Virtual tour of Nassau, and more

Conch shells at the fish marketI’ve uploaded a bunch of pictures from Nassau, New Providence, Bahamas for your enjoyment. Page through them for interesting facts and tidbits about my trip and the local history. It seemed more effective than trying to write up a few paragraphs, and made good use of the capabilities of Flickr. Note you won’t see the comments in the slideshow view, sadly.

* “Pictures from Nassau”:http://www.flickr.com/photos/dsilverman/sets/330484/
* “Pictures from Atlants”:http://www.flickr.com/photos/dsilverman/sets/329198/

The iPod phenomenon

I did not truly understand how the iPod has become a cultural phenomenon until tonight. After dinner nine of us had a half hour discussion about music which centered upon the iPod. Almost everyone at the table owned one, and the ones who didn’t either planned to purchase one or were seriously considering it. People talked about the music they had — mostly ripped from their own CDs — and how they wanted to share it with each other. People recalled specific songs and artists, tested each other on music trivia, and promised to open their libraries to each other. This truly is the future of music.

Of course the discussion then shifted to the best ways to get around Apple’s DRM in order to get the music to other people. Since no one had really bought anything from the iTunes Music Store all they really had to worry about was getting non-restricted music from one iPod to another, and there was near universal disdain for (and deep misunderstandings of) how the iPod synchronizes with a computer, and in specific how such synchronization is only one way, and with only one computer.

If I want a song from Anthony, I can’t hook my iPod up to his computer to get it — doing so will erase every song on my iPod and synchronize it with all of his music, and then when I take it back to my computer it will delete all of his music and give me back mine. There isn’t any easy way to pick and choose, to copy back and forth, in short, to share, to designate the music as ours. And it is a simple fact that one of the best things about experiencing music is being able to share that experience with others.

The feature everyone universally wanted was a way to synchronize specific songs, albums, and playlists directly from one iPod to another, “like how you can share things on Palm Pilots,” according to one of the conversation participants. This would be a killer feature, and it is one, I explained, that the recording industry would never allow.

This is, after all, the recording industry’s worst nightmare. Grown adults, discussing their love of music, and talking about sharing the music they have legally acquired. The sheer audacity of people to think they own something and can copy it for their friends! In the context of current copyright law and the current music distribution scheme, the record companies are correct. We don’t own the music, we shouldn’t be sharing it, people are not being “fairly” compensated when we do, at least not immediately, through the sale of a CD. And yet this is how people crave to experience their music. The community aspect, the sharing aspect, the sampling aspect are vital to creating strong musical connections.

And in most industries, in most circumstances, in most times, when the consumer wants something badly, the market adapts to give it to them, to serve their needs, and to make a profit in the process. But not this industry, not this circumstance, and not this time. Instead, technology is increasingly being needlessly locked down, restricted, encrypted, complicated — all in a misguided attempt to preserve existing business models.

But the world is changing, technology is changing, and people are changing. We’ve always shared music with our friends. Tape players let us make copies. CD burners let us make exact duplicates. Portable music players let us convert something we had that was not very portable into something incredibly portable, something easily sharable. And the internet allowed us to expand our communal scope to a vast degree.

The world has changed, and the only thing that hasn’t changed is the content industry itself. But when I see nine grown adults sitting around a table recalling old life memories through music, discussing their love for a piece of technology that really, really works for them, and then complaining about the stupid and needless restrictions put in place by the content industry to thwart their ability to do something that comes naturally, I am increasingly hopeful that we will win this fight. In the end, the will of the people will win out over the greed of the corporations.

But what we need is education. What we need is for the random guy on the street to realize that the reason why the iPod can’t do everything they want it to do is not because Apple is stupid or the feature just hasn’t been implemented yet, but because a higher power, the power that locks up our culture and wants to charge us every time we want to get our hands on it, has decreed that there is only one correct way to listen to our music, and it is there way. Once people understand who is the real culprit here, only then things will start to change for the better.

The best in traffic shaping

Waltham has a wonderful infrastructure for keeping school children safe from passing motorists. It consists of having crossing guards stationed at every single crosswalk within a quarter mile of the school, each festooned with a reflective yellow vest and white Mickey Mouse gloves. There are yellow blinking signs that say 20 miles per hour, there is a radar sign that flashes your current speed in yellow, and there are yellow school placards everywhere. But the best part of it is having a person on every single street corner, watching you. How can you possibly speed by at 40 when you see a person standing there with a look of absolute disgust that says “you slimy child hater, you should rot in hell.” Sure, there are still some people who speed through, and yeah, they probably do belong in hell, but almost everyone stays within a reasonable speed (25±5mph) within the school zone.

And in addition to the “Big Mother is watching you” aspect, there is also a pretty blatant YELLOW = SCHOOL = SLOW thing being drilled into your head.

Kottke beat me!

I’ve been spending a bunch of time lately implementing some neat stuff on this site. The idea is to remove all of the side navigation and allow users to access content dynamically by clicking the tabs on top (“About Me,” “Photos,” etc.). In order to do this, when you click the link I dynamically load information into a hidden field on the page and then transfer it into a container so that it appears the right way in the right place. While i’m playing with it you can click the little “flip!” links up on top to see the work, in progress and far from complete.

So of course today Jason Kottke has to go and update his site with dynamically loading content using a ridiculously simple JavaScript to do it. So basically, all this time I’ve spent trying to learn JavaScript and figure out how to make this work can pretty much be eliminated by dropping in his 20 lines of code. Gah!

Not to mention I don’t feel very unique anymore. Oh well.

Events like the Kansas Board of Education hearings on creationism in the classroom serve as another reminder of the sheer absurdity of humanity. How we’ve managed to survive this long is pretty amazing. This quote is best of all:

“We can’t ignore that our nation is based on Christianity — not science,” explained one retired teacher.

