breaking news

From http://forums.corvetteforum.com/showthread.php?t=1172555&page=71&pp=20 :

Hostage Situation in New Orleans

Just a heads up, armed looters have taken over one of the medical centers in New Orleans where the injured people were being sent. They are holding the entire staff of the hospital hostage and firing at the national guard. An FBI SWAT team has just been flown in (from Baton Rouge I believe) and they are just now getting situated. I’m not sure of any online scanners that are up monitoring the state trs. That is where alot of traffic is going on at.

LSP Troop B is requesting immediate backup. Troopers, riot squad, and national guard. He said the crowd is triple the size it was earlier and they are about to be overrun.

The location is 610 and eleshafield. [ed: ??]

getting worse

Things have gone from bad to worse. I have not heard from anyone about my grandfather. I phoned the company that runs the hospital he went to, and they have no information either. Supposedly they evacuated that hospital to another one, but the second hospital too is flooding, and according to reports on nola.com, running out of food and water. There are 350 people there at last count.

They say that the flooding is so bad in St. Bernard Parish that the water is flowing back over the levee into the Industrial Canal.

Perhaps the worst is that the St. Bernard Parish president, Henry “Junior” Rodriguez, isn’t getting any attention. He can’t even get through to FEMA and local employees to help coordinate rescue activities and focus efforts on the worst areas: the Civic Center, the Domino Sugar Refinery, the High School, the Medical Center, and so on.

For anyone who is listening in who has loved ones in the area, here are the best resources I have found for information:

St. Bernard Forum @ NOLA.com: http://www.nola.com/forums/stbtownhall/index.ssf This has the most up to date info. Go up to just http://www.nola.com/forums/ for other parishes.

Secondary forum @ wwltv.com: http://www.wwltv.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=2486 (registration is offline so this forum doesn’t get as much activity as the NOLA.com one)

Best news coverage: http://2theadvocate.com/

Streaming video of WWL-TV: here
Worst news that I’ve gotten so far: http://2theadvocate.com/stories/083005/new_penny001.shtml

Letter from Junior: http://stbernardafterkatrina.blogspot.com/ (scroll to bottom)

Photos: My cache which I’m building right now. I will update this as I get more photos of the affected area. Many cached from http://geckodog.dyndns.org/gallery/katrina (thank you!)

More photos: http://parishphotosafterkatrina.blogspot.com/ taken from KHOU-TV in Houston that’s covering St. Bernard. The general consensus is that CNN isn’t covering St. Bernard because there are too many floating dead bodies, and that’s “unsuitable” for the nation.

Official St. Bernard Parish website has a few pictures. Quote from the gentleman who runs the site:

“If I can interpret “gone” by someone, the reference is probably to a “current way of life”, or inundated with Noah’s new flood, or perhaps a “future” way of life. Looking at either interpretation, it’s a depressed feeling. I believe that St. Bernard is not alone and so many of us who have lost so much will band together at some point (as here) and hopefully give a total effort towards complete recovery with a memory that will last a lifetime. It’s a statement, sad but somehow is sprinkled with truth. “Alas, poor parish. I knew it well.” –Rebuilding as a Phoenix from its ashes. –Jerry”

Rebuilding St. Bernard Parish blog

More photos, downtown: from directNIC operator 2

“Checkin site”: http://www.katrinacheckin.org seems to go down often…

Other: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/theparish/
LiveJournal blog of an operator at directNIC.
Missing Persons
Raging Redfish forum
Photos of lower Plaquemine Parish are at this site
Red Cross: 866-438-4636 or 1-800-HELP-NOW
Number to call to see if people have been rescued: 1-225-925-6626
Company that runs Chalmette Medical Center: 800-347-7750 ask for Heather, you can get on a list and they’ll call you when they have an update
Pet rescue:

General Info:http://www.nola.com/forums/kennertownhall/index.ssf?artid=24151

Kenner pets:http://www.nola.com/forums/kennertownhall/index.ssf?artid=24154

http://www.nola.com/forums/kennertownhall/index.ssf?artid=24158

Jefferson pets (some of the links provided are showing up blank…I don’t know why though):http://www.nola.com/forums/jefftownhall/index.ssf?artid=14940

http://www.nola.com/forums/jefftownhall/index.ssf?artid=14954

The two cats I gave my grandfather are surely dead now. poor aRTie and Baskin…

accounted for

My grandfather made it to the local hospital in his area. I can’t get through on the lines, but I’m told he’s in the safest place he can be right now.

