Dec 31 2007

Real Life “The Giver”

Tollie Williams @ 6:53 am
Leave a tip!

Real life The Giver - remember that book? In India, women in “farms” being paid to have babies for other couples (including US couples)!

If you haven’t read The Giver, or don’t remember it… at 13 (IIRC) teens were assigned by the government to their role in society. One of the roles was for girls to become birthing moms, who would produce all the new-borns for the city (the government distributed required pills). And while this “baby farm” outsourcing in India is certainly a far ways away from that, it’s still eerily reminiscent.

The Giver. Good book. Need to read it again. Dang my growing reading list. I still need to finish His Dark Materials, read enough of my web development books to learn Ruby on Rails and get better at Javascript, and I still want to read/re-read the entire HP series. Sigh.


Dec 31 2007

I lose: HD ain’t for me.

Tags: Tollie Williams @ 6:52 am
Leave a tip!

Well, it’s time to get back to blogging. As is often the case for many bloggers, I worry that if I don’t develop the habit of pressing the Publish button, months will go by before ideas get shared. And idea sharing is really what this is about, isn’t it? I’m not a “true” scientist, but I believe I do think scientifically. My friends will tell you that I admire the intelligent sharing of thoughts, the diversity of opinions, the back and forth dialog to arrive at at some final result or conclusion. Ok, maybe they won’t tell you that. They might tell you that I’m a thought tyrant, certain of my correctness and persistently pressing my point. And while that’s true, I’m really not, and I do in fact enjoy intelligent dialogue - both watching and participating.

For instance, the past few days have had really reminded me of the value of TV. Off at school, I rarely watch much more than Heroes and news; however, at home I have the time to watch Discovery, History, TLC, National Geographic, and occasionally Discovery Times. Tonight I’ve seen The Universe: The Big Bang, Minutes to Meltdown: a documentary of the Three Mile Island near-disaster, and Seconds to Disaster: Chernobyl. I’m pretty sure I’ve seen all of them before, but I did something unusual this time: I paid attention. The Big Bang was good enough that I recorded parts of it - then went to download a torrent of the show to keep instead of VHS tapes (fair use!!). Alas, my DVR is still dead; one of those Christmas projects I haven’t gotten done yet.

About the DVR - it’s a pretty crappy Pioneer 531H (caveat emptor) that never would stop downloading its programming guide, so unavoidably, it would lose power during hard drive writes, and one day I noticed that one of the programs I was wanting to burn to DVD wouldn’t play all the way through. How I wish I had kept current my DVD backup of the DVR’s hard drive. There’s a lot of good science content stranded there, that I don’t want to touch until I’ve had a chance to look at the DVR’s drive through the eyes of a computer (SpinRite perhaps?) and I simply haven’t done that yet. This reminds me: I need to get a copy of SpinRite. Sadly, that’s one of those tools I need to have in my arsenal that I’ve never even used, let alone bought.

The other two shows, Three Mile Island and Chernobyl were particularly elucidating as well (find that used in a sentence in an online dictionary, I dare yo), but they didn’t receive the record button. A few things I jotted down that I want to remember from these programs:

* Jimmy Carter (who served on a nuclear sub) visited 3MI as a public relations stunt to calm down the highly panicked, angry, and confused locals. (The companies responsible were arrogant with their press briefings and had lost all trust - even the Governor had no real idea about wether or not to evacuate.) On his way there, President Carter was being begged not to go and to tell the people to evacuate immediately by the “it’s gonna blow” camp, while the other camp was less certain of inevitability. The PR stunt worked. I wonder if a president would do that today?

* At Chernobyl, the night crew operators not only survived but they were exonerated, while their off-duty bosses were thrown into jail for 10 years. I think that’s odd, but I can’t fully understand the pressure they were under to carry out the test that night, given the Soviet approach. Speaking of the communist USSR, Russia covered up the accident as long as possible. If it hadn’t been for a Swedish nuclear plant detecting the radiation on its incoming workers, they probably wouldn’t have said anything. (The US had spy satellite photos minutes after the explosion, however.)

