Kubatana Marimba Ensemble on WWR

Media

I like most of the music that plays on Whole Wheat Radio, but sometimes a song comes on that grabs my attention so much it deserves an opening sentence far better than this one! Today's such song was by the Kubatana Marimba Ensemble, that just happened to be the Artist of the Day.

Kubatana Marimba Ensemble plays a style of polyrhythmic, polyphonic music largely transcribed and arranged from songs played on Zimbabwean mbiras — traditional instruments ("thumb pianos") of the Shona cultures of Zimbabwe. In the Shona language Kubatana roughly means “to come together and unite”, an apt description of how and why the band was formed in the summer of 2004.

Originally comprised of four beginning and four more accomplished players, the group has continued to practice, progress, evolve and learn both from native Zimbabwean teachers as well as numerous American friends who have gone before them. The current membership of Kubatana is eight. In addition to playing on as many as seven marimbas (three sopranos, two tenors, a baritone, and a bass), Kubatana uses other instruments including gourd shakers, amplified mbiras, and African hand drums. The music is energizing and exhilarating and usually induces people to get up and dance!

My first instinct when I hear music like this is to rate it five stars, tag it as Ruben Bagus and check out CD Baby. Unfortunately they don't seem to have anything up on there, and their official website is fairly sparse. I've emailed them asking where I can get their stuff.

I also want their clothes! :D

(Link to the origianl wiki; the photo hosted there no longer exists).

As a final footnote, after this we were treated to an amazing blues tune with Luther Kent. Try getting that amount of variety on your Top 40 station!


Stop the presses, iPad sells in Japan!

Hardware

The iPad is selling like crazy over in Japan. And these people (amongst a chorus of others) told us even the iPhone was going be a disastrous flop in Japan, to speak nothing of the iPad!

in Japan, the world’s second largest economy, it was launched with the kind of fanfare typically reserved for a new game machine from Nintendo.

Friday morning at an Apple store in Tokyo’s Ginza district a line formed that was estimated at 1,200 people, according to media reports. Other stores in Tokyo, such as one operated by Soft Bank in Tokyo’s Omotesando area, also saw long lines.

Some people have some explaining to do, and no it's not just about marketing.

I'll be interested to see what HP/WebOS and Android bring to the table. Google's perplexing ChromeOS/Android rift needs to be nipped in the bud if they're going to have an even remote shot at creating a cohesive product line.


hwbrowser Hardware Browser

Software

hwbrowser is a slick little GTK application that probes your Linux machine's hardware and presents the results in a two pane window, in a similar fashion to OS X's Hardware Profiler.

Some things I like about it

  • Fast, simple, no nonsense
  • Self explanatory, no docs needed (or are provided!)
  • Uses GTK but doesn’t use any of the Gnome APIs, so you can use it on DEs like Xfce without too many dependencies
  • For a FOSS application the icon is surprisingly well detailed and cute — very important!

It's certainly no replacement for procfs or dmesg piped to less/more, but if you just want a quick and broad overview of the hardware on your system it's spiffy. It's also quite old, but given its not available on FreeBSD I could be forgiven for not knowing of its existance… right?

Almost works great on Fedora

I've settled on Fedora as my Linux distribution of choice; as far as I know hwbrowser isn't installed by default but it's available from the free YUM repos. The only caveat is for some reason the Hard Drive tab remains blank.

Fedora 13 is out but my machines are still on 12 at the time of this post.


#Anime I may be able to restore my blog!

Anime

Screenshot of my original anime blog

Today was so ridiculously depressing what with stories like this and the fact I couldn't see Steve Ballmer in Singapore made me think I needed to end today on a high note. I may have uncovered some of my old anime blog posts!

Hey remember…

Remember when I lost my university hosted anime blog in a database wipe? Well this afternoon I was going through one of my old hard drive image backups looking for mummy's awesome recipe for guacamole. I talk to her every night in my dreams, but can't ask her during the day. Wait, I'm supposed to be cheering myself up, enough of such thoughts.

