endenizen

October 31, 2007

Halloween in the Castro… or not!

Stay home for halloween. If you dare!

Tonight is Halloween. The city has spent $40,000 on a campaign to keep people out of the Castro. The massive hordes which usually converge here are being told that there is “no party” and all the bars will be closed. All subway stations near the Castro are also closing early.

However much of an effort the city makes to deter people, they also know that people will inevitably show up. There was talk of setting up portable toilets on Castro street because very few bars will be open. There was even talk of closing the street if too many people show up. Doesn’t sound like much of a party deterrent to me.

It’s 7pm now and security appears to be building up all over. The Muni has many employees patrolling the subway stations and there are police at every exit (perhaps to enforce the closure in an hour and a half).

Most interestingly, the 24-hour Safeway across the street has had a temporary fence set up around its border. It appears they are keeping only one entrance and exit open for the time being and additionally, there are three busses directly in front of the store (with an additional 7 or 8 on Market St nearby). I’m not sure what any of this is for, but there are a few possibilities.

Perhaps they are simply accomodating shoppers who stay late and would usually take the subway home. This seems strange as there will be free shuttles running after the subway is closed. Also, to have so many busses standing by at a station which is neither the start nor the end of the closure seems a little inefficient.

Another possibility is that the police will be using these busses to cart off partyers by the proverbial and literal “busload”.

According to the SF Weekly “The Snitch” blog, the cops will be using them, but not to carry people away:

Deputy Chief David Shinn and at least half a dozen other officials made pains to note that Muni buses and drivers will be available to ferry “platoons” of cops around town like troop transports. The notion of the police taking Muni to travel about town rapidly was greeted with barely a snicker, by the way.

The overall plan goes something like this:

Shinn will receive reports every half hour from command stations throughout the city; Mission Station, the post nearest the Castro, will be led by Capt. John Goldberg. At Shinn’s discretion, police can be redeployed throughout the city as needed. Shinn described a “zero-tolerance” policy for drunkenness, public urination and other likely offenses (he originally used the term “aggressive enforcement” but changed his wording when Police Commissioner Theresa Sparks told him that “aggressive enforcement” conjured up mental images of Tiananmen Square).

(quotes from: http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2007/10/100000_people_are_coming_where.php)

Should turn out to be an exciting Halloween after all :)

March 29, 2007

Google Maps. Helpful!

Caught this on BoingBoing. Looks like Google Maps is more helpful than I previously thought. It’ll even tell you how to get to France from Boston in only one step. All you have to do is “Swim across the Atlantic Ocean”.

I guess I already knew that, but at least now I can incorporate it into the rest of my driving directions for a complete guide. I just hate having to keep multiple maps with multiple sets of directions. It’s too confusing. And in that case I’d also have to get reverse directions. Swimming across the Atlantic Ocean, while I wouldn’t recommend it, is quite trivial to reverse.

Oh, and don’t forget to bring a waterproof bag with a passport and a set of clean clothes. You’ll thank me later.

March 7, 2007

Computer Guilty of Practicing Law

A service which automates the process of filing a bankruptcy (right down to the affidavit claiming you did all the research yourself) has been found to be “practicing law” according to the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Ninth Circuit Court (full document here).

The software did, indeed, go far beyond providing clerical services. It determined where (particularly, in which schedule) to place information provided by the debtor, selected exemptions for the debtor and supplied relevant legal citations. Providing such personalized guidance has been held to constitute the practice of law.

So if computers are capable of practicing law, it’s understandable that they’re able to do it without a license. However, they didn’t fine the computer for practicing without a license, they fined the guy running the company. But shouldn’t the computer be able to obtain a license? Or is this a simple matter of prejudice? If I program a computer to fight for its right to practice law, isn’t that really fighting for my right to program a computer that practices law?

February 10, 2006

Science is Magic!

I’m glad I live in a country where I can say things like this and still be joking. Let’s keep it that way, eh Kansas? Maybe someday I’ll even be able to visit such radical countries as China.

The dark wizard began to summon the awesome powers of ‘gravity’ and ‘momentum.’

physics.gif

Speaking of Kansas, it’s a good thing we don’t use textbooks like this:

Well Toto, looks like we're still in Kansas.

October 21, 2005

Flock!

Example: 1. Highlight a passage on a web page that you would like to blog about. 2. Right-click that selection and choose Blog This. 3. The blog editor opens with that selection already inserted. Not only that, the selection is properly formatted as a Blockquote and appropriate citation is included.

Flock

I heard about Flock a couple months back and since then I’ve eagerly anticipated the earliest release. I’ve always wanted a browser that integrated the social aspects of websites, blogs, and link sharing. Flock has released their developer preview and it’s got some support for these nifty things. Already included are integration with certain blogs (like WordPress) and Flickr. So far, while it’s extremely easy to set up access to the supported web services, there are a few quirks (as can be expected with any .5 developer release) that make it a little frustrating at this early stage. Editing text for your blog entry (which I’m of course doing right now) presents some problems with line breaks and certain shortcuts (Ctrl+V) not doing what they should. That said, I haven’t had a problem I couldn’t get around (in my limited evaluation of this browser). Of course, if this post goes into the Internet Black Hole…

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