Posts Tagged ‘news’

Accused Murderer Says God Made Him Kill [Atheist Revolution]

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008 at 8:54 am

From Atheist Revolution:

Whenever someone commits a horrible crime and then claims that some god told them to do it, believers and non-believers unite to reject the claim. Non-believers have an easy time rejecting the “god make me do it” defense because we reason that mythical beings cannot influence human behavior. We might accept the possibility that the criminal’s belief contributed to the action, or we might look for mental illness. The believer often has a different path to the same conclusion. For the believer, god did not command them to engage in the despicable act because god would never do such a terrible thing. Of course, one only has to read the Christian bible or listen to Pat Robertson to realize that this is simply not true.

Link

As If The Unitards Weren’t Enough

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007 at 5:51 pm

Was anyone else completely unaware that rasslin’ can give you herpes?

‘I have intelligence information for the president!’

Monday, April 10th, 2006 at 3:00 pm

I’m assuming everyone heard about the guy who jumped the White House fence. What if he DOES have intelligence information for the President? Remember how we found out after the fact that people had intelligence pointing to a terrorist attack on 9/11?

It’s sort of like the second coming of Jesus: he can tell everyone he sees, but we’ll all just think he’s crazy.

Google Reader: A Review

Monday, January 2nd, 2006 at 10:54 pm

Before I even bought my iBook, I knew that one of the first things I would install would be NetNewsWire. At that point, I only read a few blogs, but I’d heard marvelous things about NNW from at least a couple of them and decided it was time to try an RSS reader. I fell in love with it when I learned the keyboard shortcuts - I don’t like using the mouse more than I have to, especially when I’ve only got a track pad at my disposal. For the first several weeks down here in VA, I didn’t have wireless access or a router, so I almost never used the laptop. As such, I started using Google Reader.

I gave it a spin a few months ago when it was introduced, and imported all of my feeds from NNW. At the time, I didn’t care for the interface; it was slow, it mixed all the feeds together, and it didn’t have the keyboard shortcuts that I had come to love about NNW. When my Windows machine became the only one I was using regularly, I decided it was time to give it another shot.

This time around, I found Reader to be far more usable. It turns out, there ARE keyboard shortcuts - I’m not sure if I just didn’t see the list of them at the bottom of the screen, or if they were added since I tried it last, but I’ve learned to use them nonetheless.

I’ve also come too appreciate the single list of items. In NNW, there were more than a dozen feeds I almost never read, because I would always start with some of my favorites and run out of time or interest before I got to the “boring” feeds. Now, with every feed combined, I get a nice variety - news mixed with humor mixed with photos. I almost never read any of the news feeds before because there were always some blog posts that looked more interesting. I’ve learned to skim headlines and only read the posts that catch my attention and breeze past the rest, so I’m actually getting through more feeds than I used to, and keeping closer tabs on those “boring” news feeds.

It’s also nice that Reader is web-based. I had tried another web-based reader before - Bloglines, maybe? - because I wanted something I could use on any machine. I could have found a decent Windows reader, but then I’d be sifting through looking for new content any time I moved between my two computers. I needed a single account that would keep track of what I had read. Unfortunately, the interface on the one I tried was terrible, and I figured I wouldn’t find much better. Now that I have wireless and use both computers at my apartment, the web-based solution makes the most sense. Furthermore, I can use it at work; I’ll flip through a few headlines while waiting for a compile to finish.

As always, though, life isn’t all sunshine and puppies: this week, Reader has been reporting a lot of errors and occasionally refuses to load. I thought it might have something to do with my long list of feeds, so I went through the arduous task of removing some feeds I don’t read or don’t exist anymore - arduous because of obscene load times - and cut my list down to 81 feeds. Things seem to be going better - not great, but better. I was hoping that my woes would all be silenced by trimming the fat a little, but I’m starting to think that the Reader team may be working on things. A cursory glance at the Reader Group suggests that the team is working on the site, as these issues are being widely reported. At this point I’d say it’s usable, but it will get frustrating before long.