Perhaps she is a Christian Scientist.

Law schools are using a Supreme Court decision that allowed the Boy Scouts to discriminate against gay scoutmasters to allow the law schools to discriminate against the Army, because it discriminates against gays – Confused yet? Ford’s argument is that it is bad precedent all around, and his unspoken assertion is that the more you attempt to twist court opinions to fit your social agenda (as SCOTUS did with the Boy Scouts case), the more mess of bad law you create, which you then have to deal with later.

Drooling

In 1996 Apple was wandering in a wasteland of mismanagement and Power Computing came along with some kick-ass Mac clones. I remember my PowerTower Pro 180, it is the first computer I can remember custom-configuring myself. Power Computer PowerTower ProI obsessed over it for weeks, possibly months, figuring out all the specs, reading up on all of the subsystems and busses and add-ons. I loved that computer. I haven’t had such excitement and passion for a computer since.

For the past few days I have just been giddy with excitement about my new Nikon D70 camera. I have been reading everything I can about it, how it works, lenses, filters, tripods, speed lights (flashes), everything. Nikon D70 Digital SLR CameraI specced it out, I compared models, I read the literature, I decided which one I wanted, and finally I made the purchase, and I couldn’t be happier. Every hour I reload the FedEx tracking page and bang on my desk because it is still in New Jersey. It would have been more efficient to have driven down to New York City to get it myself, and if I was more adventurous (and thought of it) I might just have done it. Come on camera, get here!

I really hope this good feeling continues, after all, I did just blow $1000 on a new camera. And with expensive cameras come expensive accessories. I’d better watch out, because if I get too into this I might have to buy a $200 flash or a $300 telephoto lens or a $20 trigger remote or a $100 tripod…

Let’s take it slow, shall we? Can anyone recommend any good places around here for photography classes?

The new Nikon D50 contains 90% of the features of the D70 in a slightly smaller form factor with a slightly less fancy lens for $900 and will ship in June.

On the other hand, the D70 includes all the features of the D70, is shipping right now, and, after rebate (and from the right dealer), costs around $900.

So that’s a little odd.

(They’re clearing out D70s to make way for D70s‘s, which also come out in June, and are about 10% better than the D70 — for around $1200.)

Two quick TV notes

This season’s Scrubs have been highly variable and several episodes have characters behaving in ways very inconsistent with their personalities. I suspect there are some new writers in the mix, and I worry they don’t much know what they’re doing. For that reason, I’ve move things in my TiVo subscriptions list so instead it now records the other hospital show in the same timeslot, namely;

House is really engossing, and I realized tonight after watching the latest episode (which aired a couple Tuesdays ago) that what “works” about the show is the main character is an angry, bitter, stuck-up, and incredibly grating doctor, but he is the kind of doctor you’d want to have. Not just because he is always right. It’s because he behaves like a lawyer.

Go with me on this one.

For all his supposed disdain for his patients, one of the reasons it is so hard to convince House to see anyone is because once he accepts a case he moves into the role of patient advocate, and he is the best advocate you can have. He will break every rule, do everything within his power to make sure that his patient is served. He will risk his medical license and the licences of those around him, subvert authority, screw up drug trials, anything you want. He is the best lawyer you could have, and even better, he is a doctor too. House is always set in conflict with people who are “overly” concerned about profits, not being sued, or following ethical guidelines. Most of these people have very valid points, and may be right from a big-picture point of view. But House is right from the patient’s point of view, and that is what matters most to the patient.

And one day you will be that patient. So who would you rather have as a doctor?

(If I’m lucky, Kevin will step in with a Utilitarian view on this one… ;))

Time and routine

In just a bit I plan to get down to work on my Chinese Philosophy essay and do that full-time for the next few days. But once that is done, I’m finished with academics at Brandeis. I’m starting to finally have free time again.

In the past week or so I’ve had a lot of fun taking pictures, reading a book for pleasure, watching House, and listening to NPR. These are all things I try to do in general, but they are the kind of things that get pushed to the back when there are other things to do. I don’t think there is anything wrong with liking a few TV shows or radio programs or wanting to read a book, and I like that I have time and freedom to just do these things without worrying unduly about other commitments.

I’m having a lot of fun taking pictures, and I want to take more. I’m having a lot of fun playing with Flickr and 43 Things, and I want to start accomplishing some of the goals I have been setting using the latter. I have been cleaning up my computer files and my music a bit. I installed Apple’s new Tiger operating system upgrade and my computer seems…cleaner. It is a strange obsession of mine, with pristine newness, but I feel very satisfied making clear lists and albums and playlists and goals, keeping my mental map open wide. I also feel satisfied reading new, interesting things, getting new perspectives, sitting back and looking at the world and going, “hmm,” and enjoying it.

It is nice to not have anything I need to do, and to be able to just indulge in calm. I wonder how long I can keep this up before I get bored with it.

One thing is for certain, I have made my decision. I am buying a Nikon D70, and I am buying it now.

My 43 Things

I keep thinking of things I want to do, either in the immediate future, after graduation, or just at some indeterminate point, and I wanted to make a list. Luckily I stumbled upon 43 Things, a site where people make lists of the goals they want to accomplish and can talk about their progress and help others. It is a simple concept, well executed, and perfectly fit my needs. The thought is that 43 is a good number of things to have on your mind at once. Too many more and you’ll never accomplish anything, and if you aim too low you’re not being fair to yourself. So far I have sixteen things on my list, which you can view here. I’m sure it will change over time.

I’m putting the most immediate concerns at the top and the more etheral (or inconvenient) goals down near the bottom. Among my goals so far is to find a job, get an apartment, go white water rafting, and learn photography. As I think of things, I will add them. Next I need to start doing them.