* Despite the Soviet cover up, they did successfully and quickly evacuate 50,000 people over the course of a few hours, less than 24 hours after the explosion. I couldn’t help but think of Katrina and New Orleans when I heard this. Our government failed at so many levels. If news crews could find a land route to the super dome the next day (or was it two?), why did it take weeks to - wait, they were Chinooked out. Because, it took the Army coming in to get people out of there. So, credit to the communists for being able to order people out of their homes. By the way- they’d never return. The city is still too radioactive to visit for more than an hour or two.

* Finally, the horror of post-contamination cleanup is unbelievable. Of the 100 or so fire-fighters called up (not knowing it was radioactive) to put out the 1am fire (it took 3 hours to put out), about half died from radiation poisoning. Then there was the matter of inspecting the reactor, and so nuclear experts were called in to go inspect the scene. They certainly weren’t asked “would you be willing?” - they would be forced, despite knowing better than anyone the lethal risk. And then, finally, they used 1000s of their soldiers working to clear the debris by hand (shovels, etc) and throw it into the reactor, so that it could be isolated. The soldiers worked for only 3 minutes, but received a lifetime, and for hundreds - lethal - doses of radiation. And amazingly, the Russian government kept the power plant operational until 2000! (Somehow, I missed this fact.) People commuted in, through the 20 miles of ghost-town restricted areas, and ran the place. Now, the US and others are chipping in on building a new dome to cover the existing structure, as the first was hastily built and no one has much confidence in it.

Shifting away from TV-learning for a moment, over the break I also caught up on some of Stanford’s podcasts that I had saved since before it was rolled into iTunes U. One in particular, The Cholesterol Myth with Robert Simony (I’d provide the link, but it’s no where to be found now.) was enlightening. I didn’t realize the body had such a homeostatic regulation on cholesterol. It made me feel less like I’m going to die at 30 from feeding off fast food for the past 3 years. For those curious, basically the body produces its own cholesterol for its own purposes, but its production rate is inversely proportional to the amount of cholesterol made available from your diet. ie. Diet probably has less of an affect on cholesterol than popular attention leads you to believe.

And another podcast that I listened to (this one I can find, and can link to, but it requires iTunes) was “Getting Ahead in School: How We Are Creating a Generation of Stressed-Out, Materialistic, and Miseducated Students” by Denise Clark Pope, and oh how I agree with it absolutely. Its digest would be this: learning extends beyond what is being tested on pencil and paper, and we need to refocus our vision of “academic excellence” likewise. It’s a must listen to for educators, or those who are fond of genuine learning.

The state of schools, NCLB, and even at the college level - this inability to properly reward genuine academia, while meanwhile robbing students of free time to learn on their own by the use of ineffective and inefficient methods of teaching - it all burns me deep inside.

And finally, back to TV, speaking of being burned, I’m also tired of the consumers losing out in this HD-DVD war. I digress: I’m a Harry Potter fan, and I’ve already ranted on this blog about HP5 DVD, yet I failed to mention this other point of contention: the utter lack of commentary on any of the HP DVDs. Why? To make money for Warner Brothers of course. In an attempt to force consumers to shift to high definition, WB has apparently agreed to only release their commentary on the HD-DVD and Blu-ray versions, which are now in stores. No technical reasons why the commentary can’t easily fit on the DVD; it’s purely a calculated market move in attempt to force consumers to migrate to the latest and greatest.

Now, what makes this different from the VHS to DVD transition that we went through 10 years ago? Namely one thing: format wars. Because the two formats are incompatible, and because absolutely no compromise or solution is in sight (Sony in particular, known for their proprietary formats, seems to insist on no dual players) there’s very little technical reason to make the upgrade now. If you upgrade now, each format’s players cost $300+, there’s no guarantee your format won’t die and be left with only a handful of titles. To make matters worse, most titles are only released for one of the two formats, so you have to factor in which titles you want and which format you expect future titles will come out in. All of this has lead to lack of interest by the consumer, which means a lack of incentive for the market to produce more HD devices, which means a lack of competition for the existing ones (name more than 3 HD-DVD or Blu-ray players, I challenge you. I’ll help you with one… the Play Station 3 plays Blu-ray, since 80% of PS3 owners didn’t know), which means prices are still high and not coming down any time soon. And if it wasn’t for general confusion and misreporting on the FCCs push to digital-only OTA broadcasts, then HD-TVs would probably be just as stalled, although they’re finally becoming reasonably priced (for small LCD screens). In case you didn’t know, the 2008 digital thing a) has nothing at all to do with HD and b) has no effect on cable or satellite - only if you’re using the good ol’ rabbit ears will you be affected.

