Sep. 28th, 2006

geekchick: (doof doof)
Another in the periodic notes to self about various shows coming up I might possibly be interested in.  Since I know there's a fan or two around here, note the Paul and Storm show in December and the fact that Dar's doing two nights at the Birchmere.

  • 09/28 Massive Attack w/ Christine Moritz , 9:30 Club Sold out. =( (Tonight, eep! And Friday, but that's sold out.)
  • 09/28 The Mountain Goats , The Black Cat Also sold out. =( (Again, tonight! Eep!  But if I go out at all, I'm pretty sure Massive Attack wins out.)
  • 09/29 Bettie Serveert, Iota
  • October )November )December )
geekchick: (look!)
First, a shameless plug: please go vote for [livejournal.com profile] snipeyhead in Animal Planet's "Hero of the Year" contest.

Now, on to a couple of links from today's round of blog-skimming and web-wandering:

Politics:

Tech:

  • Steve Yegge's Good Agile, Bad Agile (via Dare Obasanjo), which both talks a bit about working at Google and includes this nugget of joy:
    So the consultants, now having lost their primary customer, were at a bar one day, and one of them (named L. Ron Hubbard) said: "This nickel-a-line-of-code gig is lame. You know where the real money is at? You start your own religion." And that's how both Extreme Programming and Scientology were born.

  • Theme day: The BileBlog has something to say about agile development too. It's seems like an uncharacteristically restrained post, but the comments section is being staffed by plenty of people with very strong opinions either way.

  • Today's Daily WTF (Define Failure As Success) made me snarf my Diet Coke, and then made my head hurt. From now on, perhaps I'll try that trick in my code too. Should make testing go much faster.

  • Coding Horror on testing. Make sure to check out the Did I Remember To testing checklist.

  • Creating Passionate Users on when ease-of-use goes wrong. Kathy's also looking for a web designer/developer to do some work on her Typepad-hosted blog.


Random stuff:
geekchick: (disaster)
(Airlifted from a comment to my previous post.)

Ariel Dorfman, Are We Really So Fearful?

I will leave others to claim that torture, in fact, does not work, that confessions obtained under duress -- such as that extracted from the heaving body of that poor Argentine braggart in some Santiago cesspool in 1973 -- are useless. Or to contend that the United States had better not do that to anyone in our custody lest someday another nation or entity or group decides to treat our prisoners the same way.

I find these arguments -- and there are many more -- to be irrefutable. But I cannot bring myself to use them, for fear of honoring the debate by participating in it.

Can't the United States see that when we allow someone to be tortured by our agents, it is not only the victim and the perpetrator who are corrupted, not only the "intelligence" that is contaminated, but also everyone who looked away and said they did not know, everyone who consented tacitly to that outrage so they could sleep a little safer at night, all the citizens who did not march in the streets by the millions to demand the resignation of whoever suggested, even whispered, that torture is inevitable in our day and age, that we must embrace its darkness?


And from his own blog, Bush and the dirty war

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