Monday, June 26, 2023

You're going to need a smaller boat.

Call me petty, but I just can't help enjoy a headline that begins with "Billionaires disappointed..." In this case, the rest of the story is "...after superyachts banned form Naples port" and I think the Germans have a word for what I'm feeling:
I'd like you to meet my good friend Gunther Schadenfreude. 
Here he is raising a glass to my shameful joy.
Pictured: Arnault's 110 meter floating
symbol of everything wrong with capitalism.
Evidently, the city of Naples, Italy, has recently banned yachts measuring over seventy-five meters from stem to stern or just under two hundred, fifty feet front to back for the metrically and nautically challenged (like me, I had to look those up). It's ostensibly a security measure, although I can't find anything explaining why. The end result here is that the world's current richest man, Bernard Arnault, tried to dock his one hundred-ten meter yacht in Naples and heard a word I suspect he's not been used to hearing after passing the billion-mark: "no." 

When the revolution comes and these guys
are being led to the guillotines and they ask
what they did to deserve this fate, it's this.
The boat? Yacht? Superyacht? Like I said, I'm not nautically inclined, but it's called the Symphony--because of course it is--and cost the billionaire one hundred and fifty million dollars of money, plus an additional fifteen million per year to operate. It features eight staterooms, a crew of twenty-seven to cater the the every whim of up to thirty-six passengers, a pool, and a helicopter pad. Superyachtfan.com goes on to gush about how the Symphony is eco-friendly because it uses thirty percent less energy than a comparable yacht. Yes. A comparable yacht.

Hey, do you know what would be a hundred percent more eco-friendly than sailing a rich dude and his friends around on luxury yacht with caterers and a helicopter pad?
"Damnit, another wildfire. If only more billionaires would follow
Bernard Arnault's noble example and buy marginally more energy efficient
superyachts, we could finally get climate change under control."
-exactly zero fire fighters ever
Above: the people of Naples scrambling to
grab some of the money rich yacht people rain
down upon them whenever they sail into port.
According to The Guardian article, the riches aren't taking it lying down. Their source at the Port of Naples says they are getting "letters from magnates" complaining about how they and their superyachts used to bring money and jobs to the city, not to mention fame, and that this ban is robbing the good people of Naples of the pleasure and prestige of their presence. Which, I mean, if you can think of anything more entitled than billionaires railing against the injustice of them having to dock somewhere else when vacationing in southern Italy, I'd love to hear it. 

Again, maybe I'm being petty and maybe this is sour grapes or something, but the planet is on fire and I pass tent city full of homeless people on my way to work every morning, and Bernard Arnault is sad because Naples won't let him park his glorified party boat. So maybe sell the Symphony, buy a less ludicrous yacht and I don't know, plant some trees or something? And maybe do it before we all wise up and grab the pitchforks and torches?
"Or the city of Naples could just give in and give me what I want.
I am, after all, the richest man in the world. Like, the entire world."
-Bernard Arnault, on the great injustice that has been 
visited upon him and his friends with superyachts.

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Who doesn’t love things from vats?

Soon you'll be able eat a chicken whilst looking it right in its beady, uncomprehending eyes. Which, I mean, is a horror show on the surface, but I don't know, hurray for science?
What? They wouldn't know. In fact, my incredibly low estimate of bird
intelligence is a key factor in my (usually) being comfortable eating chicken.
Articles about this keep describing the vats
as something like what brewers use, but I'm not
sure that's making this any less gross sounding.
To be clear, I would never do such a thing, and really, no one would. I'm just saying it will soon be theoretically possible thanks to the U.S. Department of Agriculture giving their approval to two companies to market lab-grown meat. Lab-grown meat, for those who are either unfamiliar or horrified at the very premise, is still meat, just cultivated from cells that are taken from a living animal and then grown in a tank full of nutrients. Next, the "meat" is formed, uh, somehow, into something approaching the texture of meat without the quotation marks.

