Monday, September 29, 2014
He's getting old...
That first word, being used by him, is causing much hilarity (and wishes for his early earthly departure) in many of the tweets that follow.
Hey, I had that weird thought first
I would like to point out that I had odd thought 9 months ago.
That's OK, maybe someone else had written about it before me. But if he writes soon about my proposed TV series of time travelling, fecal transplanting doctors who change the course of history, I'll expect an acknowledgement.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
The ever reliable tobacco industry speaks
Hey, interesting to note that France is going the "plain packaging" route for cigarettes. Apparently, youthful smoking has been on the increase, despite the EU already requiring that packets be plastered with health warnings.
Most amusing, though, is a claim from a tobacco aligned company (although the article does not say what it actually does):
Celine Audibert, a spokeswoman for French firm Seita, which is aShe should work for the IPA; she makes about as much sense.
subsidiary of Imperial Tobacco, described the move as "completely
incomprehensible".
"It's based on the Australian experience which, more than a failure, was a complete fiasco," added Ms Audibert.
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Well known skeptic has some doubts
This is a rare story - a widely known skeptic getting a bit spooked by a remarkably meaningful co-incidence (or more?)
It would be great if this sort of thing happened more often. Skeptics should doubt their skepticism a bit more often than they do, I think.
(I also trust that this isn't some sort of playing with his readership on Shermer's part.)
Significant movie news
The Steven Spielberg-directed Cold War era movie is currently taking over the DUMBO section of Brooklyn. Signs for the previously untitled project, now going by St. James Place, began popping up around the area surrounding the Manhattan Bridge this week, and this morning about two blocks have been taken over by the production.Sounds quite interesting, no?
The film will star Tom Hanks, Amy Ryan, Eve Hewson, Alan Alda, and others. According to a Variety report from June:
"DreamWorks and Disney have dated the Cold War spy thriller for Oct. 16, 2015. Joel and Ethan Coen came on board last month to write the script, which Marc Platt and Kristie Macosko Krieger will produce with Spielberg. The Coen Brothers, who won screenwriting Oscars for Fargo and No Country for Old Men, are revising Matt Charman’s script."The movie is based on the true story of attorney James Donovan (Hanks), who was "enlisted by the CIA during the Cold War to surreptitiously negotiate the 1962 release of Francis Gary Powers, the U-2 spy plane pilot who was shot down over Russia two years earlier." During his lifetime, Donovan also negotiated deals with Fidel Castro during the Bay of Pigs invasion,
counseled during the Nuremberg Trials, and in 1962 was backed by Kennedy for as the Democratic candidate for a New York Senate seat (which he lost to Jacob Javits). In the late 1960s, he was the President of Pratt Institute.
In non Spielberg related news, I also noticed this week that the new James Bond will be directed again by Sam Mendes, who I thought did a very classy (and distinctive looking) job with Skyfall. Shooting starts in December, for release in November 2015.
Then, in December, will be the release of the new Star Wars film. I don't hold any particularly high hopes for that, as I think JJ Abrams is a poor director. Possibly better than George Lucas, though. At least, it would appear, he is limiting the amount of CGI, which is a good thing.
The end of 2015 is going to be pretty full of highly anticipated movies....
Friday, September 26, 2014
Some awesome photos...
Backyard nature news
Not exactly colourful, but their behaviour was interesting: hoping around the ground in a group of 5 or 6.
And I see from Wikipedia that they indeed seem to be a very co-operative species:
The apostlebird was named after the Biblical apostles, the twelve followers of Jesus Christ.[5][6] In fact, the species travel in family groups of between 6 and 20, which may coalesce with other family groups into large feeding flocks of over 40. ...
Apostlebirds are a socially living, cooperative breeding species with each breeding group generally containing only one breeding pair, the rest being either their helper offspring, kin or unrelated adult birds. Most group members help construct a mud nest, share in incubation of the eggs, and defense of the nest. Once the eggs are hatched, all members of the group help feed the chicks and keep the nest clean.Positively socialist!
I take it from one other site, where someone posted a photo of them from Brisbane in 2013, that they are not so common here. (They generally come from a bit further inland, it seems.)
We seem to be privileged to be seeing them. Hope they hang around.
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Disturbing in its own way
Interesting details on the potential for cheap, flexible solar cells
I know: it seems that a flexible and cheap version of solar cells has been just around the corner for a long time now, but this article goes into details that does indeed make them sound likely to be commercially available soon. (Or soon-ish.)
These perovskite ones sound different to what the CSIRO hopes to commercialise.
Sounds like quite a race may be on to get some form of cheap, flexible cell on the market.
Needed next: a breakthrough in cheaper storage batteries.
I take this very seriously...
Yay! An unexpected harm from exercise - maybe. If you're an athlete who does heavy training.
I don't care - any anti-exercise news is welcome in this neck of the woods.
Yet another reason not to trust them...
Gee. Jonathan Green (whose twitter feed indicates when he's not in the studio, he's on a horse*) needs to watch his back...
* quite possibly, he's tried training his horse to operate the panel
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Spy stuff
Quite a lengthy article here showing more than a dozen, rather interesting, items held in the CIA museum.
About Julia
A few observations:
* it seemed to be lit in a strange, harsh looking way. It certainly highlighted a bit of bagginess under the eyes of Gillard, but it did no favours for a well wrinkled Martin as well. I wonder why it was done that way?
* Gillard herself remains a cool, calm and very likeable character. She readily admits to mistakes, but regrets little and (to use that pop psychology term that has fallen out of favour) just seems a very "centred" person. Despite half of the public's nutty obsession with attacking her for carbon pricing, her general reliability for sound policy approaches runs rings around the ever flaky, unreliable, current PM we have.
