The New Saudi Arabia?

Mark Whittington asks if that’s what the moon will be in the twenty-first century. He also misspells Gerard O’Neill’s name in the process…

I assume that he means in the energy-production aspect, not the exporting-murderous-nutballs-with-a-misogynistic-fascist-ideology aspect.

Maybe, but we’re a long way from it, both in terms of the cost of getting there, and in developing the technologies to make it happen. I think that it’s a race between using space for energy, and developing radical new technologies on earth that will make that unnecessary, and I don’t have my money on either one right now.

It Strikes Me…

…in reading some moronic commentary on Usenet about Dan’s Unexcellent Adventure, that this little incident provides a pretty fool-proof intelligence test. Anyone who still believes, at this point, that the documents are genuine, or even could conceivably be genuine, has to be an imbecile.

Of course, someone who believes that they may be false, but now considers them irrelevant because the underlying story must still be true (and conveniently, because they’re obviously forged), is simply bereft of logic or ethics.

CBS Stands By Imperial Wardrobe Claims

NEW YORK (APUPI) In the face of rising, even overwhelming skepticism, Dan Rather and CBS News refuse to back down from his blockbuster story that the Emperor wore a new set of clothes in last week’s parade. His network remains one of the last holdouts from the growing consensus that His Highness was, in fact, ambulating down the street completely naked.

“We choose to believe the numerous eyewitnesses who saw the Emperor’s new clothes before they changed their story,” explained a CBS spokeswoman.

The imbroglio started last week when Sixty Minutes did a hard-hitting piece on the latest imperial fashion, with extensive footage of the Emperor as he strode down the street, waving to his subjects. Shortly after the piece aired (though NPR, pointing to a plot on the part of the nudity lobby, and being unable to distinguish between time zones, claims that it actually occurred prior to airtime), a small boy put up a post at the anti-imperial Free Republic website claiming that the Emperor was actually not wearing any clothes at all.

“I’ve been examining the footage of the parade,” he wrote, “and if you look carefully, you’ll see that almost every square inch of his skin is exposed. It looks to me as though he’s not even wearing any underwear, either boxers or briefs. I think that in a couple shots you can actually see his doodle.”

It was apparently a thought that hadn’t occurred to anyone else, at least at first, and this post didn’t receive much attention initially, but a few people started emailing it to some bloggers, who on the next day noted the potential sartorial discrepancy and invited comments from their readership. As others went back to reexamine the CBS footage, the web sites started to become deluged by emails from fashion experts all over the country.

Heated arguments took place on line, with sites like The Daily Kos arguing that the clothes were simply so fine that that they just appeared to be transparent. One commenter at that site named “Joe the Fashion Guy,” who claimed to have worked with famous Parisian designer Foofoo LaDerriere, pointed out that it was quite common for celebrities’ clothes to present the illusion of nudity. Subsequent investigation, however, determined that he was simply a night watchman in the LA Fashion District.

Some bloggers and other web site owners did their own experiments, taking pictures of themselves with and without clothing, and posting the results to demonstrate the difference. Many of them used animated gifs to offer instant A/B comparisons.

The results ranged from fascinating to frightening, resulting, in some of the latter cases, in charges of grotesque internet obscenity. For additional contrast, some of them demonstrated a state in between, by donning pajamas. The other networks and newspapers started to pick up the story. As a result, over the course of a couple days, it became clear to most non-imperial partisans that His Majesty had suffered a major-league wardrobe malfunction, and that CBS had been snookered.

Despite this, the network and Rather stuck to their guns. They dragged out other footage of prior clothed instances of His Majesty, and noted that even if that particular footage displayed a naked emperor, it didn’t matter, since the general story was true. Flanked by the imperial tailors, they also attacked critics as partisan, and opposed to the vital, albeit expensive, imperial clothing budget.

One of the few publications to stand by the network, the Boston Globe, ran a story in which it quoted Mr. Blackwell as saying, “The Emperor was clearly completely and resplendently clothed during the entire event.” The famous clothes critic later complained that he was misquoted.

“If by ‘completely and resplendently clothed,’ they meant ‘naked as a jaybird,’ then I guess they got the quote correct,” he told this correspondent.

