Saturday, May 30, 2009

Who are the Barbarians?

solvent in righteousness
bankrupt of common sense
using emotion as your weapon
you wage a crusade of ignorance

you beat down the downtrodden
senseless with sentimentality
crying crocodile tears into puppy fur
and conveniently ignore the reality

animal rights bigots
with your lamb chops fricasseed
thinking your cause is humane
blind to the honest people you bleed


A thought on the seal ban

This is a response to an editorial published in today's Free Press.

Given the absurdity of Europe's ban on seal products our GG's actions were completely appropriate and showed the kind of grit that more of our Queen's representatives should aspire to. I know there a lot of PETA types in Canada, I myself love animals, but we consume the little critters, most of us, and seals have no more right to life than the fish you so fancily fry and the young cows that are slaughtered in the name of veal.

What I take from the GG's actions is that as Canadians we should stand up for the rights of our east-coast fishers, as well as our Inuit people, to make a modest living from the seal hunt; and that we should support them in the face of knee-jerk animal rights policies that are based on lies and misspent emotion.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

They've Done it!

The big heads at Google have listened to my pleas and made it easier to access date specific searches (among other filters) via a handy "options" link that resides just below the masthead on the results page. Those changes and others are discussed further in this article from BBC technology:

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Some nerdy requests from an unhappy iTunes user.

Okay, I like to bitch about meaningless stuff on a Sunday sometimes. I dunno, it's cathartic I guess. I was working with my music library today and it's massive (about 12,000 songs). But I have to use iTunes because I have a Mac and an iPod. Sadly iTunes kinda sucks. It could be so much better but the good folks at Apple seem pretty happy with the status quo since they're still moving lots of units. Anyway, here's a letter I sent asking for some improvements:

Dear Apple, I am continually disappointed (but not entirely surprised) that newer releases of iTunes focus almost exclusively focus on ways to sell more product without making some simple but greatly beneficial enhancements to the overall usability of the application.
One thing that needs to be done is to allow people to have multiple columns available for the "Source" pane. If you have a lot of music and a lot of lists it is a real hassle to have to click and drag down an endless column. I use folders to organize my lists, but even then there can be enough folders to make navigation difficult (especially with my 80 GB iPod mounted.) I hate to say it, but you could learn a thing or two from WinAmp in this regard.
Allowing for the use of multiple libraries without having to Option-start iTunes would be another major improvement. With massive libraries of content now available it is more and more common to have information stored on a variety of removable/external media, and therefore it would be nice to have the capability to have iTunes recognize this media on the fly, especially if the start-up drive has limited capacity.
Finally, with the death of DRM I don't see why iPods should not be re-opened to allow users to manipulate their file structure manually on any computer like was possible in earlier versions of the iPod. Specifically, it should be possible for the user to use the iPod as a library that can be opened on any Mac (or PC) for creation of playlists, etc. as well as a playback device.