The Shroud of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

The Shroud of the Flying Spaghetti MonsterRecently, I took a trip to middle IL, and found a physical clue to the existence of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.  Much like the Shroud of Turin, this simple linen cloth bears the image of the FSM.  It shows appendages similar to his Noodly Appendage, and a where The Meatera rested above them.

I am certain it will be the subject of intense debate among some scientists, believers, historians and writers regarding where, when and how the shroud and its image were created.

(Click on the image for a bigger view.) 

Children of the Gods

Slice of Sci-Fi recently interviewed one of the driving forces behind Children Of The Gods and what I heard got my interest enough to track it down, slap it on my iPod and give it a listen. Its an serious long term audio drama, which is a rare experience for those of us in the US who missed the golden age of radio.

Although, I have to say, ever since I first heard Well’s War of the Worlds audio drama, I’ve been a huge fan.  There’s just no modern content.  Except, maybe the Alien Voices stuff.  I’ve bought a number of their CDs for car trips, and they are a great way to pass the time.  But I digress…

The core concept in Children Of The Gods is that we’re seeing events 500 years or so after the events in Independence Day. Including the much mocked virus Jeff Goldbloom gave the aliens. The first chapter lays out this history of the world between the movie and the now of the story including technology advances, why we fled the earth, and the current system of government.  I’ve in the middle of the third chapter right now, and its pretty good.  I’m going to continue to listen to it.

A cool aspect of COTG, outside of the story, is that its mostly a volunteer effort with people providing voice active from all over the world.  As its not professional voice actors, the quality of performance can be hit and miss, but not so much that its turned me off.  My big fear was the quality of acting would distract from the story.  However, Clerks showed me that in some cases, story and dialog can overcome sub-par acting.  They are also only 3 chapters in, so I figure they are still shaking out putting together the podcast as well as the actors or whatever.  For some tv shows that can sometimes take the whole first season.

Now that its easy to put together high-quality audio and video content on commodity PCs, I think its inevitable that we’re going to get some audience created content that is as high, if not higher, in story content that what the "content producers" are putting out.  I think enough people are getting fed up with the crap coming from hollywood and the record producers that they’ll start rolling their own.  The big question is if they’ll be able to get other people to pay for it, or if it’ll all be for the love of it.

WAAAAAAAAAAANDAAAAAAAA

From the looks of it, this new is about 2 years old, but I just came across it today. Spawn: The Animation is apparently in the works. This is exciting to me for a number of reasons:

  1. The HBO series that ran for three seasons rocked
  2. Keith David is back as the voice of Spawn, which is perfect.
  3. Mark Hamill is playing Twitch.
  4. Phil LaMarr is doing a voice. He’s been great as the Green Lantern Jon Stewart on the Justice League cartoons, and he ruled on Mad TV back in the day.
  5. The show will be “R” rated. WH00h00. Breasts and gratuitous violence for everyone.

I got all the actor info via IMDB. It looks like its going to be a 70-minute direct-to-DVD movie. Now I just need to decide if I should buy it or Netflix it.

Firefox and Thunderbird extentions

I thought I’d document which Firefox and Thunderbird extensions I’m using. This is as much for me to remember should I have some disk failure or something as it is to generate discussion.

Firefox extensions

  • User Agent Switcher – easily change the user agent for sites that work with Firefox but don’t think they do
  • GooglePreview – inserts preview images (thumbnails) of web sites and Amazon products into the Google and Yahoo search results pages. Thumbnails are provided by thumbshots.org and alexa.com.
  • BugMeNot – Integrates BugMeNot right into the browser. Right click on the login area, and boom, you’re in.
  • Live HTTP Headers – Follow the HTTP headers back and forth in real time. Helpful for debugging.
  • ScrapBook – helps you to save Web pages and easily manage collections.
  • ForecastFox – brings weather info from AccuWeather.com® to your status bar.
  • WebDeveloper – adds a menu and a toolbar to the browser with various web developer tools. I haven’t used it a lot lately, but is can be fairly useful.
  • Google Toolbar for Firefox – goes without saying…
  • Tab Mix Plus – Adds a lot of functionality and configuration over tabs. Allows you to change tab size, where the close button is, a session managers, etc. (Now TinyMCE friendly!)
  • del.icio.us – Integrates del.icio.us right into firefox. Has a bit more funtionality than just the drag and drop javascript eextensions
  • Adblock – does what it says, a powerful content filter
  • Fasterfox – allows you to tweak-out firefox’s network and rendering settings.
  • Viamatic foXpose – OS X expose like choosing for open tabs in Firefox

Thunderbird extensions

  • AboutConfig – adds about:config to thunderbird, for behind the scenes tweaking. The most important for me being mail.check_all_imap_folders_for_new
  • Attachment Extractor – Can detach multiple attachments from one to many messages in one fell swoop. Rather than visiting each message each attachment.
  • Enigmail – GPG/PGP integration. I mostly use it as a prereq for Display MUA.
  • Display mailing list header – implements RFC 2369 for Thunderbird: Special mailing list header fields in the mail are parsed, and the links are displayed in the extended header view.
  • Display Mail User Agent Extension – This one is more for fun, but sometimes gives insight into who has e-mailed me.
  • Mail Redirect – adds one the features I was missing from mutt. Adds redirection, better known as bounce in elm, mutt, and others.

Now I just need to find a thunderbird extension that does arbitrary headers that are updated on sending. And mutt could be removed from my life. So sad.

Things we have relearned today

Regular backups are your friend. Also, if you can’t normally back something up (i.e. data in open ldap’s backend) do a regular dump and back that up.

rsync/unison/scp data off your co-loc to a local machine, and back it up again, just for good measure.

The new drive is the drive most likely to die first.

Losing /var really fucking sucks.

Recreating most of the information in ldap out of mail logs is cool, though.

Drinking doesn’t solve sysadmin nightmares, but it makes you feel good while you’re having the nightmare.

Keith's attempts to fix the cable of life