Saturday, March 11, 2006

L

Empire and the Regime of Unilateral Translation

Mise en ligne le vendredi 19 décembre 2003

It has always seemed rather symptomatic of a critical, yet largely untheorized, problem in the new praxis of the multitudes that the intellectual project bearing that name, the journal Multitudes, should be undertaken in a single, national-and formerly imperial-language. Certainly, the interesting role of French in relation to global English as both a codification of the division of labor within the putative unity of the West-particularly in relation to the crucial redemptive role ascribed to the aesthetic in the wake of the collapse of the ethical-and the relative autonomy of French vis-à-vis English combined with the intimate proximity between the two (allowing for much faster translation flows between the two languages) must be taken into account in judging the practical effects of this means of communication for the multitudes. From this point of departure, it might be possible to construct a genealogy of the role of the French language as it constitutes something approaching a theoretically-critical meta-language of ostensibly global proportions.

In their collective opus, Empire, Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri (hereafter abbreviated H&N) recognize that one of the important problems of today’s political struggles are their inability to articulate beyond immediate local concern (except by immediately jumping to a global plane). "There is," they write, "no common language of struggles that could ’translate’ the particular language of each into a cosmopolitan language...This points toward an important political task : to construct a new common language...Perhaps this needs to be a new type of communication that functions not on the basis of resemblances but on the basis of differences." [1] As true as this may be, not all difference is the same, and we would have to be very careful in our analysis to specify precisely how this difference occurs. H&N seem to be aware of what is at stake in this problem when they remind us that, even as communication needs to be rethought on the basis of difference, "control over linguistic sense and meaning and the networks of communication becomes an ever more central issue for political struggle." [2]

Accepting the premise advanced by Empire that networks of language constitute a crucial site for the multitudes in the struggle against global Empire, this brief essay explores how the problems of address within the text call forth, or pre-figure, a certain mode of address by critical intellectuals from the non-West. In this sense, both "Empire" and its critics-in this case, the reception of the text by intellectuals in Taiwan-form a fascinating instance of "co-figuration" that demands the attention of those who find in the notion of the multitude a conceptual mobility adequate to the exposure of non-subjective sovereignty and the diagonal lines of flight from capital.

The relation between Taiwan and the conceptual framework deployed by H&N in Empire is hardly fortuitous. To a large extent, H&N’s theorization of the historical development of sovereignty provides a cogent way to understand Taiwan’s long term, anomalous situation and its position within the U.S.-centered global Empire. [3] The redefinition accomplished by H&N of internationalism, dispensing with the limiting framework of political subjectivities based on the normativity of the nation-state without falling into the samson-esque pathos of anarchism or the compensatory catharsis of a so-called "global soul," is surely one of the enduring contributions of their work. Unfortunately, the critical import of this global, non-(inter)national perspective is often undermined, in Empire, by the absence of a thorough critique of American nationalism. I will not dwell on the reasons why H&N underestimate the importance of this critique, as it is completely conceivable-and indeed imperative-to articulate the growing dialectic between Empire and nationalism within the framework already deployed by Empire. Needless to say, nationalism has never been fundamentally opposed to imperialism, and it is surely within this history that the amalgam of US Imperial Nationalism ought to be understood.

The Taiwanese edition of Empire is prefaced by not one but five essays varying in length from two to approximately twenty pages. The battery of authors solicited to preface the work for readers with access to Chinese on the Taiwanese market is evidently designed to create the representation of a national intelligentsia. [4] The unusually large number of prefatory introductions by local intellectuals immediately suggests the complex politics of knowledge that accompany the economy, indeed war, of translation (often unilateral) between central and peripheral nationalized languages such as English and Chinese. Needless to say, the complement to this economy of translation (and silence) across the boundary between center and periphery (or again, between West and non-West) is an assumption of the translated text’s heterogeneous opacity in contrast to the homogeneous clarity of "original" communication in the national language. Hence, each of the prefaces takes upon itself the task of "introduction," devoting more or less time to the process of distillation of Empire’s main arguments. By the time the chronologically-inclined reader has gone through four of these introductions and prepares, once again, to begin yet another, this time by Kuan-hsing Chen, it is virtually impossible not to recall that Chen, years ago in the preface to a Chinese translation of an English-language work on cultural imperialism, qualified the prefatory operation in terms of "disinfection and sterilization."

There is at this postcolonial conjuncture little to be gained from questioning the latent premise of social pathology and normalization inscribed into such metaphors. Rather, it is more fruitful to read the tirelessly "introductory" quality of this battery of prefaces as the performance of an incantatory repetition done, somewhat as Starhawk has taught, in order to cast the circle. Significantly, the casting of a powerful, tautegorical circle is not performed in order to allow unprecedented mutation and multiplication of the fecund discourses deployed by Empire, but rather to protect the power of the older tautology, nationalism, that runs a continuous cycle between market, territory, blood, and language. The position of the intellectual as privileged guardian of the secret of this circle is well known. Indeed, the question of the empowerment figures prominently in two of the text’s most strident critics, Chen and Wang.
The primary problem that really captures our attention in this limited space here is rather how the prefaces work within the construction of a homolingual mode of address that binds readers and authors in a pact of homogeneous translation. The first, and certainly most obvious, clue to understanding this construction concerns the deployment of the authorial voice, particularly the use of the first person pronoun, including fascinating shifts between singular and plural that we cannot discuss in detail here. Each of the authors, except one whose "we" is implicitly left to an "orthodox" leftism of class analysis, poses the question of how "we" should read Empire. It is not difficult to show that the referent behind the ubiquitous use of "we" is assumed to be the particular, limited community circumscribed by the proper name "Taiwan."

Language, of course, inevitably becomes a central concern for the prefatory authors. Kuan-hsing Chen refers, without further explanation, to the difference between an "English-language world" and a "Chinese linguistic context." In reference to the theoretical dispositive of the text and the historical narrative concerning the development of immanentism as a motor of political liberation, Chen observes : "As far as those people living in Chinese-language areas are concerned, although we can comprehend this history intellectually, we are not very capable of experientially incorporating the corporeal and affective content of secularization and its historical transformation... Since we cannot incorporate the historical experience of Euro-American secularization, it is impossible to understand the specificity of Euro-American modernity." [5] Chen makes a similar argument, based on collective historical experience, about why Europeans cannot understand how the moral constantly impinges upon the public in the United States. Undoubtedly, there is a certain truth in these kinds of highly precipitate formulations. Baudrillard essentially makes the same argument concerning the impossibility of understanding across the Atlantic. What is alarming about these kinds of formulations is not the tendency towards cultural essentialism, which is precisely what gives them their imaginary force, but rather the implicit relation between experience and textuality that guarantees the meaning of certain enunciations will be more transparent for members of the same community. A classic strategy of enunciative desti-nation, in which the object of address is known in advance and pre-figures the meaning of address.

