Search Results: "schizo"

30 December 2021

Chris Lamb: Favourite books of 2021: Non-fiction

As a follow-up to yesterday's post listing my favourite memoirs and biographies I read in 2021, today I'll be outlining my favourite works of non-fiction. Books that just missed the cut include: The Unusual Suspect by Ben Machell for its thrilleresque narrative of a modern-day Robin Hood (and if you get to the end, a completely unexpected twist); Paul Fussell's Class: A Guide to the American Status System as an amusing chaser of sorts to Kate Fox's Watching the English; John Carey's Little History of Poetry for its exhilarating summation of almost four millennia of verse; David Graeber's Debt: The First 5000 Years for numerous historical insights, not least its rejoinder to our dangerously misleading view of ancient barter systems; and, although I didn't treasure everything about it, I won't hesitate to gift Pen Vogler's Scoff to a number of friends over the next year. The weakest book of non-fiction I read this year was undoubtedly Roger Scruton's How to Be a Conservative: I much preferred The Decadent Society for Ross Douthat for my yearly ration of the 'intellectual right'. I also very much enjoyed reading a number of classic texts from academic sociology, but they are difficult to recommend or even summarise. These included One-Dimensional Man by Herbert Marcuse, Postmodernism: Or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism by Frederic Jameson and The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism by Max Weber. 'These are heavy books', remarks John Proctor in Arthur Miller's The Crucible... All round-up posts for 2021: Memoir/biography, Non-fiction (this post) & Fiction (coming soon).

Hidden Valley Road (2020) Robert Kolker A compelling and disturbing account of the Galvin family six of whom were diagnosed with schizophrenia which details a journey through the study and misunderstanding of the condition. The story of the Galvin family offers a parallel history of the science of schizophrenia itself, from the era of institutionalisation, lobotomies and the 'schizo mother', to the contemporary search for genetic markers for the disease... all amidst fundamental disagreements about the nature of schizophrenia and, indeed, of all illnesses of the mind. Samples of the Galvins' DNA informed decades of research which, curiously, continues to this day, potentially offering paths to treatment, prediction and even eradication of the disease, although on this last point I fancy that I detect a kind of neo-Victorian hubris that we alone will be the ones to find a cure. Either way, a gentle yet ultimately tragic view of a curiously 'American' family, where the inherent lack of narrative satisfaction brings a frustration and sadness of its own.

Islands of Abandonment: Life in the Post-Human Landscape (2021) Cat Flyn In this disarmingly lyrical book, Cat Flyn addresses the twin questions of what happens after humans are gone and how far can our damage to nature be undone. From the forbidden areas of post-war France to the mining regions of Scotland, Islands of Abandonment explores the extraordinary places where humans no longer live in an attempt to give us a glimpse into what happens when mankind's impact on nature is, for one reason or another, forced to stop. Needless to say, if anxieties in this area are not curdling away in your subconscious mind, you are probably in some kind of denial. Through a journey into desolate, eerie and ravaged areas in the world, this artfully-written study offers profound insights into human nature, eschewing the usual dry sawdust of Wikipedia trivia. Indeed, I summed it up to a close friend remarking that, through some kind of hilarious administrative error, the book's publisher accidentally dispatched a poet instead of a scientist to write this book. With glimmers of hope within the (mostly) tragic travelogue, Islands of Abandonment is not only a compelling read, but also a fascinating insight into the relationship between Nature and Man.

The Anatomy of Fascism (2004) Robert O. Paxton Everyone is absolutely sure they know what fascism is... or at least they feel confident choosing from a buffet of features to suit the political mood. To be sure, this is not a new phenomenon: even as 'early' as 1946, George Orwell complained in Politics and the English Language that the word Fascism has now no meaning except in so far as it signifies something not desirable . Still, it has proved uncommonly hard to define the core nature of fascism and what differentiates it from related political movements. This is still of great significance in the twenty-first century, for the definition ultimately determines where the powerful label of 'fascist' can be applied today. Part of the enjoyment of reading this book was having my own cosy definition thoroughly dismantled and replaced with a robust system of abstractions and common themes. This is achieved through a study of the intellectual origins of fascism and how it played out in the streets of Berlin, Rome and Paris. Moreover, unlike Strongmen (see above), fascisms that failed to gain meaningful power are analysed too, including Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists. Curiously enough, Paxton's own definition of fascism is left to the final chapter, and by the time you reach it, you get an anti-climatic feeling of it being redundant. Indeed, whatever it actually is, fascism is really not quite like any other 'isms' at all, so to try and classify it like one might be a mistake. In his introduction, Paxton warns that many of those infamous images associated with fascism (eg. Hitler in Triumph of the Will, Mussolini speaking from a balcony, etc.) have the ability to induce facile errors about the fascist leader and the apparent compliance of the crowd. (Contemporary accounts often record how sceptical the common man was of the leader's political message, even if they were transfixed by their oratorical bombast.) As it happens, I thus believe I had something of an advantage of reading this via an audiobook, and completely avoided re-absorbing these iconic images. To me, this was an implicit reminder that, however you choose to reduce it to a definition, fascism is undoubtedly the most visual of all political forms, presenting itself to us in vivid and iconic primary images: ranks of disciplined marching youths, coloured-shirted militants beating up members of demonised minorities; the post-war pictures from the concentration camps... Still, regardless of you choose to read it, The Anatomy of Fascism is a powerful book that can teach a great deal about fascism in particular and history in general.