Not that a situation being unsustainable
has ever stopped us before. Like, not once.
See? Horror show, right? Well, yes, but as unappetizing as that sounds, bear in mind that gruesome way meat has been produced up until now. Like, don't do this--sweet merciful God, don't do this--but you could do a search right now for a video on how slaughterhouses work. So between the environmental impact of the meat industry, and the ethical issues that come along with eating animals (no matter how dumb they are), meat is looking increasingly unsustainable. 

Do I sound like I'm trying to convince myself? Because I am. And I mean, it's probably safe. A similar cultivated meat (another, not really better term for it) has been available in Singapore since 2020, and nobody's mutated into bird-people, so it's probably fine. 
Fine, nobody's mutated yet.


Saturday, June 24, 2023

Again, that's trillion with a T.

Yeah, move over CHOAM.
Yeah, sorry, talking about video games again, but crying poverty when you're like the fourth most valuable company on Earth and consequently, the known universe is pretty weak, right? I mention this because this week Microsoft, you know, the hardware/software maker behind Windows, operating system you probably use at work even though it's kind of garbage, was bemoaning its third place status in the home video game market to to the Federal Trade Commission.

Pictured: Microsoft, seen here asking
the FTC for some more gruel.
But why would they do such a thing, and how could anyone possibly feel anything approaching pity for a company worth two point four trillion--that's trillion with a "T"--dollars of money? The why is that it's a strategy to convince regulators that the world needs another massive merger. Microsoft is trying to buy Activision Blizzard, a games developer (Warcraft, Diablo, that Overwatch nonsense all the kids were into a couple years ago), for sixty-seven billion dollars, and sure, billion with a "B", but still, a preposterous amount of money. As for the who's buying it--buying their story that is--I don't know.

Given that both Microsoft and Sony have been consuming developers for years now like giant Katamari Demacy balls of everything wrong with capitalism, I suspect the FTC will eventually give in. 
It's a game where the object is to accumulate so much stuff that the gravity
of it becomes so intense that it coalesces into a star. Why? I don't know, 
but it kind of feels like an analogy for consumerism.

Isn't this how all competitions in the
history of competition works?
What's interesting here is the suggestion on the part of Microsoft that their Xbox is some struggling niche console in desperate need of Activision Blizzard just to stay competitive:

"Xbox has lost the console wars, and its rivals are positioned to continue to dominate...Xbox has consistently ranked third in consoles behind PlayStation and Nintendo."


It should have been all over for them during
the "Red Ring of Death" period, and yet they
lived to fight, and complain, another day.
Which, I mean, I'm sorry, I'm no economist but a couple of things here. First, the fact that the industry has consistently supported three of more platforms for more than twenty years is something. The phrase "console wars" was first thrown around in the 90's when Sega and Nintendo were the only real contenders. Since the first Xbox's introduction in 2001, there've been three and Microsoft's been able to hang in there for decades, even being in first place at least once during the 360 era, and that despite the console itself famously overheating on the regular.

This may be lingering bitterness from
The Console Wars, but Sonic is and always
was, shallow and overrated. There, I said it.
And another thing, in what world is letting already giant companies get even gianter good for consumers? Like, again, not an economist here, but they're making the case that they need Activision Blizzard if they're ever going to beat their rivals, but is the FTC's job to help Microsoft sell Xbox's or is it to ensure a fair and competitive marketplace? Back during the Console Wars of the 90's, I was definitely a Nintendo kid, and I'm sure nostalgia and familiarity are why I still am, but I like Xbox too and have always preferred it to Playstation as a platform. But isn't this how capitalism is supposed to work?

I'm not saying that capitalism is great, and until someone invents replicators, I don't have a better idea. But for a company who's inconceivable wealth and profit is built on exploiting this system, it just feels a little gross that they're now pointing to their bronze medal status--a place they've held since Brittney Spears was big--as a reason the FTC should let their Katamari get even more out of hand.
Someone's working on that right? It'd solve a lot of problems...

