It’s the music, stupid

CNN.com – Josh Bernoff: Customers turning to downloads over CDs – Sep. 6, 2003

This is definitely a trend that’s coming from youth. The young people do this the most, and when you go into Tower Records a few years from now, it’s going to be all old people hanging out in there.

Interesting article: this makes the first time a media format will go away, but won’t be replaced by another.

The victim here will be the retailers: they’re the ones who won’t have any physical objects to sell. The labels are projected to move to online services for music sales, and DVDs will be replaced by cable companies’ video on demand, leaving the mall music stores selling posters and T-shirts.

$12.99 still too much?

Universal Music cuts CD prices up to 30% – Sep. 4, 2003

NEW YORK (CNN) – Hoping to win back customers lost to free music downloads, one record company is slashing prices.

Universal Music Group said Wednesday it is cutting the suggested retail price of its compact discs to $12.98 from current prices ranging from $16.98 to $18.98.

So will enough people increase their music buying to make the labels think this is a good move?

I’d be happy if they’d make their back catalog available through a service like iTunes.

interspecies infection: Windows viruses could propagate to UNIX

Wine HQ – WWN Issue #185

Of course the obvious question was asked (by P. Christeas), “Does SoBig.F run under wine? If yes, how bad can it get? “

Marcus Meissner tried running it and reported that it crashed. Sylvain Petreolle wondered how long it would take for virus writers to begin complaining their code didn’t work under Wine. Shachar Shemesh warned against using Wine as a sandbox for testing such things:

We’ve been through this discussion before too. Wine is not a VM, and the isolation between Win32 and Unix code is the result of application’s ignorance, rather than a deliberate design decision. As such, it is highly NOT recommended for cases where hostile code of unknown qualities is tested.

For all you know, sobig may be checking whether it is runnning on wine, and then issuing the correct interrupts (static linking dlopen) and infecting your Unix system.

Yuck.

media-molded democracy short-circuited

U.S. Court Blocks Plan to Ease Rule on Media Owners

A federal appeals court issued a surprise order today blocking the Federal Communications Commission from imposing new rules that would make it easier for the nation’s largest media conglomerates to add new markets and areas of business.

The decision came a day before the new rules, considered among the most significant efforts at deregulation adopted during the Bush administration, were scheduled to take effect. It followed two hours of oral arguments at an emergency hearing this morning by a three-judge panel in Philadelphia and was a sharp setback for the largest media companies and for the commission’s chairman, Michael K. Powell.

Mr. Powell, the architect of the new rules, has emphasized that the commission was compelled to rewrite the old regulations because of a string of federal court decisions in cases brought in Washington by the media companies. Those decisions ordered the agency to reconsider some of the rules.

But today the appeals court voted unanimously to prevent media companies from moving forward with plans to take advantage of the new rules. The court also raised tough questions for the commission and its industry supporters about their efforts to reshape the regulatory landscape. The new regulations are already facing a challenge in Congress, where legislators have taken steps to repeal some of them.

Hard luck for the laissez-faire chairman . . .

your emergency is not your hospital’s responsibility

Emergency Rooms Get Eased Rules on Patient Care

WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 — The Bush administration is relaxing rules that say hospitals have to examine and treat people who require emergency medical care, regardless of their ability to pay.

Under the new rule, which takes effect on Nov. 10, patients might find it more difficult to obtain certain types of emergency care at some hospitals or clinics that hospitals own and operate.

The new rule makes clear that hospitals need not have specialists “on call” around the clock. Some patients might have more difficulty winning damages in court for injuries caused by violations of the federal standards.

So after November 10, expect to be turned away from the emergency room unless you have an open wound if you visit any but the largest big city hospitals.

This is progress?

impromptu vacation

UWLS

Preparations are in high gear for this summer’s move by the University of Washington School of Law into its new building, William H. Gates Hall. The building is 85 percent complete, with a ‘substantial completion’ date of June 24th.

Well, here we are in early September and the building isn’t ready, the old building is closed for renovations, and I get to work from home.

We’ll see how it goes. For once, I’m at a loss for words about how this process is going. The summary in the paragraph above is all I can say about it.

humdudgeon

This excellent word “humdudgeon” came to me from this book, part of which is a daily diary of a mid-20th century newspaper editor.

One entry read, in part:

Suffered an acute attack of the humdudgeon today; the symptoms of this illness are a sense of failure, self-contempt and mental fatigue; there is no cure for it; application to the bottle merely brings on a crying-jag; a walk in the park suggests thoughts of suicide; while the fit lasts, all seems dross; sufferers from the humdudgeon should be left alone, though if they can be persuaded to lie down with a pillow under the knees, it helps . . .

One of the worst spells I’ve had in a while and I might have an explanation for it. Since we joined NetFlix we have been catching up on our movie watching, and last night’s feature was Shakespeare in Love. It was good, though it’s ending is no happier than the play it features. But what I think started dragging me down was watching the play being written and the players groping their way through it, as a completely different play than any they had experienced. It was the passion of creation, of doing something original or new, if for no one but yourself. (Shakespeare’s plays and the self-aware characters he created are considered the foundation of modern literature and that seemed to a big part of the movie’s plotline.

It struck me as I was out riding this afternoon that I am leading a completely colorless, drab existence, as a meaningless cog in a machine whose functions are opaque and meaningless to me. I was more satisfied when I was between opportunities for that oh so long stretch than I am now.

Once I worked that out (aided by some exercise), the spell passed . . .

The challenge now is to keep it away: the Black Dog of Depression, another occasional visitor, is nothing compared with this, as depression is dull while the other has an ache to it.

energy-less air-conditioning

Natural Air Conditioning

There was a technique used or invented by the Romans a long time ago [for] natural form of air conditioning / ventilation.

I saw something similar on an edition of This Old House: the location was in Charleston, SC, and the house in question — about 200 years old — had a cooling system, very similar to this. The key was a central chimney over the main hallway with a ring of gas jets close to the top. As the gas jets heated the air in the chimney (this was a large affair, not a narrow brick box), the air rose rapidly enough to pull air in through street level windows and doors, creating a persistent breeze.

The Roman system would probably work quite well here in the Pacific Northwest . . . .

Seen in Rebecca’s Pocket