Bill Maher – Spot on buddy…
Bill Maher tells some truths. See the video on onegoodmove.
Thanks to Pharyngula for the link.
Bill Maher tells some truths. See the video on onegoodmove.
Thanks to Pharyngula for the link.
I thought I’d written about the Swedish group, The Concretes, here on the Soapbox before. But it seems not. I’ve been into the group for a few years now. For several reasons, one of which was the vocals of Victoria Bergsman. I say was, because it seems she has left the group. Not all doom and gloom though, as she has a new solo project called Taken by Trees, plus The Concretes have a new album out and Victoria Bergsman is featured on the wonderful Peter Bjorn and John track called Young Folks.
Victoria Bergsman (Click picture for larger view)
BTW: The Taken by Trees album, Open Field, is excellent. She really does have a wonderful voice.
I posted earlier about getting sun burnt in San Francisco. I was curious how far it was from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Bay Bridge. Using Google Maps to get directions it seems it is 5.9 miles. See picture below. More pictures of the route here and here.

Click picture for larger view. Route is blue line, sort of. The actual walk hugged the coast more at North Beach and Fort Mason
About 15 minutes out from landing in Belfast last night, on the way back from San Francisco via London Heathrow, the pilot comes on the intercom to say we’d be landing soon and that the weather was sunny but that the wind was from the north, As a result it would feel colder than it has been recently. Boy he was right. When I got out of the plane it was bloomin’ freezing. Spending a week in the nice San Francisco climate probably had a lot to do with it, but boy it felt cold. Got home and fired up the central heating. Then slept for 12 hours 🙂
Yeah. Fictionwise have added the Sony Reader as an option for the multiformat content they carry. So that means like Analog and Asimov’s Science Fiction are now available for the device. Excellent news.
I’ve just started using the new .Mac Web Gallery functionality. I’ll be using this for my extended picture hosting from now on. Also linked from the side bar in the right.
Should be another interesting week for weather watchers. I like weather (just in case no-ones noticed!) Another storm coming in from the Atlantic. Should be be a bit windy from Tuesday to Thursday. See the Atlantic pressure charts below for Tuesday to Thursday for the reasons why.
According to the BBC the 7th and last Harry Potter book sold 11 Million copies in 24 hours. Gosh! I have to admit that I’ve never read any of them. Not for any particular reason, I just never got round to it. Way to much other stuff to read over the last 10 years. Maybe I’ll have to read them all now the series is complete. Might actually be better to read them now as I won’t have to wait for the author to complete the series. That used to scroll my nerd big time when I was a lad 🙂 I can remember nearly going spare waiting for Julian May to complete the Pliocene Exile and Galactic Milieu series.
What happens if she gets hit by a bus!? 😉
Thankfully she didn’t (and not just so she could complete the books).
It seems that Bloomsbury and J.K. Rowling have not authorised electronic copies of the Potter books for eInk devices like the Sony Reader. This is a mistake in my opinion. Although given the sales of the series I’m not sure mistake is the term to use! In any event if I do decide to read the books then I’ll have to get cheap paperback copies so I’ve actually bought the books and maybe look for electronic copies for the Reader from alternative sources…
The question is. Are they worth reading?
UPDATE: The Loading Ready Run crew attend a Victoria HP7 launch event.
I finished God is not Great by Christopher Hitchens last week. It’s the most recent of the string of popular anti-religion books that have been published over the last year (Sam Harris, Dan Dennett, Richard Dawkins, Victor Stenger and others have trampled the grass on this path recently). many people think that Richard Dawkins is a bit strident in his anti-religions views. I don’t, for the record. BTW, why does it seem that none of the people who have responded to Dawkins’ latest book, with arguments that he is too strident or hasn’t studied some obscure theological text, that they haven’t actually read his book for comprehension (or at all)?
Anyway. If you thought Dawkins was strident you’ll either love or blanch completely at Hitchens’ latest book. This is a real polemic. Wide ranging as well. Dawkins focused on Christianity to a large extent. Hitchens covers Judaism, Hinduism, Islam, Buddhism and others. Hitchens has a writting style and background that will appeal to a more literary audience than Dawkins et al. As such it is a welcome new addition to the anti-religion canon. A good synopsis of the book is given in a lecture by Hitchens presented by the Seattle Town Hall Center for Civic Life and University Book Store.
BTW: This was the first book I read on an eInk device. A Sony Reader.
This is good news. Responding to a petition on the Number 10 website the Government have said that creationism and Intelligent Design should not be included in science lessons in UK schools. Now, lets make sure it isn’t pushed on pupils in RE classes.
This is the third book in the Destiny’s Children series. This is actually more of a sequel to Coalescent than Exultant was. As with the previous two books there are 2 story lines intertwined. One is set just after Coalescent, and includes many of the characters from that previous book, and the 2nd story is set half a million years in the future! 🙂
Interestingly the stories do come together. I really enjoyed it. So much so in fact that I resented having to do other things when I was reading it. I’ve got the 4th book in the series sitting here to read. It contains a series of short stories set over the time of the other 3 books.
2 hours 45 minutes this film lasted. You’d think that given the time available there’d be a stonking story line to present. Well it seems not. Don’t get me wrong, the effects were 1st class but things like plot, character development etc. seemed to have been left on the cutting room floor (if they made it on to film at all). I recently attended a talk given by Dr. Michael B. Johnson of Pixar about the use of IT and technology in their film making process. He emphasised that in Pixar the story line people are king. If there isn’t a good story then all the effects in the world aren’t going to rescue a film. I think the PoTC people could take this lesson on board.