* I was particularly impressed by her encouragement of women to enter into politics despite the troubles she had been through herself. (And her dismissal of the idea that anyone should get into politics because they like the attention it will bring them.)
* There is no doubt that Labor made a disastrous decision to go with Rudd - and as I have said before, the only good thing that a Coalition win has achieved so far is ridding the political scene of that menace.
Perhaps they can build a toilet on Mars?
Look, I'm not one who would argue that you never have a space program until you eliminate your own country's (or the world's) poverty. (I heard a lot of that type of talk at the time of the Apollo program - but I think that virtually all idealists of the 60's have since realised that solving poverty is not simply a matter of the rich West sending its money overseas.)
However, India, a country where the WHO says more than 600 million people are without access to adequate sanitation (read - toilets of any variety) perhaps does deserve a bit of a re-organisation of priorities.
Senators having a lend
First, Senator Lambie claiming on Insiders on the weekend that she didn't post a photo of a (now deceased, rather heroic) burka clad policewoman with the intention of showing burka clad people as being a danger for carrying concealed weapons. We can safely assume that there would be no one in this wide brown land, short of a Tasmanian meth head with formication issues, who would believe her.
Secondly, because the United States is so chock full of examples of how gun carrying citizens have thwarted terrorist attacks [/extreme sarc], the gun loving libertarians of both Catallaxy and Senator "I liked to pat my guns" Leyonhjelm are both now talking about how it's such a shame our gun laws have left the good, beheading fearing, citizens of Australia defenceless.* Here is Senator L in the Daily Tele, making some very odd claims in the process:
Australia’s prohibition on practical self-defence is relatively recent, emanating from the 1996 changes in firearms laws that followed the Port Arthur massacre. Not only were many types of firearm prohibited, but Australia embraced an international push to prohibit civilian ownership of firearms for self-defence.A few points:
This was driven by several factors. One was a desire to avoid America’s so-called ‘gun culture’. However, this seems to have broadened to include all means of self-defence. Another was a type of religious pacifism, of ‘turning the other cheek’. There was also a type of precautionary approach — average citizens may one day be struck with murderous tendencies. And then there were the perennial claims that resistance is futile and weapons will inevitably be turned against those using them.
a. there is nothing "so-called" about American gun culture.
b. who has ever heard of the claim that "religious pacificism" or "turning the other cheek" was even a partial motivation behind the Howard led revamp of gun laws? The fact that there had been a series of armed nutters shooting up random strangers for the previous decade did not, from my recollection, lead to anyone, anywhere, suggesting that there was a need for a "turn the other cheek" approach to gun laws. Let us recall:
In the decade up to and including Port Arthur, Australia experienced 11 mass shootings. In these 11 events alone, 100 people were shot dead and another 52 wounded.Leyonhjelm is prone to creative fantasy when it comes to guns** - I can see no other explanation.
c. [Engage /extreme sarc again]: who has ever heard of "average citizens" one day being "struck with murderous tendancies?" I mean, a grandfather shooting his daughter and six grandchildren (after apparently accidentally shooting his son a decade ago?) As if that could happen. OK, maybe Dads in Australia are different. Yeah, sure.
* I certainly hope we don't soon have an example of a random beheading here any time soon, but even if we did, as this post goes on to show, there would have to be about 100 of them to match the danger that nutters with guns on rampages represented to the public before the gun laws here were tightened.
** and economics, I should add...
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Two bits of writing that cheered me up, a bit
A climate-change march that organizers claim was the largest on record is nevertheless unlikely to change the minds of idiots, a survey of America’s idiots reveals.Charlie Brooker in The Guardian, writing about Apple:
As part of the iPhone 6 publicity blitz, Tim Cook also announced every iTunes user in the world would be getting U2’s new album free of charge. It was downloaded automatically on to millions of users’ phones, like a sinister virus. Music is meant to be catchy – but not until you’ve heard it. The album, which I haven’t listened to yet, is terrible: even worse than their last one, which I didn’t listen to either. I don’t want to listen to any U2 albums in case I discover I like them, and have to violently reassess my own self-image. For the past five years, it’s been delightfully easy to ignore U2. Then Apple comes along and slings them under your nose like a bowl of bum soup you didn’t order. What do we have to do? Start lobbying Google for U2’s right to be forgotten?
Disconcerting times
More posts later...
This is an outrage
A letter from Ms Credlin to Mr Pyne's office approving the trip also notes that the attendance of Mrs Pyne was expected to cost the Commonwealth no more than a business class airfare for the minister. As a minister, Mr Pyne is entitled to fly business class on official overseas travel.
Mr Pyne flew business class from Adelaide to Sydney but switched to economy for the rest of the journey to London.
That's from the Fairfax story this morning, explaining how Pyne, who (by the way) has done the completely un-Catholic thing of using IVF to have kids yet wanted to be at the canonisation of one of the most conservative Popes, managed to take his wife along for the ride.
All good people of Australia, like me, who only ever fly economy, should be outraged that in doing so there is a risk that they may have to sit for 20 hours beside the whiniest voiced, biggest pillock of a lying Minister this country has seen in 50 years just so his wife can hold his hand.
I'm thinking of contacting GetUp about this....
Monday, September 22, 2014
More about the recent optimism on de-carbonising the world
JQ has always been an optimist on this topic, but here he is, looking the recent burst of reports I was noting last week, all suggesting that decarbonising the world is indeed do-able, and won't kill the globe economically in the process.