Another issue mentioned often in the Group, and one I’ve seen myself, is the inability to unsubscribe from feeds. You can click “unsubscribe” as many times as you want, and it will disappear from your subscription list, but posts may continue to appear in the reading list. It seems to be a caching issue, as the feed’s items will stop appearing sooner or later, but it’s frustrating to keep deleting something that just won’t go away.

Reader is not without it’s flaws. It serves my purposes well, and isn’t so critical that occasional downtime bothers me. I’m confident that the service will improve over time - as all Google products do - and I’ll probably be using it for a long time to come. After all, GMail has been my primary account for a year and a half now, and it’s only gotten better. I’d recommend it to anyone who reads content that’s available in RSS or Atom, but give them a week to get things running right again.

Addendum: Enlarging the text totally screws up the view.

Information Overload

Wednesday, October 26th, 2005 at 12:13 am

There is WAY too much information out there.

For the most part, this isn’t a problem. The more the merrier, right? Wikipedia is certainly a lot more useful when it’s full of information.

The problem is the fact that I feel the need to consume it all, to read and watch and listen and process until I have a grasp on everything and know a little bit about all of it. I try to spend some time reading every day, both online and in dead-tree media, to keep up on current events, and every day, my stack of new magazines seems a little taller, and the number of unread posts in my news reader is a little higher. I know I can’t possibly take in everything that comes my way, but I’ve always had an overwhelming desire to know what’s going on.

Internet Anxiety Disorder first came to my attention over SIX MONTHS AGO, about the same time Ryan found it. I’ve been meaning to comment on it ever since, but I always seem to have something to read.

My intent to articulate this was recently revived when I found a link (from somewhere) to an article by Bob Walsh: All The News Doesn’t Fit. Just a few days earlier, Google had introduced Google Reader. The introductory post on Google Blog said it best (though almost definitely not first): how is anyone “supposed to keep up with the fire hose of stuff launched from the web’s spigot?”

I like to be able to comment intelligently on the issues facing the world around me, and as such, I try to keep on top of things. I’ve been spending more time reading lately and feel like I’m getting a better grasp on things, but it never slows down. Currently:

  • I have a half-dozen unread Wired magazines laying around.
  • There are around 30 non-technical, just-for-fun type books on my shelf. I’ve read about half of them, maybe.
  • I’m currently reading two books. I’m an incredible 75 pages into the one I started a couple months ago.
  • I have 104 RSS feeds in my news reader, totaling 559 unread posts right now.
  • I’ve been keeping a list of movies I want to see since around August 2003 (I think). It currently features 217 titles. In 2004, I watched 129 movies, and just 71 so far this year, so that’s around two years worth of movies I need to catch up on.
  • The text file with the list of movies also has 94 books that I’ve read ABOUT, and want to actually read.
  • Back in February, I started posting things to del.icio.us with the ‘toRead’ tag, when I found something interesting but didn’t have time to read it immediately. There are now 306 pages with that tag.

I feel like I’m missing out when I hear people talking about the latest book - two good examples are The Tipping Point and Freakonomics , both old news by now - but I’ve accepted the fact that I’ll never be able to keep up on it all. Yesterday, I started reading The Influentials (which I owned for TWO YEARS before finally starting) and thought this summed it all up nicely:

The average American would have to read 334 books per day, go to 11,000 web sites per day, peruse 15 magazines per day, and tune into 29 radio stations every day for a year to see everything available to him or her - and that’s not counting the dozens of programs being beamed every day by the hundreds of television networks vying for viewers’ attention.

I haven’t even tried to address TV, which has only gotten worse with the recent acquisition (and subsequent upgrade) of TiVo. I watch Simpsons or Aqua Teen Hunger Force when I feel like I need a break from consuming all the print media I need to get to.

There’s a lot out there, and it just keeps coming. I know I can’t possibly get all of it, but I feel like I’m missing something if I don’t at least catch the major stuff. I’ve learned to be very suspicious of anyone who seems to be on top of it all - they are clearly unemployed and don’t require sleep.