Little Green Bag by George Baker. As heard in Reservoir Dogs and, more importantly, Coupling.
Click Movie to play
This blog entry by P.Z. Myers over on Pharyngula is worth reading.
i agree completely. What we have on our hands here is a battle for Enlightenment values. We will need to defend them, and that means confronting and opposing the vendors of superstition and dogma.
Comments closed for this post. Please comment over at Pharyngula if you need to respond.
And the overall intelligence quotient just went up as well. Here’s why. You shouldn’t speak ill etc.
But good riddance.
Update: SomeWateryTart sums it up well.
Update 2: Christopher Hitchens tells it like it was, indeed is in the case of the other kooks he mentions. See YouTube video below:
Just finished Exultant by Stephen Baxter. This is the 2nd book in the Destiny’s Children series, and is nominally a sequel to Coalescent. As outlined in the comments to the previous post about the 1st book Exultant isn’t really a direct sequel. It has none of the characters from the first book in it, and it is set 25,000 years in the future. However it is a sequel in the sense that the ideas in the book about humanity and their relationships are core. Exultant outlines a story against a backdrop and history that has seen humanity near extinction after Earth was occupied by aliens; the overthrow of the occupation; and then the expansion of humans throughout the Galaxy over many millennia with wars against other aliens on the way. One war against the Xeelee aliens has been going on so long that it has become the norm and has been a stalemate at a front near the centre of the Galaxy for 3,000 years. Exultant tells the story of the humans engaged in the war on the front (and the appalling attrition they endure – 10 billion killed every year). There is a focus on a few individuals to carry the story forward. It also intertwines their story with the efforts of one of the ruling class from Earth to find a way to end the 3,000 year stalemate and find a way to end (win!!) the war. I really liked it. It’s a good hard sci-fi story that spans the galaxy, whilst at the same time getting down and dirty with the combat troops and spacecraft pilots engaged in battle.
Some of the themes that are developed in Coalescent are also in this book. Such as the way human communities can develop a goal orientated existence or as hive-like structures over time to help ensure the survival of the species as a whole. This is evident to a minor extent in the way the soldiers who are bred, born and die for the war deep in the heart of the Galaxy bond together in their fight for humanity (even though they have never, and will never visit Earth), and in a major way in the eusocial colonies that are glimpsed in the book (the archive on Mars).
Just finished Coalescent by Stephen Baxter. I’ve had this sitting on my bookshelf for a while *. After recently rereading the brilliant Hellstrom’s Hive by Frank Herbert, I was thinking about a sequel to the Herbert book. I’d love to read more about the human colony in HH. What did the Government do about the hive and Project 40? What happened when the first swarm left the hive? How did the Outsiders react to the swarm? What happened to the normal humans as the number of hives increased? Did the hives take over all the Earth? Were there conflicts between hives in the future? Did any hives raid others and make slaves of the drones (like insects do)? Did colonies spread out into space in the far future? And so on. There is a lot of scope to tell more stories in the Hellstrom Universe I think.
So I did a search to see if Frank Herbert had ever talked about a sequel. And turned up a Wikipedia page on Stephen Baxter’s Coalescent. The Wikipedia entry references HH in the See Also section of the page. By no means is Coalescent a sequel to HH. But it does have at its core a similar idea. Both focus on a colony of humans who have built habitats underground over time and as a result of selective breeding have adapted and evolved in a different way. HH is a harder edged sci-fi story than Coalescent. The latter has two stories that come together at the end. One of set in modern times and outlines a mans search for a twin-sister he only recently discovered existed. The other tells the story of a child, then women, who grew up in post-Roman Britain and of her fight to preserve her family. A fight that ends up in Rome itself and the founding of the underground colony when Rome is sacked. The 2 story lines do come together at the end. I really enjoyed it. Recommended. I’ve got the 3 follow-up books on order (in fact they tried to deliver them when i was out, so I’ll have to go collect them from the post office).
I also found an interview with Kevin Anderson, who is working on the Dune prequels and sequels with Brian Herbert, that he would like to explore the HH universe at some point. Can’t find it at present to link to it.
* Actually I’ve got just over 60 (yes sixty!) books at present that I’ve bought over the last year that I want to read. There are 22 popular science books, 36 fiction and about 10 in business, atheism and stuff. That’s going to be my recreation over the summer. So expect a few posts in the Books section here!!
It’s 4 years since my first post on the subject of testicular cancer. Like last year, I forgot about the anniversary. Which is still a good thing! The only legacy of the TC are the yearly check ups. Next one due in November 2007.
In a complete rip off of the question asked at the end of the BBC Radio 4 show Desert Island Discs, were the participant is asked what book they would take to the island with them, I’m going to post a few of my favourite books. Incidentally, on the programme they give The Bible and The Complete Works of Shakespeare for the island. At least they’ll be useful for kindling to get the fire going. [Update: See Note 1]
One book i would definitely want to take to the island with me would be Hellstrom’s Hive by Frank Herbert of Dune fame. I’ve just noticed when searching Amazon for a link to put in this post that there is a new edition being published on April 7th. Cool. My copy is about 20 years old and could do with being replaced. I’m a bit reluctant to put too much info here about the plot as it’ll be a spoiler for anyone who wants to read it. Suffice it to say it’s a brilliant story that deals with a human population that have decided to live separately from the rest of humanity and have a society that is modelled on social insects. Which is fine until the Government starts to take an interest…
Hellstrom’s Hive would be one of the books I’d take to the island. Others to follow. Feel free to say what books you would take in the comments.
Note 1: Andy Kershaw was on Desert Island Discs this week and he rejected the offer of The Bible and Complete Works of Shakespeare. Good man.