Google Satellite

Google Maps has added Satellite pictures! Or maybe they’re aerial photographs, I can never tell.

I used to love playing with Microsoft’s Terraserver, which has similar content. Google’s version is much more user friendly for browsing.

The pictures are a bit out of date, however. Looking at my hometown, it shows a bridge that was replaced at least a few years ago.

Homeward Bound, by Harry Turtledove

Product Image: Homeward Bound, by Harry Turtledove
My rating: 4 out of 5

Wow, I actually managed to finish a book not class-related!

Harry Turtledove has been a favorite author of mine for a number of years now. Back in High School I discovered his Worldwar series. Basic premise: In the early days of World War II, aliens invade. That was an epic four novel series, resulting in humans fighting their lizardish enemies (called “The Race”) to a draw. The Race ended up with about half of Earth under their control.

Turtledove followed up Worldwar with a three novel Colonization series. It followed the arrival of the lizard’s main colonization fleet in the 1960s, who expected Earth to be completely subdued by the preceeding conquest fleet.

Homeward Bound is a single novel to put a cap on it the series. It’s nice to really get some closure. The Race’s society changes at a pace fundamentally slower than ours. Very little has changed for them in the last 100,000 years. They surveyed Earth hundreds of years ago and saw knights in shining armor; that was what they expected to still find when the invasion fleet arrived. Thus they were unprepared and forced to end in a draw. Humanity stole and improved on the alien technology, and by the 1980s was starting to pull ahead in important technological areas.

The United States sends its first starship to Home, The Race’s planet, to open negotiations for formal recognition as equals. Those negotiations, and one final giant leap in technology for humans, form the crux of Homeward Bound.

If there was one problem with Turtledove’s earlier books in the series, it was an overabundance of main characters. He wisely cuts down on the cast here, keeping only the most interesting ones. Thanks to the technology of cold sleep hibernation, some of the characters even make it into the mid twenty-first century.

There’s some great philosophical exposition as The Race slowly realizes that humanity is quickly eclipsing them and tries to figure out why. It’s hard to discuss in a review like this without spoiling much.

I do feel like the novel could have been 50 pages shorter and not lost much. Some of the points were made over and over again, to the point of head-smashing obviousness. As a standalone novel, it wouldn’t really work – too much background knowledge is necessary. But as a capstone on an 8 novel opus, Homeward Bound is fun and satisfying.

Digital Photo Preservation

Because I’m a native son of Rochester, NY, I still read the local paper online now and then.

As the home of Kodak, the city has always had an interest in photography. Today there’s an article on the pitfalls and perils of digital image preservation in the home/consumer environment.

The issue of image loss is a big one. My brother ran into some Windows issues a couple years back and ended up losing almost every digital picture he’d taken. They weren’t backed up anywhere.

I’ve been paranoid ever since. I back up photos regularly on an external hard drive, distribute CDs of photo sets to friends, and now have uploaded the majority of my snapshots to Flickr. I think I’m safe, but you never know.

Think of it like a digital shoebox. I’ve got piles of ‘traditional’ pictures as well, and really should see about getting them scanned in.

One of the more cogent points in the D&C article is that digital photos have no inherent backup. Film at least provided negatives to derive reprints from should the worst happen.

The article also mentions the advantages of keeping your digital photos organized. Maybe I’m weird, but I actually quite enjoy organizing my pictures. But even so, I wish I’d started sooner. I did a major overhaul of my organizational scheme, which was haphazard at best, about a year go. In the process I discovered that my old camera had very often not recorded the correct date. So I wasn’t able to classify some of the pictures accurately. The best I can do is narrow it down to the year. But now that my scheme is in place, dropping new files into it is a breeze.

Digital preservation and standards creep like this always interests me. Will the JPEG format still be readable 50 years from now? If so, will the storage device they’re located on be readable?

City of Sin

Product Image: Sin City (2005)
My rating: 5 out of 5

Sin City… wow. I’m not even sure where to start.

I’ve cut down on my reviews recently, they’re not really my focus anymore. But this movie needs to be written about.

It’s got action, character, plot twists, humor, violence, pretty much anything you can think of. But most of all, a jaw-dropping visual style. The movie looks like a comic book on the screen. Some shots I could point you to the exact panel of Frank Miller’s graphic novels that its based on (and that’s a good thing). This has to be the most faithful adaptation yet.

And the cast! Everybody is cast perfectly, even when going ‘against type’. Elijah Wood as a psychotic serial killer, for example. He never says a single word, but still manages to sell the role.

Out of the three main stories, I think I enjoyed the scenes from That Yellow Bastard. Bruce Willis’ Hartigan is the most noble, do-the-right-thing guy you’ll ever meet. One of the few truly likeable people in Sin City actually. He has the worst possible bad luck, but still comes out standing up. I don’t want to spoil it any more than that for you.

