Random Musings and Half Baked attempts at Insight
I had planned on taking some time to write a nice thoughtful post, but after nosamrellim made such a nice request for a post, I thought it was better idea to change my blogging format a bit, so this is my take on the nosamrellim format, but with the Andy twist, despite it being a nosamrellim tribute post, any shortcomings and/or offense caused are all my own.
1. Wine corks are an awful idea. I mean cork was the height of packaging technology about the time that wine was invented. But X,000 year later, can't we do better. I can't count the number of times that I've either broke a cork, or had to cork a bottle of wine because I suck at getting the cork out. Now I'm not talking about every other bottle or anything, but it's one of those things where you only remember if it has gone wrong. I don't remember the 99 time I successfully opened a bottle of wine, but i sure as hell remember 6 weeks ago when I accidentally pushed a cork through the bottle and the wine sprayed up and got all over my shirt. I can't remember ever having ruined a shirt trying to open a beer? It's really hard to jam a screw top down a bottle.
Furthermore, not only is cork sub-optimal in terms of ease, it also poses a significant risk to the quality of the wine. When you taste wine at a restaurant, you aren't tasting it to see if you like it, you're tasting it to see if the cork has malfunctioned and the wine is now vinegar! This would only be an ingrained part of the wine experience if it was a relatively common occurrence.
So cork is neither easier nor better at it's sole purposes which is preserving wine. The only reason we still use it is tradition. And I'll admit that there is something to that, but with so much tradition in wine anyway, can't we take a pass on the cork. Leave the French pronunciations, but for the sake of my pride and my dress shirts, I really hope we see more screwtop wine soon.
2. One thing that there isn't enough of out there is people passing out pamphlets. I love people who pass out pamphlets. Yes! Give them to me. Let's communicate, share your ideas with me in a polite and passive way. I don't want to be shouted at, I don't want you asking me "Do you have 5 mins for the environment," (which is insulting to the environment and my intelligence). But yeah, if you care enough to print something up, I want to read it.
I grabbed one the other day outside my grocery store for vegetarianism. I looked at it and read it. It took me maybe 5 mins, I read it while I was walking, and then threw it away. I still remember what it said. I'm not going to become a vegetarian, but i definitely thought about the pamphlet when I was ordering a slice of pizza later that night. (I got cheese).
It's not that I think I or many other people are going to be swayed by pamphlets, or that something going to change the world (although, I guess just ask Thomas Paine for proof that they can) but I really like the idea of people reaching out to others with their ideas. It's kinda like a blog, but a lot more personal. Thanks to google I do have some sense who reads this blog, but only in terms of bits and bytes. If I was printing up a pamphlet, standing on a corner and looking these people in the eye, I know I would feel a more personal connection to this thing. It's good to hear new (even wacky) ideas about vegetarianism, Scientology or (wacky)Ron Paul. Now I may think your idea/Ron Paul is ridiculous, but it still does me a world of good to hear about it. So keep passing that stuff out, I'm going to keep grabbing them.
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One of the most appealing parts for me was how it treated Islam. Unlike many of the other recent action movies set in the middle east, the Muslim characters in this movie was not defined as "good" or "bad" based upon how close to Western values they adhered, in fact we see the main character (cheadle) pray on a muslim pray rug a number of times, speak arabic and recite the Koran a number of times. This is a big deal to me as I feel that as a culture, our acceptance or rejection of others, especially on religious grounds, is an important part of our identity.
I try to be very tolerant of other people's views, I certainly don't always succeed to the extent that I should, but I try. But there is a certain set of beliefs that I have no interest in understanding or absorbing, and that is religious intolerance. It disgusted me during the most recent election to here people say "well, Obama's a Muslim so I can't vote for him." Or some variation of that. Thankfully, this sentiment is mostly contained to right-wing fring elements of the political discourse, (not exactly a demo that BHO had a good shot at winning over anyway) nevertheless it was very disheartening to me to hear.
But I don't worry too much. Because we as a nation have always listened to our better angles shout down our lesser demons when it come to religion. True, we have never elected a non-christian to the presidency, but there was a time when people spoke of JFK being Catholic in the same ways that people now speak of BHO (falsely) being Muslim. But we rose above. We do always rise above. This may seem to be a long way from my original point about Traitor being a good movie, but they are related. For Pop Culture to produce a movie with an appealing muslim character, with real (albeit superficial) muslim characteristics, that is a step forward. That is moving in the right direction and it is a signal that faith in us as a tolerant, accepting and therefore decent people is not misplaced.
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"Comment is Free
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It's not just a quote, or the motto of the Guardian's influential blog, but it's also an important tenet of journalism. But when Scott wrote those influential words, journalism and publishing was a very different business today. The cost of putting words to paper, and exposing that paper to the world for review was much higher. The internet is changing that every day, While I can report the exact cost of running www.studentnerds.com/blog, I can assure you that it is much much cheaper than an industrial printing press
and national distribution network. Many blogs and website (and hopefully this one) actually make money (how does $40K per month sound?).
The internet hasn't reduced the importance of facts, they are still sacred, maybe even more so. But I do believe that it has increased the value of comment. The world has become a big coffee shop, a university, a newspaper and a library. We are all, or at least should be, both producers and consumers of content, of facts and comment.
The Student Nerds try to add to this debate. We hopefully provide valuable facts about ways to back up PCs and share documents and music. We also try to add (what we consider to be) worthy comment as well. We hope you guys read and enjoy what we write. But more importantly, we hope you guys are inspired to contribute as well.
Part of this goal of this blog is to create a dynamic community, the intellectual equivalent of a game of "First Bounce or Fly" we (only by virtue of being authorized on the blogger account) toss up and idea, review or fact and if we do our jobs right, hopefully someone catches it and runs with it, agreeing, disagreeing, and adding to what we have presented. The comment system that we have added to the blog, IntenseDebate
is a great tool for tracking and monitoring comments, people can give comments 'thumbs up' or down for comments that they read, receive and send email responses to what others have said, and track members of the community that they find insightful. We hope you all sign up (you can also comment without creating an account of course)
One of the most enjoyable posts that we have made was Praz's Google Docs post, both because it was an excellent post, but also because of the comments that it spawned (16 of them!), starting on the original topic, open source software, but eventually turning to not only Google, but Microsoft, cloud computing and start up DNA. I learned a lot more from the comments than I ever would have if I just wrote about it. There's a new model of journalism, and if Scott was alive today, his quote might look more like this
"facts are sacred…to the extent that they free people to comment"
We hope you guys will feel free.
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