Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Brilliant 'Get Smart'

Don Adams, 82; Fought Evil and Got Laughs as Agent 86 on 'Get Smart' - Los Angeles Times:

"It was the height of the Cold War and the James Bond spy craze when 'Get Smart' debuted on NBC in 1965 with Adams as Maxwell Smart, Agent 86 for CONTROL, a Washington-based counterintelligence agency."

One of the greatest satirical series on TV. When I was an undergrad student, my roommates and I would watch reruns every night at 11:30 after coming home from the library. A comedic classic!

DVD Fight Intensifies

DVD Fight Intensifies: Microsoft and Intel to Back Toshiba Format - New York Times

Yikes! Another format war!

Does this mean we'll all have to buy two formats of DVD player for the next generation of discs?

Or, like with DVD-R and DVD+R, will every machine just support two standards and we choose on which version of the disc we buy?

Is the world we live in destined to offer a confusing array of choices? A few people figure out what they like best, and the rest of us that really don't know the difference and don't care, just follow?

I guess that's the price of not having a world dictator. Wait, wasn't that supposed to be Bill Gates? Let's see if he can make everyone else to follow his lead.

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

How 'Bout Those Bruins?!!

After Fast Start, Future Looks Bright - Los Angeles Times:

I don't care that the three overwhelming wins came against hapless oponents. The important thing is that the team believes in itself. They're winning the "Inner Game of Football" which is really what separates champions from also-rans. So when they face some quality opponents, they'll believe in themselves and keep playing hard, and maybe good things will happen.

Plus, it's a lot more fun to watch teams that are excited and think they are going to win. That's the one wrap against Terry Donahue. Though he built a quality program that always did very well, they never made it to the pinnacle. And you got the feeling that no matter how good they were, that they were always worried...that he was always worried.

"The last time UCLA started 3-0 was 2001 and the Bruins won their first six, reaching a No. 4 national ranking, before losing four in a row and finishing 7-4"

Now the start to that season was a lot of fun. Until the wheels fell off. A few good years under Bob Toledo and Cade McNown, though hampered by a porous defense and ultimately succumbing to scandals and team bickering.

Sunday, September 25, 2005

Yorkshire Tales

Last year we started making Sunday evenings a family reading time. After having our normal Sunday evening meal of leftovers, we each pick a chapter from a current book we are reading and read them to each other.

I've been reading chapters from a James Herriot book, "Dog Stories." What a great storyteller he is! His stories are charming, humorous and interesting, transporting us to a different time and place - where he served as a countryside veterinarian in northern England 50 years ago.

My wife and I got hooked on his books 20 years ago when we were newlyweds and didn't have a TV. We used to regularly read his stories to each other in bed at night. Now we are having the fun of passing on these dear stories to our two boys.

They are also very human stories, profiling human character traits in their interaction with animals, and inspiring us to be better people.

Friday, September 23, 2005

Making the World Better

An interesting observation by this columnist on differences between the "Left" and the "Right." He says the Left focuses more on making society better, while the Right focuses more on making people better.

"Because Judeo-Christian values have always understood that the world is made better by making people better. On occasion, of course, a great moral cause must be joined. For example, it was religious Christians who led the fight to abolish slavery in Europe and America. But in general, the way to a better society is through the laborious and completely non-glamorous project of making each person more honest, more courageous, more decent, more likely to commit to another person in marriage, more likely to devote more time to raising children, and so on."

If that is true, then is there any more important work than spiritual growth and character formation?

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Calculate Your Life Expectancy

This will get you thinking about how long you've got, which ought to get you thinking about what you will do with it!

"Teach us to make the most of our time,
so that we may grow in wisdom."
Psalm 90:12

I Love My Gmail

This article gives some tips for how to use your gmail account as a private online journal.

I've signed up for several gmail accounts this year, and I love them for the fact that:

1. I can use separate accounts for different projects - all the email for a particular conference I'm planning is linked to one account
2. I can use accounts as online filing cabinets. They are effectively my email backups. I use a different email account, but forward a copy of every email to my gmail account, where it will be stored for a long time (currently 2.6 GB of free storage!)
3. This article suggests using your gmail account to write notes to yourself. Great idea!
4. They come with SSL connection for connecting to your computer's email client, giving more security/privacy than other email services.

writing sensible emails

Here's a helpful article on getting your emails read and answered.

Interesting observation: only 3 kinds of work email - inform, request information, or request action.

My favorite advice: state up front what the purpose is for your email.

Lots of good other tips.

Monday, September 19, 2005

Bridget Redux

I thoroughly enjoyed the original Bridget Jones movie. Charming and witty, it was a funny and touching look at the life of urban singles.

The sequel is an excuse for spending more time with Bridget, but with no compelling story or new character development. It was reminiscent of Ocean's Twelve, a movie I really disliked, as a vehicle for tagging along with the characters. I didn't dislike Bridget II, but it wasn't very meaningful or even very enjoyable.

Da Vinci Dollars

Just another reminder of how out of touch Hollywood producers can be.

This article explores how the makers of the "Da Vinci Code" movie are trying to tone down its anti-Catholic message. They even explore using the movie to attract religious attenders:

"The phrase I heard used several times was 'Passion dollars'; they want to try to get 'The Passion' dollars if they can," said Ms. Nicolosi, referring to her conversations about the film. "They're wrong," she added. "It's sacrilegious, irreligious. They're thinking they can ride the 'Passion' wave with this. And I said, 'Are you kidding me?' "

The book has been hugely popular, and I'm sure the movie will be also. But it's amazing to think the producers believe they can tap into a religious audience. And it's scary to think that people are getting their view of religion from this novel, which is ludicrous as far as its premise, and patronizingly polemic in its presentation (all the smartest people know the truth about this, it's just the simpletons who are kept ignorant by the wiles of the church).

Searching for Intimacy

Is blogging a kind of reverse-voyeurism?

Why do people want to publicize their intimate details, like their finances written about in this article on bloggers revealing their money matters?

I think it's a hunger for intimacy in a world where we've got more relationships and more communication than ever, but less-fulfilling connections with other human beings.

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Top 10 Tech Products Ever

Here's CNET's list of the products that have changed our lives. #1? The iPod (2001)

Hard to believe it's only been 4 years, they seem ubiquitous!

#2 is Tivo, which will make its debut in Singapore in December - though run by the cable company and coming with a hefty premium.

What would make your list??? Wow, hard to narrow down on what doesn't qualify - TV, radio, computer, phonograph, electricity, lightbulb?

My list for the past 25 years:
(items that have most influenced our lives)

1. Personal computer (1987)
2. VCR (1981)
3. Cell phone (1999)
4. CD player (1985)
5. Digital camera (2003)
6. PDA (1999)
7. iPod (2004)
8. Camcorder (1985)
9. Playstation (2002)
10. Gameboy (1997)