Monday, June 19, 2023

Ok, so couple of things...

Uninformed opinions make up some
80% of the internet. So, you're welcome?
I booted up the Final Fantasy XVI demo this weekend, and I have some thoughts I want to share. What's that? You don't care? That's fine. Skip this one. I'm not offended. It takes a special kind of nerd to want to sit through what somebody else--particularly me--thinks about a video game. Oh, and let me be clear, I'm not writing a review. No one cares what I think about a thing, I'm not a critic. Criticism is a skill, and a wifi connection doesn't make an opinion an informed opinion. Anyway, some thoughts...

Well, first, this didn't bode well:
Are they so afraid of AI taking their jobs that they're trying to blend in?
Being a quarter Canadian, I'm actually
a little ambivalent about the War of 1812.
I realize that it's just the name of a development team at Square Enix, and that the team itself worked on Final Fantasy's XI and XIV, but c'mon, that's terrible. Still though, I can get past that. What I can't get past is the British. I have no particular beef with the British, well, maybe the war of 1812, but that was like, a hundred years ago. What I do have a perfectly marbled, forty-thousand yen per pound beef with, is Japanese-developed fantasy games getting localized with British accents for no reason. Well, there is a reason, I just find it a tired one.

Ok, fine, high fantasy and space
authoritarians, if you want to split hairs.
I think the rationale is that we, whoever we are, associate the accent with high fantasy. Final Fantasy XVI isn't the only game guilty of this, and I suppose with its more Game of Thrones/LOTR vibe it's at least less jarring than say, Xenoblade Chronicles, which, while firmly in the fantasy genre, had a distinct anime sci-fi flavor. But I'd really love the option to switch to a more, well, I was going to say American accent, but that sounds wrong too. Maybe it's just about the lack of specificity my native accent imparts? 

Above: the developers of FFXVI
daring us to take this seriously.
Imparts to other Americans, I guess. Yeah, alright, British accents just go with medieval castles, even if the game is set on some other planet. And it works fine in this game, at least as far as I've gotten in the demo. Obviously, Final Fantasy XVI is in no way an attempt to recreate any real historical time or place. And yes, all the "yes milords," and "do you yields" do admittedly lend the world whiff of pseudo-history. Medieval-ish. Still though, it feels like Creative Business Unit III went through all this trouble--too much trouble--in pursuit of authenticity only for the King to ride in on a giant chicken.

Sure, it's like calling out The Red Wedding
for being historically inaccurate but, c'mon.
But whatever, it's Final Fantasy. It's a violation of international law to make one without chocobos. Verisimilitude be damned. Can we talk however, about the choice to give their characters anime hair? Look, nothing's going to make chocobos and giant magic kaiju feel particularly plausible, but one of medieval Europe's most striking features, and perhaps the one that is almost always overlooked in fiction, is its terrible haircuts. 

Until developers of high fantasy video games lean into that, I'm going to continue to call them out on the selective historical accuracy. 
What I'm saying is give Clive a bowl cut you cowards.

Sunday, June 18, 2023

He's like the Immortan Joe of Texas...

Sure, it denies water breaks to construction workers, but maybe this bill does a bunch of good things too? I mean, it doesn't, but we should give Greg Abbott the benefit of the--sorry, I can't even type that with a straight face. I mean, the man's a monster.
Pictured: Texas Governor Greg Abbott, seen here lording over
the supply of water before a crowd of thirsty construction workers.
Above: some of the Texas road workers
Greg Abbott will be endangering next summer.
Look, I don't live in Texas (thank liberal Jesus), and I'm not a construction worker, but holy shit. Governor Greg Abbott signed a bill this last week which will eliminate local rules that give construction workers ten minute breaks for hydration and sun protection. In Texas. In a time where each successive summer is hotter than the last because the climate is spinning out of control. The bill goes in to effect September 1st, so workers should have some time to get their affairs in order. Greg Abbott: what a guy.

