Monday, April 25, 2005

Made a $250 donation to Kerry? Blacklisted from industry events

Time Magazine is reporting The White House has excluded at least 4 of the two dozen US delegates for this week's The Inter-American Telecommunication Commission meeting in Guatemala City, because they have made campaign donations to the Kerry Campaign. Individuals barred from entering the meeting by The White House include people from Nokia and Qualcomm, arguably the two most important companies in the telecommunications industry in the US.

It's unclear from the article under which authority The White House has barred these people from entering the meeting. The White House spokesperson had the audacity to comment on the issue by saying The White House thinks people that made campaign donations to John Kerry "..would not represent the administration favorably". I guess telecommunications industry innovation and standards are now a partisan effort as well. What next? The Republican GSM spec?

Looks like Nokia's and Qualcomm's competitors' campaign donations to George W. Bush are REALLY paying off now.

-TPP

Sunday, April 24, 2005

Spin City

Senator Bill Frist (R-TN) comments on the Democrats opposition of some of the judicial nominees by the Republicans with "...judges deserve respect, not retaliation...".

The Republican House majority leader Tom Delay (R-TX), however, has been spewing hate against "liberal" judges for months, most recently against Judge Anthony Kennedy.

If you didn't know better, you could take Mr. Frist's comments as a swipe against Tom Delay. That would be most welcome, but that isn't the case here. Instead Republicans are engaging in pandering of the most basic kind.

-TPP

Friday, April 22, 2005

Universal Translator or Visual Directory

A Flickr user created a cool Flickr hack that will enable you to search for a word and get photos representing that word come up in a mobile browser friendly way.

The obvious use is helping to communicate with someone, whose language you don't speak: "Ein dieses foto, bitte". The results, however, can be somewhat unexpected at times.

The same effect can be achieved with Google's Mobile image search feature, of course.

Both are great examples of what sort of innovative ideas API access to public data unleashes. At the same time one of our fine senators is trying to keep public data out of the public hands at the behest of his handlers (AccuWeather from Pennsylvania). The mind boggles.

-TPP

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Immigrants Against Immigration 2005

Mr. Schwarzenegger, a first generation immigrant in the United States, has spoken, again, for stricter immigration policies. While what he said could be interpreted as blatant bigotry, it appears he meant to advocate for stricter border controls to curb illegal immigration.

Let's see how many more times he manages to shoot himself in the foot with his mom and apple pie speeches.

-TPP

Friday, April 15, 2005

Republicans - God's Chosen People - according to Republicans

Senator Bill Frist (R-TN) is joining prominent Christian conservatives in an April 24th telecast and use the telecast to declare Democrats as acting "against people of faith" for their efforts to block some of the more conservative judicial nominees.

Given that the Pope also was a great friend of the Republicans and George W. Bush especially [1], well, according to the Republicans and George W. Bush, this political move is sure to guarantee God himself will vote for Republicans for now and forever.

We heathens will be doomed to eternal political minority, as well as an afterlife in hell. According to the Republicans.

-TPP

1. Apart from that little thing about the death penalty, of course

Monday, April 11, 2005

91% of people arrested during the Republican Convention in New York City found innocent

1,806 people were arrested sometimes with distinct gestapo style tactics in New York City during the Republican party convention last year.

1,670 of those cases have so far been decided. In 91% of the cases the charges were dropped or the people were found not guilty of the charges filed against them.

The New York Times article also reports edited video tapes were sometimes being used to present the prosecutor's case. Unedited tapes clearly showed people to be not guilty. The police, of course, is saying the editing was accidental. Sure...

But, hey, they were only protecting the President against grave threats. Surely their actions were justified.

-TPP

Online music services reviewed

Extremetech does an excellent job at reviewing and comparing the current crop of online music services.

allofmp3.com and other marginal services are only included as an aside, which is a shame, although the review gives them high marks at the end.

-TPP