An introduction
Why do I clutter up the internet with this stuff at all? Mainly because I'm trying to get into the habit of displaying as much as possible of what I'm doing in public. Also, Blogger is a decent interface for a notebook
Monday, June 21, 2010
Sunday, June 20, 2010
notify-send
To display a notification on the desktop from the command-line:
# apt-get install libnotify-bin
$ notify-send "hello world"
obv. "from the command-line" really means "from a script", unless you're in some Evil Dead situation of independently-mobile hands
[reason for looking: trying to get xmonad+dmenu to notify me when I mistype a command, rather than just failing silently]
markdown + vim
Since I'm spectacularly dim, it never occured to me that I can run markdown from within vim. Select your text, run !markdown, and wham! bam! everything is replaced by its technicolor HTML twin.
keyloggers on linux
I've been trying to find (for entirely legit reasons*) a decent keylogger for linux. The pickings are surprisingly slim - as one upstart option puts it:
Novice users, however, are usually limited to a narrow set of the following tools: lkl from 2005, uberkey, which appears dead, THC-vlogger, made by a renowned group of hackers, and PyKeylogger. All these tools have their pros and cons. Lkl, for example, sometimes abnormally repeats keys and its keymap configuration is rather awkward for a range of users. Uberkey, which is just over a hundred lines of code, also often repeats keys and what is worse, it makes your mouse move abruptly, loosing any sense of control. PyKeylogger, on the other hand, while very feature rich, only works in X environment. Finally, there is vlogger, ...umm..., about which I cannot say anything specifically, only that it is receiving low score all around the web and it only logs shell sessions.
I'd add that lkl managed to crash my system within 5 minutes of using it, requireing a hard reboot to get things back up. So I'm currently deep in thinking surely it can't be *that* hard?
- reason: I find it useful to have statistics on my activity. Counting keypresses is pretty useless as a direct way of measuring productive work -- but it's a pretty good early indicator of when I'm getting too sleepy or too hyper.
Monday, June 14, 2010
Habermas and Europe — Crooked Timber
A very considerable part of Habermas’ intellectual project over the last few years has been exactly to come up with a form of patriotism which is distinct from nationalism. Habermas dubs this “constitutional patriotism” – and while it is not intended to overcome existing forms of nationalism, it is intended to temper them, and to make them non-exclusive.
& back to Henry F as himself:
he moment when (if) an actual European polity will be created, will not be the moment when European publics, led by their elites, realize that they are actually Europeans. It will be the moment at which self-interested political parties, rather than arguing and picking petty squabbles about whether ‘we’ should all be Europeans or not, start arguing and picking petty squabbles about what kind of Europeans ‘we’ should be.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Like Washington's go-go, Baltimore Club exists as a regional sound relatively unknown outside the mid-Atlantic. The music blends the repetitive boom of house or techno with hip-hop's aggressive posturing and full-frontal frankness (one of the most popular B-More singles is DJ Booman's "Watch Out for the Big Girl"). What B-More lacks in subtlety it overpowers with shouted hooks, uncleared samples and chest-rattling bass patterns that induce dance-floor euphoria. Baltimore Club allows hip-hop heads to get their rave on.
Still can't figure out if I like bmore at all, or if it's just Donna Summer. Suspect the latter
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Amazon CloudFront HTTPS delivery can be used to transfer inherently sensitive objects to your users, to avoid security warnings that some browsers present when viewing a mix of HTTP and HTTPS content, or for anything else that needs to be encrypted when transferred. [email from Amazon today, announcing the new service]
Yes, I know that every step along the way here is reasonable. It just feels wrong, y'know?
