Category: philosophy
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Guns don’t kill people… yeah, right
So the AP is running the story that the Palestinian Authority has banned weapons for civilians. This is a big deal for Chairman Abbas to do politically, and the right thing for the US, Europe, Russia, and China to do in response would be to agree to a moratorium on arms shipments to Israel and…
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Google as the architect of consumer computing
Dvorak thinks that there is a Google OS coming soon, and maybe he’s right. But I think that Google doesn’t need to have an OS, a branded computer, or any other conventional consumer electronic/IT product. I think this because I think they already have what they need to unseat Microsoft, and that they can do…
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masters of mediocre: what next for the Seahawks?
Yep, I’m one of those poor suckers who root for the Seattle Seahawks. They lost their sixth consecutive play-off game yesterday, and their third consecutive game against the St. Louis Rams, to complete another season of essentially mediocre professional football. It’s Mike Holmgren’s sixth year in Seattle, and the luster of his 1996 super bowl…
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the end of the desk?
I have a wireless laptop, and have been wireless for something approaching three years now. During that time, my need for and use of a traditional desk has progressively diminished. The idea of sitting at a desk to accomplish anything has started to become outmoded in my mind, and my idea of the perfect office…
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Bad Guys
So I just sunk the better part of four days into playing Killzone on my PS2. It, like all other kill or be killed video games has two faults – the AI is not so smart, and the go-here-do-this excuse for a story that makes you hit check-points and accomplish “missions”. Neither of which would…
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The newest member of the cult
Shaun of the Dead. It’s British. It has zombies. It’s funny. What happens in the background during the first half of the movie, and how cleverly cynical it is about being involved/interested we are in the goings on outside our lives just had me rolling. If you are a news-addict, a geek, and you own…
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Unbelievable
Ok, so I get this postcard in the mail today – it’s from the Army Reserve. It’s a form letter, and there is a “personalized” web site, which is also a form letter. This is my favorite quote: “The best part-time job in America – because you’re defending America.” This isn’t a joke. Here is…
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Ask the Hard Questions
I suppose that asking the hard questions is one of those relative things – the hardness of a question being one of those multi-faceted relationships between many different things. Is a question hard because it is difficult to ask? Is it hard because it is difficult to answer? Both of those are relative to the…
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one third of the secret of life
There isn’t anything that I want to do, as work, for someone else that I can’t do as my own boss. (I guess – prove me wrong here) I should be able to do what I want. I want to be respected, to have a voice, to have a place where I have a degree…
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pace & idleness
The pace of change, the rapidity of a generational adaptation to the effects of change, these are the measures of progress or conservation. These are the markers by which we judge the fitness of a people. Adaptability and the willingness to adapt is, in a dynamic cosmos, the hallmark of civilization while, in contrast, the…