What Good are the Arts? (2005) John Carey What Good are the Arts? takes a delightfully sceptical look at the nature of art, and cuts through the sanctimony and cant that inevitably surrounds them. It begins by revealing the flaws in lofty aesthetic theories and, along the way, debunks the claims that art makes us better people. They may certainly bring joy into your life, but by no means do the fine arts make you automatically virtuous. Carey also rejects the entire enterprise of separating things into things that are art and things that are not, making a thoroughly convincing case that there is no transcendental category containing so-called 'true' works of art. But what is perhaps equally important to what Carey is claiming is the way he does all this. As in, this is an extremely enjoyable book to read, with not only a fine sense of pace and language, but a devilish sense of humour as well. To be clear, What Good are the Arts? it is no crotchety monograph: Leo Tolstoy's *What Is Art? (1897) is hilarious to read in similar ways, but you can't avoid feeling its cantankerous tone holds Tolstoy's argument back. By contrast, Carey makes his argument in a playful sort of manner, in a way that made me slightly sad to read other polemics throughout the year. It's definitely not that modern genre of boomer jeremiad about the young, political correctness or, heaven forbid, 'cancel culture'... which, incidentally, made Carey's 2014 memoir, The Unexpected Professor something of a disappointing follow-up. Just for fun, Carey later undermines his own argument by arguing at length for the value of one art in particular. Literature, Carey asserts, is the only art capable of reasoning and the only art with the ability to criticise. Perhaps so, and Carey spends a chapter or so contending that fiction has the exclusive power to inspire the mind and move the heart towards practical ends... or at least far better than any work of conceptual art. Whilst reading this book I found myself taking down innumerable quotations and laughing at the jokes far more than I disagreed. And the sustained and intellectual style of polemic makes this a pretty strong candidate for my favourite overall book of the year.

7 February 2021

Enrico Zini: Language links

In English In Italiano

4 September 2017

Daniel Pocock: Spyware Dolls and Intel's vPro

Back in February, it was reported that a "smart" doll with wireless capabilities could be used to remotely spy on children and was banned for breaching German laws on surveillance devices disguised as another object. Would you trust this doll? For a number of years now there has been growing concern that the management technologies in recent Intel CPUs (ME, AMT and vPro) also conceal capabilities for spying, either due to design flaws (no software is perfect) or backdoors deliberately installed for US spy agencies, as revealed by Edward Snowden. In a 2014 interview, Intel's CEO offered to answer any question, except this one. The LibreBoot project provides a more comprehensive and technical analysis of the issue, summarized in the statement "the libreboot project recommends avoiding all modern Intel hardware. If you have an Intel based system affected by the problems described below, then you should get rid of it as soon as possible" - eerily similar to the official advice German authorities are giving to victims of Cayla the doll. All those amateur psychiatrists suggesting LibreBoot developers suffer from symptoms of schizophrenia have had to shut their mouths since May when Intel confirmed a design flaw (or NSA backdoor) in every modern CPU had become known to hackers. Bill Gates famously started out with the mission to put a computer on every desk and in every home. With more than 80% of new laptops based on an Intel CPU with these hidden capabilities, can you imagine the NSA would not have wanted to come along for the ride? Four questions everybody should be asking
  • If existing laws can already be applied to Cayla the doll, why haven't they been used to alert owners of devices containing Intel's vPro?
  • Are exploits of these backdoors (either Cayla or vPro) only feasible on a targeted basis, or do the intelligence agencies harvest data from these backdoors on a wholesale level, keeping a mirror image of every laptop owner's hard disk in one of their data centers, just as they already do with phone and Internet records?
  • How long will it be before every fast food or coffee chain with a "free" wifi service starts dipping in to the data exposed by these vulnerabilities as part of their customer profiling initiatives?
  • Since Intel's admissions in May, has anybody seen any evidence that anything is changing though, either in what vendors are offering or in terms of how companies and governments outside the US buy technology?
Share your thoughts This issue was recently raised on the LibrePlanet mailing list. Please feel free to join the list and click here to reply on the thread.

