Wednesday, September 20, 2006
The Angry Drunk Bureaucrat smells a budget in the oven
The Angry Drunk Bureaucrat The department of Finance is also estimating revenue from the Casino at 'eleventy zillion, bagillion dollars,' although with a note that they may be overestimating the amount slightly.
Bob's Bean | Engage Pittsburgh
Bob's Bean | Engage Pittsburgh Follow Bob into communities: traveling civic coffee truck and net cafeVote for this and give it a "10" -- if you please.
Classroom look.
Two power-hitters in idea generation. C and L.
UnNews:Thailand now 60% "less funny" - Uncyclopedia
Humor me.
UnNews:Thailand now 60% "less funny" - Uncyclopedia BANGKOK, Thailand -- Thailand is now 60% less funny than it was the day before yesterday, according to the Swedish Institute for Rating Amusing Countries. Before the military takeover, the country was given 'Fairly Amusing' status. That has now officially dropped to the level 'Only Makes us Kind of go 'Phnuh...''. The new military leaders have not helped matters by announcing that everyone in the country must now wear a tie, have a haircut and get a proper job. On the other hand, according to SIRAC, Army chief Sargeant Gen Sonthi Boonyaratglin has a fairly amusing name, so this might be an optimistic sign.
Picasa 2 Release Notes
Picasa 2 Release Notes Share photos online
Upload photos to Picasa Web Albums for easy sharing on the web. Select the photos you want in Picasa and upload them to the web by clicking the 'Web Album' button. When viewing your friends' albums online, you can even download them right back into Picasa on your own computer.
Political unrest and the role of the artist as activist
CMU's College of Fine Arts email blast has details of an ARTIST TALK with Joyce Kozloff and Ann Messner for Friday, September 22, 5:30 p.m.
Kozloff and Messner will talk about "Disarming Images," political unrest, the role of the artist as activist, and related issues in the gallery. Messner is the creative director of the video, as well as an adjunct at Pratt Institute, and has recently held positions at the Council of Humanities at Princeton University, Amherst College and Harvard University.
All events and exhibitions at the gallery are free and open to the public.
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Images of Thailand from our past trip
Because They Can.... by Russ Diamond
Red flags should go up anytime a Court requires one hundred pages to explain its position, and the recent opinion by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court regarding the 2005 pay raise fiasco is no exception.
The case was unusual in its origin, as the Court reached down to combine three separate cases from lower courts for an opportunity to make a general legal opinion. One case challenged the constitutionality of the pay raise itself, while two others challenged the constitutionality of its repeal.
This combination allowed the Court to cherry pick arguments from briefs filed on behalf of many different parties in each case in order to form its eventual ruling. One wonders whether the Court would have made such a move had their own compensation not been at stake.
Logic would dictate that if the pay raise itself was unconstitutional, any issue regarding its repeal would be moot. But the Court approached it differently, establishing opinions regarding the repeal first, based upon the assumption that the pay raise was constitutional. Doing it any other way would not have allowed the preservation of the judicial raises.
While the opinion goes to great lengths to explain the necessity for an independent judiciary and demands that the other two co-equal branches of government be kept from stepping on judicial turf, it offers no reciprocal respect of the legislature’s prerogative to make a bill an ‘all or nothing’ affair by inserting a non- severability clause.
Another contradiction lies with the Court’s willingness to revisit its original ruling on unvouchered expenses, while on the other hand considering its 2005 opinion regarding legislative shenanigans with the slots bill to be rock-solid precedent. In other words, it’s acceptable to correct a twenty year old mistake but unacceptable to do the same for a decision made just last year.
The biggest insult to our intelligence, however, is the Court’s claim that it had nothing to do with the original pay raise legislation. Published reports from as early as November 2004 mention Chief Justice Ralph Cappy’s overtures to the legislature for a judicial pay raise.
The opinion opens with an explanation of the political implications of the pay raise and an account of the public fallout, including the first-ever non-retention of one of its own last year. With this in mind, the fact that the lone dissenter to this opinion is the very next justice up for retention in 2007 comes as no surprise.
The timing of this ruling raises questions as well. Is its release less than seven weeks before a general election an indication that the Court wished to ‘stick it’ to the legislature in return for botching pay raises for the judiciary? The emphasis on protecting judicial turf lends credence to the notion, as does the fact that public anti-pay raise furor has otherwise taken a hiatus of late.
In legalese, the Court needed one hundred pages to delineate why they restored their own pay raises, but in plain English it takes only three words: Because they can. This should come as no surprise to citizens who regularly follow the Court’s slicing and dicing of the Constitution’s plain language.
The usual follow-up to the brazen ‘because we can’ position is an equally arrogant question: So waddaya gonna do about it? The Court’s opinion actually hints at the answer.
