viewing. How can I express this?

I really, really like the original Russian film of Stanislaw Lem’s Solaris, which has long stretches with no dialog or action on screen, and is also about subjective perceptions and danger. But the film is renowned for its’ oppressively slow pacing. That pacing is absolutely appropriate to the subject matter, and it makes the film physcally uncomfortable to watch.

This film doesn’t have the ambition or scope of Tartovsky’s; but it’s interested in similar effects.

I totally missed the PBS adaptation a few years ago, so I cannot draw a comparison to that series.

This looks like it for now.

SquirrelMail on OSX.

This guy’s setup is essentially the same as mine. I’ve avoided php.ini to date and hope to in future, though. Use of httpd.conf server directives is preferred, according to apache.org, so that’s what I have been trying to do.

However my use of Liyanage’s precompiled PHP module is officially making me nervous, since I don’t know all of his steps in cooking it. As he’s moving on to Jagwire and I’m staying put for the foreseeable future, I must needs hit the weights again.

A bit more musing on this, I think.

the squirrelmail site makes me a bit nervous too – ALL their docs are posted as open wiki, which means that, for example, their Requirements page can be, and apparently has been, edited by anyone, including me. In the non-english sections of the reqs, a variety of imap servers, including uw-imap, are specified as valid. Yet, in English, it appears that someone left the start of that line out somehow.

Since our correspondent at bayswaterfarm is in fact using uw-imap with squirrelmail, I must conclude that the requirements page listing is in error, which then leads me to wonder about other docs on the squirrelmail site.

Ken: seen in Chitown.

Bells and Whistles has some lovely images for the Ken Goldstein Project – they’ll be at the Project site soon.

I’d like to point out that I think this qualifies as some sort of success. Let there be… Ken!

I wonder if Ken’s 13-year old buddy is onto the KGP yet.

I think some sort of prize should be offered for the largest group shot. I’m thinkin’ the cover of Sergeant Pepper’s, for example.

Promising-looking…

Horde Projects details the various efforts of the Horde project, which, given my cursory examination, look a LOT like the future. GPL, open source, collabo-dev, PLUS standards and a long-term strategic vision. This looks cool.

Their IMP is up against the more old-skool lookin’ squirrelmail for my use here at the moment. Man, I think I’m finally starting to have enough background technically with the backend stuff to make meaningful business-oriented evaluations of this stuff. Finally. You leave the back room for a couple measly years and you’re as clueless as a mangerial type. Oh wait, I was a managerial type.

Happy Birthday, Ken

As the Portly Texan points out, it’s Buddy Holly‘s birthday, a distinction shared with Ken.

I thought perhaps despair.com might have a nice e-card, but no; so I sent a condolences card from Apple’s soon-to-be-no-longer-free dot-Mac services (which, is, um, the second time I’ve used that service in two years? But enough about me).

What really would like, though, would be a nice Edward Gorey e-card. Alas, none were found, but this was. Via this links list. Heh heh heh. Nothin’ makes me happier than a refreshing Gorey book.

FREE ZILLA personnel may be interested in this.

Gentil link

Alan Baruz’ Rough Days for a Gentil Knight offers a lengthy except from a Slashdot interview with Perl overlord Larry Wall concerning the bit-state of theistic faith and how that relates to Perl.

I have faith that one reader will find it interesting as well, even if I’d like to see Wall’s interesting and amusing metaphor both expanded and challenged.

I tried to write about my thoughts on this here. I couldn’t either explain myself to my own satisfaction or write something which I could imagine standing behind.

An infinity of futility is bearable only in absence of intellect and consciousness. Wait, isn’t that Buddhism?

I guess it’s best for me to say I find the idea of the nonexistence of souls and deities infinintely more comforting than the inverse. Which doesn’t mean I hold that idea to be true, only that I like it better than the opposite.

Of course I'm thinking about it.

No really. Just like you are. But the inevitable anniversary media coverage is not helping me reflect, come to terms with, or otherwise cope with it. It’s just making me irritated with the media. Which means I suppose I’ll be listening to more music than usual.