"Gentleman, a toast: to human suffering!"
-supporters
According to the Texas Tribune, supporters say that the bill eliminates a bunch of local ordinances that get in the way of business. Everyone else in the world says that construction workers are human beings and business can go fuck itself. I guess not being content with Trans erasure, suppressing the vote, and relegating women to the status of property/baby factories, the GOP has turned it's aggressive lack of empathy on to the hourly workers who maintain the State's infrasctucture. Why? Who even knows with these people.

Pictured: Austin, one of the few
acceptable parts of Texas.
Texas has the most heat related worker deaths per year of any state, even California which has more people. Of course, California has laws in place protecting worker safety, and is, generally speaking, better. Austin and Houston have laws protecting these breaks and San Antonio was working on one, but so much for those. Hey, guess which counties were won by Democrats in the last election cycle? If you said Travis, Harris, and Bexar counties, you'd be correct. You'd also be really good at naming counties in Texas. I had to look those up

Anyway, for a party that's been blowing its own, tired horn over how anti-big government they are, they sure love telling local municipalities who they can and can't let die from heat stroke. 
I suppose the joke's on them. If construction workers quit, who will maintain all
 the highways Republicans need to drive their ludicrous, oversized pickup trucks? 
And without giant pickup trucks, how will mediocre white men feel powerful?

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

I'm sure this won't be used for evil...

I'm sorry, are we saying we can use computers to read minds now? Because that's what this sounds like. Yeah, fine, click the link, don't click the link, I'm going to sum up either way: according to a paper published by researchers from the National University of Singapore and The Chinese University of Hong Kong, it's possible, using AI learning technology, to reconstruct images from the mind's eye. 

Above: the grim, confusing future we're destined to age into.
Pictured: me, after reading that.
If I'm following this, and if I'm being honest, I don't. Because the researchers says things like:

"...we propose Mind-Video that learns spatiotemporal information from continuous fMRI data of the cerebral cortex progressively through masked brain modeling, multimodal contrastive learning with spatiotemporal attention, and co-training with an augmented Stable Diffusion model that incorporates network temporal inflation."

-the abstract, the part that's supposed
to be a quick summary of the research

But again, if I'm following, I think the idea is that they put your head in some kind of MRI and what you see in your head ends up as a thirty-frame per second video file with 85% accuracy. What 85% accuracy means or how that's even measured is a mystery to me, but fortunately this scientific paper has pictures:
Original video on top, video as filtered through a human brain, 
an MRI machine and then the AI software on bottom. You know, this
might now be the most ominous cat video the internet has to offer.
I mean, dang Wen 2018, why'd
you even show up to this party?
Ok, so you might be thinking to yourself "m'eh, it's not that accurate. But bear in mind that this is a computer that reads your mind. And while the kitty below has the distorted, somehow off quality that a lot of AI generated imagery seems to have right now, it is, and I can't stress this enough, coming from a computer that reads your mind. It's also, as the paper points out, far ahead of previous attempt to--huh? What's that? Oh yes, evidently this has been done before with less impressive results. But still: mind reading computer. Check out the comparison to the right and ask yourself if you could do any better leaning the spatiotemporal multimodal--sorry, are my ears bleeding?

But what's this even for? you might reasonably ask. I don't know, probably some medical applications? The researchers don't say. It's not really their job I guess, but they do bring up the idea that while brain to computer interfaces are promising, there probably should be some governmental regulation to prevent malicious uses of the technology. But it's probably unnecessary. I'm sure everyone will use the power to record information directly from the human brain wisely. After all, we've had such a great track record up until now.
What could possibly go wrong? Everything. Like, just everything.