30 March 2016

Julien Danjou: The OpenStack Schizophrenia

When I started contributing to OpenStack, almost five years ago, it was a small ecosystem. There were no foundation, a handful of projects and you could understand the code base in a few days. Fast forward 2016, and it is a totally different beast. The project grew to no less than 54 teams, each team providing one or more deliverable. For example, the Nova and Swift team each one produces one service and its client, whereas the Telemetry team produces 3 services and 3 different clients. In 5 years, OpenStack went to a few IaaS projects, to 54 different teams tackling different areas related to cloud computing. Once upon a time, OpenStack was all about starting some virtual machines on a network, backed by images and volumes. Nowadays, it's also about orchestrating your network deployment over containers, while managing your application life-cycle using a database service, everything being metered and billed for. This exponential growth has been made possible with the decision of the OpenStack Technical Committee to open the gates with the project structure reform voted at the end of 2014. This amendment suppresses the old OpenStack model of "integrated projects" (i.e. Nova, Glance, Swift ). The big tent, as it's called, allowed OpenStack to land new projects every month, growing from the 20 project teams of December 2014 to the 54 we have today multiplying the number of projects by 2.7 in a little more than a year. Amazing growth, right? And this was clearly a good change. I sat at the Technical Committee in 2013, when projects were trying to apply to be "integrated", after Ceilometer and Heat were. It was painful to see how the Technical Committee was trying to assess whether new projects should be brought in or not. But what I notice these days, is how OpenStack is still stuck between its old and new models. On one side, it accepted a lot of new teams, but on the other side, many are considered as second-class citizens. Efforts are made to continue to build an OpenStack project that does not exist anymore. For example, there is a team trying to define what's OpenStack core, named DefCore. That is looking to define which projects are, somehow, actually OpenStack. This leads to weird situations, such as having non-DefCore projects seeing their doc rejected from installation guides. Again, I reiterated my proposal to publish documentation as part of each project code to solve that dishonest situation and put everything on a level playing field Some cross-projects specs are also pushed without implication of all OpenStack projects. For example, The deprecate-cli spec which proposes to deprecate command-line interface tools proposed by each project had a lot of sense in the old OpenStack sense, where the goal was to build a unified and ubiquitous cloud platform. But when you now have tens of projects with largely different scopes, this start making less sense. Still, this spec was merged by the OpenStack Technical Committee this cycle. Keystone is the first project to proudly force users to rely on openstack-client, removing its old keystone command line tool. I find it odd to push that specs when it's pretty clear that some projects (e.g. Swift, Gnocchi ) have no intention to go down that path. Unfortunately, most specs pushed by the Technical Committee are in the realm of wishful thinking. It somehow makes sense, since only a few of the members are actively contributing to OpenStack projects, and they can't by themselves implement all of that magically. But OpenStack is no exception in the free software world and remains a do-ocracy. There is good cross-project content in OpenStack, such as the API working group. While the work done should probably not be OpenStack specific, there's a lot that teams have learned by building various HTTP REST API with different frameworks. Compiling this knowledge and offering it as a guidance to various teams is a great help. My fellow developer Chris Dent wrote a post about what he would do on the Technical Committee. In this article, he points to a lot of the shortcomings I described here, and his confusion between OpenStack being a product or being a kit is quite understandable. Indeed, the message broadcasted by OpenStack is still very confusing after the big tent openness. There's no enough user experience improvement being done. The OpenStack Technical Committee election is opened for April 2016, and from what I read so far, many candidates are proposing to now clean up the big tent, kicking out projects that do not match certain criteria anymore. This is probably a good idea, there is some inactive project laying around. But I don't think that will be enough to solve the identity crisis that OpenStack is experiencing. So this is why, once again this cycle, I will throw my hat in the ring and submit my candidacy for OpenStack Technical Committee.