$ dpkg -S filename
e.g:
$ dpkg -S /usr/bin/lintian
lintian: /usr/bin/lintian
A long article in the New York Review of Books considers the growing division betwen Zionists and liberal Jews, both in Israel and the US. It touches on the diaspora politics overall, but also connects to the impact of personal experience, memory, and generational divisions:
When he probed the students’ views of Israel, he hit up against some firm beliefs. First, “they reserve the right to question the Israeli position.” These young Jews, Luntz explained, “resist anything they see as ‘group think.’” They want an “open and frank” discussion of Israel and its flaws. Second, “young Jews desperately want peace.” When Luntz showed them a series of ads, one of the most popular was entitled “Proof that Israel Wants Peace,” and listed offers by various Israeli governments to withdraw from conquered land. Third, “some empathize with the plight of the Palestinians.” When Luntz displayed ads depicting Palestinians as violent and hateful, several focus group participants criticized them as stereotypical and unfair, citing their own Muslim friends.
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Phantom MEP expenses
the European Parliament has decided to give the MEPs only "observer" status from next year.
The deal will mean they can draw full salaries and allowances at an annual cost of over £6 million without any legislative duties to carry out.
The 18 MEPs, from 12 EU countries, including Britain's West Midlands region, will be paid more than £76,000 a year, with staff and office allowances worth £210,000.
[That is, I was under the impression that the Phanton MEPs weren't being paid. As usual, there's a strong possibility that I'm just totally wrong]
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Nina Power
That the height of supposed female emancipation coincides so perfectly with consumerism is a miserable index of a politically desolate time. Much contemporary feminism, particularly in its American formulation, doesn't seem too concerned about this coincidence. This short book is partly an attack on the apparent abdication of any systematic political thought on the part of today's positive, up-beat feminists. It suggests alternative ways of thinking about transformations in work, sexuality and culture that, while seemingly far-fetched in the current ideological climate, may provide more serious material for future feminism.
Have just ordered the book (and narrowly restrained myself from simultaneously ordering Militant Dysphoria); massively excited to see if it's as good as Capitalist Realism.
Monday, May 24, 2010
latest from k-punk
"Azzellini and Ressler's daring hypothesis is that Latin America is not some atavism, a residual space yet to be subsumed into global capital, but the vanguard - the first area of the world to adopt neoliberalism and the first to seriously propose an alternative to it."
I'm not sure I'd count this as daring, quite; the collective ability of Latin American populations to see through, around and beyond capitalism is a wonder to behold.
Also:
it is important at this point to stress the aesthetic dimension of capitalist realism, its echoes of socialist realism's disdain for abstraction and montage, and its similar preference for the homely, the populist, the familiar: that which pushes already-existing emotional triggers.
This is in superficial conflict with the usual understanding of neophilia capitalism in general, and within the culture industry in particular. But at a deeper level, I suspect it really is true; much surface change, but nothing fundamental.
Labour party more lost than ever
"After so many years of ever tightening welfare entitlements, and with the City elite seemingly as untouchable as ever, to focus any argument about distributional justice on welfare claimants is borderline obscene."
Somebody at Crooked Timber adds:
Roy Hattersley quite rightly observed that Labour used to appeal to (or reflect) the best instincts of working people: New Labour appeals to their worst. but that’s a direct consequence of their rightwing economics: not that they have to go with horrid social politics (often they don’t) but if you’re making your pitch to working people and you’re not appealing to their better instincts, which are going to be egalitarian, you’re going to have to appeal to their resentments instead.
And another; I'd be interested to know if there's any hard data to back this one up:
It’s a generalisation, but there are a lot of working class people who would be reluctant to move even 20-30 miles away from their home for a job – their support networks and roots are in a particular place and they want to remain there if at all possible. They thus have no personal benefit from the possibility of being able to go and work in Portugal or Germany. It is predominantly the middle classes, with a culture of moving away from their community for education or work, who can take advantage of this kind of labour mobility.
