WordPress 2.5

I just upgraded to wordpress 2.5 from 2.3ish… and my first reactions are positive.  The new images feature is awesome; but if you already have a large library of images from older wordpress versions, migrating them requires alot of page-by-page editing.  

Also, in Safari, none of the admin popup windows in the WSYWIG work.  This is a MAJOR problem that needs fixing!

Also, if you haven’t done so already, head on over to gravatar.com and set yourself up with a visual avatar… your avatar will now automatically post alongside any comments you make.

Itunes design flaws…

I’m a pretty avid itunes user, but lately I have been noticing there are fundamental design issues that cripple the itunes interface. As I have been adding more and more movies to my itunes library, It has become quite clear that this portion of the application needs a facelift.

The Movie Preview Page

I must admit, this page baffles me.. on any number of levels. The thumbnail view is completely lacking in design and usability. Not only is its jet black background fundamentally out of place in the Itunes white/grey design scheme… but with your typical widescreen movie, you are limited to a preview image approximately 100 pixels long — hardly enough information to make out a face, much less serve any preview purpose.

To make matters worse, itunes insists on providing you unnecessary metadata for what is essentially a visual preview mode… without providing room to display most of the data it insists upon. If you look a the example screen-capture, you will see that most titles more then 20 characters long get cut off. This is especially true with the Stanford university video where nearly every piece of information in each content area.

What bothers me about these problems is that there is more then ample space in this view to display twice the information, with a much larger preview, but instead we get huge gaps of black background. Let’s do some quick math… with an average size window (800w x 600h)… you have an area of 480,000 square pixels. If each preview image is 100w x 50h (average approximation for DVD movies), and you only put 15 previews in this area (3 across, 5 down) , you end up using only 15% of the total useable space for preview purposes! (75000 [100*50*15] / 480,000). And this is IN PREVIEW MODE!

I would love to see a movie preview page that did movie previews well. In fact, I would prefer navigating my video library visually instead of textually but alas, Apple’s implementation just isn’t worth using. Apple, you can do better.

I have my issues with coverflow as well; but perhaps that is better saved for another post.

For your next wine & cheese event:

Just because I’m up to my eyeballs in law review articles doesn’t mean I don’t take some time to enjoy the finer things in life. One of those finer things is the music of an Estonian artist all of you should be aquatinted with: Arvo Part.

Also, if you want to bring the best bottle to your next event: I want to highly recommend the “Joel Gott” Cabernet Sauvignon (For father’s day I gave my dad the bottle with an added message “Joel Gott… you a father’s day present… clever, no?) I think the ’05 year is the better year then the 06… but I would imagine both are very good.

I’d love to hear from someone else on their opinion of this bottle; it’s currently my #1 Red wine in the under $20 list (which is the only kind of wine I have a list for)

As for the cheese? I’m partial to aged asiago.

Sex(y) scandals

Ashley DupréThe Spitzer sex scandal has received alot of press coverage the past week; After all, what self-respecting reporter when offered the scoop of a 32 22 yr. old bombshell babe servicing a powerful, married Political figure would even dream of exercising restraint.

Ya… I couldn’t think of any either.

In all seriousness, I did have a few thoughts to share on the issue. First, Alan Dershowitz (a harvard law professor of whom I have previously referenced on this blog) came out in Thursday’s Wall Street Journal and very nearly defended Spitzer.

Generally, wise and intelligent prosecutors use their discretion properly–to target organized crime, terrorism, financial predation, exploitation of children and the like. But the very existence of these selectively enforced statutes poses grave dangers of abuse. They lie around like loaded guns waiting to be used against the enemies of politically motivated investigators, prosecutors and politicians.

If this is what “wise and intelligent” prosecutors do… one can only think what Dershowitz thinks about the prosecutors in this case. He certainly has a valid point: overly-broad criminal statutes can be used for ill by partisan political figures. This isn’t to say that Spitzer shouldn’t have been held to the same standards as anyone else, or that he is above the law–but it is never right to selectively apply criminal statutes… these should be applied equally to all people.

One other person who came to mind as I reflected on this story was Jean Baudrillard, a french philosopher about whom I have written extensively about. In his book, America, he examines the media fascination and the cultural response Americans have to such events. I’ve re-read the book in its entirety and cannot find the exact quote I wanted… but here are a few relevant portions:

The fact is that a certain banality, a certain vulgarity which seem unacceptable to us in Europe seem more than acceptable — even fascinating — to us here. All our modern governments owe a kind of political meta-stability to the regulation of public opinion by advertising. Mistkes, scandals, and failures no longer signal catastrophe. The crutial think is that they be made credible, and that the public be made aware of the efforts being expended in that direction.

No one keeps count of the mistakes made by the world’s political leaders any more, mistakes which, in days gone by, would have brought about their downfall… The people no longer take pride in their leaders and the leaders no longer pride themselves on their decisions….

Everything has to be made public: what are you worth, what you earn, how you live – there is no place here for interplay of a subtler nature.

What I couldn’t find was Baudrillard’s amazement with the American media’s fascination with scandals (particularly of the sexual nature). He notices that while Americans insist on absolute transparency; the French handle scandals very differently… hiding events under layers of Bourgeois norms and phony appearances. One wonders which is the better alternative.