Anyway buried in an otherwise nondescript folder I stumbled across some of my anime blog drafts! By that I mean the text files I wrote while sitting at my beloved Boatdeck Cafe or at Starbucks before I added all the XHTML paragraph and image markup. I would have just left a university class and had my spirits crushed, so it was a happy, uplifting thing to do :).

The Palmtop Tiger trying on glasses!

Daijoubu!

What's even scarier is I just did a Toradora marathon again recently and that series was the last one I blogged about. I had the biggest otaku crush on Minori (Minorin to her friends!), possibly the biggest since Ami Mizuno. She had a visor mounted computer. I think I'll stop now.

Anyway (I've preceded two paragraphs with that word now) it means I can start restoring all these lost posts!

So here comes the ultimate question: should I spin my anime blog off again now that I can restore some of it? Could I be bothered? Or perhaps a more question: do I have the time? Or even more pertinent: desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu desu! Nyoro~n.

See, that's why I used to separate those posts out onto another blog. I remember I wrote an entire entry on using Minorin's kinetic energy to power a city, and questioning how Negi could see anything through his glasses that were barely larger than coins. I had diagrams.

I'm cheered up now, all good ^^.


Brit Hume is a Tool and Singapore’s oil spill

Thoughts

Jaw, meet floor. To be fair to Fox News, at least they had one dissenting panelist who scoffed at the idea that oil was just in a "few isolated patches", and that nature could take care of it. Frankly, the moment Brit asked "Where's the oil?" I would have informed him it's in his skull, where his brain should be.

I post this because Singapore is dealing with its own oil spill now too. Obviously its an order of magnitude smaller than what BP managed to do in the US, but given Singapore is barely the size of a country town in land area the effects are being felt all over the place. The smell, mostly :P.


Steve Ballmer, 20 years of Microsoft in Singapore

Software

Steve Ballmer in Singapore

On Tuesday I announced on Twitter that I'd booked a seat for Steve Ballmer's talk at Marina Sands celebrating 20 years of Microsoft in Singapore. At least, I thought I did until I got this message:

Due to overwhelming demand, we are unable to offer you a seat (-6).

Have no idea what that -6 is. Does it mean I missed out by six places? Or does it have something to do with 666 or another superstitious number thingy?

I'm bitterly disappointed, but I'll survive. I thought the talk and Q&A would be an interesting counterpoint to CloudForceSG which I watched on Tuesday, even if I probably would have disagreed with most of what was said. Hey, you're supposed to keep your friends close and your enemies closer, right?

I was going to ask him how he thought Microsoft was going to stay relevant in the consumer space this decade, and to sign my Windows 3.0 software carton! I suppose they got wind that I was a Mac, free/open source software and standards guy. Sneaky.


Fedora 13 Goddard cooked

Software

Fedora 13.

From the Fedora tracker. I'll be grabbing the DVD and Xfce releases :).


Google Images puts Singapore in KL

Thoughts

Today's fun and utterly pointless observation is a Google Image Search for "Kuala Lumpur". The first result is a photo of… Singapore!

To lend some possibly needed perspective, that would be akin to having a photo of Melbourne appear if you typed "Sydney", or London if you typed "Dublin", or Sarah Palin if you entered "intelligence is sexy".


I want the end of car culture too!

Thoughts

Aerial view of w:Fawkner, Victoria looking south, from Sydney Road / Western Ring Road, by Wongm on Wikimedia Commons

This has nothing to do with computer science or software or anime, but when Alex Sadlier shared this in Google Reader I just had to comment on it.

I want the car culture to fall down tomorrow, and I no longer care who knows it. I want the end of single-occupant vehicles, and the end of suburbs that force us to drive 30 or 40 miles to get to a job.

Yes, yes and yes!

The Aussie Factor

First I want to get this disclaimer out of the way. With all my recent blog posts on airport searches and internet filters I may give the impression that I hate Australia. I don't, I'm just bitterly disappointed at all her missed opportunities and think she and her people are capable of so much more, if people in charge were competent and forward thinking enough.

