Upcoming Events in LA

Tonight: USCLUG topic: DNS: Delegation and Authority.

Tomorrow: teaching Intermediate Web Publishing

Also, a bunch of free film screenings on campus. About a Boy tomorrow at 3PM, and Sunset Boulevard to Mulholland Drive: The Film Series (along with an associated conference), which will be showing about a dozen films over the weekend, including Sunset Boulevard, Star Maps, Chinatown, Menace II Society, LA Confidential, Mulholland Drive, and Strange Days.

Editor & Publisher: 15 Stories They’ve Already Bungled, Mitchell on the War Coverage So Far

On Monday, I received a call from a producer of a major network’s prime time news program. He said they wanted to interview me for a piece on how the public’s expectation of a quick victory somehow was too high. “But,” he hastened to add, “we don’t want to focus on the media.” I asked him where he thought the public might have received the information that falsely raised their hopes. In chat rooms, perhaps? The problem, I suggested, is that most of the TV commentators on the home front appear to be just as “embedded” with the military as the far braver reporters now in the Iraqi desert.

Asia Times, This war is brought to you by… (a really informative article)

The lexicon of the Bush doctrine of unilateral world domination is laid out in detail by the Project for a New American Century (PNAC), founded in Washington in 1997. The ideological, political, economic and military fundamentals of American foreign policy – and uncontested world hegemony – for the 21st century are there for all to see.

PNAC’s credo is officially to muster “the resolve to shape a new century favorable to American principles and interests”. PNAC states that the US must be sure of “deterring any potential competitors from even aspiring to a larger regional or global role” – without ever mentioning these competitors, the European Union, Russia or China, by name. The UN is predictably dismissed as “a forum for leftists, anti-Zionists and anti-imperialists”. The UN is only as good as it supports American policy.

Interestingly, there’s an outline of Regime Change in Iran [PDF] up there. Leaving the gym, a friend and I were talking about the order of upcoming ‘regime changes’, and a stranger passing by interject “Syria, they suck.” I don’t think that a deeper probing on that statement would have revealed any insights, so I tossed off a, nah, how about France? The reply: “Maybe after Syria. Syria sucks.”

After having to completely refill my credit card information to TicketWeb 3 times in order to complete an order (Bright Eyes, Cursive, Cat Power), I took a few minutes to write them about their need for better Contingency Design. Here were my points:

  • Initial client-side verification of fields, while not authoritative, would have saved grief on try #2
  • If you must break that Back button, then give pass-thru links that will prepopulate appropriately
  • This (pass-thru) should be happening anyway so that invalid field entries are highlighted (session state should be retained so that automatically loading the entry field step should prefill appropriately)

I have no doubt about 37signals claims 40% sales increases. If I was feeling the slightest edgier (and believe me, I’ve been on edge) I would have threw in the towel after the second try. Seeing as TicketWeb claimed over $15 in service charges, they can probably afford to send someone to a workshop.