And one final comment:
Clinton and Obama. Blair and Schoeder. Why do the left parties of the developed world keep selecting leaders and platforms that betray the economic positions that have always been the most characteristic concern of the left? It seems to be happening in different contexts. Is there a unified field theory of why Labour cannot seem to get to the Left of Brown
I don't quite believe it's just the left. Sarkozy constantly outflanks the PS on the left, although he mixes it up with plenty of right-wing populism. IMO it's less about the leaders (all leaders batter the fringes of their parties, as electoral necessity), but the weakness of the wider left. There was no serious resistance to Blair.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
The Big Fat Spiders of Political Paranoia � Exit Zero
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
work hard, stay awake, fail well, hang with smart people, shed bullshit, say “maybe,” focus on action, and always always commit yourself to a bracing daily mixture of all the courage, honesty, and information you need to do something awesome
Self-tracking
The subject is aelf-tracking, automatically gathering data about your health, mood, daily activities, storing it in a form which allows you later to analyze it and unpick the interactions between aspects of your daily life:
A hundred years ago, a bold researcher fascinated by the riddle of human personality might have grabbed onto new psychoanalytic concepts like repression and the unconscious. These ideas were invented by people who loved language. Even as therapeutic concepts of the self spread widely in simplified, easily accessible form, they retained something of the prolix, literary humanism of their inventors. From the languor of the analyst’s couch to the chatty inquisitiveness of a self-help questionnaire, the dominant forms of self-exploration assume that the road to knowledge lies through words. Trackers are exploring an alternate route. Instead of interrogating their inner worlds through talking and writing, they are using numbers. They are constructing a quantified self.
The project most interesting to me was one of the simplest, the moodscape mood-tracking system. And even there, it's less for the interface itself than for the list of mood elements, which I may well incorporate into a spreadsheet and skip the online elements entirely.
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Equality for economists
male-female-diff.PNG (PNG Image, 303x673 pixels) - Scaled (86%)
AG on the burqa
"Will a surveillance team stake out the Gare du Nord or the Sunday market at Cergy? Will Eric Besson and Brice Hortefeux accompany the flics as they lay hands on the offending 'agent of Islamism?' Will she be taken for a garde �vue and, in the name of equality of women and public security, be stripped of her robes and headgear, searched, photographed, and displayed on the evening news? Will she be hauled into court and required to appear with face uncovered before her ermine-clad judges? Will she then express gratitude to the state for emancipating her from her oppressive culture?"
Hunter S Thompson
Even Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas is, Duke keeps telling us, a search for the American Dream. The intrepid heroes purgatory their torsos, strain themselves to the point of breaking, and through this mortification uncover the nature of their world. The apparent nihilism is the aftermath of broken dreams, the realisation that the chnage which had appeared to be beginning in California in the 60s had come to a juddering halt:
[in the mid-Sixties] there was madness in any direction, at any hour. If not across the Bay, then up the Golden Gate or down 101 to Los Altos or La Honda....You could strike sparks anywhere. There was a fantastic universal sense that whatever we were doing was right, that we were winning.And that, I think, was the handle—that sense of inevitable victory over the forces of Old and Evil. Not in any mean or military sense; we didn’t need that. Our energy would simply prevail. There was no point in fighting—on our side or theirs. We had all the momentum; we were riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave.
So now, less than five years later, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West, and with the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high—water mark—that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back.
This sense of disappointed idealism, and the quest to regain it, appears much more strongly in Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail. his report from George McGovern's 1972 presidential campaign. He's striking in his affection for the young staffes and volunteers fighting for McGovern from within the system, even when their positions are far more centrist and pragmatic than anything Thompson would himself countenance.
Saturday, May 15, 2010
oh, just shut up about Aristotle already
Again there's an ancient Indian parallel to be drawn here, and again I'm too wooly-minded to make the case. But here is an article giving the basics of Nyaya ogic, and the classic example is easy enough to follow:
There is fire on a hill (called Pratijna, required to be proved)
Because there is smoke there (called Hetu, reason)
Wherever there is fire, there is smoke (called Udaharana, i.e. example)
There is smoke on the hill (called Upanaya, reaffirmation)
Therefore there is fire on the hill (called Nigamana, conclusion)
In brief: analogy good, mmkay?
And so to bed
Robot theology
* bear in mind, this entire concept remains somewhat new and alien to me; I'm almost certainly butchering some carefully-considered principle. In all honesty, I don't much care.