Oh yeah, and if we got rid of the states. An entire country with less people than many cities doesn't need them and it only adds to the red tape, bureaucracy and waste of our already ineffective federal government!

I digress!

When the British first arrived in Australia, they held the promise of creating an egalitarian society without the rigid social classes and sense of entitlement so entrenched in much of the Western world at the time. Instead that potential was squandered in an attempt to realise the Aussie Dream of a 1/4 acre lot and two cars, at the expense of our land's native peoples, the environment and ultimately of sustainable living.

With only 4 million people, Sydney is larger in land area than New York City, is it any surprise services such as public transport can't be effective when people are spread so thin?

Urban sprawl in Sydney by Bunzip on Flickr

It’s a car entitlement culture thingy

I've touched on this a few times on this blog, but basically the way I see it Australia, like the United States, has a car entitlement culture which has such a deep and profound effect on virtually everything. Cities can't afford to provide good public transport because they're too busy clearing huge swaths or land or tunnelling to build gigantic roads and other necessary infrastructure so individual people can sit in their gigantic cars and talk on their phones about how the traffic is so terrible and run over a few pedestrians and bike riders. As a result, nobody uses public transport because it's slow and ineffective. It's a viscous cycle that no politician for decades has had the balls to break other than token new tram lines or refurbished carriages.

It goes even deeper than a practical standpoint of "needing" a car. It's a rite of passage for 16 year olds to start learning to drive and to get their first wheels. As a financial result of growing up in Singapore, I'm 24 and the only vehicle I have a licence for is a Segway. It used to embarrass me. I don't care now.

I've only really talked about public transport here, but there are many other issues. With people living so far out, the idea of walking to work or school is out of the question for so many people which I can only imagine is having serious health effects. Many people somehow think living in a trendy apartment is still just a cheapie substitute to a "real" house. There's less space for parks. We can't use renewable energy to power trains because people are too busy burning a disgusting liquid in their cars that spills and causes disaster, not to mention chokes the air we breathe.

This isn't to say there aren't legitimate uses for cars, but for every person using one there are dozens who abuse them. You really need a gigantic car to go one block… by yourself… really?!

The Holden Commodore Omega, photo by User:OSX on Wikipedia

Put down the pot your hippie!

And yet if I say this to people, I'm called a daydreaming hippie or a stupid commie red socialist, or some less polite combination of the two! Anyway, call me what you will, I'm off to take the Singapore MRT two stops. If I miss the train, another one will be there in 2 minutes, and when I go on it there won't be any graffiti or broken windows either.

Ah the wonders of investing in your future!

Image credits

  • Melbourne aerial photo by Wongm on Wikimedia Commons
  • Sydney urban sprawl photo by Bunzip on Flickr
  • Holden car photo by User:OSX on Wikipedia.
  • Photo of baked cat pie with Guinness by Neal O’Carroll from the IntoYourHead show.

Celebrating Geek Pride Day!

Thoughts

42! The answer to The Great Question!

I can't believe I almost missed this, today was Geek Pride Day!

Geek Pride Day is an initiative which claims the right of every person to be a nerd or a geek. It has been celebrated on May 25 since 2006, celebrating the premiere of the first Star Wars movie in 1977.

It shares the same day as two other science-fiction fan ‘holidays’ – Towel Day, for fans of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Trilogy by Douglas Adams, and the Glorious 25th of May, for fans of Terry Pratchett’s Discworld.

According to that now infamous venn diagram showing the relationship between nerds, geeks and dweebs I'm a dweeb owing to the fact I'm socially inept. Still, Geek Pride Day is for all of us!

Kushieda Minori avatar I didn't carry a towel all day with me, but I did use one on several occasions and by pure coincidence I was listening to The Restaurant at the End of the Universe from Audible while traversing the MRT! I also spent much of the day transfixed on a cloud computing keynote by the CEO of SalesForce.com with their announcement of Cloud2 and Chatter, and I rewatched an anime series from 2008 because Minori is awesome!

I would say more, but I fear I'd be in violation of the Temporal Prime Directive.

And he’s single folks!