Undoubtedly, the most thoughtful engagement with the text comes from Kuan-hsing Chen, whose reading is attentive not only to the histories of colonialism, imperialism and the Cold War that have impeded or deformed the emergence of local as well as truly international struggles of liberation, but which also recognizes the truly innovative aspects in the text’s identification of a new, non-anthropological figure for bioplitical struggle. However, Chen’s overall evaluation of the text is negative. One of the most serious charges that Chen lays against the authors of Empire concerns their inability to articulate a serious critique of US nationalism. In the aftermath of September 11, Chen concludes that this crucial absence reveals critical flaws in the political disposition of the text as a whole, flaws which become most apparent in the "fiercely hollowed-out" account of the constitution of the multitudes.
In the penultimate section of Chen’s preface, devoted to a discussion of the multitudes, Chen resumes the essential novelty of the concept, both in relation to the advent of immaterial production and in relation to the essentially non-liberative concept of a people. Significantly, Chen mentions that, "in a Chinese linguistic field, it is difficult to find a precise translation for the term," [6] preferring to leave the term in English, untranslated. He does explain, however, that the term is equivalent to the term "subaltern," essentially referring to groups that are "weak" (ruo) in a sense relative to the momentum and mobility (shi) of the dominant. Note that the Chinese translators of H&N’s work simply rely on the conventional Sinic term qunzhong that has long served as a conventional equivalent for the "mass." Certainly, Chen’s refusal to translate the term as "qunzhong-mass" must be seen in light of his recognition of the difference the term "multitudes" marks in relation to the previous political trio of mass, class, and people. We must stress, however, that our concern here is not to determine whether or not Chen has properly understood "the Concept," but rather to grasp the field of relations in which bodies become knowledgeable. From this perspective, the fact that Chen leaves the term untranslated is not simply orthogonal, it is also actively anti-diagonal, for it effectively interdicts the emergence of a new term, and hence a new articulatory subjectivity, from emerging in Chinese.
For Chen, the constitution of the field of meaning and the dispersal of bodies within it is unquestionably conditioned by historical experience. Of course, Chen has already posited an immanent connection between historical understanding and the present constitution of community-particularly in its linguistico-cultural specificity. Although we must reject the conceptual premises of this argument, it still must be treated in terms of its corporeal opacity. In order to grasp the relations at work here, it is necessary to refer to Chen at length :
"Even if we construe Empire as a diaolgue within leftist thought, we still must see : if historical experience has proved that the unfolding of capitalism and the movements of the working class in different regions throughout the world possess different attributes, the erasure of different historical layers would result not only in a loss of explanatory power, but also a loss of the possibility of discovering both real points of articulation and the principles of the new articulations : by the same token, the Euro-American historical locus that constitutes Empire cannot be separated from the multitude [this term is always in English in the original]. The multitude is immanent to Euro-America/postmodernity. If one cannot grasp the specific attributes of the multitude in different regions, the linkages of the multitude as it becomes an anti-imperial subject could only operate in a serpentine-like fashion. This fiercely hollowed-out tendency leaves a reading of the overall theoretical account finally washed out. The fact that the book ends with a discussion of militants in the movements shows that the authors clearly see that the anti-imperial revolutionary movements must pass through linkage, articulation, and organization, and it is precisely here that we return to the problem of historicity : the articulatory subject of the movement does not exist in a vacuum and can no longer accept unified commands issued by the anti-imperial headquarters. If trans-regional linkage is to become possible, the discovery of a common enemy is but a point of departure, the democratic form is but a mediation. If the work of organization is to unleash the desire for liberation, it cannot be de-linked from the knowledges of specific local histories and cultures. This is what I call the necessity of an uninterrupted dialectic between the new internationalism and localism. To the extent that the positions of globalism, its enunciative position, manifest a posture of anti-Empire, it is difficult to empower [in English in the original] the subject of resistance immanent to history." [7]
Considerations of length force us to condense and economize. Clearly, the unsurpassable horizon of historical experience is understood by Chen in a conventional, hermeneutic fashion : community and language are the suppositories of sedimentary accumulation over time. However, since Chen’s whole notion of political meaning is completely relative, based on a calculus of relative positionality and momentum, it is pointless to construe these remarks as simple cultural essentialism. In fact, Chen’s position is quite the opposite, emphasizing absolute motility in the present. The true import of Chen’s position, combining the essentialism of common historical experience with the non-essentialism of radically relative positionality, is rather to be found in the constitution of an unequal linguistic barrier that distinguishes the supposed unities of Chinese and English. The problem of how the communication of the multitudes will create linkages across the debris of subjectivities bound to the violence of national language created in the wake of capital’s deterritorializing advance throughout the supposedly "open" space made by the creation of a line dividing the lawful comity of nations-the West, from the lawlessness of the Rest, is irreducible to the historico-theoretical account of sovereignty and immanence in Empire and its various translation-mutations. From this point of view, we see that Chen’s inability to translate the term "multitude" is primarily performative, and in this sense, not the indication of a negative lack, but rather a positive refusal. Readers of H&N will certainly recognize in this refusal the operation of a political action whose meaning extends to, or really circumambulates, the central problem of transformation in Empire/Empire.
The problem, however, is that this central problem itself can only be perceived as such from the other side of the unilateral regime of translation between Chinese and central, imperial languages (primarily English, but certainly including, in a manner that remains to be specified, French and Italian, for instance). The relation between English and the languages of Taiwan (mandarin, Taiwanese, Hakka, aboriginal, etc...) is a relation of unilateral translation. Of course, languages are ’freely’ translated into each other, although it hardly requires a statistical analysis to know that the overwhelming direction of translation is structured by a market that promotes flows of data from Chinese into English and flows of comprehensive technology from English into Chinese. The sense of these flows produce very different kinds of subjectivities. The subjectivities produced in English remain virtually autonomous of what is said in Chinese, while English becomes not just a means of social production, but also the only means of social recognition for Chinese in global Empire. Hence the matrix of difference and control needs to be transformed. Just as H&N say, this means "Knowledge has to become linguistic action and philosophy has to become a real reappropriation of knowledge." [8] This reappropriation, however, cannot simply be thought along the lines of difference without considering how bodies become knowledgeable in asymmetrical ways under the regime of unilateral translation. Readers of Empire will of course remember that H&N carefully reject theories of biopower that are purely intellectual (taking aim primarily at Italian and French writings from the 1990s) because they overlook the corporeal aspects of social production. In response to these overly intellectualized accounts of biopolitics that focus "almost exclusively on the horizon of language and communication" [9] and hence ignore somatic affect, H&N elaborate the crucial aspects of immaterial labor, particularly the production and manipulation of affects, that will lead to a powerful recognition of the new figure of the collective biopolitical body. In a disciplinary process of language-learning, which necessarily comprises a moment of translation, we could see a subjective technology that defeats the distinction between body and intellect, per se.
It should be clear now that the crucial absence in Empire of a critique of US imperial nationalism is intrinsically related to the biopolitics of language, particularly the regime of translation instituted by global English. What we might simply call the "technologically-assisted amplification of English voice"-provided we understand the word "technology" primarily in terms of subjective formation in the displacement of the political-is one of the most important lacunas for the multitudes in H&N’s work, all the more salient given the fact that H&N’s biopolitical dispositive ought to have led them beyond this lacuna in the first place. Minimally, this would mean that one has to change the notion of address implicitly codified into disciplinary divisions of knowledge within the Human Sciences. The fact that H&N’s work appears in English is not, to borrow their terms, "superstructural, external to production." Since the end of the Second World War, English serves as the model of complete translatability. [10] However, disciplines that specialize in theoretical production about global issues-we know these disciplines occur in French as well as in English (and here we express some reserve as to the division of labor between the two)-this global theory, then, does not take responsibility, in the Derridean sense of being response-able, for the way this kind of intervention is disseminated into other languages. Ultimately the unilateral privilege enjoyed by English (with its French reserve, or preserve, of radical theory) can only be maintained by institutional discipline that overlooks the need both to engage in the dialogic process of translation, refraction, and retranslation and to not confuse this dialogic process with the construction of a world.
Is it necessary, as H&N think, to create a new "common language" based on the singularity of translation as a mode of social production ? If the answer is undoubtedly yes, does this mean that we can dismiss the need also to resituate the site of unilaterality away from theories of difference, and, perhaps even singularity ? Otherwise, how can we ever distinguish between "common language" and doctrine ? This project minimally means that English cannot be relied upon as a site of commonality and the exteriority of, or exceptionalism granted to, the position of the translator must be reworked. Unless we disrupt the poles of relative positionality visible only when Empire is translated from the central language into the peripheral one (and then subsequently "retranslated," as we do now, back into the circuits of the central language network), two related results are predictable : on the one hand, Chen’s position will only find expression in the spirals of third world identity politics and/or Chinese linguistico-cultural nationalism ; on the other hand, H&N’s global framework will only communicate, in the unilateral regime of translation, the bio-affective form of a directive from the self-styled Party Central of the Imperial Avant-Garde.

