Articles


Rational WMD theory emerges

I read with interest a pretty rational article from the New York Times this morning. This is likely the first article to reasonably explain what has been seen since the invasion and what the intelligence services worldwide were seeing before it, but it still leaves room for debate. The basic …

Latest Panther info

I'm still in the process of downloading copies of the latest Panther Server and Client (I have to do so quickly, because Apple's now sending me three pestering messages a week asking me to see if they've fixed my bugs reported in 10.2). However, there are plenty of other …


SIGGRAPH 2003: Day 5

The last day of SIGGRAPH 2003 (Thursday) was the only day during the week that forced paper-goers to choose between multiple sets of papers. The first and last sessions provided this problem, giving way to five paper write-ups with a few fewer papers each than the previous days. As usual …

Belgians back off from prosecuting the world

The Belgian legislature has voted to change the controversial human rights prosecution law such the court now only has jurisdiction when Belgian citizens or property are involved. According to this article from BBC News, the only thing standing in the way of this bill becoming law is the formal signature …

Movie making software for the P800

Makayama software (makers of video encoding software for handheld phones) have released software to compress movies using Apple's QuickTime so that they can be watched on a Sony Ericsson P800. The software costs $9.99 and can be purchased online. A two hour movie can be compressed to fit on …

Harvard to put up Nuremberg trial documents online

A story from the Scotsman tells that Harvard Law School is in the process of readying over one million pages of documentation from the Nuremberg war crimes trials online. 6,700 pages of documents on the "Doctor's Trial" (about medical experiments carried out by 23 doctors in the Third Reich …

RIAA questioned by Senator

According to an article from CNet this morning that Minnesota Republican, Norm Coleman has sent a letter to the RIAA asking for specifics about their subpoena operation. The lawmaker has said that he is concerned that the industry is using a "shotgun" approach that could harm innocent people. For their …

Homeland security looks to fund a billion in research

According to an article from CNet, the Department of Homeland Security is preparing to fund $1B per year in Homeland Security research. So, grab your friends and ready your proposals, because the funding gates are open. Patterned after the Department of Defense's DARPA, HSARPA is intended to provide funding for …

MIT research says random searches could improve security

With all of the recent discussions on profiling and the CAPPS system for airport profiling, it appears that one issue was lost: is profiling actually more effective than random searches. According to an article on ACFNewssource, a set of MIT graduate students have put together a paper detailing why random …

OpenGL 1.5 announced

The OpenGL ARB (Architecture Review Board) and SGI have announced that version 1.5 of the international graphics standard will be released including the OpenGL Shading Language. Key improvements: OpenGL Shading Language (OGLSL), which provides a vendor-neutral method for high-performance vertex and fragment shaders as well as shader objects. These …

Baby Bells continue to fight for your privacy

In a story that just continues to get larger and stranger, yet another Baby Bell (this time Pac Bell) is standing up for your rights to privacy. On the heals of Verizon standing firm until an appeals loss earlier this year, PacBell has filed suit against the RIAA claiming that …

Virginia plans to extend Metro system anyway

Despite recent news of layoffs and accelerated retirements in the Metro design and construction group, it appears that Northern Virginia is still planning to phase in Metro from DC to Dulles Airport, albeit in phases. This according to an article from the Washington Post. The project is supposed to be …

NASA finds decrease in ozone depletion

According to a press release by NASA, the ozone layer is still being depleted, but the rate at which it is occurring is on the decrease. Although not yet to the point where we'll be getting back to the pre-CFC state, it does show progress in reversing man-made pollution. There …

MovieFest: SIGGRAPH 2003 Electronic Theater

Since I've got a DVD version of the 2003 Electronic Theater presentation, I figured I'd do a showing of it before I leave to go to the Canyon. The plan is to do the showing next Sunday (8/10) afternoon at 5pm. Please RSVP if you are interested in coming …

Finding nemo breaks into top ten

Finding Nemo, Pixar's summer release, has broken $315M in gross revenues, giving it the number one spot for 2003, trumping The Matrix Reloaded by almost $40M so far. Here are some other interesting facts: Nemo has now surpassed Fellowship of the Ring (by a couple million bucks) Nemo is now …

More bad news for BuyMusic.com

I know, you're sick of hearing me complain about these guys, but here are some more choice complaints from users and musicians. A lengthy article of complaints from a Windows 2000 user who has bought tracks from BuyMusic.com enumerates the following problems: You must download each track in an …

Rolling Stones use WiFi on the road

An article from ComputerWorld relates the story of the Rolling Stones use of WiFi networks while on the road. The band and their entourage uses 1.5-3Mbps connections at each venue to update their website and connect to business associates, as well as handle personal email and other communications. Their …


SIGGRAPH 2003: Modeling and Simplification papers

This paper session seemed to be a bit of a catch-all, covering everything from a new UI for editing 3D objects to machine-created architecture and then finally the simulation of complex environments with texture depth maps. Twister: A Space Warp Operator for the Two-Handed Editing of 3D Objects Twister is …