Archive for December, 2005

Today’s inspirational image

Dec 29

Colin Farrell

Ahhhhhh

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Top 10 products of the decade

Dec 29

According to CNET

1. iPod (2001) No other product has had the incredible, loyal devotion that the iPod inspires. It’s also one of only a handful of products to get a 9 rating from CNET. It revolutionized and popularized music players with its stylish design and is still considered the industry leader. Even if you devoutly believe other music players have better features now, you have to acknowledge that iPod is still the king.

2. TiVo (1999)
3. Google (1996)
4. Napster (1999)
5. Firefox (2004)
6. PalmPilot (1996)
7. Motorola Startac (1996)
8. Apple iMac (1998)
9. Sony Digital Mavica MVC-HD5 (1997)
10. The Sims (2000)

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Eileen made me do it

Dec 29

Went to read her blog and saw that she’s Ron Weasley! So I had to take the test, too.

quiz
Which Harry Potter Character Are You Most Like?

brought to you by Quizilla
You are Hermione Granger (Emma Watson)
You are clever, resourceful, and a great problem-solver. However, people sometimes perceive you as pushy or a know-it-all, and that’s why they choose to stay away from you. You stick close to your best friends, but don’t mind being a bit of a loner sometimes. Like Hermione, you don’t seem to care whether or not you have a significant other, but can’t have one that wouldn’t show you the respect you know you deserve.

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And the saga continues

Dec 28

I first blogged about this on the 22nd here

Judge tosses Letterman restraining order
Woman had claimed host caused her ‘mental harassment’

SANTA FE, New Mexico (AP) — A state judge has lifted a restraining order granted to a Santa Fe woman who accused talk-show host David Letterman of using coded words to show that he wanted to marry her and train her as his co-host.

Judge Daniel Sanchez on Tuesday granted a request by lawyers for Letterman, host of CBS’ “Late Show,” to quash the temporary restraining order that he earlier granted to Colleen Nestler.

She alleged in a request filed December 15 that Letterman has forced her to go bankrupt and caused her “mental cruelty” and “sleep deprivation” since May 1994.

Nestler requested that Letterman, who tapes his show in New York, stay at least 3 yards away and not “think of me, and release me from his mental harassment and hammering.”

Read the rest of this lunacy

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The 2005 Foot in Mouth Awards

Dec 27

From Wired

By Evan Hansen

Tech execs say the darndest things. And so do shuffling presidents, and disgraced scientists, and Wikipedia fakers. It’s time to relive 2005′s biggest spoken gaffes.
“Screw the nano.”

– Motorola CEO Ed Zander

Cell-phone makers hoping to break into the music business got little traction in 2005 in the face of Apple Computer’s iPod dynasty. The shortcoming was made all the more glaring for Motorola, when its Rokr iTunes phone debuted alongside Apple’s newest entry, the iPod nano. (Motorola later issued a press release saying Zander’s statement was a “joke.”)
“I’m going to f***ing bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again. I’m going to f***ing kill Google.”

– Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, in statements attributed to him in court documents by former Microsoft engineer and recent Google hire Mark Lucovsky

The accusations flew fast and furiously in a high-stakes court battle between Microsoft and Google over alleged employee poaching. Drama aside, the case highlighted a tectonic power shift in the technology industry brought on by post-IPO Google.
“Walk this way, talk this wa-ay.”

– Intel chairman Craig Barrett

The most embarrassing executive antics of the year came early in 2005, as a tone-deaf, stiff white guy stepped up to the stage at the Consumer Electronics Show and joined Aerosmith front man Steven Tyler in a duet. Silicon.com has the video.
“Most people don’t even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?”

– Thomas Hesse, president of Sony BMG’s global digital business division

The music giant responds in an NPR interview to complaints that anti-copying technology on some of its CDs creates serious security vulnerabilities in computers.
“You’re obviously from France.”

– Intel CEO Paul Ottelini

This zinger deflects criticism when a reporter with an accent asks why Intel is so far behind Advanced Micro Devices on a dual-core server chip. After the laughter subsides, AMD continues to assault Intel’s leadership position.
“All research up until now has been conducted in strict observance of the government-set guidelines.”

– Korean stem-cell researcher Hwang Woo-suk

The cloning pioneer initially denies accusations that he broke ethical guidelines in conducting stem-cell research, but eventually admits he lied to protect co-workers. Later, he withdraws a groundbreaking research paper amid accusations of falsified data.
“I know what I don’t know, and to this day I don’t know technology and I don’t know accounting and finance.”

– Bernie Ebbers, ex-CEO of WorldCom

At his $11 billion telco fraud trial, Ebbers tries to pin the debacle on ex-WorldCom CFO and state’s witness Scott Sullivan. The jury is not convinced, and Ebbers is convicted of conspiracy, securities fraud and false regulatory filings on all counts. An appeal is pending.
“Lightweight, and crank it on, and you shuffle the shuffle.”

– President Bush

Brit Hume interviews the president about his iPod on Fox News, as recorded in a hilarious transcript published by The Washington Post.
“It was done as a joke that went horribly, horribly wrong.”

– Fake Wikipedia poster Brian Chase

A false post linking journalist John Seigenthaler Sr. with the Kennedy assassinations spilled over into public debate over the merits and failings of Wikipedia, a publicly maintained database of encyclopedia listings open to all comers. The controversy ends with an anticlimactic apology, but raises tough questions about the reliability of a new brand of participatory media, loosely dubbed “Web 2.0.”
“Mr. Negroponte has called it a $100 laptop — I think a more realistic title should be ‘the $100 gadget.’”

– Intel chairman Craig Barrett

At a press conference in Sri Lanka, the head of the world’s biggest chipmaker disses a plan by Nicholas Negroponte to give the world’s poorest children affordable computers.
“(Telecoms) and the cable companies have made an investment, and for a Google or Yahoo or Vonage or anybody to expect to use these pipes (for) free is nuts!”

– SBC Communications CEO Ed Whitacre

Intimations of a “two-tiered” internet emerge in this Q&A with Business Week. The frustrations come out near the end of a year that saw the telecom industry begin to shake off bankruptcies and fraud only to confront an inescapable paradigm shift in the shape of broadband.

Heard any good ones? If you have a favorite verbal blunder from 2005, please share it in the Rants & Raves area below.

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