[1] Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge : Harvard University, 2000), 57.

[2] Empire, 404.

[3] Cf. Jon Solomon, "Taiwan Incorporated : a survey of biopolitics in the sovereign police’s Pacific Theater of Operations," in Traces : a multilingual series of cultural theory, Vol. 3. (forthcoming, 2003).

[4] Pressed for space, I can only list these authors in a note : Wan-ch’ang Hsiao, a politician who formerly held the post of premier ; Hsing-ch’ing Wang, a senior journalist and leading liberal critic ; Hui-lin Wu, an economist from a government think tank ; Yi-chung Ch’en, a defender of "orthodox" leftism from the Academia Sinica (a state-sponsored research center) ; and Kuan-hsing Chen, a university professor who is also a leading thinker and promoter of academic Cultural Studies, social movements, and pan-asian internationalism.

[5] Empire, 30.

[6] Empire, 36.

[7] Diguo, 39-40.

[8] Empire, 404.

[9] Empire, 29.

[10] Cf. "The Technique of the Modern Political Myths," the penultimate chapter of Ernst Cassirer’s posthumous English work, The Myth of the State (1946), in which the history of rationality against myth that forms the construction of the political in the West is finally grounded in the untranslatability of mythically-oriented Nazi Deutsch and the implicit, full transparency of rational English.

Farrakhan revels in the spotlight of Million Men March

Farrakhan revels in the spotlight of Million Men March

Farrakhan

October 16, 1995
Web posted at: 7:45 p.m. EDT

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Nation of Islam leader Minister Louis Farrakhan spoke for over two hours at Monday's Million Man March, telling hundreds of thousands on the Mall in Washington that white supremacy is the root of the country's suffering ( 199K AIFF sound or 199K WAV sound).

"That makes you sick," Farrakhan said, "and you produce a sick society and a sick world."

The response to his call for a day of atonement and reconciliation for black men strengthened his position as a leader in the African American community, Farrakhan said, "like it or not." Mall at 1 pm

The U.S. Park Service estimated that 400,000 heard Farrakhan and other speakers in the all-day rally.

And while Farrakhan may have been the inspiration for Monday's Million Man March, he wasn't necessarily the reason huge numbers of people showed up. In interviews with CNN, several African-American participants said they hoped the rally would generate self-reliance and black unity. "We're not here to overthrow anyone," said John West, an educator from Chicago. (111K AIFF sound or 111K WAV sound).

Rosa Parks Organizers claimed attendance at the rally exceeded the million mark but that estimate could not be immediately verified. U.S. Park Police were expected to release their own figure on the crowd size later in the day. Despite the gathering's name, there were many women speakers, including civil rights movement pioneer Rosa Parks and poet Maya Angelou. Several children also addressed the crowd. (180K AIFF sound or 180K WAV sound)

The crowd was entertained by pulsing African drums (88K JPEG photo) and music before it heard uplifting speeches from a platform set up just below the congressional terrace where U.S. presidents deliver their inaugural addresses. (1M QuickTime movie)

Speaking in Texas, President Clinton praised the inspirational goals of the rally but he rejected "one man's message of malice and division" -- a reference to Farrakhan, whom he did not mention by name. Farrakhan has angered Jews, Catholics, gays, feminists and others with his comments over the years. He has called Judaism a "gutter religion" and recently defended his use of the term "bloodsuckers" to describe Jews, Asians and others who open businesses in minority communities and take the profits elsewhere.

Memphis poster But those who poured into Washington by bus, car and train shrugged off criticism of Farrakhan as they massed shoulder-to-shoulder in a festive mood on the vast Washington Mall, cheering and applauding as speakers shouted "March on, black men!" and "God bless the black man!"

"Many of our young people are in prison or dropping out of school," West said. "I would like to send a message to them that there is hope and there are people who care about them. If we all pull together as a community and as a race, I think we can lick some of these problems."

man in hat Farrakhan conceived the rally as a "a day of atonement" in which black men would repudiate the crime, drug addiction and family abuse that have crippled American black communities and dedicate themselves to a self-started economic and spiritual resurgence. With the "Million Man March" slogan, he had set out to achieve the biggest public demonstration in Washington history, surpassing the legendary civil rights rally led by the late Martin Luther King Jr. in 1963.

"We who are at the bottom of the pile need to climb out and not wait to be lifted out," said one Farrakhan aide, Abdul Allah Muhammad. "In the process of doing that, we must ask for God's help and be worthy of God's help. That's why this is called a day of atonement." (more from Muhammad on Farrakhan's message to African-Americans - 94K AIFF sound or 94K WAV sound)

"I'm here for atonement," said Stephen Jones, an assistant school principal from Chicago. "I'm here to unify the black community, to be role models for our students to let them know there is hope in America. We are here to inspire all people of our country to get an education." (179K AIFF sound or 179K WAV sound)."

"It's not about Farrakhan," said Philip Branker of St. Paul, Minnesota. "(It's about) black men uniting for a cause." There's "a need to unite," he said, because "there hasn't been a strong (black unity) movement for some time now."

That's also why Jerry Parries of Cleveland drove to Washington with friends. "What motivated me was the African-American brothers getting together, doing something for their community and supporting one another," he said. "It's an economic thing. ... It's not about Louis Farrakhan." (more from Parries (119K AIFF sound or 119K WAV sound)

Many federal employees arranged to take Monday off. Several government agencies and local school districts reported a high absentee rate.

Milion Men march ,1995

Clinton: Racial rift 'tearing at heart of America'

President voices concerns in black and white

October 16, 1995
Web posted at: 2:15 p.m. EDT

AUSTIN, Texas (CNN) -- While thousands of African-American men marched on Washington, President Clinton issued his own challenge to both white and black Americans.

march crowds In a powerful speech touching on such cultural hot points as the O.J. Simpson trial, America's legacy of slavery, welfare reform and Monday's Million Man March, Clinton urged all Americans to "clean your house of racism."

Clinton "In recent weeks," said Clinton, speaking at the University of Texas at Austin, (170K AIFF sound or 170K WAV sound) "we've all been made aware of a simple truth. White and black Americans often see the world in dramatically different ways."

Clinton said differing reactions to the Simpson verdict had served to highlight far deeper divisions, rifts that are "tearing at the heart of America." But they had also helped provide a window for communication and reconciliation.

