Marjorie Ferguson

Comparing U.S. and Canadian experiences in an age of global and hegemonic electronic cultgure and communication, Ferguson argues:
“…first, that national/cultural identities are open to influence but they are not necessarily shaped by their electronic media reflection or construction and, second, that assumptions about an undifferntiated global culture as a consequence of consuming the same material and symbolic goods are reductionist and fail even on a continental North American basis. In othe words, we are not what we eat.”
“…Canada's . . . natioanl talent for self-inflicted wounds.” (p. 46)
“[America's] national symbolic exuberance.” (p. 46
“The more compelling sotry is that any distinctively Canadian television and radio survives, given seven decades of American variety, drama and sitcome overspill.”
– Marjorie Ferguson, in “Invisible divides: Communication and identity in Canada and the U.S.”, Journal of Communication, 43(2), (noted Nov. 30, 1993)

The best Windows app ever written

As a cub tech reporter many moons ago for the The Hamilton Spectator, I convinced my bosses to pay for the airfare from Toronto to San Francisco to report on a Macworld Expo. This was either the first or second Macworld for the reign of Jobs II — his return to the company he co-founded after his ouster.
As he does at most Macworlds, Jobs gave the keynote and the atmosphere was electric. I've yet to meet a business leader who can exude the excitement and charisma he can. The only think I can remember about his talk is that this was before the iMac showed up and someone got up to talk about an early version of DreamWeaver.
But I digress . . .
Earlier this week, Jobs was back on the same stage I saw him on at the Moscone Convention Center in downtown San Francisco to announce that Apple's top-notch music software iTunes was now available (along with Apple's Music Store on Windows.) You can watch some video excerpts of his presentation at C|Net and Apple fans will get a kick out of Jobs' claim, delivered with a straight face to rousing applause that iTunes on Windows is “the best Windows app ever written.”
Sad thing is, he could be right.

Camille Paglia

“The notion of the decentred subject [is] one of the fattest pieces of rotten French cheese swallowed whole by American academics . . .” (p 180)
“The number one problem today is not ignorant students by ignorant professors who have substituted narrow 'expertise' and 'theoretical sophistication' for breadth and depth of learning in the world history of art and thought.” (p. 207)
-Camille Paglia, in Sex, Art, and American Culture

George Woodcock

“The arts are only viable and only justifiable if they serve values that are neither economic nor political. Their real contributions to society have nothing to do with paying taxes or creating jobs or providing propaganda for causes like national unity. They have their justification in irradiating our lives by the gifts of the imagination.
– George Woodcock in “Jackals' Dream” in The Bumper Book, p. 51 (Noted Sept. 19, 1993)

Big holes in Microsoft's core products

There are some big holes in Microsoft Exchange that could let an attacker seize control of a machine and run arbitrary code. The holes could let in someone who wants to unleash a worm or a virus. Systems affected include those running Windows NT, XP, 2000.
Microsoft has some patches posted.

  • <a href="http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/byid?searchview&query=VU%23467036,VU%23575892,VU%23422156,VU%23435444"A description of the problems.
  • Microsoft calls these security updates “Critical” — it's highest rating.
  • Not surprisingly, the geeks at Slashdot have a few opinions.