Arg. Sorry, but as much as I want to hear the commentary, there’s no way I’m going to spend $300 on a player and another $300 on a TV just to buy into one of the two formats, when all rational thinking says “wait until the format wars are over and prices come down.” I wonder how many people were in the same boat, but decided to make the costly upgrade? As consumers, we lose.


Dec 21 2007

LNM (Magic) Video Podcast 3 and 4

Tags: Tollie Williams @ 6:26 pm
Leave a tip!

Now with a name - Late Nite Magic (LNM) - Aaron and I present our 3rd video from the tollie.org LIVE video channel. Also, in this video we’re joined by our good friend Mallory.

This video features two of Tollie’s decks. I play with a newly reconstructed 5 color deck (heavy on the green) and Aaron plays with my mono red aggro/combo deck - both Standard. It got intense as both of us knew the other person could be only one card draw away from dealing out over 20 damage in one turn.

Also, I’m posting up video 4, but apologizing for it at the same time, as I accidentally recorded all but the last 2 minutes without audio. This game is my mono-white Kithkin deck vs. Aaron’s mono black creature removal deck. Although there’s no audio, the ending is definitely a surprise to us both.


Dec 21 2007

Better Blogging

Tollie Williams @ 10:52 am
Leave a tip!

So I’m trying to be better (whatever that means) about blogging here. Now, am I one of these self-centered people that thinks what I have to say is so important or entertaining that you’ll be disappointed if I don’t blog? No, of course not. And if I was, I wouldn’t admit it. Instead, my re-dedication to blogging is more of a personal thing. Personally, I want to throw my ideas and thoughts into tangible words more often, not leaving them floating in the neurons to be later forgotten or confused. That’s why I’m making an effort to be a “better blogger.”

Once upon a time, I understood Wordpress code (mostly). Now, with the new Wordpress 2.3.x, I’m out of touch and a little too lazy to feel my way around again. Here was the problem: I wanted to get my Twitter Updates off my main page - they just looked too spammific compared “real content” - but I didn’t want to stop adding them to the blog. After all, I more or less have control over the blog and full access to its data; twitter - not so much. So I wanted to keep updating my Twitter Statuses here for archival reasons and search reasons, but not clutter the main page with their updates.

So I found it! A surprisingly comprehensive and so far successful1 plugin to exclude posts from certain categories from the main page and the RSS feed (and/or a variety of other places). It’s “Advanced Category Excluder” from advanced-category-excluder.dev.rain.hu/ and so far all is well.

1Why “so far?” Well, traditionally, back when I followed a little more closely this sort of stuff, removing a category of entries from the main page came with some side effects, like reducing the total number of posts shown. And do I have enough entries to test this for myself yet? No. So we’ll see. Once I hit 10 posts I’ll probably find that it doesn’t and all is well, but in the meantime, I’m content with everything working as is.

Oh, and lastly, while I was sad to find out that I’d have to pay to upgrade my (paid for) version of MarsEdit if I wanted to keep using it, I am glad to have discovered that the author of Ecto reversed his original reversal and has again decided that Ecto3 will be a free upgrade to paid users of Ecto2. Now that’s how it should be. (I’m pretty sure he promised free upgrades for life originally, but I’m not entirely sure.)

Now, next thing to do is get a hierarchy back to my categories and see if Ecto supports them. MarsEdit didn’t. Windows Live Writer does (it’s like, the only reason I’d use Windows right now).

Oh, and then I need to get a separate page up for our “Late Nite Magic” (LNM) podcast. I really feel like there’s an audience out there for this - somewhere.


Dec 19 2007

J.K. on Pottercast (Not J/K!)

Tags: Tollie Williams @ 2:00 am
Leave a tip!