"Today we face a choice," he said. "One way leads to further separation and bitterness and more lost futures. The other way, the path of courage and wisdom, leads to unity, reconciliation, and a rich opportunity for all to make the most of the lives God has given them."

Clinton Clinton issued a poignant reminder of the history of blacks in America, one that stretches from lynchings and trumped-up charges to Rodney King's beating at the hands of the Los Angeles Police Department. (168K AIFF sound or 168K WAV sound)

"White racism may be black people's burden, but it is white people's problem," charged the president. In a reference to former Los Angeles Police Department detective Mark Fuhrman, he said, "The taped voice of one policeman should fill you with outrage. So I say to you: clean your house of racism." (250K AIFF sound or 250K WAV sound)

march aerial Noting the traditional economic disparity between the races and current efforts to end affirmative action, he said, "It is so fashionable to talk today about African-Americans as if they had been some sort of protected class. Many whites think blacks are getting more than their fair share in terms of jobs and promotions. That is not true." He pointed out that black Americans still earn, on the average, only 60 percent of what whites earn. Moreover, he said, more than half of African-American children grow up in poverty.

While acknowledging the roots of black pain and anger, the president also gave voice to white concerns. "Blacks must understand the roots of white fear," Clinton insisted. "It isn't racist for a white parent to hold his child close in a high crime neighborhood."

And he urged the black community to take responsibility for its problems, and for people of color, too, to cleanse their minds of ugly racism: "Again, I say, clean your house."

Clinton hailed the men participating in Monday's Million Man March, but offered thinly veiled criticism of the events' organizer, Louis Farrakhan, known for anti-Semitic remarks.

"One million men are right to be standing up for personal responsibility," he said. "But one million men do not make right one man's message of malice and division."

In a powerful speech that sometimes resembled a parental lecture, Clinton ended with a call for a united America.

"Whether we like it or not," he said, "we are one nation, one family, indivisible. For us, divorce or separation are not options."

Related story

Tuesday, March 7, 2006

pRON ON MAC MINI

Opening up the Intel Mac mini


Our first Intel-based Mac minis have arrived, straight from the Apple Store, and what was the first thing the cold, cruel alien intellects at Macworld did with one of these innocents? That’s right. We got out our putty knife, popped it open, and spilled its guts out faster than you could say “CSI!”

So before we get started, be sure you’ve read our clever list of things you need to know about this new machine. You might even want to read my first take on the new Mac mini (hint: I’m excited about its use in a home theater set-up), or hear me yammer on about it in our latest podcast.

All set? Okay, without further ado, here’s an extremely quick tour around the patient’s insides.

Mac Mini 1

From this vantage point, the Mac mini hasn’t changed much from its previous version. However, there’s one gigantic change that may not be apparent from this angle: the easily-accessible RAM slot on the left side (A) is gone. Or to be more accurate, they’ve been turned on their side and hidden from view. (More on this in a moment.)

On the far side of the case you can see the new infrared receiver (B) right at the end of the optical-drive slot.

The Mac mini’s Bluetooth (C) and AirPort (D) antennae are still in place, although these versions seem a bit more robust than the we-just-taped-it-together feel of the previous model. There’s one other change that’s a bit hard to see from this photo, but it’s just beneath and behind the AirPort antenna (E): the Mac mini’s Bluetooth card, relocated to the top of the drive cage.

Next, we remove the drive cage (four screws, just like the previous model) and gingerly lift up, removing the interconnect card from its slot and disconnecting another cable carefully. Folding the drive cage back, we reveal the inside…

Mac Mini 2

Things are a bit different under here. We’ve got two large heat sinks (F) (one for processor, one presumably for video circuitry). There’s a little perch (G) at the back for the new “penthouse” on port row, belonging to the audio-in and -out ports. Just below the interconnect slot (H) is the built-in AirPort Extreme card (J) (you can see the antenna snake off to the right). At the front left you can make out the two RAM slots (K), one on top of the other. SODIMMs slide right into here, laying on their side. It’s a tight squeeze, but SODIMMS like to snuggle, so it’s okay.

Mac Mini 3

On the flip side, here’s the bottom of the drive cage. The 2.5-inch hard drive (L) is still here, although now it’s of the Serial ATA, rather than parallel ATA, variety. To the right resides our old friend the fan (M).

And that’s your lightning-quick, shotgun tour of the new Mac mini. She’s in the hands of the Macworld Lab now, being tested as we speak. More on that — including a full review — later on. Got more questions or comments? Feel free to leave them in the comment thread attached to this story.

The PlayStation 3 delay meme, part VI: Variety sez holidays 06

There isn't exactly a pull quote from Sony's head, Sir Howard Stringer (or Howie Stringy, as we like to call him around these parts), but Variety's latest profile on the man at the top pretty clearly states that despite Sony's claims to introduce the PlayStation 3 this spring, it'll be delayed into the holiday 2006 season -- and that's presumably for Japan, America could be any amount of time later than that. We've more or less come to terms with this as truth by now, we just wish Sony'd admit it or launch the PS3 already, and stop yanking our chains. So don't be surprised when, as usual, some Sony talking head chimes in about their sticking to their spring 2006 plans, and that so and so had this and that totally wrong about what they've got going on to launch on time. After all, a company like Sony just loves holding its cards to its chest, we know this, but did we mention we're already a month into spring? This concludes today's PlayStation 3 delayed post, everyone, thank you for your attention.

Solar USB drive and MP3 player to rise at CeBIT

Solar USB drive and MP3 player to rise at CeBIT

Taiwanese manufacturers A-Data and MSI plan to unveil solar-powered flash devices at CeBIT, though we're not quite sure either one is a shining example of bright new ways to harness the sun's power. A-Data's offering, the Solar Disk USB drive, is a fairly generic thumb drive with a solar-powered LCD that displays its available capacity. Given that USB flash drives with LCD displays are becoming fairly common, and that the use of a solar cell to power such a display isn't exactly earth-shattering (we seem to remember picking up our first solar calculator about 20 years ago), we can't exactly see this feature commanding a premium. Meanwhile, MSI plans to demo a solar-cell MP3 player. While that sounds like it could be promising, the solar cell won't be the sole source of juice for the prototype player; rather, it'll help charge a conventional lithium battery. And given the amount of time audio players spend in pockets, backpacks and purses, we somehow don't anticipate this giving the player much of a boost.

Saturday, March 4, 2006

There were a few revisions to the script, so at times it seems disjointed, something I'm sure they'll fix in the editing process. The film opens up with a fight scene featuring the latest heavyweight champion, Mason "The Line" Dixon taking out another inferior opponent. The crowd is disgusted. It seems there's no one left for this man to fight and it's become tiresome (irony?). This is all written as if our ADD-riddled country is still interested in boxing. Don't get me wrong, I loved "The Contender" last year simply because it was real and bloody. But I also know why it failed.

Cut to Rocky, in a graveyard, mourning. Who's dead, you ask? Probably whoever said no to this project (see Talia Shire). Yes Adrian (that's how Sly spells it) is dead and Rocky makes periodic visits with a lawn chair to sit at her grave and talk to her. This was all probably dialogue that was supposed to be interactive until she declined involvement. He also drags Paulie along but he hates it. Surprisingly, Burt Young was available! Not only was he available, but he also gets more screen time in this film than he did in any other outing. Is this a good thing?