Monday, June 12, 2023

Today in what Ancient Rome smelled like:

Say, did you know that ancient Roman perfume smelled like patchouli? Yeah, the people who conquered the Mediterranean world apparently all smelled like a bunch of hippies.
Pictured: a scene from the now surprising accurate
Mel Brooks's History of the World Part I.
Above: the entire field of ancient world
perfume researchers, seen here, celebrating.
Of course, this is archeology, so let's walk that back a bit. All Romans didn't smell like patchouli. But scientists did analyze an old perfume bottle from a Roman grave using gas chromatography and, well, patchouli. According to the paper in which these findings were published, this is the first time ever that a perfume from Ancient Rome was identified. "Which is a major advance in this field." It adds, as if to assure us that this really is a big deal.

Bribery and malfeasance? In the
oil industry? Poppycock I say!

And it is a big deal, right? So much of my public school history education seemed to focus an awful lot on wars. And the Teapot Dome Scandal, but mostly war. This war was followed by this war, and that brings us to this war. And in fairness, ours is a violent species, but historically, people did other things as well, right? As mentioned before, not all Romans used this perfume, and in fact, perfume was reserved for the wealthy, but still, it's kind of cool to imagine what the ancient world smelled like, isn't it? 

No? Just me. Me and those three scientists above? Ok, fine. But you have to admit, the mind reels at the possibilities of what our civilization might leave behind and what conclusions future archeologists might draw. I for one shiver at the prospect that some wayward can of Axe body spray might one day be the only clue as to life in the twenty-first century.
Pictured: Some examples of the spray-tanned douches that
once roamed North America. (source: future history books)

Thursday, June 8, 2023

An ambivalent farewell:

I want to be very clear that I take no pleasure in the news that Pat Robertson died. I do however appreciate how Rolling Stone magazine chose to report on his passing: 
Nothing there is inaccurate.

I think the German word for this is
Gleichgültigkeit. Because of course it is.
Obviously I didn't know him personally, and I think he's said some pretty terrible things over the years, and influenced others to do and say some pretty terrible things, but I'm not happy he's dead. I take no freude, schaden or otherwise in this. I will admit however, that in the past there have been times when I, out of ideas and looking for something to blog about, searched his name, just to see if he'd done or said something infuriating, or hateful, or just plain dumb. I was rarely disappointed. 

Pictured: the big baby sacrifice at 
last year's Pride Festival. It was a hoot.
There was the time he denounced gay men as Molech worshipping baby murders. And that other time when a guy wrote in to complain about how disrespectful his wife is. Robertson immediately took his side, compared the woman to a disobedient child and suggested that this is because she wasn't smacked enough as a child. Oh, and then he suggested that they move to Saudi Arabia, so he can beat her legally. In a later installment of his show, he told straight married women to just put up with cheating. Because dudes gonna dude.

Wait, did he...did he think 
Game of Thrones was real?
Oh, and he also repeated an incredibly inflammatory, completely baseless urban legend/conspiracy theory about the gays wearing special rings with needles which infect the normies with HIV via an innocent handshake. Has this ever happened in the history of ever? No. Not even on Game of Thrones. But that didn't stop him from repeating it to his fans as the God's honest truth. And then, when called on it, he released a statement blaming everyone else for taking him out of context. Classic Pat.

So yeah, like I said. I'm not happy Pat Robertson is dead. I feel for his family, and, well, I was going to say his fans, but I guess I feel sorry for them. Them and their families, because there's a decent chance they've alienated more than a few of them by parroting the nonsense this guy put out there in his decades of televangelizing. So rather than saying something bad about Pat Robertson, I'll just leave this on a positive note:
Happy Pride month Pat Robertson, wherever you are!

Monday, June 5, 2023

What are you going to do, not buy one?

 I mean, I ask you:

I've seen the future, and it's kind of dumb looking.
"What? We've got this nonsense to pay off."
-Apple
Today at Apple's World Wide Developer's Conference --a commercial Apple has managed to convince media outlets constitutes, you know, news-- the company showed off Apple Vision Pro which is a computer. A computer for your face. And in classic Apple naming convention, the "Pro" bit means that it's the expensive version, although they've skipped right over a cheaper one. Yes, this preposterous pair of ski goggles costs thirty-five hundred dollars. Of money. No really. And did I mention that it goes on your face? Because you do.

