new iPod

Well, I ended up getting a replacement unit for my misbehaving 10 Gb iPod. After sending it in for service and getting it back in not all that different condition, the nice folks at the Apple depot told me to take it and my case number to the local Apple store and tell them what happened.

They were reluctant to cough one up but I was more persistent than that. The Genius bar is pretty busy and in the grand scheme of things, this was rather low on their list of things to hassle with.

So I have a new one to play with. Among my lessons learned? Get some kind of skin for it so it doesn’t get as scratched up as it’s predecessor. None of them are very appealing: I’m not buying leather (unless it comes from windfall cows), so my options are rather limited.

looks like he got enough rope

the modesty of Bill O’Reilly

WHYY reports that Fox News Channel’s Bill O’Reilly, host of The O’Reilly Factor, will not authorize Fresh Air to relicense segments from his amazing appearance on Terry Gross’s amazing show. Speculation why he’d ban the repeat of his worlds elsewhere is growing. But it is obvious to this writer that it is nothing more than a flash of modesty by this engaging figure, no doubt motivated by a desire to drive traffic to Fresh Air’s site (again, it is here). Yet another example of commercial media reaching out to help noncommercial media.

sec_oreilly03.jpg

[Lessig Blog]

From the accounts I’ve seen and having not listened, it seems he walked off the set in disgust. Since his guests regularly get cut off mid-sentence, I guess it amounts to the same thing.

Machiavelli said it best

Weekly Review (Harpers.org):

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld apologized for the torture of Iraqi prisoners and said that there are “many more photographs and indeed some videos” of American soldiers engaging in “blatantly sadistic, cruel, and inhuman” behavior; Rumsfeld took “full responsibility” for the abuse but still refused to resign. [ . . . ] American soldiers allegedly put a harness on an elderly Iraqi woman and rode her like a donkey. New charges included rape, murder, and child molestation. “The system works,” Rumsfeld told the Senate.

The end justifies the means?

parsing

The New York Times > Opinion > Op-Ed Columnist: Just Trust Us:

Did top officials order the use of torture? It depends on the meaning of the words “order” and “torture.” Last August Mr. Rumsfeld’s top intelligence official sent Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, the commander of the Guantánamo prison, to Iraq. General Miller recommended that the guards help interrogators, including private contractors, by handling prisoners in a way that “sets the conditions” for “successful interrogation and exploitation.” What did he and his superiors think would happen?

Anyone remember Bill Clinton wiggling on the word “is” during the Starr witch hunt?

Anyone recall the murder of Becket in his cathedral by four knights who took Henry II’s “who will rid me of this troublesome priest” as a call to action?
Continue reading “parsing”

I’m glad this isn’t representative of Canadians

ongoing · Torture:

The right reason to invade Iraq was because Saddam was weak and it was cheap to take him out. If we could get Kim Jong Il and Bob Mugabe at acceptable cost I’d be in favor of those ones too.

So Tim Bray thinks that it’s OK to knock off the leaders of sovereign nations if the price is right. This sets a dangerous precedent, which is illustrated by the Executive Order banning assassinations[1]: if you do it, it’s OK for the other guy to do it. Do we want a world where we off each other’s presidents/premiers/prime ministers until we run out of candidates?

I’m not sure what to make of a _Canadian_ making this case. Nothing against our northern neighbor: I gaze wistfully at it on the map when I reflect on how weird things are getting. But there’s a hint of bullying by proxy in that line of thinking. If Canadians were opposed, by and large, to this misadventure, why does extending it into Korea and Zimbabwe make any sense? And I don’t see any groundswell of support for a global house-cleaning in Canada.

While Tim may be justifiably sympathetic with the victims of Saddam Hussein’s regime, it’s important to remember that he was ‘the enemy of our enemy’ (Iran, in the Khomeini era) and was supported by prior US administrations. As FDR said of Somoza and some folks are updating to refer to Saddam, “he may be a son of a bitch, but he’s our son of a bitch.”

Do we never learn from our mistakes? Do we even willing to admit them?

fn1. CNN.com – U.S. policy on assassinations – Nov. 4, 2002:
According to an October 21, 2001, Washington Post article, President Bush in September of last year signed an intelligence “finding” instructing the CIA to engage in “lethal covert operations” to destroy Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda organization.

White House and CIA lawyers believe that the intelligence “finding” is constitutional because the ban on political assassination does not apply to wartime. They also contend that the prohibition does not preclude the United States taking action against terrorists.

pointing iTunes “now playing” links to either Amazon or iTunes

In case the title doesn’t sum it up, I would like for the iTunes tracks I include with weblog entries (using KungTunes or ecto) to point interested parties at the relevant tracks on Amazon or the iTunes music store. Extra credit if the relevant affiliate links can be inserted in the Amazon links (like the following example).

now playing: Black And White from the album Anthology [1968-1985] (Disc 2) by Todd Rundgren

improving the iPod

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At the suggestion of the folks on my local mailing list and the entrepreneurial fellows at iPodhead.com, I bagged a pair of these and it makes the iPod a whole new experience.

They’re great. I’m able to hear a lot more than I ever did before on stuff I thought I knew. And the bass response is a lot better (that was when I realized the old ones weren’t going to cut it). The stock earbuds just never fit in my ears (so they’re a little small: sue me). These are designed to fit *in* the ear with three sizes of little adapters (hey, Sony realizes people come in different sizes: clever, that).

now playing: Hello It’s Me from the album Anthology [1968-1985] (Disc 1) by Todd Rundgren