So Rocky owns a Philadelphia restaurant and basically every night people want to hear Apollo Creed stories. I, myself, would rather hear Mr.T stories because that was a better movie, but that's another story. Meanwhile, Rocky's son, Robert (oh no! shades of Rocky V!) is kind of embarrassed by him and keeps his distance. This puzzles me because who wouldn't want this guy for a dad?

Meanwhile, the rocket scientists at ESPN have designed a computer program that pits current fighters against the classics. After using CGI to pit Mason Dixon against the Philly slugger, 'analysts' realize they have a great fight on their hand.

Back in Philadelphia, Rocky has befriended a single mom. She has the obligatory, disgruntled son who also doesn't care for Rocky. If you've seen a movie before, you can guess how that relationship develops.

After hardly any prodding, Rocky decides to fight Dixon and re-applies for his license. There are subplots about Dixon arguing with his manager because he's too good to fight a has-been and Paulie and the meat factory (he's still there??).

Actually, the script's not as predictable as you think and I don't want to give away too much more out of fairness to the filmmakers and Mr. Stallone, a man whom I admire and respect very much. His success story in Hollywood is legendary. I will tell you this- I am going to be there on opening day exclusively because of the last shot in the film, which I won't give away. It's so good that it gave me goose bumps and made me wish that the rest of the script had lived up to its ending. Honestly, as a screenwriter myself, I don't know how I would or could have effectively revived the series. You have to be true to the franchise and basically the idiots that make up Middle America like their stories simple and spoon-fed to them. So, get ready for Dukes of Hazzard II, coming soon to push all the intelligent films out of the theater. This is Tregs, see you in 2007 (why?) when this movie comes out.

Thursday, March 2, 2006

Podcast en Dixo.com

En fechas recientes he estado escuchando mucho podcasts, los de Engadget me parecen geniales, me puse a buscar algunos en español, afortunadamente hay más de los que yo creía, desafortunadamente muchos son muy malos, me tope con este sitio DIXO.com, donde hay blogs y podcasts, algunos bastante amenos y otros que aunque están bien producidos son muy malos, el peor es el de un tal sopitas, raras veces logra decir algo coherente y generalmente debe recurrir al recurso de las groserías, que no espantan a nadie, pero que en su caso son como una herramienta, existen bastantes de tecnología, hay uno realizado por Adrián Carbajal muy bueno y otro mediocre de la revista sputnik, pero el tal Eduardo Arcos es nefasto, tiene un tonito de "yo se más que tú" y "escucha como exagero mi pronunciación" que hacen que parezca que el tipo quiere esconder que siempre se le oye nervioso, muy ansioso (!!Esta grabado¡¡) !¿Acaso portará el micrófono pegado al cuerpo?¡.¿tendrá Asma?

Por último, hay uno muy interesante por un tal Abel Membrillo (que yo decía:"¿quien es este canijo?", ya luego me informaron que es la voz de Otro rollo (¿Será que no veo TV?) de repente aporta cosas buenas, no esta exento de una que otra grosería, pero en él no es sistema y muchas veces ponen "rolas" "chidas".

Dense una vuelta por la página.

Si quieren podcasts chidos de tecnología, ENGADGET, no hay más.

Monday, February 27, 2006

Forget Film, Games Do Sci-Fi Best

Commentary by Clive Thompson


Ah, the subtle pleasures of intergalactic fascism. My flotilla of TIE fighters swarmed through space like locusts, picking off rebel troops at will. My mammoth Star Destroyers had reduced a rebel base to a smoldering hulk, and Darth Vader had personally blown up Millennium Falcon and killed that jackass Han Solo -- twice.

As you might have guessed, I was playing Star Wars: Empire at War, the latest strategy title from Lucas Games. And something quite rare was happening: Even though I was deep inside a George Lucas creation, I was having a total blast.

Normally, I cringe whenever Lucas launches another movie. Ever since the Ewoks appeared in 1983's Return of the Jedi, his films have steadily tobogganed downwards into a vale of unwatchability. It's hard to figure out what Lucas has done worse: Is it his increasingly Disneyfied characters? His wooden scripts? Or the plots that, having been carefully denuded of action sequences, instead focus on, y'know, trade disputes?

Which brings me to my point: In the last 20 years, Lucas' vision has arguably been far better expressed in video games than in movies.

For me, this epiphany began back in 1998, when Rogue Squadron came out on the Nintendo 64 -- a note-perfect evocation of in-flight combat. I played it nonstop for four months. Then every year or so, another superb Star Wars title came along to get me addicted, from Knights of the Old Republic to Jedi Starfighter to Battlefront. Each time, Lucas did a much better job of recapturing the original spirit of his universe: A mix of campy voice-acting, moral dread, and -- most of all -- pell-mell action.

Why were the games so comparatively good? A cynic would say it's because Lucas probably isn't as closely involved in the games, so his young designers aren't hampered by his inane creative decisions. But I actually suspect it's deeper than that. I think it's because games are beginning to rival film -- and even eclipse it -- as the prime vehicle for sci-fi and fantasy.

After all, there have been vanishingly few original, mass-market, sci-fi or fantasy movies in recent years. We had The Matrix and then ... what? (I said "original" movies. Stuff like The Lord of the Rings, I, Robot and Minority Report were all based -- however loosely -- on pre-existing books. The shining exception is Joss Whedon's superb Serenity, a movie that, sadly, tanked at the box office.)

In contrast, the game industry has produced dozens of worlds as lovingly rendered and lush in detail as a Bruegel painting. Think of the weird, vaulting steampunk buildings of Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee, the operatic scope of the Final Fantasy series, or the calm beauty of Ico.

Perhaps this shift is taking place because games have an inherent affinity with sci-fi and fantasy. Those genres are based on what-if premises; they're the literary version of the Sim, the author as world-builder. Part of the fun of watching a sci-fi movie is mentally inhabiting a new world and imagining what it feels like to be inside. But now there's a medium that actually puts you in. It's why I reacted to Rogue Squadron with such a jolt of déjà vu: As a kid, I'd fantasized about flying my own X-wing fighter -- and suddenly, bang, there I was.

So if you were a creator wandering around Los Angeles and hankering to forge a new universe, why do a movie? Why not try for a game? For today's youth, the go-anywhere, exploratory feel of immersive worlds is where the cultural mojo resides. Even the few popular fantasy stories in the mainstream today borrow from this vibe. When J. J. Abrams and Damon Lindelof were writing Lost, they explicitly modeled it on a video-game world: An overarching mythology and a cohesive world-picture, slowly revealed through creepy exploration by the main characters.

Of course, assuming I'm right about this trend, it's not all good. There's arguably something lost when games become the central site for flights of fancy. Even the best "narrative" games can't replicate the emotional undertow of a good film. When I wander through Shadow of the Colossus -- or even the old Myst series -- I'm filled with a sense of awe. It's like visiting a breathtaking Renaissance church; I'm struck by the beauty and the neoclassical detail. But it doesn't drag my heart along a path the way a plain ol' linear movie does.

Then again, when's the last time Lucas did that on the silver screen? So I take what solace I can. I boot up Empire at War again, join the dark side, summon Emperor Palpatine, send another couple hundred TIE fighters off on howling suicide missions. Plenty more where they came from, m'lord. My training is complete.

- - -

Clive Thompson is a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine, and a regular contributor to Wired and New York magazine. His blog is www.collisiondetection.net.
The Xbox 360 vs. the Public Good
Is the Xbox 360 hurting the gaming industry?