Let’s hope that the small subdivision survived without too much flooding or damage.

new orleans

My grandfather, last heard from valiantly waiting for the Red Cross to whisk him away to safety, is unaccounted for. The only house I’ve ever truly called home is about to be submerged under 24 feet of water. People, countless childhood photos, valued cultural treasures, all wait to be washed away in a torrent of destruction. I won’t even begin to try and list all of the people, places and things I personally would mourn. Entire cultures may vanish instantly. Sadly, you can’t honestly believe that they’d rebuild the city the way it exists today (save the Cabildo, Jackson Square, and a few other obvious landmarks). But, like the Ursuline nuns of yore, the people of Southeastern Louisiana will remain strong.

If my grandfather does not make it, will I remain as strong?

Before she died, my grandmother used to speak all the time of “the next Betsy,” and how it would destroy the city. She spoke with bile and hatred of the US Army Corps of Engineers, and their blowing of the levee to “save” New Orleans, when all it did was submerge her house under 5 feet of water needlessly. She gave me a copy of Rising Tide, and forced me to read it cover to cover. I, too, now become ill when I think of the Industrial Canal, that stinking man-made river I used to cross twice daily to and from school. I remember hunkering down for hurricanes, taping windows, stockpiling resources, sitting with family and praying for the storm to pass uneventfully, occasionally escaping northward to safety, but never was I faced with a threat so terrible as this one. I empathise with the survivors of Betsy who remain today, people who know full well what Katrina may mean to the Mississippi Delta.

And I have to give training to call centre staff here in Malaysia this week.

Lord, grant me the strength…

gi joan

It’s confirmed; I have both GERD and an ulcer. Seems that modern research points to Helicobacter pylori (hee-lih-co-bac-ter pie-lor-ee) being the root cause of most ulcers, and that stress does not cause them – but it can aggravate them.

As a teen, I used to have fierce, fierce heartburn. My mother used to think I was just making fun of her cooking, and sweep me aside. My father thought I was being melodramatic, but at least acknowledged that there are times you just need some Tums or Rolaids. Since then, I’ve had recurring issues with my gastrointestinal system, but have either ignored them, or been told to ignore them by medical professionals (including my parents).

When, recently, the pain became so bad that I couldn’t eat normal foods without being in pain, and not eating was causing its own problems, I finally switched doctors and had a bunch of tests done. They’ve finally found a cause, and while I’m hopeful this is all that’s going on, I won’t yet rule out the possibility that something more is going on. Really, I just want to go back to a normal lifestyle of decent, well-seasoned meals, the occasional glass of red wine, beer, or a martini, all without farting uncontrollably or having to lie down for hours on end. It’ll be nice to stand up for more than 30 minutes without keeling over.

malaysia

Anyone out there been to Malaysia? If so, got any tips on places to see, things to do, people to meet? I won’t have a lot of time, but I’m definitely interested in seeing what sites I can hit!

wohzork

thanks to Conty-kun…

You are standing in an open field, west of a white house, with a boarded front door. There is a mailbox here.

> CALL CITY HALL

You whip out your cell phone and get City Hall on the line.

> OFFER TO BUILD A GAS STATION ON THE PROPERTY

They ask you on what grounds you wish to build a gas station.

> GET THEM TO USE EMINENT DOMAIN LAWS TO SELL YOU THE PROPERTY

They agree. YOU WIN!

easy reader

Seems that there’s some renewed interest in my The Electric Company (TEC) website, the one over which Sesame Workshop sent me a C&D letter. I’ve never made my thoughts public on the matter until now. If Sesame Workshop was keen to reclaim their copyrights on the material I had there for commercial distribution, so be it; I would understand if a DVD release of previous material was forthcoming. However it’s not available on DVD, and the C&D letter I received startled me — it stated something about “brand dilution.” (I will try and find the letter and post an excerpt here.)

Maybe CTW/Sesame Workshop is embarrassed by their former efforts on a children’s program with extremely low production values and a set that looks like it was designed by someone on LSD. Perhaps the educational value of those programs has decreased over time, and they are worried that today’s children would be negatively impacted by the offbeat programming. Maybe they don’t want to pollute their limited marketing stream with outdated ideas when they would much rather put effort into newer, potentially more lucrative projects.