P.S. – turns out you can become a “fan” of Ashley Dupré on Facebook. Who knew?!

P.S.2 – check out her solo music debut on her myspace page. Not really my style… but… it’s a start.

You know you’ve got a great blog when…

… the Wall Street Journal Editoral Board echos the sentiments you have been blogging about for weeks.  This just in from Dorothy Rabinowitz:

Michelle Obama has left little doubt about her views on American society, and its people… the wife of the candidate told crowds that she was, for the first time in her life, “proud” of her country… It was obvious, nontheless, that this was no blip, no failure to express her real thought.  She said exactly what she’d wanted to say… The comment reflected her deeply held, grim view of American society, one she was accustomed to sharing with others who thought likewise.

She recently waxed irate over the American attention to security interests, arguing that we should be “changing the conversation” and building diplomatic relations “instead of protecting ourselves against terrorists“.  

A New Yorker profile published last week quotes numerous stump speech pronouncements, among them Mrs. Obama’s assertion that most Americans’ lives have gotten worse since she was a girl.  ”So if you want to pretend like there was some point in the last couple decades when your life was easy, I want to meet you.

In short, not only is existence in America a deserate proposition for most citizens –anyone claiming to have led a satisfactory one not sunk in the hell that is American life is, quite simply, lying.  America is, she has elsewhere informed audiences, a nation whose “souls are broken“.

Whatever America’s faults, we are certainly not a nation of “broken souls”, a nation where every day is some impassable hurdle, a nation needing the generous hand of some benevolent Democrat dictator.  It is almost beyond explanation how someone who has done so well in this country can still have such a pessimistic attitude toward it’s people and government.  

And what are we supposed to make of her “I want to meet you” quote?  Does she really WANT to meet someone who has had easy times in their lives?  She might want to spit in their face to spite them; no other reason seems that plausible. But this really begs the question: why is a hard life so unbearable for her?  Playrights have been exploring the tragedy of the human condition for Centuries… wouldn’t an educated woman such as Ms. Obama would have been sensible enough to grasp this fundamental truth instead of ‘hoping’ that her husband can change the human condition?  

Is a Government pouring money on our problems (which is all it can do for people)… going to make us Happier?  Is our life now really comparable to the lives our grandparents experienced during World War II?  Is it really of such a nature to complain about? 

Well, Michelle, Feel free to come and meet me anytime. If you Vant… I am here*.  I have had a few easy times over the past couple decades and would be more then happy to tell you what a great country I live in.

*[wait for it... it's worth it] 

Stop Islamofascism… buy Danish.

Back when the first Muhammad cartoon came out… I stumbled across a flickr album cataloging one man’s attempts to support anything Danish in a sign of solidarity. I just stumbled on it again…and it’s about as funny now as it was at the time (perhaps even more so now). Check it out. I think this is hilarious..

Feb. 19, 2006 — Nothing says “I love Denmark” like a fat middle-aged Jew in a Viking Helmet. Also, just found out from an Iranian friend that the thumbs up hand signal has special meaning in the Mid-East. Apparently it is the equivalent of flipping someone the bird. Take that Islamo-Fascists!

The Wall of… ‘Hate’

This just in from TIME Magazine online: 

The policeman’s quick reactions no doubt saved lives in Israel’s first suicide attack in over a year. But the bombing seemed to confirm fears by Israeli security chiefs that terrorists had joined thousands of Palestinians who streamed through the breach made last week in the security fence between Egypt and Gaza.

And yet people still still criticize Israel for building a “wall of hate“…

And again via Yahoo News:

A Palestinian armed with a semi-automatic rifle opened fire on a dining room full of Jewish religious students on Thursday night, killing eight and wounding eight others.  Police told TIME that the terrorist walked into the unguarded seminary, up two flights of stairs to the library, where hundreds of male students, many of them teenagers, were having a celebratory feast. The intruder then pulled his weapon out of the box and began spraying the room with bullets. Eyewitnesses told police that students tried hiding under tables and behind bookshelves. But as the students began to scatter, he hunted them down, killing each victim, one by one, with shots to the head at close range. 

I’m sure our hearts go out to the families of those killed.  These deaths were not simply the result of “collateral damage” resulting from the targeted killing of armed enemies but the intentional slaughtering of innocent civilians… as an end in itself… as an act of terrorism.  Yet even as we grapple with the concept that another human being could be so callous as to do such a thing… we must face yet another incomprehensible reality:

“In Gaza, news of the seminary killing was greeted with celebratory gunfire, cars honking their horns, and people passing out candy in the streets. “

words fail me…  These are the people the world demands Israel make peace with… people who rejoice… who celebrate the slaughtering of defenseless young students. Whatever the problems with the security fence, it certainly serves an incredibly important purpose–to protect the innocent civilians living within Israel.

Let’s cut to the chase… the quickest way to STOP Israel from building the fence… the most effective solution to open borders is NOT to be found in criticizing Israel’s attempts to protect its civilians but is instead the condemnation and eradication of the radical Palestinian terrorists who do not show even the slightest deference for human life.

The dirty little secret is that if these terrorists did not exist, there would be no reason for a wall!  

I wonder… if Palestinians ever did get a state… would a single Israeli be able survive there?