** Doubtless you could concoct other arguments for robot inferiority, perhaps arguing that they weren't created directly by good, and so are merely a shadow of a shadow of his Goodness. After all, Christians have plenty of experience justifying racism; justifying discrimination against machines would be an order of magnitude easier.
Science Envy
This is nothing new. As their name suggests, the social sciences have been built up by wave after wave of this imitation throughout the 20th century. Or even further back. The scholastic theology of medieval Christianity was largely a centuries-long case of 'logic envy'. Theologians discovered Aristotelian logic in the 12th century, and proceeded to apply it to the bible in mind-numbing detail.
The indian case is even more interesting. Here the discipline to be emulated was grammar, then far more advanced than any other branch of knowledge (and pretty damn impressive even in a modern context). Grammatical terminology and forms of argument cross over into most other disciplines.
Book: The Night Sessions
MacLeod's science fiction is, among much else, a vehicle for satire on the preset. Here it's most entertaining when confined to small details: Creationist theme parks, for example, or gangster-ridden "Capitalism with Russian Characteristics". His broader swipes on religion mostly fall flat. Towards the end there is a particularly ludicrous conversion as a True Believer is confronted with the contradictions of the bible* -- a shaky plot device on the biblical literalism which a certain kind of atheist shares with only the most extreme of protestant sects.
The science fiction elements are largely window-dressing, with the exception of the robots. Macleod's robots are superior not only in strength and intelligence, but in their ability to understand human emotion. They unnerve people, even though they are no longer given humanoid form to avoid this very problem. Police robots are loyal and devoted sidekicks to their masters, and the strength of this bond is one of the assumptions driving the plot. And, finally, there's the question of whether robots could be affected by religion.
These are all interesting questions, but the pace of the book prevents MacLeod exploring them. The Night Sessions is fundamentally a thriller and a police procedural, and theories of robotic personhood have to take a back-seat to that.
* ETA: later, it occurs to me that the nature of this is partly a comment on the human/robot comparison. The human is defeated in the same way robots are according to B-movie cliche: show them a contradiction, and wait for them to blow a fuse. Meanwhile the robots, emotionally advanced far beyond human level, have no trouble on this point.
Book: Generation X
Like all his books, it's set in an all-too-real world. The cast are young Americans, raised on marketing and branded aspiration, with every possible gestrue of rejection, independence or individuality already anticipated and commodified by the marketing industry. The plot developments are incidental; the action is in the stories and fantasies of the Generation Xers, mostly of where they find love and beauty within small moments of their lives:
"inspired by my meetings of the Alcoholics Anonymous organization, I instigated a policy of storytelling in my own life, a policy of "bedtime stories," which Dag, Claire and I share among ourselves. It's simple: we come up with stories and we tell them to each other. The only rule is that we're not allowed to interrupt, just like in AA, and at the end we're not allowed to criticize. This noncritical atmosphere works for us because the three of us are so tight assed about revealing our emotions. A clause like this was the only way we could feel secure with each other."
Coupland's happy-ever-after endpoint, here as elsewhere, is for this circle of friends to find a shared language, a common aesthetic in their savviness and semi-rejection of the world, and so an ability to share their perfect moments. The problem is that they aren't really "tight assed about revealing [their] emotions". Once the storytelling device clicks into place, they're all able to talk in the style that is Coupland's trademark, cannily picking apart the brands and marketed aspirations from which they've built their inner lives. The emotional fluency isn't developed over the book; it's present from the start, as plot device.
Not only is the endpoint present from the start, it's also deeply unsatisfying in itself. We can't leave any mark on the world, he seems to be saying, so should content ourselves with occasional brief moments of beauty and communication. This is both accurate, and sufficient reason to fling yourself off the nearest cliff.
Books on Italy
Paul Ginsborg, Italy and Its Discontents, a history of Italy 1980-2001 (following an earlier book covering the period to 1980):
the 1980s were years of "cynicism, opportunism and fear" – the conditions in which corruption could flourish, and from which Berlusconi would benefit.