“In fact, after examining the footage to be used in the piece, I actually warned CBS that the Emperor wasn’t wearing any clothes before it aired, but they didn’t pay any attention to me. I told them that I couldn’t verify the authenticity or fashionability of clothes that didn’t exist, but they chose to go ahead anyway.”

Columnist Maureen Dowd at the New York Times tried to help out as well, quoting one of the critics as saying, “I…think…the Emperor was not…naked.”

But by the end of the week, the strain was clearly getting to the CBS staff. “Who are you going to believe, me, or your lying eyes?” snarled the veteran anchorman in a brief press conference last week in front of CBS headquarters.

“We don’t have to prove that the Emperor was wearing any clothes. It’s up to our critics to prove that he wasn’t.”

Recently, though, there have been some signs that the network may be preparing to back down from some of its more extreme clothing claims. A spokesperson said today that “…we stand by the general theme of our story, and we certainly believed at the time that the Emperor was finely garbed. We believed that the clothes were authentic, and it remains inconclusive whether or not he was actually dressed at that particular point in time.”

In related news, the FCC is investigating the long display of nudity during prime time, and is expected to levy fines that make the half-million paid by CBS for the Janet Jackson Superbowl incident look like couch-cushion change.

New Network Problem

My server is having trouble with DNS. It can ping the internet by IP, and when I ping by name, it makes an attempt and echos the IP, but cannot ping. My /etc/resolv.conf file contains only “nameserver 192.168.2.1” which is the address of the wireless router.

Am I doing something wrong?

[Update]

I finally found the DNS servers for AT&T. When I put them in resolv.conf, everything seems to work fine. Thanks for the suggestions.

Networking Problem

I’ve got a weird (at least to me, I’m hoping that it will be obvious to someone else) problem with my network.

I’m running an 802.11(g) router. I’ve got my server and my desktop ethernetted to it, and I’m using my laptop in wireless mode. All machines are seeing the router fine (and getting Internet access), but the laptop is not able to see the other two machines and vice versa on the network. The laptop can ping everyone, but the laptop cannot be pinged. I’m running in encrypted mode on the wireless connection, and wondering if that might be the problem. It doesn’t seem like it should be, because I would think that the signal is being decrypted by the router and available through ethernet.

Does anyone have any ideas?

[Update]

D’oh!

I’d changed my network from 192.168.1.* to 192.168.2.* and forgot to tell Zone Alarm on the laptop.

Problem solved.

Too Much Time On Their Hands?

Did I miss the story about all political prisoners being released from prisons in dictatorships around the world? Has torture come to an end on the planet?

If not, then how to explain Amnesty International’s new-found preoccupation? Remind me of their priorities next time they send me a fund-raising letter.

[Update on Tuesday morning]

In comments, Derek Lyons writes:

…if any of you had actually paid any attention to AI over the years, you’d know well that the US isn’t a ‘new found obsession’, nor is their sole focus…

…If Rand actually bothered to read the article he linked to, he’d find the report was issued by AI-USA, not AI. I myself find it unsurprising that a ‘local’ group concentrates on ‘local’ issues.

I must have missed the part where I said the US was a “new-found obsession”, Derek. I was referring to racial profiling, not the US. I know that AI has long considered the US to be the major human rights violator on the planet.

The point isn’t about it being a “local issue.” It is about dealing with trivia when there probably are people actually unjustly in prison, even in this nation. Why don’t they do something about the prison rape problem, which would be more in line with their original charter? I see this as mission creep to justify their existence and fund raising.

A New Human Launcher?

Jeff Foust has an overview at The Space Review today about a new concept that many (including many in the astronaut office) are pushing as a CEV delivery vehicle–an SRB-based design, with a new J-2 powered upper stage. This is what many are calling a “single-stick” vehicle, as opposed to the EELVs with their strap-on boosters.

I actually agree that such a system could be built, and could have a (marginal) cost of a hundred million per flight (though it’s not clear what the actual cost per flight would be, including amortization of the development costs). However, the issues aren’t quite as simple as the proponents make out.

A major drawback of using an EELV to launch the CEV is that neither the Atlas 5 nor the Delta 4 are

Biting Commentary about Infinity…and Beyond!