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Live from a Music Video Beach Party 34

Sure, it might be the beginning of winter, but that didn't stop us from having our fun veejay style in this week's show. We talk about DVD encryption, robotic snakes, and more.
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Live from a Music Video Beach Party

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  • Only her hairdresser knows for sure...
  • I'm a big fan of including the length of the show in the article, so that I have a clue how long I'm going to be listening for. This one, for example, was 21:18 or so.

    Commentary on the past articles is right on the spot, though I've got to admit I missed the "Mattress King" reference.

    ------
  • You guys go through all this work and have all this fun and there's no video?! Hmm ... Ever notice how SLOW /.ers are to respond to news posts on Saturday mornings? Hmm ... =)
  • Ever notice how SLOW /.ers are to respond to news posts on Saturday mornings? Hmm ... =)

    Nah, they're just so amused by the 20+ min show that they're listening to it over and over again, so by the time they start posting again, ...

    (Standard disclaimer: my sense of humor doesn't match yours. Moderators keep that in mind. :-D )

  • I wish I were reading a transcript. It wouldn't waste as much time, eh? :)

    CmdrTaco, Hemos, CowboyNeal, and Nate...
    Talking about stuff posted on slashdot? What nerds! :)
    Oh well, at least they're warez dudes at heart, eh? Burn your DVD's onto CD-R's, d00d...

    Remote control robotic snakes? That's out there too... So they're cheap, but no one will want them, eh? Good improv fake snake charming music and sound effects there...

    "The Internet as an Ecosystem"... Ooo, animated internet traffic stuff. Of *course* it has "organic" properties. You're looking at a lot of humans doing stuff. Surprise.

    The stupid Amazon patent. Umm... go to technocrat.net, d00d. I'm waiting for no-click shopping. Make them press "Enter". :)

    I guess this would be pretty cool if we were all listening to it earlier, eh? It *is* nice to hear the posters yammering about this, for the novelty of it, I guess, but... well, that's about it.

    Hmm. I got cut off somewhere around wireless modem/ghosting. And that was actually sounding interesting. Oh well. A waste of 15 minutes, but all in all better than television. (What, I was missing Pokemon? Ahhh!)
    ---
    pb Reply or e-mail rather than vaguely moderate [152.7.41.11].
  • Commentary on the past articles is right on the spot, though I've got to admit I missed the "Mattress King" reference.

    That was a segment on John Stewart. It was pretty funny. You had to see it, though.

    I still like the archivist who spends his free time archiving porn and lives with his mother. I had to laugh at that, especially the puppet porn they showed clips of.

    I also enjoyed watching Tori Amos not talking very much, then pouring a glass of water on the floor for no apparent reason.
  • OK, admittedly, you Slashdot maniacs shouldn`t be allowed to broadcast... :-) Mad!!! But funny!!
    I think you should make more of an effort to promote this craziness.
  • Roblimo responded to this kind of question in another thread. /. is choosing not to post anything yet because we don't really know anything other than the fact that we have failed to make contact with the lander.

    They are waiting until they have more information before they post an article. This seems like a good idea to me, since a thread about it now would invariably involve flamewars and everyone bashing everyone else, when in actuality nobody knows anything about what happened yet and nobody has enough information to speculate as to what happened.
  • I have to admit that I only started listening to the show this week. I found it VERY amusing. I started to listen to the achives. I look forward to listening to you every week! Please keep the laughs coming!

    Me
  • :) I agree. I was thinking the same thing.

    But I figured the only way I could intelligently comment on the content would be by listening to it, and commenting on it, since there isn't a transcript.

    But, some of my comments weren't just rehashes of the article, and some of their comments were somewhat funny (but not for long :)...

    I also hadn't listened to one of these before, so I figured I'd give it a try.

    Frankly, if I wanted to hear a bunch of nerds talking about slashdot, I could go to the lab. But of course this is a special bunch. :)
    ---
    pb Reply or e-mail rather than vaguely moderate [152.7.41.11].
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I used to live up in LA - Al Greenwood (The old codger) has been plugging his bedspread kingdom in Long Beach forever on late-night B-movies. Just like "Cal Worthington and his Dog Spot". These old cronies never die and invade the late-night arena forever till theyre pop culture.

    You should see the new guy there: "Crazy Gideons" You see this dufis chuck his microwave oven through his big screen TV. ("Because I'm CRAZY!")
  • When the question was asked for what might the icon be for "Your rights online" for evil patents, I was thinking about those old western pictures of the stereostypical short and fat snakeoil salesmen hawking his dubious warez from a soapbox to the unsuspecting public.