25 November 2014

Chris Lamb: Validating Django model attribute assignment

Ever done the following?
>>> user = User.objects.get(pk=102)
>>> user.superuser = True
>>> user.save()
# Argh, why is this user now not a superuser...
Here's a dirty hack to validate these:
import sys
from django.db import models
from django.conf import settings
FIELDS =  
EXCEPTIONS =  
    'auth.User': ('backend',),
 
def setattr_validate(self, name, value):
    super(models.Model, self).__setattr__(name, value)
    # Real field names cannot start with underscores
    if name.startswith('_'):
        return
    # Magic
    if name == 'pk':
        return
    k = '%s.%s' % (self._meta.app_label, self._meta.object_name)
    try:
        fields = FIELDS[k]
    except KeyError:
        fields = FIELDS[k] = set(
            getattr(x, y) for x in self._meta.fields
            for y in ('attname', 'name')
        )
    # Field is in allowed list
    if name in fields:
        return
    # Field is in known exceptions
    if  name in EXCEPTIONS.get(k, ()):
        return
    # Always allow Django internals to set values (eg. aggregates)
    if 'django/db/models' in sys._getframe().f_back.f_code.co_filename:
        return
    raise ValueError(
        "Refusing to set unknown attribute '%s' on %s instance. "
        "(Did you misspell %s?)" % (name, k, ', '.join(fields))
    )
# Let's assume we have good test coverage
if settings.DEBUG:
    models.Model.__setattr__ = setattr_validate
Now:
>>> user = User.objects.get(pk=102)
>>> user.superuser = True
...
ValueError: Refusing to set unknown attribute 'superuser' on auth.User instance. (Did you misspell 'username', 'first_name', 'last_name', 'is_active', 'email', 'is_superuser', 'is_staff', 'last_login', 'password', 'id', 'date_joined')
(Django can be a little schizophrenic on this Model.save()'s update_fields keyword argument validates its fields, as does prefetch_related, but it's taking select_related a little while to land.)

30 April 2014

Mirco Bauer: Smuxi 0.11 "Distractions" Release

And here we go again! We're proud to announce the new version of Smuxi, release 0.11 "Distractions". During the development, 11 bug reports and 2 feature requests in 112 commits were worked on. Notable highlights in this release are:

User Interface Enhancements
  • The chat list can be shrunken. This is especially handy with XMPP/Jabber and long group chat identifiers.
  • The highlight counter is now a separate column. This enhances the vertical alignment with other highlights and guarantees to be visible even if the chat name was truncated.

Multi Identity Support Smuxi cares for user feedback. Multi identity support was the most voted feature and thus it has been implemented! Now you can please your schizo^Wdesire to use different nicks, users and real names depending on the server. Simply edit the server in preferences and change the details.

Message Patterns Everybody knows text can be boring because it is all just text. Nothing can sidetrack you except reading that bare text. Text often has recurring patterns from which something useful and interactive can be created. For example, someone writes:
Hey meebey, do you know RFC2812?
RFCs are a recurring pattern with a distinct number behind it and are real references to something in the internet (collection of protocol specifications). So I would usually fire up a browser tab, copy/paste or type RFC2812 into my favorite search engine and click the first hit. Then I'd reply to the question afterwards. But with Smuxi's message patters, it turns RFC2812 into a link on which you can simply click to launch the relevant document. Wow this is very cool, but isn't this already happening with http URLs and email addresses? Exactly! Why shouldn't more information be used to create useful things from it? Smuxi message patterns allow you to define text patterns that are transformed into clickable links. This can be used for RFCs, CVEs, bug report numbers (#XXX), git commit hashes and much more. Make good use of your creativity! By default Smuxi comes with built-in message patterns for:
  • URLs
  • heuristic URLs (not starting with http:// etc)
  • email addresses
  • RFCs
  • CVEs
  • Debian Security Advisories (DSA)
  • Many popular bug trackers (GNU, GCC, kernel, Launchpad, freedesktop, GNOME, KDE, Xfce, Debian, Redhat, Novell, Xamarin, openSUSE, Mozilla, Samba, SourceForge, CPAN, boost, Claws and Smuxi)
If you know more general patterns useful for others, please submit them. For a full list of built-in message patterns or how to add your own patterns, head over to the message pattern documentation.

Hooks Enhancements
  • A bug was fixed that prevented hooks from issuing more than one command
  • New hook points:
    • engine/session/on-group-chat-person-added
    • engine/session/on-group-chat-person-removed
    • engine/session/on-group-chat-person-updated
  • New hook variables:
    • CMD
    • CMD_PARAMETER
    • CMD_CHARACTER
    • PROTOCOL_MANAGER_PRESENCE_STATUS: Unknown, Offline, Online, Away

Twitter Enhancements As of 14 Jan 2014, Twitter disallows unencrypted HTTP requests which broke Smuxi's Twitter support. Smuxi is now making exclusively encrypted requests (HTTPS) and thus works with Twitter again.

JabbR (Beta) Enhancements
  • Messages now raise Smuxi hooks
  • The Validate certificate setting is now correctly honored.