My favorite Harry Potter podcast (and the more intelligent of the two big ones) just scored a two-show skyped-sit-down with the author herself. Wow. From what I can tell, J.K. Rowling really appreciates their commitment to the fun of the series for fans, and it sounds like she probably has listened to more than just a few of their podcasts. (Now that’s an endorsement.)

In the interview, she definitely comes across as a real (very real) down to earth person. In fact, it’s almost like listening to a “just another fan” who’s found some hidden book of backstories that you haven’t read yet when you listen to her, except this fan is particularly well spoken and witty. She’s seems most real when you can hear the genuine frustration in her voice about dealing with legal matters and lawyers. She celebrates getting one over on her own lawyers, and she sighs twice at the specter of an ongoing matter surfaces when talking about her upcoming encyclopedic work.

For those who don’t know, the ongoing matter (at least, the one that is public) is concerning the book form publication of Steve Vander Ark’s fan site hp-lexicon.org. It sounds like (I’m doing some major reading between the lines here) Steve and J.K. both want the book published, but J.K.’s lawyers have told her that if she allows it, it will endanger her intellectual property rights. Currently, the book’s publication has been halted through force of court order until Feb’08 when they meet in court again.

Both sides: J.K.’s News (direct link). Steve’s News (no direct link, scroll down to “more from Jo”)

As for me, my thoughts? I don’t see why J.K. can’t just “license” the use of whatever her lawyers tell her is her intellectual property for $1 to Steve. All the information is already available on hp-lexicon.org and no lawyers seem to be going after it. In fact, J.K. (in the past) frequently endorsed the site. I would think that by giving the book the “official” moniker all would be well, and Steve could publish his compendium and commentary, still leaving J.K. free to publish her conclusive and complete encyclopedic work when she feels she’s ready.

But what do I know? Here’s the link to the podcast (may I suggest digging it first?): Pottercast.com

digg: episode, podcast


Dec 18 2007

MTG Video Podcast 2

Tags: Tollie Williams @ 1:07 pm
Leave a tip!

Well, I’m still working on getting an actual feed up. In the meantime, here is our second video and second game of Aaron and I playing Magic the Gathering - a collectible card game. In this video we utilized a much better setup, using two cameras to provide an overhead view of the cards and a view of the commentary.

Our next live game is scheduled for Wednesday night / Thursday morning at 12:01am. Watch live at tollie.org and click through to join the chat on Ustream. Find deck lists at tollie.org/files.

Here’s game two:
Aaron’s mono black vs. Tollie’s new mono red (v4). Type 2/Standard.

Stay tuned for when I post game 3, which really was exciting. In game 3, I play with a newly reconstructed 5 color Type 2 deck against Aaron using my mono red deck. The game goes right down to the wire with a big finish at the end.


Dec 18 2007

A Tale of Two Potters

Tags: Tollie Williams @ 4:12 am
Leave a tip!

So here’s the story. If you’ve followed my tweets you probably noticed that I- A, am a Harry Potter fan, and B, recently bought the 5th DVD, Order of the Phoenix but didn’t get the “Special Edition” two disc version. It was a mistake on my part, not immediately finding it in Wal-Mart and foolishly assuming (hey, I was in a hurry) that the special features had be relegated to the HD version only in some bizarre marketing move. After all, stranger things have happened.

And as was kindly pointed out to me on my Facebook wall, I was wrong. As always, there was a 2-disc version somewhere floating around; I just missed it. So with my receipt in hand I went back to Wal-Mart knowing that technically I wanted to exchange one DVD product for another and that technically violated their return policy, however, I hoped that common sense would prevail and that a manager somewhere would recognize that the product I was returning (the plain-ol’ movie) was included in the new product I wanted to exchange it for - just the new one had more stuff (for only $3 more).

Thankfully, and perhaps surprisingly today, the common sense ruled and the manager recognized the situation and agreed to the exchange. Interestingly they said they had to open the DVD there, however. At first I thought “to check the discs to make sure they’re the same?” but then it dawned on me - they were ensuring that I couldn’t return the new DVD for cash by saying it was unopened. I’m guessing this is standard operating procedure, but it struck me as surprisingly - again - as a simple common sense approach.

