Archive for June, 2006

Buy the fastest Mac you can afford

Posted in General on June 7th, 2006 by evan – Be the first to comment

I just upgraded my main work Mac from a 667Mhz G4 PowerBook to a 2Ghz MacBook Pro. I find it to be three to four times as responsive in UI behaviours like scrolling, cutting and pasting, window switching, etc. This alone will make me far more productive on an ongoing basis as I have already caught up to the new machine. Processor-intensive applications are just off the chart comparativelty speaking. The cumulative time savings will be enormous, since I am working on my Mac sometimes up to 18hrs/day.

If you are holding off on upgrading to a new Mac, don’t. Do it now and it will pay dividends immediately.

I have taken the extreme step of refusing to install any Microcruft apps at all. I’ll have to learn Pages, which looks familiar, and things are going well so far with the switch to Mail, Address Book and iCal. Good riddance. Now, c’mon Adobe, how about some Universal Binaries?

Bloodbath in Iraq

Posted in SocPol on June 5th, 2006 by evan – Be the first to comment

Where is the mainstream outrage?


More than 6,000 corpses found in Iraq in five months

By Kadhem al-Attabi
Jun 5, 2006, 19:00 GMT

Baghdad - Every morning as ambulance cars and police vehicles rush to the hospital in Bab al-Mo’adham carrying corpses of unidentified victims, a queue of women, teenagers and elderly men forms in front of the morgue as people search for their relatives, fearing they might be found among the bodies.

Usually, one of their family member is lost or kidnapped by gunmen and then turns up after a week or so later as a corpse with gunshot wounds on the body, a further victim of the latest wave of sectarian violence that has swept through Iraq in recent months.

Iraq’s main morgue had never received that huge number of corpses on a daily basis - not since modern Iraq was established in 1920s.

According to statistics by Iraq’s morgues institute, 6,002 corpses were found in the past five months: 1,068 in January, 1,110 in February, 1,294 in March, 1,155 in April and 1,375 in May.

Most of the corpses had gunshot wounds, while others showed marks of burns or electrocution.

Morgues institute officials said that since the institute was established in 1927, it had never received such a huge number of corpses as currently, with the daily average now 35 to 50 per day.

Before the US-led coalition invasion of Iraq and the toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003, the institute used to receive only seven to 10 corpses per day.

In occupied and conflict-ridden Iraq, the morgues have become the daily destination for at least 100 Iraqis looking for their relatives who were kidnapped by militiamen or who were killed in explosions.

‘I came from al-Mada’en in search of my son Saad who was lost 12 days ago and we could not identify him in the photos that we saw inside the hall,’ said Ahmed Ibrahim, 62.

‘For two months, I have been visiting here in search of my husband whom I don’t know anything about since he left for work in al-Shorja marketplace in Baghdad,’ said 41-year-old Elham Khalil.

An official at the morgues institute said that unclaimed corpses are buried in the state cemetery, Karbala cemetery, Najaf cemetery and Mohammed Sakran cemetery in Baghdad.

He said that the burial procedures take place following judicial authorization that requires maps for locating the burial sites in the event that the bodies need to be located later on.

‘Most of the corpses we receive are brought in by police patrols who usually find the corpses in far-off and waste areas and at the gates of the cities, handcuffed, some with gunshot wounds and torture marks,’ the employer said.

Spokesman for the Iraqi Health Ministry said that the ministry has required health officials in Baghdad not to receive any unidentified corpses and that unidentified corpses should only be received by the morgues institute.

‘This will make it easier for citizens seeking their lost relatives,’ he said, adding that the institute keeps information and pictures of the corpses. He said most of the corpses were males.

Sectarian-based violence has mounted in Iraq since the bombing of al-Askary mosque in Samarra last February. The formation of a new government with 37 ministers last month had raised hopes that the violence might end.

But the key posts of interior, defense and national security ministers who are expected to play a key role in tackling sectarian violence, have not yet been agreed on and their duties are currently only being performed by interim ministers.

© 2006 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur

© Copyright 2003 - 2005 by monstersandcritics.com.
This notice cannot be removed without permission.

And the leader of the TO Terrorists is…

Posted in General on June 4th, 2006 by evan – Be the first to comment

William Petersen?

At a news conference earlier in the day, a CSIS official said a series of terrorist attacks plotted against unspecified targets in southern Ontario were “inspired by Al Qaeda,� adding that the ring of suspects arrested posed a “real and serious� threat.

I dunno. CSIS…CSI…sounds supicious to me.

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Joe Volpe’s Young Supporters

Posted in General on June 4th, 2006 by evan – Be the first to comment

It seems Joe Volpe’s youth wing may extend to children of foreigners as well. After revelations that 11 year old twins of Apotex Inc. vice-president Allen Shechtman donated big sums of cash to Volpe’s bid for the Liberal leadership, somebody started to ask questions about who the other kids backing Volpe were. This apparently led to the cracking of an international child-support ring for Volpe. According to CIRA:

June 2, 2006
CIRA RESPONDS TO HYPE ABOUT YOUTHFORVOLPE.CA
How can a website be shut down?

Ottawa, June 2, 2006 – The Canadian Internet Registration Authority (CIRA) issued a statement today in which it clarifies erroneous information referencing its part in shutting down youthforvolpe.ca.

Recent events related through the media indicated that Liberal MP Joe Volpe’s staff had requested CIRA suspend youthforvolpe.ca.

Bernard Turcotte, CIRA’s President and CEO states “We have no record of any contact between CIRA and Mr. Volpe or his staff. Furthermore, CIRA does not deal with website content. This is and continues to be a guiding principle underlying our operations.”

He added that no CIRA staff undertook any actions with respect to youthforvolpe.ca but rather that the Registrar for the domain name requested, via CIRA’s automated systems, that the domain name be cancelled, as is allowed under the rules. The registrar advised CIRA that it made this request because its registrant would not provide valid Canadian contact information.

Under CIRA’s registrar rules, the registrar had to act once it confirmed it could not obtain valid Canadian contact information from the registrant.

This is in no way an exceptional case, CIRA and CIRA Certified Registrars cancel domain name registrations on a regular basis for these exact reasons.

What are these foreign kids up to? Is Joe Volpe wearing an adult suit? That he is in fact a child in disguise might explain his lack of political sense.

No rules were broken?

Posted in General on June 1st, 2006 by evan – Be the first to comment

Joe Volpe appears to be just plain stupid. Aside from never having had a chance to win the Liberal Leadership, his endorsement at convention, which might deliver a few delegates to tip the scale for a front-runner, is now worthless as well.

At issue is “just not getting it” as a phenomenon amongst those who have been in power or close to power for too long:

Volpe returns money from young donors
Last Updated Thu, 01 Jun 2006 14:48:15 EDT
CBC News

Liberal leadership candidate Joe Volpe has returned $27,000 in donations from five donors under the age of 18 whose fathers are current and former executives with drug companies.
Joe Volpe is seeking to become the new leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. (Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)

The donors included the 11-year-old twins and 14-year-old son of former Apotex Inc. vice-president Allen Shechtman.

Volpe’s spokesman Corey Hobbs said no rules were broken, and returning the money is simply a way to avoid misperceptions.

How dumb is that? People don’t care that “no rules were broken”. People care that you have a shred of ethical sense in your spine. Volpe clearly does not.