In the end, though, this program forms part of the collective consciousness of millions upon millions of Americans, and at least some folks from other nations I’ve met remember the program. It helped them grow into the people they are today. I certainly wouldn’t have the love I have for funky music, analogue synthesis and graphics, and humorous little ditties without this program. And it did help me read — me, a child in the city with some disadvantages and a tumultuous family life — precisely the sort of child at whom the programming was targeted, according to various Teacher’s and Parents’ Guides for the program I have collected over the years.

Further, such programming is woefully absent on PBS these days. I know the team responsible for TEC went on to work on Square One TV (another fantastic program, focused on math) and then Between The Lions (still on limited circulation, and for the moment, acknowledged by PBS). Post-Sesame children’s television is a panoply of offerings, and Sesame Workshop may have decided to throw in the towel to other fields. Yet this is the area in which TEC excelled, and provided a positive, hip role model. An example: Morgan Freeman himself (under the guise of his Easy Reader character) would make references to Fred Rogers’ program and Sesame Street — he reads some ancient graffiti, an inside joke about how “Sir Lancelot loves Lady Elaine Fairchild.” This is the sort of subtle, intelligent humour that should be required reading for today’s generation of children lost on televised baby talk, programming that amounts to no more than bubblegum for the brain.

Sesame Workshop’s struggle to define themselves in the increasingly narrow field of educational television – in a world where PBS is under constant threat, where parents demand programming that pacifies, not instructs or challenges, and where commercialism is required to achieve the desired production values – may not permit the sort of experimental efforts TEC engaged in on a daily basis in the 1970s. Controversy is unavoidable, and I appreciate Sesame Workshop’s attempts to “walk the line” as carefully as possible. But to not even mention programs like TEC on their own website, and to actively persecute other websites offering no more than the sharing of memories and concepts, is tantamount to denying that the past ever occurred.

However, I argue that to remain relevant in the digital age, in a world where evolution of ideas is occurring with ever increasing rapidity, that experimentation must be increased. There should be tens more programs all being explored through digital means. Experimentation should be seen as a chance to learn more, and just like Fred Rogers used to tell me, failure isn’t something of which to be ashamed. It means you tried your best, and you learned from what you did. That such a simple concept is lost in the world of public television is, frankly, heartbreaking.

Why not bring TEC back? Why not release it on DVD, with two versions: an edited down version approved for today’s kids, and a full-length version for parents keen on nostalgia? Such things are easy to execute, and former actors on the program have stated publicly they’d be happy to volunteer their time to help frame the content. I’d buy the complete program set if available. Heck, why not consider relaunching the show? Popular cultural references in the media are at an all time high. Electronic techno music echoes the funky strains of the 1970s now more than ever. And while one can rightly attack some of the sappy songs one hears in childrens’ albums and television these days, the self-effacing humour of TEC never alienated nor condescended.

My archive was never intended to cut into Sesame Workshop’s profits, but to keep memories alive for this generation and share them with the coming ones. I could even argue for its restoration under “fair use” terms, but I really don’t feel like fighting a long, protracted battle with the powers that be.

Feel free to convince me otherwise. I have plenty of bandwidth.

early august joanbits

Ok, there’s actually more interesting things that have happened in my life than me spending hard-earned dough on neat toys.

For instance, an article I wrote about my work at my last employer (AIM‘s AutoCode product) was published in the Journal of Registry Management (2005, 32.1, pp. 28-31). I apologize here for the misspellings in the table headers; I’m certain that the proof copy I provided had the word “arbitrary” spelled correctly. Ah well, I am deeply thrilled to publish in a journal period, errors and all. My work at AIM was often arduous, but the >99% sensitivity and specificity we started achieving on a regular basis due to my team’s continuous lexicon tweaking made it all seem worthwhile.

I’ve also managed to track down more information on the Voyetra 8 from its original creator, the last remaining “official” tech, and more. I’ll have it posted RSN. There’s a reason these babies still fetch top dollar on eBay – they still have that fat, lush, rich sound you just can’t get out of a digital/virtual synth.

Oh, and I’ll be heading East again in a few weeks – that is, to Malaysia for my current employer and to Japan for vacation. Any long-lost friends looking to get together while I’m in Japan, drop me a note (same email addy as always) and let’s do it!