Popular Mechanics named Google Glass
2014's most punchable tech innovation.
How is this different from Google's ill-fated Google Glass, you might ask? You remember, the wearable augmented reality computer that got that guy punched in the face back in--holy shit, 2014? Yikes, I've been at this too long. I'm actually not super clear on that. This thing is more like a wearable MacBook in that, at least according to the video, it overlays a Mac operating system over your field of vision. Just in case you feel the need to be in your computer rather than hunched over one like some kind of gauche, ludite barbarian. Or an Android user.

So, basically this.
But a wearable computer that makes you look like the people ruining Burning Man is not the most bizarre part. Those aren't the user's eyes you seeing through the glass, but rather a forward facing screen that just shows an image of the user's face, or at least your eyes. The idea is that it makes you it look like you're paying attention to whomever you're talking to in real life instead of absently nodding at whatever nonsense they're yammering on about while while you check Insta. Insta being what the kids call Instagram. 

So I get that maybe this isn't for me, and also, who knows? Maybe this really is the next big thing, and in a couple of years we'll all be walking around with $3,500 space goggles running a live feed of our dead, expressionless eyes as we escape the crushing reality of the Second Civil War. But I can't help but wonder, was anyone, anyone at all outside of Apple R&D asking for the ability to strap an iPad to their face?

"We here at Apple are pretty sure you'll buy anything, anything
as long as it's white, costs thirty percent more than it should and
comes in over-designed yet somehow minimalist packaging."
-Apple CEO Tim Cook, not being wrong

Saturday, June 3, 2023

Today in predictable petard hoistings:

Look, I don't want to tell the narrow-minded, rabid-foam conservatives trying to foist their worldview on the rest of us through book banning and anti-drag laws how to fascist, but I mean, they should have seen this coming, right?
Pictured: a sixteenth century soldier about
to be hoisted by his own petard.
So books. Basically any book.
Seen what coming? Why the 2022 law passed in Utah that allows any parent to demand a book be considered for removal from schools for containing the flexibly broad "pornographic or indecent" material, to come back and bite them in the Leviticus. Obviously, the intent behind the law was to give entitled Bible-thumpers the ability to filter out anything that doesn't support their personal worldview under the cover of indecency, so books that include queer themes or address racism. 

"Nuke it from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
-God, evidently
The part they didn't see coming is how TV-MA the Bible is: The first people you meet are completely naked and one of their kids commits fratricide. Then there's murder, mass-murder, infanticide, global genocide, all committed by God himself. He actually kills a mother of four for looking at back at a city. An entire city he just destroyed. And don't even get me started on Job. Ever see Saw? Well, it's got nothing on the Bible. And that's just the Old Testament. In the New Testament, a guy gets crucified for suggesting that people be kind to poor people. 

"It requires six years of schooling and a Master's
Degree. But please, feel free to weigh in." 
-Librarians
And I'm not suggesting that the Bible or Christians (at least not all of them) endorse any of this anti-social behavior, but there is an element of where do they get off banning Boy Meets Boy by David Leviathan? All this to say, what if we trusted librarians and educators to, you know, educate? Is it crazy to suggest that maybe parents don't always know what's best for kids? I know it's a thorny issue, but surely we can all agree that the sheer fact that someone has a kid doesn't qualify them to make decisions for other people's families, right? 

Anyway because this is Utah, the next book up for banning is the Bible's sequel the Book of Mormon which I'm far less familiar with, but I understand also contains a fair amount of violence and it says some pretty racist things about Black and Indigenous people. And you know, one can't help but wonder how carefully these folks have even read the books they not only claim to base their life around, but also insist we live our lives around as well.
"Oh, you have read it? Well Joanne, then maybe you can show me
the part where it condemns abortion. No? Yeah, I thought not."
-Jesus, getting surprisingly sarcastic