Updated Translations Smuxi should now be in your language, including:
  • Initial complete Dutch (Jeroen Baten)

Behind the Scenes
  • New Smuxi git repository @ GNOME
  • Cleaner XMPP code (Oliver Schneider)
  • Smuxi's STFL text frontend is doing a graceful shutdown on quit (Calvin B))
  • New sexy website! We hope you like it :)

Contributors Contributors to this release are the following people:
  • Mirco Bauer (98 commits)
  • Oliver Schneider (6 commits)
  • Calvin B (6 commits)
  • Andr s G. Aragoneses (1 commit)
  • Jeroen Baten (translations)
Thank you very much for your contributions to Smuxi! Want it? Go here and grab it right now!

Posted Mon Apr 14 13:23:29 2014

19 December 2013

Chris Lamb: Quickly switching between imperial and metric units on Strava

British triathletes are quite schizophrenic about their units: not "European" enough to bike using metric units yet not "American" enough to run using their imperial counterparts. Garmin GPS units seem happy enough to accomodate this contradiction but Strava only has a single global setting. Switching units would normally involve visiting your settings page inconvenient when viewing lots of run and bike pages so I wrote a Chrome extension that toggles between the different unit types via a Strava icon in the address bar: https://chris-lamb.co.uk/wp-content/2013/strava-1.png I considered a solution that actually converted the values displayed on the page but the illusion would always be shattered by Javascript elements which would require monkey-patching to ensure the desired unit was rendered: https://chris-lamb.co.uk/wp-content/2013/strava-2.png Source code is available, which should also serve as a template for similar extensions.

15 May 2012

John Goerzen: Suspicious Blog Activity any advice?

I ve been noticing a number of odd things happening surrounding my blog lately, and I thought it s about time to figure out what s going on and how to stop it. The first problem is that people are illegally copying my posts, probably using RSS scraping, and putting them up on their own ad-infested sites. It is trivial to find them using Google for any somewhat unique word or phrase in one of my posts. Lately one of them, linux-support.com, actually sends me pingbacks announcing the fact that they ve scraped me! Most of these sites seem to be nothing but content farms for selling ad impressions, and almost none of them have any identifiable names for the owners. (There is an exception: I have specifically set up sites like Planet Debian and Goodreads to copy my blog posts.) I m obviously an advocate of open content, but I do not feel it right that others should be profiting by putting photos and stories about Free Software, or photos of my family, on their ad farms. While I release a great deal of content under GPL or Creative Commons licenses, I have never done so with my blog an intentional decision. What should I do about this? Is it worth fighting a battle over, or is it about as useless as trying to block every spam follower on my twitter account? So that s the first weird thing. The second weird thing just started within the last few weeks. I have been getting a surprising amount (a few a week) of email addressed to me. It does not bear the appearance of being 100% automated spam, though it is possible that it is. It s taken a few forms: The profit motive in all of these is high, and in at least the second and third, so is the sleaze factor. I ve gotten two emails lately of this form:
Hi John, I am curious if you are the administrator for this site: changelog.complete.org/archives/174-house-outlaws-fast-forwarding-senate-pres-next I am a researcher / writer involved with a new project whose mission it is to provide accurate and useful information for those interested in the practice of law, whether as a lawyer or paralegal. I recently produced an article detailing the complex relationship between law and technology and the legal implications on personal privacy and free speech. I would love to share this resource with those who might find it useful and am curious of you are the correct person to contact about such a request? Thank you! All my best,
The details vary the URLs appear to be random (the one cited above was little more than a link to an article), the topics the website claims to discuss range from law to schizophrenia (that one actually came with a link to the site, which again seemed to be a content farm). I am slightly tempted to reply to one of these and ask where the heck people are getting my name. It seems as if somebody has put me into a mailing list they sell containing sleazebag bloggers. Frankly, I am puzzled at this attention. I guess I haven t checked, but I can t imagine that my blog has anything even remotely resembling a high PageRank or anything else. It s not high-traffic, not Slashdot, etc. Either people are desperate, naive, failing to be selective, or maybe working some scam on me that I don t know yet. In any case, I m interested if others have seen this, or any advice you might have.

23 May 2010

Thorsten Glaser: Cancelling bash, retrieving a command, mksh rules :

In response to a planet.d.o series (mentioned in #grml on IRC) of postings: In a sensible shell, Esc+# not only pushes it back but also re-enables the command. Try it out: l s Esc # Cursor-Up Esc #
tg@blau:~ $ #ls
tg@blau:~ $ ls
The command sticks in the history, and is not immediately shown in the next interactive input line, which I consider a plus in most use cases. Anyway, try mksh (just a-g i it), there are a lot of goodies. I found out about Ctrl-O only a year or so ago myself I wonder why schizo didn t write about how to do it in posh tho

