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Saturday, Jul. 17, 10
Small Gains in My Ability to Picture Internet Infrastructure
Other than some mental of image of a highly air-conditioned server farm full of droning hard drives, I have a pretty limited ability to actually picture much of the infrastructure of the internet. (e.g. this fine photo of a Swiss server farm courtesy of Flickr's own Nicholas Nova. Thanks, Nick.)

I guess when I envision phone calls or digital information being sent to other continents I always picture them being sent via sattelite and was surprised to hear that the bulk of transatlantic info is still carried by underwater fiber optic cable -- not too different from the transatlantic cable first opened in 1956. Boing Boing writes, "When AT&T opened TAT-1 in 1956, the first trans-Atlantic telephone cable, the initial capacity was 36 calls at a time." Although, of course, it would have been coaxial cable instead of fiber optic. Prior to that, transatlantic phone calls had been carried by radio.

In early July, the Main One fiber optic cable connecting Europe to Africa went live, a step toward bridging Africa's 'digital divide' by reducing the cost of connectivity and increasing the reliability of the service. 4,350 miles of cable now connect Portugal to Nigeria. Additionally, Google is one of the investors in the recently completed Unity Cable, which connects Chigura, Japan to Los Angeles.

I've often imagined a non-electric means to light city streets by digging tunnels to the earth's core. Fiber optic cables would then be laid to the center of the earth, which is made of iron and nickle at about the same heat as the sun and perhaps glows with the same ferocity, to carry the light non-electrically to the surface. This would create orange-colored street lamps that might shine about the same color as the current notoriously ugly high-pressure sodium ones. Not sure how actually environmental digging millions of holes to the center of the earth would be but it's always a funny thought to me.

Alternately I used to imagine that a beam of light inside a fiber optic cable with mirrors at either end would just keep bouncing back and forth forever, and wondered whether this would qualify as a perpetual motion machine, considering the object -- a photon -- moving back and forth forever.

Pondering fiber optics primarily as the means to deliver the internet changes how I think about that little photon and conjures up that hoary old buzzword 'the echo chamber,' in which, due to media proliferation, people absorb only the media that reinfornces their own opinion -- each internet user just bouncing around inside that piece of cable.
Run freely, tiny photon, you are free!
-BB
Tuesday, Jul. 13, 10
Some words for Harvey Pekar

It seems like every time I go to write something for the magazine these days it's because somebody died. Today (6/13) George Steinbrenner died and in papers and columns and Web sites everywhere, people are eulogizing him and talking about what a great guy he was, how he built the Yankees into a winning team, which I suppose when you're willing to go to any lengths to build a winning team (read: spend any amount of money... kind of like the Miami Heat are trying to do now), then you're bound to hit the jackpot at some point. It's surprising to me how lionized he is now that he's dead, for some reason I was under the impression (probably due to watching too much Seinfeld when I was younger) that everybody hated that guy. I guess I was wrong about that.
Another guy who was probably easy to hate was Harvey Pekar, who died yesterday. I liked Harvey Pekar, though my interaction with him was only through his American Splendor books and the movie of the same name. In fact, the movie was the first time I ever saw what he actually looked like, since he couldn't draw he would have other artists like R. Crumb draw him and his stories of the ordinary, quotidian bullshit that one man has to suffer through every day of his life. I also can't draw. I think that's one reason I liked him.
Harvey Pekar was played by Paul Giamatti in the movie, though Pekar himself narrated it and made appearances outside of the main storyline. Giamatti did a pretty good job playing Harvey; the opening credits with him walking through Cleveland in the wintertime, breath visible in misty puffs, wearing a crappy, duct-taped winter jacket and a perpetual snarl on his face is one of my favorite sequences. Harvey spoke with a gravelly, somewhat strained voice, like it had to battle through tangled and twisted vocal cords in order to reach the audible air. Around the time I saw the American Splendor movie in San Francisco, I'd taken a hard elbow to the throat a few weeks earlier and was bumming around the city and graduate school with a similarly hoarse, harsh, and raspy voice like I was a fish gasping for air. It was a terrible time and it lasted about six months before my voice got back to about 80 percent. I still cannot laugh the same. This is another reason I liked Harvey Pekar. He seemed to rarely ever laugh also.
The main reason I liked and related to Harvey Pekar was because he was a curmudgeon and a grumpy, gruff bastard. At least that's how he liked to present himself to the outside world, because in the pages of American Splendor you see a man like any other man growing old with fears and anxieties when he looks in the mirror ("There's a reliable disappointment") and a real vulnerability and honesty in the pictures he couldn't draw and the stories he could tell. He knew most people considered him to be an asshole from the get-go, but he had a very big and real compassionate, human side and the indirect way in which one empathizes with the character of Harvey Pekar in the American Splendor books is part of his genius of exposing those same secret fears and anxieties we hide away from others and ourselves. I know he was a very well-respected jazz critic but I'm unfamiliar with that work. The stuff I do know though, makes him kind of a folk hero to me. —mkl
Obit for Harvey from his hometown paper.
Saturday, Jul. 10, 10
Tooting the Vuvuzela for Spain!
There's no end of good things to be said about the Netherlands. Nobody trompes the oeil quite like Vermeer. They gave us Van Gogh and their brave and humane policies towards drugs and prostititution. Not to mention Dutch cut 'n' paste pop star Solex, who just wrote a great piece for Fanzine. What college student doesn't have a fond, well worn memory of totally losing their shit on mushrooms at the Anne Frank house? If someone asked me in the abstract if Holland/the Netherlands is/are awesome. I would thrust my fist in the air and shout: "Yes! They/it are/is awesome!"

But there is a line on even my strongest allegiances.
I know it's not easy to cheer on the team that defeats you. But after watching the Ghana-U.S. game on a tiny laptop with a Ghanian guy named Osekre and his Cameroonian Harvard solid state physics doctoral student friend, I felt like the World Cup is being held in South Africa and sort of seems like it should be Africa's chance to be in the news for something good for a change. So after that I felt like I wanted Ghana to win the cup although that was clearly not in the cards.
But as Casey pointed out earlier this week, we've moved on to an all European final round. So I can't help but feel like it would be kind of poor form for the Dutch to win in their former colonial territory of South Africa and some feel like part of the team's edge has been from strong fan support including local Afrikaner fans. Clearly the Dutch soccer team are not a bunch of slave-trading colonists and local Afrikaner fans are not their Apartheid-endorsing parents but I guess for some kind of symbolic politics reason, my gut blasts a vuvuzela's clarion call in favor of Spain, where people are in need of athletic victories to counteract growing unemployment and the recurring fear that they will be lumped in with debt-damaged Greece. -BB

Wednesday, Jul. 7, 10
So We Move On...
...to an all European Cup. Still love this guy, Forlan for Uruguay.... and prior... Messi et coach Maradona for Argentina, et all, the rest.... 3 left... hmmmm...



