Monthly Archives: May 2004

On Blogging Software…

As I work to install WordPress on this site and tweak and twiddle the look and functionality, I can’t help but think that every blog, Wiki and content management system isn’t so much an application as a construction set full of pieces that you can assemble to make a blog or website. Is there some reason why that is the case, or could a more disciplined application be designed and deployed?
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Pardon our construction…

traffic cone

Pardon my construction. I’m busy revamping brainwagon’s look and feel to be more like it’s previous incarnation, and have unveiled a few warts in the markup emitted by WordPress. All should be better shortly, but until then, don’t be surprised if some of the markup looks a bit strange.

ARRLWeb: Rocket Carrying Ham Radio Payload Reaches Space!

An amateur constructed rocket reached an altitude of 100km and became the first such craft to reach space. This incredible achievement is described here by the ARRL, or the Amateur Radio Relay League. The rocket also carried an avionics package designed by radio amateurs. The rocket apparently transmitted telemetry on the 33cm band and ATV on the 2.4ghz band.

I’m looking forward to seeing some of the pictures from the flight. To all those who worked on the project, hearty congrats!

Review: Troy

Troy This weekend’s block buster is Troy, the classic tale of the Iliad. Brad Pitt stars as Achilles, the moody and reluctant (if somewhat bloodthirsty) Achilles, Eric Bana as Hector, hero of Troy, and Orlando Bloom as Paris, who steals the lovely Helen from King Menelaus and provokes a tizzy that ultimately results in a war between Greece and Troy.

I came to this movie expecting a panorama of Pitt’s golden locks, battle scenes, and thin romance, and that’s almost precisely what this movie delivers. The problem is that it doesn’t really deliver it very well. The basic formula is pretty common: the clash between two great heros. Hector is the good prince, the noble warrior and father. Achilles is the talented but brutal warrior, concerned only with his own immortality as a hero. Unfortunately, the movie never really gets beyond the formula. It isn’t a bad formula, nor is it a bad movie, but it never really becomes great. I couldn’t help thinking that Ridley Scott did this movie better in the 2000 release of Gladiator. The battle sequence between Achilles and Hector is good, but virtually all the battle sequences in Gladiator were better.

On the plus side, Pitt certainly isn’t hard for the ladies to look at, and my wife informs me that Bana and Bloom aren’t far behind. There are some good supporting performances, probably the best of which is the immortal (we wish) Peter O’Toole as Priam, King of Troy. Diane Kruger plays Helen, whose beauty was so great it was said to launch a thousand ships. Diane may be able to launch a dinghy or two, but I don’t think she’s worthy of a regatta. She seems to have the same placid, vacant quality that always reminds me of Bo Derek.

Overall I give it about a seven out of ten. Certainly not a snoozefest, but neither does it make you jump out of your seat. Try renting Gladiator afterwards and compare.

Brainwagon Under Construction

Motivated by the change in licensing in MovableType as well as a general feeling of dissatisfaction with certain elements of its design, I decided to look at other weblogging solutions. An article on Slashdot mentioned WordPress, so I gave it a shot.

And was immediately sold. It works very well.

It will take me a few days probably to get everything transferred over, but ultimately this will be an improved weblog. Enjoy!

On Today’s Date, Hindenburg explodes over Lakehurst, NJ


On May 6th, 1937, the German airship Hindenburg had just completed its 21st crossing of the Atlantic. While approaching it’s landing field in Lakehurst, New Jersey, it burst into flames and crashed, killing 35 people aboard. Ironically, 33 of the victims died from injuries sustained while jumping from the airship, not from the resulting fire.

The airship exploded because it was filled with explosive hydrogen gas, rather than the safer but vastly more expensive helium. This disaster effectively ended the era of airships.


IPOD update

Well, the IPOD is working, if not flawlessly. It seems to get it to work I need to plug the iPod into the USB card and then plug the combo into my laptop. Other combinations seem to work unreliably. But I’ve managed to put about 2 days worth of audio on it, and have been enjoying:

  1. Al Franken’s Lying Liars, only $4 from iTunes
  2. Testimony before the 9/11 committee, downloaded from audible.com
  3. a nice thunderstorm, created with boodler and compressed using faac.
  4. my Fodor’s Learn French CDs…
  5. The A-Z of Opera
  6. A bunch of old time radio shows from the Webranger Old Time Radio DVD

Cool device.