Monthly Archive for August, 2006

Mon
Aug
28
2006

NPR on Buffy studies 0 cmts

A fitting christening for my new cable modem — listening to an NPR report on academic studies of _Buffy the Vampire Slayer_ on the occasion of the show’s finale back in 2003. Not sure how I missed this report when it was first broadcast, but at least I found it now. Good job, little cable modem! :)

Common interview questions (and answers) 0 cmts

Common interview questions (and answers)

Sat
Aug
26
2006

Life on Mars 1 cmts

Detective Chief Inspector Sam Tyler is 100% a product of the “new” school of British policing — he follows the trail of evidence, reads suspects their rights, and leaves personal feelings out of the mix. Just as an important murder case goes bad and Sam’s detective girlfriend is plunged into danger, he gets hit by a car and wakes up to find himself on the same street, but in a different time. Is he in a coma? Gone mad? Or did he really somehow get transported to the year 1973? People here seem to know him as Detective Inspector Sam Tyler, recently transferred from Criminal Investigation Department in Hyde, and he certainly has the credentials and outfit to match.

!>/files/2006/08/annie_sam_11.jpg(Life on Mars)! In addition to having to deal with being an anachronism in the 70s, Sam must also learn to work with a different kind of police force, one where hunches are more important than evidence, getting bad people off the streets more important than respecting suspect’s rights, and a little bit of sexism and corruption are just par for the course. Through his constant clashes with his new boss, DCI Gene Hunt, a hardened lawman, Sam brings a little bit of modern policing technique back to the 70s while learning some valuable lessons of his own. After all, the 70s is not just an age where modern forensic techniques like DNA tests and computerized fingerprint databases don’t exist, its that plus a time of great social upheavel, changing gender roles, new societal norms, labor unrest, war, and scandal. Not only is Sam a fish out of water who has to relearn a profession he thought he had down cold, he is also confronted with a bigger investigation, and one not so easily solved — finding out how he got here, and why, and how he will get home.

_Life on Mars_ is a great concept, a police drama with just a dash of science fiction, and if works because the writers are very keen to get things right, representing both the fun and the very serious sides of the 70s, the actors are marvelous, and the stories are compelling. Sure there are a few repeating themes that drive me batty, and sure many of the British cultural references fly right over the heads of we Yanks, but the show is still an excellent watch and, beause its a BBC drama, there are only 8 episodes to get through in series one.

Want another reason to watch? David E. Kelley (Ally McBeal, Boston Public) is producing an American version. Watch the original first, and then see what setting the story in a US context does to it. :)

Thu
Aug
24
2006

“Miranda” warnings around the world 0 cmts

In an episode of _Life on Mars_ I watched a few days ago, Sam Tyler arrested a suspect and began reciting the warning mandated by the UK’s Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, before correcting himself with the proper 1973 warning, which begins, “you have the right to remain silent.” Interested in what the new warning is, I looked it up on the ever-useful _Wikipedia_ and found a few interesting variations. I like the UK one’s phrasing best (even if it might serve to abolish the right to silence), what do you think?

United States:

bq. You have the right to remain silent. If you give up that right, anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney and to have an attorney present during questioning. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided to you at no cost. During any questioning, you may decide at any time to exercise these rights, not answer any questions, or make any statements. Do you understand the rights I have just read to you? With these rights in mind, do you wish to speak with me?

Australia:

bq. “You are not obliged to say or do anything unless you wish to do so, but whatever you say or do may be used in evidence. Do you understand?”

United Kingdom:

bq. You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention, when questioned, something which you later rely on in court. Anything you do say may be given in evidence.

Many other countries have variations that include statements about the charges and maximum length of custody.

More IRR Marines to be ordered back to Iraq — again 0 cmts

_LA Times_: “You can send Marines back for a third or fourth time, but you have to understand you are destroying their lives,” said Paul Rieckhoff, founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. “It is not what they intended the all-volunteer military to look like.”

Battle plans make way for PowerPoint 0 cmts

Instead of complex battle plans with specific outcomes and contingencies, war planning has regressed to bullet points thanks to the use of PowerPoint in the Rumsfled-headed DoD.

Tue
Aug
22
2006

Kids Say the Darndest Things in Their Blogs 0 cmts

I don’t think kids are “exploit[ing] a generational disconnect” by blogging about things that their parents and others might find objectionable. I think the media that “exposes” this blogging by kids of famous people to embarrass them is the group exploiting generational disconnect to put down a new medium that it fears.

Holding out for a roommate 0 cmts

I need someone to live with me because my previously-agreed tenant bailed on me a couple days ago. The place is nice, the price is reasonable for the area, and the move-in date is flexible. I’m posting here rather than Craig’s List because I’d like to find someone I know, at least somewhat, who is clean, quiet, and low-maintenance. 2 bedroom, ~1000 sq ft, washer/dryer, 1.5 bath, by Porter Square. Email me for details: zeno at agblog — dot com!

Mon
Aug
21
2006

First USChase 0 cmts

Just for reference for anyone who may have been considering getting an Amazon.com Visa card — everything was great until my card went from FirstUSA to Chase, and ever since everything about it sucked — the card was constantly being deactivated for “security fraud” purposes, the phone support system sucked, and the web interface was flaky. When I tried to login today I found all my account details and history missing and a cryptic message on the bottom of the page telling me to call Chase. After much bouncing around, it turned out that my address change, which I did through the online interface, caused a fraud alert to be tripped. They don’t even trust the security of *their own online banking system*. The only thing Chase was able to do *right* was cancel the card — from the second I said “I want to cancel” to the action occuring was about 45 seconds.

Federal Appeals Court: Driving With Money is a Crime 0 cmts

Looking for a fairly short and interesting appeals court case to read on your summer vacation? Check out United States v. $124,700 in US Currency. In the 8th Circuit, at least, driving with a large sum of money hidden in a container, even in the absence of any other factors, is apparently enough evidence for the government to seize the money as ill gotten gains from illegal drug trade. The War on Drugs, I guess, has reached its illogical peak. Amazingly disproportionate prison sentences, arrests of terminally ill cancer patients, and now carte blanche to just take citizens money with absolutely no proof of wrongdoing, all in the name of fighting a never-ending and unwinnable war on an amorphous concept. Hmm, wait, I’m seeing a pattern here.


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I'm Danny Silverman, a guy in Cambridge, MA with an interest in law, culture, media, and using technology to bring people together even as we work ever harder to push ourselves apart.

My day job is maintaining computer systems. I like exploring the outdoors. I catch and throw flying discs for sport. My cat is fuzzy.

To contact me: zeno@ this site.

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