12 September 2008

Benjamin Mako Hill: What I'm Up To

It's been a year or so since I last reported what I was up to in my "day job." The last year has been a productive, if sometimes schizophrenic, period. I've had a good time working with Eric von Hippel (innovation and free and open source software research guru) and have decided I'd like to do a bit more of that. So I'm taking classes again -- mostly sociological methods courses -- to try to learn a bit about becoming a social scientist. To do so, I've enrolled in the Technology, Innovation and Entrepreneurship PhD program at the MIT Sloan School of Management and am working on putting together an interdisciplinary -- probably even interdepartmental -- research program. My basic research questions remain the ones that have motivated all my work: How can I get a better understanding of communities producing free stuff? How can I help those communities do so more effectively? MIT has a large number of people who share these goals and interests. Who knows, if I can put together enough of them and an academically rigorous research proposal that will provide a real benefit to the free software and free culture communities I care about, I might even manage to get a degree out of it! I'll also be staying on as a fellow at the MIT Center for Future Civic Media where I'll continue to maintain and expand Selectricity, work on Revealing Errors, and more.

13 December 2007

Gunnar Wolf: Supertheory of supereverything

First time I had read the Bible
It had stroke me as unwitty
I think it may started rumor
That the Lord ain't got no humor Put me inside SSC
Let's test superstring theory
Oh yoi yoi accelerate the protons
stir it twice and then just add me, 'cause I don't read the Bible
I don't trust disciple
Even if they're made of marble
Or Canal Street bling From the maelstrom of the knowledge
Into the labyrinth of doubt
Frozed underground ocean
melting - nuking on my mind Yes give me Everything Theory
Without Nazi uniformity
My brothers are protons
My sisters are neurons
Stir it twice, it's instant family! I don't read the Bible
I don't trust disciple
Even if they're made of marble
Or Canal Street bling My brothers are protons
My sisters are neurons
Stir it twice dlja prekrastnih dam... Do you have sex maniacs
Or schizophrenics
Or astrophysicists in your family
Was my grandma anti anti
Was my grandpa bounty bounty
Hek-o-hek-o-hej-o
They ask me in embassy! 'Cause I don't read the Bible
I don't trust disciple
Even if they're made of marble
Or Canal Street bling And my grandma she was anti!
And my grandpa he was bounty!
And stir it twice
And then just add me!
Partypartypartypartypartyparty
now afterparty...
That's the Supertheory of Supereverything, by the gypsy-punk Gogol Bordello. I was really surprised to find their Super Taranta! at a local music shop. Of course, five minutes later, we were heading home with our shiny and oh-so-very-green purchase. Highly recommendable!BTW, does anybody else think that Eugene Hutz is Larry Wall's evil twin? (No, and I don't only mean it because of their choices in background colors)

30 September 2007

Romain Francoise: Clint rocks

19h57:
Subject: Bug#444747: Acknowledgement (git-mergetool completion missing)

Thank you for the problem report you have sent regarding Debian.
This is an automatically generated reply, to let you know your message has
been received. It is being forwarded to the package maintainers and other
interested parties for their attention; they will reply in due course.

Your message has been sent to the package maintainer(s):
Clint Adams <schizo@debian.org>
21h24:
Subject: Bug#444747: fixed in zsh 4.3.4-19

This is an automatic notification regarding your Bug report
which was filed against the zsh package:

#444747: git-mergetool completion missing

It has been closed by Clint Adams <schizo@debian.org>.

12 August 2007

Clint Adams: ZOMG goes cutting-edge

ZOMG has now been updated for Audioscrobbler 1.2, and is now in a Mercurial repo. Users should be aware that the caching of credentials and the caching of unsubmitted tracks have both changed in incompatible ways, so be sure to flush or remove your old data before upgrading. Probably the only exciting user-visible change is that currently-playing tracks will now show up on last.fm as now listening .

1 August 2007

Ross Burton: Daily Mail vs British Medical Journal

From an article in the Daily Mail this week:
Previous studies have found that cannabis claims 30,000 lives a year by causing cancer, heart disease and bronchitis, and that it can double the risk of mental illnesses such as schizophrenia.
Now, I wonder where that data is from. Oh look, the British Medical Journal:
It may be argued that the extrapolation from small numbers of individual studies to potential large scale effects amounts to scaremongering. For example, one could calculate that if cigarettes cause an annual excess of 120 000 deaths among 13 million smokers, the corresponding figure for deaths among 3.2 million cannabis smokers would be 30 000, assuming equality of effect.
Genius. Thanks to Dr Ben Goldache for spotting this. NP: The Good, The Bad & The Queen, The Good, The Bad & The Queen

26 April 2007

Axel Beckert: FTP and port 80?