Jessica Alba surprised me. I’ve never seen much she’s been in, but she’s got some decent acting chops here. Confident stripper one scene, scared little girl the next.

I can’t let the review end without commenting on the violence. There’s a lot of it, to put it lightly. But its done so artfully in the black and white world – glowing white pools of blood slowly seep out of the shadows – that you can’t help but be mesmerized. It’s art, pure and simple.

I’ll be interested to see how Sin City does at the box office. It was sold out where we went, but of course it would be on opening weekend. I don’t think its a movie for the general public. It’s wonderful, but I don’t see Joe From The Street appreciating it.

If I have any real complaint, its that at some times I felt lost. Viewers are thrown into the middle of a story right off the bat. Having read the comics I could jump in feet first, but without that foreknowledge it might have taken me a bit to catch up. I meant to ask the people I saw it with afterwards, but forgot. There’s a lot going on, Sin City is a very complex movie. But definitely worth your time.

Movies are so expensive around here that I just can’t justify going to the theater very often. But Sin City is an exception I’m glad I made.

April Fools? Amazingly not.

I’d like congratulate New York state for passing the state budget on time. Why is this a cause for celebration? The last time it happened was 20 years ago.

1984. As this article says:

“That year, the Apple Macintosh computer was introduced, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated, and Soviet athletes boycotted the Los Angeles Olympics.”

And I was two years old. Puts it in perspective. Many years of those twenty the budget was late by at least half a year, if I remember correctly.

I just hope Albany doesn’t pat itself on the back for doing what is, after all, simply their job.

As a nice bonus, $4.5 million of library funding cut in years past has been restored!

Happy Anniversary

A Cnet interview with a Google high muckety-muck brings some insights about Gmail to light. Appropriate, given that tomorrow is the 1 year anniversary of Gmail’s debut announcement. You might remember that just about everybody (myself included) thought it was an April Fool’s joke. One gigabyte of electronic mail storage? Poppycock! That’s what I would have been thinking were I British and a fuddy duddy. I’m in a strange mood tonight, don’t mind me…

Back on topic!

Now Google is upping the ante to 2 gig! I’m guessing this is in response to Yahoo’s recent matching of Gmail’s 1gb storage limit. Not only that, but the storage limit will steadily increase beyond the two gigabyte frontier, and the sky’s the limit! The details are a little muddled at this point, but it sure sounds interesting.

It’s amazing how just a year ago even the best webmail account rarely exceeded 10 megabytes.

And in closing, a reminder: Don’t believe anything you read online tomorrow, being April first. Every year I fall for some dumb hoax, even if only for a moment, but this year I pledge to remain skeptical!

And I’ve still got tons of Gmail invites if you’d like one.

Behold… the power of Blogs!

The debate topic testerday in my management class was whether or not digitization was a good idea. Naturally, Michael Gorman’s name came up in the discussion. The points made on both sides were interesting, and this was the first topic in the class that I felt everyone in the class really engaged with. Most debates peter out with a question or two, but yesterday the prof eventually had to cut them off for time!

The really interesting part came during the break immediately afterwards. Gorman remained the topic of chit chat among the desks; the topic turned to his remarks on bloggers, which as you might remember caused quite an uproar in the LIS field and beyond. Suddenly the guy who sits next to me turns and says:

“So Chad, you were at Computers in Libraries, right?”

I was taken aback, I couldn’t recall ever mentioning this to him. It turns out that he saw my picture on TameTheWeb!

I swear, the Internet makes it a smaller world every day.

Uh….

Touching

Nintendo is running what I officially dub to be the Strangest Promotion Ever.

The objective is to promote the Nintendo DS, which uses a touch screen to play games.

Nintendo will send you a disembodied mannequin hand (pictured). You take pictures of this hand in various situations, send them in, and then the best ones win prizes and/or money.

The name of the promotion? Touching is good.

I’ve signed up for my hand, I hope it actually does arrive. It’d make a great coffee table item, that’s for sure.

Flickred Out

Hoo boy. I’ve spent my free time yesterday and today uploading and sorting and tagging pictures into my new paid Flickr account. As of right now I’ve got 511 photos in there. I need a break.

At first I was uploading everything. Then I realized how ridiculous that is and started uploading only the good ones. That’s enough of a backup for me. But as a result, 1999 (the first year I took digital pictures) has more pictures than any other year. Thankfully I’ve been remembering to tag with the year so I can bring you this handy data. I’m caught up to February of this year in my uploading now and I’m pretty proud of the organizing job I’ve done so far.

If for some reason you’re interested, the sets are viewable here. Every picture I’ve put up is in one of those sets, even if just the Miscellaneous one.

I just gotta say how unbelievably awesome Flickr is. However, it would be even more unbelievably awesome if my camera had recorded the correct date on every picture.

I’m off to have a drink on my 18 inch balcony. Still 62 degrees out, woo!