It would be hard to get Peter Moore to admit it, try as you might, but it's pretty clear that the Xbox 360 launched a little bit before the system was ready. The certification process for 360 games came right down to the wire, in some cases leading to games being pressed before they had technically passed. Manufacturing rates for the actual consoles weren't at the level Microsoft had wanted, leading to shortages that are still in effect as of this writing. And depending on who you believe, the early launch means that the system's specs are below the PlayStation 3's -- although, given how long it takes for developers to get comfortable with a new hardware generation, whatever differences exist likely won't become apparent until well into each system's life span.

More important, though less remarked upon, is that the Xbox 360 was also launched before the industry was ready. If you pay attention to companies' end-of-year financial reports, which I'm sad to say my job requires me to do, one thing that stands out in the postholiday reckoning was the statement, again and again, that the Xbox 360 launch had hurt sales across the industry.

A few examples: Electronic Arts CFO Warren Jenson says he doesn't "see getting to the installed base numbers we expected & causing some people to stay on the sidelines."

Atari chairman and CEO Bruno Bonnell notes, "As we anticipated, during the holiday season the industry felt a depressed demand for current-generation titles at retail and, as a result, publishers will need to strategically address the marketplace, balancing titles across multiple consoles as well as portable devices." NPD Group numbers for the year indicate that current-generation game sales were indeed down 12 percent, bearing out the executives' claims.

The clearest voice articulating the effect is Wedbush Morgan Securities analyst Michael Pachter, who went on a doom-tinged tear in January, claiming that 2006 game sales would be off by 3 percent in part due to Microsoft's lunge. "Most troubling to us was the fact that the rate of decline was especially acute, down 21.6 percent, during the September-to-November period, a time that coincided with the hype surrounding the launch of the Xbox 360," says Pachter. "We believe that sales may have been even worse in December had Microsoft continued its marketing push, and believe that sell-through was helped in part by deep discounting of new releases during the month."

So it's fair to say that Microsoft's early launch had a negative effect on the industry as a whole. Which raises a question: Was the rush to market irresponsible, or just good business? After all, the likes of J Allard, Peter Moore, Steve Ballmer, and other Microsoft/Xbox higher-ups have frequently said that the "first-to-market advantage" is a major piece of the company's arsenal against Sony in this round. Indeed, one reason the company was constantly playing catch-up during the current generation was because Microsoft's system wasn't even announced by the time the PlayStation 2 had wowed everyone with its Japanese launch -- so getting the jump on Sony and beating it at its own game was important in the establishment of the 360.

The question ties into the concept of "public good," an intangible that's balanced against "private good" in decision making. Writer David Foster Wallace explains it in his essay "Host," which is about right-wing talk radio, like so:

"Suppose that I am the conservative and rabidly capitalist owner of a radio company. I believe that free-market conservatism is Truth and that the U.S. would be better off in every way if everybody were conservative. This, for me, makes conservatism a 'public good' in the Intro Econ sense of the term -- i.e., a conservative electorate is a public good in the same way that a clean environment or a healthy populace is a public good.& In other words, I alone would have paid for a benefit that my competition could also enjoy, free. All of which plainly would not be good business & which is why it is actually in my company's best interests to 'underinvest' in promulgating ideology."

In this case, Microsoft is underinvesting in the public good of maintaining a stable and growing market in general -- something that its rivals Nintendo and Sony could also benefit from, resulting in resources spent to further its competitors' goals -- and putting its own interests first.

The move seems to have worked. Sony talked at E3 2004 about its desire to create a 10-year life span for the PlayStation 2, following the successful eight-year run of the PS1. After all, the PS1 was originally introduced in 1994 in Japan, and it wasn't until 2002 that the Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine proclaimed The Italian Job "the last great PS1 game." But Microsoft's eagerness to abandon the current generation in favor of getting everyone on board its next-generation console has short-circuited the natural life of the PS2, and already this month OPM is asking if Black is "the last great PS2 game?" a mere six years after the console's debut.

You can't really fault Microsoft for that, because that's capitalism for you -- a deeper-seated issue than this essay has the scope for. But I submit that the rush to a new generation was a bad idea anyway, not so much because it weakened the market but because it weakened its own position. Microsoft, after all, was also a victim of the market -- those were Xbox titles suffering right alongside the PS2 and GameCube games on shelves. Furthermore, the 360 production issues caused by the rush to launch have impacted the one reason Microsoft had for going ahead with it in the first place: that key first-mover advantage.

As Michael Pachter says, "In our view, Microsoft did a phenomenal job of marketing the Xbox 360 and created unfulfilled demand for several million hardware units over the holidays. As we move into 2006, we think that consumers will begin to consider deferring purchases of Xbox 360 units once a launch date for the PS3 is announced (we expect an October launch)." In other words, the longer it takes for Microsoft to deliver more product onto shelves, the easier it'll be for all those consumers to just wait a little bit longer until Sony is ready.

The console war is an all-out fight, not an honorable duel at 10 paces, and Microsoft has to grab every advantage it can if it wants to win. But if it's going to change the rules and spin around after the seventh step, it had better make sure its powder is dry, because the element of surprise only lasts so long before Sony begins returning fire.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Mexico mine rescue is abandoned
Pasta de Conchas mine
The rescue effort at the mine lasted almost a week
There is no chance of survival for 65 miners trapped underground in northern Mexico for almost a week, the mine owners have said.

It had been hoped some miners, most trapped at least 2km (1.25 miles) inside the mine, might have survived if air pockets were present.

But now the mine company has told relatives there is no further hope.

Grupo Mexico, said tests of air in the mine showed there was not enough oxygen for anyone to survive.

The men were trapped early last Sunday, when a methane explosion brought down debris and cut them off.

Ten men who were underground escaped safely, and another 12 were rescued, suffering from burns and broken bones.

But nothing more was heard from the larger group further along tunnels, 150 metres below ground.

'Nothing to be done'

Mine director "Ruben Escudero told us all the miners were dead," Juan Hernandez, whose nephew Margarito Zamoran is one of the missing at the Pasta de Conchas mine, told the AFP news agency.

Relatives of the missing at Pasta de Conchas mine
For relatives of the miners, all the waiting has come to nothing
"There's nothing more to be done," Mr Escudero had added.

"We are moving on to the hard task of the physical recovery of our miners so the families can start their mourning," said Xavier Garcia, a senior executive at Grupo Mexico, according to Reuters news agency.

However, he said that it might be two days before rescuers could safely return to the mine.

'Tricked'

Operations were halted on Friday because of the risk of further methane explosions. The gas also made breathing difficult for the 100-strong rescue team, as methane is lethal when it forms more than 15% of the atmosphere.

Rescuers were unable to used heavy mechanical equipment for fear of sparking new explosions, but moved more than 800,000 tonnes of debris in days of digging.

Relatives were angry at what they saw at deception and raising of false hopes by the mine's management.

"They tricked us because they knew from the beginning how the mine was," said Aida Farias, whose husband, Elias Valero, is one of the missing.

"They played with us like puppets."

Union leaders have alleged that Grupo Mexico ignored safety concerns, and Labour Minister Francisco Salazar has said an investigation is to be carried out.

Grupo Mexico says it will pay compensation of about £70,000 for each of the dead miners.

