Tag: video

Kill Sports

Big sport has come out against Google’s WiFi 2.0 plan by arguing that use of white space spectrum will cripple sporting events by interfering with wireless headphones.

big sport can fuck themselves.
2009-01-26:

“What’s been surprising is that the damage is so extensive. It’s throughout the brain, not just on the superficial aspects of the brain, but it’s deep inside.”

unsurprisingly, playing these kinds of sports makes you stupid. just like watching them does, too. There is hope that we can end the football epidemic soon, by making it too expensive to play. better uses for all that land now wasted for stadiums, time wasted in front of tvs, and schools will have to compete on actual merit, not the exploits of a bunch of guys in spandex.

the NFL conducted a 20 year campaign to deny a growing body of scientific research that showed a link between playing football and brain damage what’s worse, there is huge brain damage just from watching.

76 of 79 Deceased NFL Players Found to Have Brain Disease
96% of players and 100% of viewers suffer from brain disease.
Long overdue:

How did a sport that causes brain damage become the leading signifier of our institutions of higher learning? no idea

Does our addiction to football foster a tolerance for violence, greed, racism, and homophobia? yes

More encouraging developments:

The NFL is done for the year, but it is not pure fantasy to suggest that it may be done for good in the not-too-distant future

It is after all, worse than cigarettes:

4 years ago I wrote a column saying that football was dead in this country, as dead as the Marlboro Man, though it didn’t know it yet. Putting your kids in football would be akin to giving them cigarettes, and leave you to face the withering judgment of your friends and neighbors.

There’s also massive corruption around stadiums:

20 NFL stadiums have opened since 1997, at a cost of $5b in taxpayer funds. Taxpayers have actually spent $10b more on professional sports stadiums and arenas than is typically acknowledged after various hidden costs are taken into account. Using public funds to subsidize wealthy sports franchises makes 0 economic sense and is a giant waste of taxpayer money. Professional teams add virtually no income to local economies. Large subsidies actually have a negative effect, taking money out of the local economy. Aside from the jobs generated by actually building the stadium, most jobs inside the stadium—selling food and beer or working at team concessions—are low-paying temp jobs. It’s even worse for football stadiums, which are used for games at most 10 times a year, and maybe a few more times for concerts or large events. Public economic development dollars can be put to much better use on things besides subsidizing sports teams and their wealthy owners.

Football shares a lot of attributes with religion: Pointless rituals, homophobia, misogyny, tax exempt status, indoctrination of the young, large public subsidies, changes to the brain in practitioners, tribalism, glorification of violence, uneasy alliances with commercial interests, elaborate costumes, a long and confusing rule book, practiced on weekends, involves singing, held in big and expensive buildings and a rabid fan base that forces themselves onto uninterested parties.
This is why US universities produce garbage.

I’d be thrilled to see the insane football culture at many American universities—the culture that Spanier and Paterno epitomized—brought down entirely, and some good might yet come of the Penn State tragedy if it helps that happen. Football should be one of many fine extracurricular activities that are available to interested students, rather than a primary reason for a university’s existence.

The article makes great points about how the NFL in particular has nothing to do with sports, and is actively harmful. but then, every thinking person already knows this.

The ING New York City Marathon was cancelled, but the football game of the New York Giants against the Pittsburgh Steelers went ahead. Why? The nation places a higher value on sedentary spectators popping Advil and Viagra, than on lean and wiry runners.

2011-07-15: “news” for stupid people, aka sports news can now be generated automatically. why not replace the spandex guys with simulations too?

“WISCONSIN appears to be in the driver’s seat en route to a win, as it leads 51-10 after the third quarter. Wisconsin added to its lead when Russell Wilson found Jacob Pedersen for an 8m touchdown to make the score 44-3 … . ” Those words began a news brief written within 60 seconds of the end of the third quarter of the Wisconsin-U.N.L.V. football game earlier this month. They may not seem like much — but they were written by a computer.

2012-01-23:

Many are skeptical that reining in college sports is even possible; the $ are simply too attractive, the pressures from outside too great. It is naïve “to think we will ever put the toothpaste back in the tube. There is an oversized, insatiable interest in sports, and college sports is part of that.”

2013-03-17:

2012-06-09:
ideally the class action suit takes the NFL down. what i don’t understand is why the action wasn’t extended to viewers, as that causes brain damage too.
2013-05-14: Misplaced priorities lead to a dumb, uncompetitive nation

2013-09-24:
nonprofit status for one of the biggest timewasters ever.

Taxpayers fund the stadiums, antitrust law doesn’t apply to broadcast deals, the league enjoys nonprofit status, and Commissioner Roger Goodell makes $30M a year. It’s time to stop the public giveaways to America’s richest sports league—and to the feudal lords who own its teams.