Hmmm, I never thought that a URL could look some kind of schizophrenic or paradox, but this one truly does: ftp://ftp.port80.se/. (Found in ftp://ftp.*.debian.org/debian/README.non-US.)

18 December 2006

Biella Coleman: VIVA ZYPREXA!

I am about 2/3 over with my haul from Edmonton to San Juan, PR (laying over in the beautiful JFK) and am too tired to blog anything much of substance but do check out Furious Season’s impassioned and excellent commentary on the recent NYTimes article (and this one )that reveal how Eli Lily knowingly downplayed the risks of Zyprexa. And if you read the second article, you will find out what Viva Zyprexa means. Here is Eli Lily’s press release, which I have included on the next page as these things tend to vanish… Statement from Eli Lilly and Company: Response to The New York Times Article from December 18, 2006 December 18, 2006 INDIANAPOLIS, Dec 18, 2006 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX News Network/ — Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY), vigorously objects to the characterization of company practices in a New York Times article based upon selective documents illegally leaked by plaintiffs’ lawyers. “At Lilly, we do not engage in off-label promotion - as alleged in The Times article,” said Dr. Steven Paul, Lilly’s executive vice president, science and technology. “Lilly is committed to the highest ethical standards and to promoting our medications only for approved uses. We have clear guidelines and extensive training for our sales representatives to help assure that they provide appropriate promotional information that is within the scope of prescribing information approved by the FDA.” Lilly works to bring Zyprexa to physicians who are confronted with the need to diagnose and treat serious schizophrenia and bipolar disorder wherever they practice. * About half of medical care for serious mental illness takes place in a primary care physician’s office. This is due to the fact a large number of people in the United States have no access to a psychiatrist or do not seek psychiatric care. * Our experience in mental health has taught us that primary care physicians are asking for education on severe mental illnesses, since they see many of these patients in their offices. * We believe that it is absolutely appropriate to discuss Zyprexa and its indicated uses with primary care physicians in the interest of meeting a critical medical need. * It is important that the public understand that physicians can and do prescribe medications outside of their approved indications to meet the needs of their individual patients. “While it is accurate to say that mental illnesses like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder begin early in life — with a higher prevalence during early adolescence and childhood — it is simply untrue to assert that these diseases somehow end — and therefore prescribing for them ends — in young adulthood,” added Paul. “To dismiss the devastating impairment of these disorders throughout a patient’s life is wrong. “Bipolar disorder and schizophrenia are often treated in the offices of primary care physicians. In fact Lilly did research with primary care physicians and found that they were challenged in making the diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Many primary care physicians appreciate the educational outreach Lilly provides in mental illness,” he added. The Times failed to mention that these leaked documents are a tiny fraction of the more than 11 million pages of documents provided by Lilly as part of the litigation process. They do not accurately portray Lilly’s conduct. As part of Lilly’s commitment to patients and healthcare professionals, many high-level Lilly physicians and researchers — along with researchers from outside Lilly — were engaged for a number of years to study the issue of Zyprexa and diabetes. Leaked documents involving these discussions do not represent an accurate view of company strategy or conduct. Lilly deplores the illegal release of select confidential documents. This illegal and selective disclosure of incomplete information will cause unwarranted concern among patients that may cause them to stop taking their medication without consulting a physician. This is the unfortunate result we saw when plaintiffs’ lawyers aggressively advertised about Zyprexa in recent years while searching for clients. Lilly, a leading innovation-driven corporation, is developing a growing portfolio of first-in-class and best-in-class pharmaceutical products by applying the latest research from its own worldwide laboratories and from collaborations with eminent scientific organizations. Headquartered in Indianapolis, Ind., Lilly provides answers — through medicines and information — for some of the world’s most urgent medical needs. Additional information about Lilly is available at www.lilly.com. C-LLY Zyprexa (olanzapine, Lilly) (Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20031219/LLYLOGO ) SOURCE Eli Lilly and Company Tarra Ryker, +1-317-276-3787, mobile: +1-317-332-7502, or Marni Lemons,
+1-317-433-8990, mobile: +1-317-532-7826, both of Eli Lilly and Company http://www.prnewswire.com Copyright 2006 PR Newswire. All rights reserved News Provided by COMTEX

17 December 2006

Biella Coleman: Big News in Pharma Science

So one of the darling drugs for bipolar disorder (and I believe schizophrenia) has been Zyprexa.. Marked by the pharmaceutical company as a wonder drug, for being safe and effective, it has just come out that Eli Lilly, maker of the drug, hid and downlplayed the severity of side-effects. This is big because critics from survivors to academics and journalists and have been attacking pharmaceutical science for this very reason… This explicit revelation is thus pretty gynormous. I am frantically getting ready to go to PR, so that is I can say but more later…