Friday, February 24, 2006

Thomas Pink iPod tie keeps your nano on your neck

Finally, for the man who has everything -- except a job where he can dress casually -- it's the Commuter Tie from Thomas Pink. The bright pink silk tie has a hidden pocket on the back that's the perfect size for an iPod nano, and includes an extra loop to keep headphone wires from getting tangled (though from Pink's promo pic, right, it looks like the wires will get a bit jammed anyhow, since the headphone jack on the nano is on the bottom). We can't help but worry that using this with anything heavier than a nano would result in a curious tightening around the throat -- not to mention a rather unattractive stretching of our neckwear. And if you're going to spend $95 on a tie, we'd like to think you can also come up with a few bucks for a dedicated carrying case for your audio player. Of course, all of this is irrelevant to us, since we're not in the market for a pink tie -- it would clash horribly with our pajamas.

Teaser spiderman 3

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Wednesday, February 22, 2006


Ananova:
Row over nuclear toys

An Italian toy maker has caused controversy by unveiling models of the atomic bombs dropped on Japan.

An Italian toy maker has caused an explosive row after unveiling two model nuclear bombs named after the 'Little Boy' and 'Fat Man' devices that killed more than 350,000 Japanese at the end of World War II. The 1:43 scale toys which were unveiled by Italian toy maker Brumm cost six pounds each /Europics

Brumm unveiled its £6 Little Boy and Fat Man 1:43 scale model bombs at the Nuremberg toy fair.

Critics say the toys are in bad taste but a Brumm spokesman said: "We want to protest against the insanity of nuclear-war."

More than 350,000 people were killed when the US bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of the Second World War.

Dave Perry Resigns From Shiny

Dave Perry Resigns From Shiny
Prominent studio head steps down to help sell his company.
by Jeremy Dunham


February 21, 2006 - After learning that Atari would be selling its studios in an effort to meet its bottom line, Shiny Entertainment President Dave Perry has stepped down from his lofty position to help Atari find a buyer for his studio. The reason? According to the Orange County Register which first reported this story, it's because an employee of the publisher isn't allowed to help facilitate a buyout, whereas an outsider can do whatever they wish.

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"Atari can go ahead and sell Shiny but I think I can help too because I'm on the board of a lot of things. I can bring a lot of parties to the table and I can do that faster if I hit the streets myself," said Perry. "If I'm an employee of Atari, then I'd be stepping all over them. This way, I'm representing a buyer. I can act swiftly and get buyers on the table. I pitched Shiny last time and got $47 million [in reference to Atari's purchase of Shiny from Interplay in 2002]."


We've been waiting for a Jim sequel forever... if Shiny Entertainment is bought, apparently we'll get one.
Reportedly, Perry has already begun his sales pitch to several companies to which he is quoted to saying, "There is a lot of interest out there."

Should a new buyer purchase Shiny Entertainment, it is Perry's full intention to come back on board. As the guy who founded the now-56 employee-strong company in 1993, he wants to continue to watch it succeed.

It should also be noted that whichever company ultimately purchases Shiny will inherit a minimum of three games that Shiny is already working on -- including a long-awaited sequel to Shiny's most famous property, Earthworm Jim.

More as it develops.

From engadget

Viliv P1 PMP coming to US


If you had told us last year that the Viliv P1 PMP would soon be available in the US, we would have laughed in your face (well, OK, maybe we would have been polite and chuckled into our hands). After all, not only does the device have a suspiciously familiar controller, but it's also from Yukyung Technologies, a company with zero US presence. But this is one case where we're happy to be proven wrong, since the player will apparently make its North American debut on March 1 via a dedicated e-store. Specs include a 30GB drive, DivX and Xvid support, 4-inch display, FM radio and CF slot. And, yes, it does still have that round, white controller, but we're willing to overlook that (though we don't know if you-know-who will do the same).

Sunday, February 19, 2006

from the encouraging-better-customers dept.
d writes "Gamespot has an article about an association of prostitutes protesting the GTA games. Apparently, the sex workers of the Sex Workers Outreach Project aren't too happy about their ingame counterparts being treated violently in the GTA games. They note that the games are a bad influence on children, and might encourage rape and violent behavior towards prostitutes in real life."
Role Playing (Games)Games

Saturday, February 4, 2006

Munich

No vi el partido del América el jueves (por que ya sospechaba lo peor) y porque tenia ganas de ir al cine, así que me lanze a ver Munich.

La verdad siempre me ha parecido que el estado de israel no debería existir, que es una provocación terrible para los musulmanes (que por cierto ahorita andan enardecidos por lo de las caricaturas de Mahoma) y que Estados Unidos ha cometido una gran pendejada, con su visión a futuro, un futuro en el que los campos de petroleo seran suyos.

Bueno, el asunto es que en 1972 Israel ya tenia sus añitos y sus pleitos con los arabes, y ya se hablaba de alcanzar la paz en el "medio oriente" , como lo ocurrio durante el gobierno de Clinton.
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Yo era muy joven en aquellos ayeres (como 13 años) y con musica de Michael Jackson de fondo en verdad crei que estabamos conjurando el peligro de una guerra que venga del islam, me aterran porque son muchos, son irreflexivos y bastante sensibles.

Bueno, volviendo al asunto de Israel, uno de estos golpes publicitarios que suelen dar las naciones para "Demostrar que son fuertes" fue tomar venganza por el asesinato de la representación del estado de Israel en los olimpiada de Munich.
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El asunto si fue una tragedia, mucha gente piensa que fue una de la estratagemas de los judios para ponerse como las victimas de la cuestión y que los arabes son unos desalmados.

Bueno como haya sido, los judios enviaron a la unidad asesina del Mossad (¿que no el mossad es de por si al igual que el MI6, la KGB, la CIA y demás agencias de inteligencia una bola de asesinos?) llamada Kidon (bayoneta) a matar a las 11 "mentes maestras" que planearon Munich en la manera más violenta y llamativa que fuera posible.

Volviendo a la pelicula, es de verdad escorazonador saber que tantos secretos se intercambian entre los servicios de inteligenica y algun player independiente, así como que en todo el mundo andan sueltos sujetos dispuestos a desaparecer a los enemigos.

Algo que me agrado de la pelicula es que no ponen a los objetivos como villanos de pelicual antigua, ya saben, malos malos, sino que son personas con las que hasta se pueden encontrar empatia en sus breves minutos en camara.

El final se me hace medio vulgar, sexo con flashbacks de "el rescate" fallido.

El final tiene lugar en Manhattan, bueno, no, de hecho no es Manhattan, es del otro lado del rio, pero se ve la isla, a mediados de los 70, y claro, ahi estaban las flamantes Twin towers (de las que se especula que fueron destruidas por Bush, así que existe cierta concordancia), me gusta tambien que no hace ver a los judios como blancas palomitas obligadas a actuar en contra de su voluntad, si sabemos que son unos inches asesinos que no tiene reparos.
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Lo que no me gusta es que Spielberg siente que ya hizo oir su voz:

Nueva York . Steven Spielberg opina que los cineastas tienen que volverse más provocadores en Estados Unidos ante la situación política, según publica la revista Newsweek de este lunes. Al menos desde la relección del presidente George W. Bush ha llegado el momento de tomar posición, asegura. "Pienso que cada uno intenta manifestar su independencia y dejar claro en que cree. Nadie nos representa, así que nosotros representemos nuestros sentimientos e intentemos devolver los golpes", afirma el director de Munich.


Si no mal recuerdo este canijo apoyaba las invasiones de Bush, creyente d las guerras preventivas, pues si, debería irse a vivir a Israel.