2014-01-03:

My name is Chris Kluwe, and for 8 years I was the punter for the Minnesota Vikings. In May 2013, the Vikings released me from the team. At the time, quite a few people asked me if I thought it was because of my recent activism for same-sex marriage rights, and I was very careful in how I answered the question. My answer, verbatim, was always, “I honestly don’t know, because I’m not in those meetings with the coaches and administrative people.”

you’re living in a decaying, backwards society when bigoted idiots who contribute nothing to society get both big bucks for running around, (or even worse, telling others to run around) and a huge platform to spew their nonsense.
2014-04-07:
Spending more on spandex doesn’t make the US more competitive. 25% more on athletics, combined with the student loan bubble? it seems these institutions are doing everything they can do fail as soon and as hard as possible. good riddance.
2014-06-29:

Plan to Replace American Football With Soccer On Track. The EU could take no credit for the legalization of gay marriage in the United States, but called it “a very welcome development. Once a country has socialism, national health care, and gay marriage, soccer is usually next.” The spokesman offered no timetable for eliminating baseball, but indicated that it was “in the works.”

2015-01-20:
yes please.

what would happen if we eliminated the institution of sport—from the high school level to the pros? Every league, every team. All of it. Gone. What would America look like then?

2015-04-06: step 4 is crucial.

2015-11-07:

The Department of Defense doled out as much as $6.8M in taxpayer money to professional sports teams to honor the military at games and events over the past 4 years

that’s actually pretty well targeted. a particularly dumb audience is much more likely to eat up nonsense like patriotism.

Enkin

“Enkin” introduces a new handheld navigation concept. It displays location-based content in a unique way that bridges the gap between reality and classic map-like representations. It combines GPS, orientation sensors, 3D graphics, live video, several web services and a novel user interface into an intuitive and light navigation system for mobile devices.

wow. headmap, here we come

El Bulli

On the whole El Bulli is much less formal than what one would expect from a Michelin 3 star restaurant of any sort, let alone one as famous as this. Service is incredibly busy, the wait staff have a large role in presentation of dishes, they’re running around the whole time rather frenetically. Service is still good of course – there’s someone there to help you with your chair when you return from the restroom (and your napkin has been discretely replaced while you’re gone). But given the rush silverware isn’t placed perfectly and symmetrically. But then silverware is changed at least 12 times during service.

Whenever food arrived at a table, everyone would go silent – awaiting instructions on how to eat the course just presented. Each dish is presented and then explained. In most cases all the ingredients are detailed, although in one case (the gorgonzola shell) things were left a bit of a mystery as we weren’t told what was underneath and left to discover the surprise. ~50% of the dishes also have a distinct order in which you’re supposed to eat each piece. Some might find this pretentious … but it’s executed in a fairly down-to-earth way, it’s hard to describe. It’s not “you must follow our instructions” rather it’s a description of how the chef believes, after much scientific testing, that the combination and ordering of flavors will be most interesting or fulfilling or demonstrate something about the ingredients that you might not have thought of before.


2011-08-30: amazing.

Conveyor Belt Waiters

Up in the kitchen, it is man, not machine, that makes the food. They haven’t found a way of automating the chef, just yet. Everything is prepared from fresh. When it is ready, the meal is put in a pot and given a sticker and a color to match the customer’s seat. Then it is put on the rails and despatched downhill to the correct table. Replacing waiters with helter-skelters and computers is fun for the customers. It also makes financial sense for the restaurant.

Restaurant in Nuernberg, run by… ROBOTS

Virgle

For 1000s of years, the human race has spread out across the Earth, scaling mountains and plying the oceans, planting crops and building highways, raising skyscrapers and atmospheric CO2 levels, and observing, with tremendous and unflagging enthusiasm, the Biblical injunction to be fruitful and multiply across our world’s every last nook, cranny and subdivision. An invitation. Earth has issues, and it’s time humanity got started on a Plan B. So, starting in 2014, Virgin founder Richard Branson and Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin will be leading 100s of users on one of the grandest adventures in human history: Project Virgle, the first permanent human colony on Mars.

how many years before this is not a prank anymore.

1857 Sound Recording

First Sounds has been in the forefront of finding and playing back the world’s earliest audio recordings. The first recordings of airborne sounds were traced onto lamp blacked paper; they were made to be viewed, not played. Extracting sound from soot is no trivial pursuit, and our approaches continue to evolve as our knowledge increases and new technologies become available. Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville, the inventor of sound recording made the world’s first recordings of airborne sounds in Paris between 1853 and 1860 on a machine he called a phonautograph. Jeune Jouvencelle (August 17, 1857) is the earliest known sound recording. An inscription identifies the content as “song at a distance,” with the words “jeune jouvencelle” (“young little girl”) written at the beginning and “les échos” (“the echoes”) at the end—possibly referring to the lyrics of a song as yet unidentified. Because of the lack of a tuning-fork timecode, the sound file has not been speed-corrected, and the fluctuations in cranking speed were so great during recording that the melody can’t be readily recognized from the uncorrected file.

2023-01-17: Also fairly old, the recordings of Alexander Graham Bell

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History has embarked on a new project to recover and restore its collection of 300 experimental audio recordings made by Alexander Graham Bell and his laboratory between 1881 and 1892. These are some of the world’s oldest sound recordings and they have never been heard by living ear.