    Know what image I'm talking about? Good for an icon? Unfortunately, old clip art depicting these sellers of modern science escaped several search pages of google [google.com] and lycos [lycos.com] turned up dry. Oh well...
  • and by the way I have scanned my face, eyes open, would not advice it.

  • What licence does this show have? If i were to replay it on community TV station up here in ole canada, would cmdrtaco and hemos come after me with a pack of killer penguins?
  • RealMedia sounds great, is 1/3 the bitrate, and doesn't pause. 16Kbps voice or 24 Kbps music RealMedia will blow 24Kbps MP3 away.
  • I downloaded the MP3 and then listened to it, so the only pauses I heard were when I did something processor-intensive.
    --
  • I was thinking of one of those red drinking birds that dip their beaks in water and are not-quite-perpetual motion machines. either that or a large stone wheel with a patent number inscribed in it.
  • Hey Rob and Hemos!!

    You guys need to get your PR people to get you a shot on the Daily Show as two young geek entreprenurs, or whatever. You can doo it!

    Good show.
  • by Wah ( 30840 )
    The stupid Amazon patent. Umm... go to technocrat.net, d00d. I'm waiting for no-click shopping. Make them press "Enter". :)

    if you read the patent [164.195.100.11], it also covers buying something "by making a sound".

    I liked the show. It's one of the better small time radio shows out there. I say go for the full 30 minutes, or 32 mb to be specific!! C'mon think aboout it, my rio has 32mb of memory, get the pic?

  • all they have to do is post in these discussions. The fans would come in droverings, err flocks of mad geese!
  • Guys, I'm sorry about this; it's really offtopic, but very few have posted to this thread, and the comment about the brain being USB or firewire piqued my interest.

    I read somewhere that nerve signals travel at around 200 mph through the body. Obviously, nerves are more an interrupted electric current; I forget the actual terms, but the signal must travel to one node, be interpreted and carried on, correct?

    Well, how fast do electrical signals travel on an ISA bus? Or along IDE ribbon cable, or SCSI, or...well, whatever? How comparable are we to our buses?

    Sorry about the offtopicness...Moderate away. I'm just really interested in this stuff. ;]

  • a large stone wheel with a patent number inscribed in it

    That's probably the best idea in terms of the symbolism, since the wheel is the canonical simple, universally-known invention, as in the phrase "re-invent the wheel", though I don't know how well it could be rendered in a small icon-sized image.

    Another idea might be someone representing the US Patent and Trademark Office wearing a dunce cap, or just a dunce cap labelled with the letters "USPTO".

    I guess there are really two somewhat separate issues that we tend to have with patents in general: one is the patenting of truly simple, obvious techniques that really don't deserve to be called "technology" so as to extort licensing fees from everyone else, e.g., the "one-click shopping" patent that they discussed. The other is people being tyrannical or otherwise butt-headed about licensing for patents on things that really were innovative but are now in such widespread use that the restrictions are harmful, e.g., the LZW algorithm for GIFs (which Slashdot still seems to be using -- even though they skipped "Burn All GIFs Day", the patent icon when they add it should really not be a GIF) and Fraunhoffer's (sp?) MP3 algorithm.

    The "patenting the wheel" icon would ideally symbolize the first issue, but not so much the second. My "USPTO dunce cap" idea would be symbolic more of the problems with the whole IP system, and specifically the incompetence of the USPTO to handle the issues properly. That's sort of a third issue, but it relates to both of the ones above.

    Someone (Taco, if I've figured out the voices correctly) asked which patent is dumber: one-click shopping or human DNA, and Hemos (?) said it was DNA. I'm not sure I agree: the idea of DNA patents is worse morally (i.e., the second issue), but at least genetic engineering is truly high-tech stuff, so it makes some sense to talk about its products as scientific accomplishments. One-click shopping is such a simple idea that I find it offensive to even call it "technology", let alone think it worthy of a patent (i.e., the first issue), so it's the "dumber" one.

    David Gould
  • hmmm, second idea: square wheel :P
  • did you get a snowcrash?
  • or be on irc for some live questions
  • Would that be Debian GNU/Hemos?
    ---
  • Send email to me [mailto] if you are interested in playing Geeks in Space on public access cable or non-profit radio station. We'll look at it on a case-by-case basis.

  • I just noticed the new patent icon [slashdot.org], on the Bleem Sues Sony [slashdot.org] story. Cool! It seems to cover both the stupidity and the malice angles: not only is it absurd to consider silverware a technological breakthrough, but the "Patent Pending" label seems to connote dire consequences for infringement on this "nutrition delivery system".

    David Gould

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