Sólo puedo repetir lo que en alguna ocasión dijo el gato culto
"Cuando abundan los dioses abundan las guerras"

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Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Gaitán no quiere ser mexicano

'Gracias a Dios detuve el trámite de naturalización': Gaitán.
tPues se quedaran con las ganas de que "el mago" defienda los colores verdes (la verdad estaría mal, él es argentino y prostituirse para jugar un mundial, no va.

Que mal por LaVolpe, que quiera Argentinizar a nuestra selección.




CHRISTOPHE lyrics

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Google and Privacy

SearchTHIS: Google and Privacy
January 25, 2006

Our search editor talks about why Google's latest battle has everybody worried.

There is a giant rock screaming toward earth and we have only eight days to stop it. It's what the movie "Armageddon" called a global killer. Who will help us? Just like in the movie, the federal government has broken into the patent office to steal the plans for the world's biggest and best drill. We'll fly up to the asteroid, drill a hole in it and blow that sucker sky high from the inside out.

Phew! Another crisis averted.

Of course, the government's smartest scientists couldn't get the drill right, so the guy who made it had to fly to the asteroid and do it himself. Patents might not apply to outer space, but what about cyberspace? In times of crisis can the government just break in and take what they want? Who determines the level of desperation needed for an all access pass?

Just when you thought your most private of thoughts were safe, the Justice Department has issued subpoena's to Microsoft, AOL, Yahoo! and Google to support yet another serious crisis.

Facts du jour

It's all about the porn, really. 1998's Child Online Protection Act (COPA) had an admirable goal: keep porn out of the hands of children. Yet for a whole lot of good reasons, several courts have knocked the statute down since then. The most recent effort was Ashcroft vs. American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in June, 2004. The Supreme Court upheld the block on enforcing COPA since it was likely to be unconstitutional. It is also worth noting that many other local and state laws have been passed to help protect children.

The ACLU is once again contending that COPA is in violation of the first amendment, while the Justice Department is once again seeking the ability to enforce COPA and has asked (read: ordered) some assistance from search providers in building a cogent argument. They hope to prove that parental controls and filters are not nearly enough protection for our kids, and they expect to support the argument with search data.

To date, of the search sites subpoenaed to provide information, Google is the only one that has refused. None of the other providers have publicly disavowed the request; Yahoo!, AOL and MSN have issued statements that they have provided at least some of the information requested and have taken steps to guard user privacy.

Protecting children from pornography is a noble effort, and the connected digital world has made tremendous strides in the battle, but should we sacrifice the constitution to get there? Moreover, should a search provider be compelled to offer information that might compromise a competitive advantage?

Wait, it gets better.

All the searches

Asking for the data is one thing; using it to determine the effectiveness of accidental porn viewing is another. Government lawyers have asked search providers for all the data relating to search terms and the sites users visited in the time period between June 1, 2005 and July 31, 2005.

There has yet to be a request for users' Internet Protocol or IP addresses that would identify users individually. Published court documents have indicated that a variety of search information has been requested. From complete indexed site lists to search terms and websites-- all with the intent of proving that web filters don't do the job and the strictest of controls must be implemented.

Historically, the fallout from negative publicity in the realm of consumer privacy online is nothing short of panic. We have new spyware/adware and cookie removal tools in the pipeline, and every week there's more news about compromised data. In an effort to have search sites do the heavy lifting in this suit, attorneys are merely fueling privacy paranoia.

And the ad dollars you rode in on

Privacy concerns are top of mind for internet users, and this translates immediately into a search provider's ability to generate revenue with targeted advertising.

Case in point: Upon receiving my shiny new computer this week, I had to download DivX player and Java Runtime environments. Both really wanted me to add either the Google Desktop or Toolbar, one of which came preinstalled in my machine.

Search behavior -- such as the terms used and the sites visited along with personally identifiable information kept in confidence -- will help define the future of search and search related advertising. The more we know about how users find what they need based on who they are, the better search will become.

Consumer confidence in how closely this information is guarded will determine how quickly we achieve search utopia.

When consumers hear that millions of records have been handed over, the details won't matter. The Justice Department isn't exactly being forthcoming about what they intend to with this data. A quick and quiet response to the subpoena with partial information may have been the best way to try and put it to bed, but that hope has been shattered by Google's defiance.

Have drill, will travel

It would take an asteroid the size of Texas to wake everyone up. Tell me you are using the online data to help hunt down terrorists and protect our homes. Tell me you want to show that malware and other intrusive forms of online terrorism are worth a series of federally funded programs to help stamp them out. Tell me the U.S. government is behind efforts to expand the global communication network and help bring the world's people together so we can concentrate on not killing one another.

Tell me anything but that you are trying to support an anti-porn law.

Google's mission in protecting its intellectual property and the rights of its users no doubt coincides with protecting growth plans. Those plans rely upon increased customization and a better user experience that, moving forward, will require more data collection and analysis. The ultimate yield of these efforts will be a better advertiser experience. This is the experience we all want, but will be terrified to provide if a precedent is established that we have no rights to privacy.

Good luck Google. Tell 'em I said to stuff that subpoena up their T1.

iMedia Search Editor Kevin Ryan's current and former client roster reads like a "who's who" in big brands; Rolex Watch, USA, State Farm Insurance, Farmers Insurance, Minolta Corporation, Samsung Electronics America, Toyota Motor Sales, USA, Panasonic Services and the Hilton Hotels brands, to name a few. Ryan believes in sound guidance, creative thought, accountable actions and collaborative execution as applied to search, or any form of marketing. His principled approach and staunch commitment to the industry have made him one of the most sought after personalities in online marketing. Ryan volunteers his time with the Interactive Advertising Bureau, Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization and several regional non-profit organizations.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Zepeda, se saca la lotería

Image Hosted by ImageShack.usEl colmo de un americanista, que le traigan una promesa que nunca se cumplio, y encimade que modo

Sunday, January 15, 2006

Jaladas en Marvel

De nuevo un cambio de traje para el bienamado Spidey
¿Por que?
¿por que no mejor traer un gran escritor que se comprometa con el personaje?
Aquello de los hijos de Gwen dolio , el otro,mmmm y ¿ahora?
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Thursday, January 12, 2006

Ya hay fecha para la expansion

January 9, 2006 - Valve confirmed today that Half-Life 2: Aftermath, the official expansion to 2004's lauded and loved FPS sequel, will arrive April 24, 2006.

Simultaneously with Half-Life 2: Aftermath, Valve will release Half-Life 2: Platinum, a super-metallic bundle featuring Half-Life, Half-Life 2, Half-Life 2: Aftermath, Half-Life 2: Deathmatch, Counter-Strike: Source, and Day of Defeat: Source.

Both titles will be available for purchase and download via Valve's Steam service, or as a standard boxed product -- distribution of which is being handled by Electronic Arts.

Aftermath takes place immediately following the events in Half-Life 2. You and Alyx must flee City 17, fighting creatures who were previous blocked from entering the city. The Citadel you assaulted is tumbling into chaos, and this event will have catastrophic effects on the surrounding area, prompting your escape. Both Alyx and Dog will each play a much more significant role.

Look for more of our Aftermath affectations as more details drift in.

Saturday, January 7, 2006

Wolverine origins

Estas imagenes de Wolverine son huerfanas .
¿como las ven?

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El editor de Marvel tambien participa.
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