Here, I was originally going to write about how I also discovered that Wal-Mart has finally updated their security on product returns, based on some advise I gave them 3 years ago. OK, so they probably didn’t do it because I told them, but they did adopt a policy to plug a considerable security hole that allowed customers to steal almost any item they wanted for practically nothing, and that I pointed out 3 years ago. More on this next time.

Now, I’m going to rant. And sue Warner Brothers. Ok, maybe not but oooh, am I ticked.

Finally, with Harry Potter 5 DVD #2 - the bonus features in hand, anxious to see the deleted scenes, the audio commentary, and whatever else is there that I paid my $3 for… I load the disc into my Macbook, and viola, it loads and starts playing that awesome score! Oh, sorry. That’s not what happened. I meant… and boom! it KERNEL PANICS my Macbook. Yes, kernel panic… that Mac equivalent of a blue screen of death… the “sorry, your computer is dead, you must restart” message that I haven’t seen since I first installed my Airport Extreme card into my Powerbook some 4 years ago and it was a little loose.

In other words: I have never had a Mac “blue screen” on me except for those times when it was caused by my incomplete installation of a wireless card. Once I fixed that, 4 years later, I’ve still never seen one. … Until today, when I insert the HP5 DVD, and DVD Player tries to fire up.

I highly suspect this to be related to the Windows only nature of the DRM surrounding the “bonus” digital version. I didn’t care anything about the digital only version, because it was for Windows only. And because I already had a copy of the movie from the internet. (Ok, now I really can’t sue Warner Brothers; but hey, I bought a copy regardless, right? Yeah. Learn from this studios: piracy doesn’t hurt your sales like you want to think it does. It’s more like FREE PUBLICITY… anyways, moving on…)

So I don’t know if any data was corrupted, and of course I’ve now set DVD player to not open/start playing a DVD on insert, but you can better believe I won’t be inserting this DVD into my Macbook again until I’ve taken some time to Google this and see if others experienced the same result.

OK WB? Do you get it? digital copy = good. DRM = bad… Bad guys can EASILY get around it (bit torrent? newsgroups?), good guys only hindered by it, my Macbook- probably kernel panicked by it.

Backtrace terminated-invalid frame pointer 0xbfffd4a8
Kernel loadable modules in backtrace (with dependencies):
com.apple.driver.AppleIntelGMAX3100(5.1.8)@0×70a000->0×7c2fff
dependency: com.apple.iokit.IONDRVSupport(1.5)@0×6fc000
dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOPCIFamily(2.4)@0×60d000
dependency: com.apple.iokit.IOGraphicsFamily(1.5)@0×621000

BSD process name corresponding to current thread: DVD Player

Update: I’ve calmed down a bit and I confess, it could be completely unrelated to the DRM and more related to the fact it was the DVD players first launch on this computer, or perhaps something to do with the full screen playing. None the less, I stand by my original comments on DRM.


Dec 16 2007

new video podcast - MTG

Tags: Tollie Williams @ 5:45 am
Leave a tip!

Me and my friend Aaron decided to stream/podcast some of our Magic the Gathering games. We did it mainly for ourselves (just to see down the road) but we got really good feedback, including some suggestions to also do a tutorial podcast. And we just might! So here’s our first video. Also, after recording this we decided our video setup needed a little more than just my Macbook’s built in iSight, so we brought out another camera and used CamTwist to do a picture in picture - one with a better arial view of the cards, and another with the camera on us as we offer commentary.

Tune in Sunday night/Monday morning at 12:01AM as we play again live on Ustream. I’ll announce a podcast URL later. Live URL:


Dec 15 2007

Starting Fresh

Tags: Tollie Williams @ 8:35 pm
Leave a tip!

Hello, I’m Tollie Williams. Welcome to my blog. I’m a 25 year old from Florence, Alabama with interests in a variety of areas such as education, journalism, lifeguarding, science, and technology.

Here I share my thoughts and tweets (let’s call them micro-thoughts) along with random reviews and reflections on a plethora of topics.

For the first time in years, I’ve updated this blog without bringing the old posts along with it. The idea being that a fresh start will kick start the blogging again. We’ll see how this goes.

Feel free to leave me your comments, and thanks for visiting.