Much of the blame lies with the Communist Party. Rather than serve as gatekeeper, filtering Autonomy's contributions, the party co-operated in the suppression of groups to its left. The result was a weakened political system, the left avid for respectability while the right operated without constraints. If the Italian left is to regain the initiative, it will need to open itself again to influences like those of the autonomists.
. CT comment:
I’d recommend anyone interested in post-war Italy to read Ginsborg; his previous book on Italy from Liberation to the 1980s is also excellent, and his short book on Berlusconi is good. Ginsborg’s weak spot is that he doesn’t devote much attention to the conspiratorial side of politics. In that respect David Lane’s book on Berlusconi (the book of the Economist feature) is surprisingly good – he turns over quite a few stones. Philip Willan’s The Puppetmasters is the conspiracist account of post-war Italian politics in English; God only knows how accurate it is, but it’s extremely suggestive. The Dark Heart of Italy… meh. I enjoyed it (Tobias Jones writes well), but it’s a bit Orientalist. [links added]
SeaIceland
Perhaps this desired expansion of globalisation across the factors of production will lead to the development of other havens analogous to tax havens. A return, if you like, to safe havens as pirate islands, refuges for the stateless and hte outlawed.
Or, as with Iceland, we could have 'free speech havens', outposts where data can be sent and stored, and can sally forth to break through the restrictions of established nations. The ideal espoused by Cryptonomicon and Sealand, finally brought to fruition.
Kings is better off dead
In retrospect, I can't quite understand my anticipatory excitement. Bible dramatizations are hardly new and, like anything else, have no guarantee of turning out well. That's even without the problem of other people's interpretations of stories with which you already have some emotional relationship.
Snippets of music
Numerology - These New Puritans (who really, really want to know what your favourite number is.)
That's...surprisingly aggressive. I can kind of imagine being cornered in a dark alley by a gang of numerologists (triads?) and given this grilling. Somewhere between Tarantino and Monty Python. On a related topic, I give you a number romance. [do have a poke around on that site; I suspect at least some of it would appeal]
Fifty On Our Foreheads - White Lies (who are on a spaceship to the sun, and all going to die.)
ah, there's nothing quite like an inexplicable science fiction dystopia. Questionable Content at one point had a motivational poster saying "Work harder, or we will fly you into the sun". Now I know what they meant :)
Leechwife - Rasputina (cheating, as I already gave this to someone else, but on the other hand it really is intensely passionate about leeches)
I want to slip this into a school/university careers service, see if anybody takes up the suggestion.
Johnny On The Monorail - The Buggles (who are surprisingly intense for a song from that long ago. you know, about a monorail.)
oh, this is _fantastic_. I've spent most of my underground journeys this year in a state of inexplicable temporary bliss; now I have a soundtrack for it. Certainly my favourite of the five.
My Boy Builds Coffins - Florence & the Machine
Nice. I'd somehow avoided hearing any Florence & the Machine; I like. Had thought "hell, getting passionate about coffins, that's hardly unusual". Turns out it s.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
LibCon
As for Labour: this is the only time I can remember being on the side of the Labour leadership, against belligerent backbenchers. Particularly irritating were the attacks on the SNP -- a party who, even if not in a coalition, would be relied on by lib-lab in any vote of confidence. Tribalism is a double-edged sword, I guess: good when aimed at the Tories, hopeless when when directed at the SNP. Difference: the Conservatives deserve.
Saturday, May 1, 2010
George Scialabba
Beyond the world of farce, there's always a bubbling undercurrent of non-professional intellectuals, independent scholars by choice or implication, sometimes producing work of staggering quality but entirely lacking in professional ambition. Over the years, they build up devoted, if rarely large, audiences -- people cutting their essays out of whatever small magazine they can get published in, stashing away otherwise-forgotten gems, like the cluster of music geeks hovering around that promising local band which never quite gets a CD out. The internet makes it much easier, of course.