15 October 2006

Julien Danjou: Total recall (2006)

Directed by jd & adn Genre: Action / Adventure / Sci-Fi / Thriller / Horror / Drama / Humor
Runtime: several weeks
Country: A lot
Language: English
Color: Color (Technicolor, QT, GTK and ncurses) Tagline: They stole their project, now they want it back. Plot Outline: In September 2006, a group of developpers from the Debian planet rise against the corruption leading the government.
User Comments: Great action, great suspense, great cultural satire, and a great mind-bender. Awards: Waiting for nomination. Quotes: Cast overview
Anthony Towns (aj), as the Debian Project Leader Denis Barbier (bouz), as The Recaller
Aurelien Jarno (aurel32), as one Seconder Clint Adams (schizo), as one Seconder
MJ Ray (mjr), as one Seconder Pierre Habouzit (madcoder), as one Seconder
Martin Schulze (joey), as one Seconder Marc Dequ nes (duck), as one Seconder

26 September 2006

Amaya Rodrigo: When it doesn't really make any sense, but yet it does...

I was reading a disambiguation page in Wikipedia today. I quote:
SAD is a three letter acronym.

14 June 2006

Gunnar Wolf: Novel noble ideas for solving the world's problems

Yesterday, the right-wing PAN candidate for the presidency of Mexico, Felipe Calder n, made a declaration that shadows the current president, Vicente Fox (from his same political party) almost look like a genuine statesman. (some links, La Jornada, El Universal) - And that's no easy feat, given that Mr. Fox is -so far- the nation's most prolific president... When it comes to stupid sayings.
How come Calder n rose so quickly to become a statesman? Let me first go through a bit of history. Not much, promise. Well, I'll do my best.
Twelve years and one month ago, Mexicans woke up with the frightening news we had a violent guerrilla group in Chiapas, one of Mexico's richest states, but one with the highest percentages of poor people - and, not coincidentally, of indigenous population as well. This uprising was very soon known all over the world - And its leaders quickly learned how to ensure they would not be prosecuted and exterminated: Simultaneously with the fighting, they made as large a media coverage as they could, strongly supported in the Internet democratization of the information that had just begun. Thousands of people all over the world understood their ideas -at least what they said at that time- and spread the word. I had my first trip in Europe with my (now) wife in 1996, and we saw many grafittis stating Viva Chiapas, Viva EZLN... It was amazing.
EZLN was (is) specially hard for the government to kill. As they don't do military sabotages, terrorism or so on, it is very hard to justify military action. After 12 days of fighting, a truce was decreed. The truce was broken once, in the early years of the Zedillo government, but officially there is a cease-fire, observed by both sides. The Zapatistas have took the ideas and further promoted them, with action. My Chiapas-born friend Alex Ju rez often tells me about the tremendous cultural difference between the Zapatista territories and the paramilitary ones - In the Zapatista areas, you see indians reading books, working their land, organizing themselves in the Fair Government councils, and strongly opposing alcohol and drugs. Just the opposite from the other areas.
EZLN shifted their strategy some months ago, going beyond stating their wishes for a fair regime and waiting for the government to look at them. I still don't really understand where they are heading, but the Sixth Declaration of the Lacandon Rainforest turns them into a political movement, clearly separated from the existing regime. They do not seek to be elected, they oppose every party and candidate. They define themselves as an anticapitalist movement, located down and to the left - Lets see where this goes to.
Well, back on track... One of the president's most famous stupid quotes is that, during his campaign, he promised to solve the Chiapas conflict in fifteen minutes. Well, it's been either fifteen very long minutes, or he just hasn't had any time to devote to those dirty indians. Mexicans are very frustrated by the lack of importance this man gave to one of our country's longest and most desperate needs.
Of course, Felipe Calder n must do something in this regard. Fox's shadow is a big one, and this little man must try to escape from Fox's biggest mistakes. So he just came with a formula that I don't know why no statesman thought of before: Instead of negotiating, instead of working to solve a very difficult problem, he declared he will unilaterally declare peace with EZLN.
I wonder if this year's Nobel prize will go to such an abnegated, smart and selfless person. Man, we could take this same solution to Darfur, to Israel/Palestine, to Congo, to Chechnya... If rulers all over the world start declaring peace unilaterally, all of the world's problems will be solved! What comes next, he will declare (maybe as Salinas did) that we are a first world country? Poor people are only sad reflections in the sand but don't exist in his reality?
Please, Mexicans: The man is clearly schizoid. Are you happy with Foxilandia? It seems that alternate realities are part of the PAN's action program. If you are not satisfied with Fox's results (who is?), don't vote for this guy. We will all regret it.

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