“In our democratic form of government, there are other methods, besides lawsuits, which may serve as a corrective tool for legislative excesses, the primary method being the political process. This case has borne out the effectiveness of that process,” the Court notes.
The opinion fails to mention, however, that the same option is available to address judicial excesses. Pennsylvanians who wish to regain control of their government should choose to not retain members of the judiciary at future elections, following the precedent set last year with Russell Nigro.
Not just because we can, but also because it’s the right thing to do.
Experience the Evolution
The Penguins have a new slogan for its season: Experience the Evolution.
I like it. Well done. It works for me.
Plenty of fun images could be used with this slogan. Imagine a pre-historic man drawn with long arms that nearly drag on the ground, hunched back, and hockey gloves.
Then take the dated images of the evolution of man, from ape to uprigt, and outfit an entire team of players -- perhaps as they take the ice -- and blur into a guy in a crouched skating position showing speed -- but also to remind of the non-upright, being at the early end of the chain / timeline.
I like it. Well done. It works for me.
Plenty of fun images could be used with this slogan. Imagine a pre-historic man drawn with long arms that nearly drag on the ground, hunched back, and hockey gloves.
Then take the dated images of the evolution of man, from ape to uprigt, and outfit an entire team of players -- perhaps as they take the ice -- and blur into a guy in a crouched skating position showing speed -- but also to remind of the non-upright, being at the early end of the chain / timeline.
Brash bemoans publicity of private life - New Zealand
Brash bemoans publicity of private life - New Zealand, world, sport, business & entertainment news on Stuff.co.nz The suggestion is crap. I have always made a point of telling the New Zealand public what my policies are and what I stand for in a policy sense. I've never held myself up as a morals campaigner.'Not only am I trying to get a grip on video blogging and my associated mulit-media archives, I'm excited to tune into more news and research into life in New Zealand.
This dude with a great name, "Brash", has a great answer, "The suggestion is crap" when asked about the news of his afair.
Monday, September 18, 2006
Calling HTML and Blogger code angles
Before I retire to watch the Steelers on Monday Night Football, I'm asking for a little help.
Q#1: I'd love to embed the video from Blip.TV into the blog postings. What is the right code to make that happen?
With YouTube, they give a handy code snip for cut and paste to embed the player.
But, ...
Q#2: With YouTube, how do you manage the size of the object window so that the videos don't get too big and look so fuzzy. You'll see on my video, often taken with a Sony digital camera, that I'm able to get rather small, postage sized video clips. But, when they come into the web via YouTube, the frame gets larger and the imgages look rather ugly.
Are there some code tips or settings that can be managed in YouTube to get smaller reditions -- or accurate renditions of videos uploaded there?
I did touch up the object pixel size in the one video below, but it didn't change anything. Perhaps because my cache wasn't cleared?
Thanks in advance.
Q#1: I'd love to embed the video from Blip.TV into the blog postings. What is the right code to make that happen?
With YouTube, they give a handy code snip for cut and paste to embed the player.
But, ...
Q#2: With YouTube, how do you manage the size of the object window so that the videos don't get too big and look so fuzzy. You'll see on my video, often taken with a Sony digital camera, that I'm able to get rather small, postage sized video clips. But, when they come into the web via YouTube, the frame gets larger and the imgages look rather ugly.
Are there some code tips or settings that can be managed in YouTube to get smaller reditions -- or accurate renditions of videos uploaded there?
I did touch up the object pixel size in the one video below, but it didn't change anything. Perhaps because my cache wasn't cleared?
Thanks in advance.
Sunday, September 17, 2006
New Hazlett Theater Opening Celebration - PittsburghLIVE.com
Splendid news. Wish I could have gone. I'd love to see this place washed in digital photos and a walking tour video blog.
New Hazlett Theater Opening Celebration - PittsburghLIVE.com: "New Hazlett Theater Opening Celebration
New photos and videos are perking and moving online this week.
Photos in a video format are headed to my new video blog site. See the link along the left side of the screen. Panda photos are already there. Much more to come. You might want to get that page, Rauterkus.Blip.TV, and subscribe yourself to one of the various RSS feeds available there. Photo show me at The Great Wall. It isn't ADA accessible.
Humm... I wonder. Can PghBloggers be made a subscriber to my RSS fee at Blip.TV?
On Religion: What sort of end will Harry Potter meet? | naplesnews.com | Naples Daily News
Pondering Heros.... and Harry Potter:
On Religion: What sort of end will Harry Potter meet? | naplesnews.com | Naples Daily News “A hero is not perfect. In fact, his flaws are part of what make him great,” said Tobias, pastor of St. John the Baptist Orthodox Church outside Pittsburgh. “By the end of a story like this one, the hero has simply become too big to remain in this world. This kind of hero is born for a purpose and he dies for a purpose.”
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