George Scialabba seems to be one of them, according to this review by Scott McLemee.
It also, incidentally, provides a more positive view of Opus Dei, as a form of social innovation more suited to the young and devote than traditional orders:
"For several hundred years," he told me, "a small minority of Italian/French/Spanish adolescent peasant or working-class boys -- usually the sternly repressed or (like me) libido-deficient ones -- have been devout, well-behaved, studious... the bright ones become Jesuits; the more modestly gifted or mystically inclined become Franciscans..."
Instead, he was drawn into Opus Dei -- a group trying, as he puts it, "to make a new kind of religious vocation possible, combining the traditional virtues and spiritual exercises with a professional or business career."
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Red Toiry
what meaning they might have for people on sink estates or in sprawling, ethnically diverse conurbations, like those of the Midlands and the North, is beyond comprehension. Like his literary predecessors, Blond, when he thinks of England, sees mainly its church-spire-haunted countryside.
Well, yes, but so what? If Blond can get rural tory do-gooders actually doing good rather than tut-tutting over the neighbours, I'm all in favour. Let's make a more radical urban variant, and build an odd-couple alliance of urban anarchists and rural reactionaries.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
GTD repeating
This largely depends on what's happenign in my life; there are long stretches where I only need to deal with one or two large projects. Since GTD is optimized for managers needing to track a large number of small tasks, it's not much use for me. But then live spins out of control, and I return to David Allen for some imitation of control.
Within GTD, the big problem is that it doesn't handle big tasks very well. Often a project consists of "Do this. Then do it another 850 times, over the next 3 moths". Sure, I can keep adding each chunk to my next actions, but it doesn't really help. What I need is something to remind me that I need to work on the task, show and recognize the work I'm putting into it, and otherwise keep out of the way.
So, I took a look round online to figure out how to deal with the problem. Turns out there isn't one; everybody has bolted her own system onto it. Sucks, really it does.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Kings (U.S. TV series) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kings is a television drama series ....loosely based on the Biblical story of King David, but set in a kingdom that culturally and technologically resembles the present-day United States
Long-grain pontiff
So pop, despite itself, became arty. English society, high on the new convenience foods, allowed English culture to develop a kind of boil-in-the-bag popism as the successor to the beans on toast of social realism. [80]
[slightly less entertaining on re-reading, when I realise that "boil-in-the-bag popism" probably means music rather than the Bishop of Rome]
Saturday, April 24, 2010
It’s refreshing to read a memoirist so dedicated to telling a version of her life that is more about ideas than bedpost notches, though sad to think that only someone like Smith could push this past her editors. The New Irony: only a rock star has the moxie to be a prude now.
Naturally, though, I'm more inspired by what the other Sasha finds in it:
It’s a love story, in every sense; not only an account of a love affair, but of a connection that goes beyond sexuality and familiarity into true understanding and devotion....
he pair were the cutting edge of late 60s and early 70s creative New York, and the energy and belief and idealism surrounding them practically wafts off the page.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Widows
Dans la France de l’Ancien Régime, le droit des femmes évoluait selon leur statut social et les phases de leur cycle de vie ; les veuves étant, par exemple, plus libres que les femmes mariées qui restaient soumises à l’autorité des maris. Toutefois, la charge qui leur incombait de s’occuper et de nourrir la famille leur a donné un accès au marché.
What I can't figure out is how much this peculiarly, perversely privileged position of widows was general, how much just a situation which enabled a few personally strong widows to run with it, while the majority ended up in much more difficult circumstances, practically and socially.
[as is probably obvious, this is mainly a marker for a topic I find interesting, but which has presumably already been the subject of multiple books, and which I don't anticipate having anything new to say about]
something stranger still is happening in The Election That Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Every day in this country, two big forces artificially drag the British government way to the right of the British people, making it enact policies that benefit a small, rich elite at the expense of the rest. We are not supposed to notice this, never mind try to change it. Yet suddenly, in this election, those forces have been exposed.