"A left mouse push fires it. Kinda crazy really. We actually
asked for a great big red button, but they wouldn't give us
one..."
- Sky movie myths debunked by nuclear submarine crew
http://media.guardian.co.uk/broadcast/story/0,7493,999743,00.html
...Are you *sure* you want to unleash unthinkable devastation
on civilians you've never even met before? Click No to cancel,
Yes to continue
>> HARD NEWS <<
swiftly perused
Back in July of 2001, we wondered what "the DIRECT MARKETING
ASSOCIATION will say when they discover they've left their
own membership mailing list available on their server". Two
years later, Tom Stuart got a response. "There is a serious
breach of data protection law in that a number of email
addresses have been given out urging people to send these
people spam", they wrote in shocked response to his
mirroring of the list. Well, it's not often you have to wait
that long for an unsolicited message from the DMA. Ah,
they're probably right: although as Tom replied, "If these
people have subsequently received spam, can't they just
unsubscribe or register on an opt-out list? I hear those are
effective at preventing unwanted direct marketing material."
http://www.obsess.com/junk/dmaindex.html
- can't believe they're complaining about brand new marketing contacts
http://www.dma.org.uk/Shared/Staff.asp?Mode=search&d=0
- not too worried about spambots either
This isn't just a plug for a reader's site, as it meets at
least 3 NTK core news criteria: low-tech retro-graphics; the
paid-for content controversy; and letting people know what
Stuart Campbell is up to, so we can all sleep a little sounder
at nights. Anyway, Mr Campbell, together with fellow former
"Digitiser" contributor "Mr Biffo", is responding to the web's
woeful lack of opinionated independent games journalism that
makes use of the "Mode 7" Teletext display format, and is
launching a review site that is only available in this much-
loved 40-column, max 4 paragraphs-per-page screen size. As if
that weren't tempting enough, you can sample all the weekday
content for free as an incentive to subscribe to 10 weekend
editions for just 50p each. The advantages over all those
free, opinionated, comparatively-usable games review sites are
clear - though the one thing that might swing the subscription
issue for us would be if DIGIWORLD.TV (for that is its name)
also converted modern-day game screenshots into its gorgeously
chunky 8-colour 80 x 75 screens.
http://www.digiworld.tv/d.tv?a=fnh2
- bring back the Vic-20, heyday of the 20-column text adventure
In other "stuff you might have missed while we were on
holiday": it still pains us to see THE GUARDIAN (and subsequent
Slashdot discussion) perpetuating the popular myth - and
mainstay of Ed Byrne's standup act - that Alanis Morisette's
song "Ironic" might "not be ironic at all". The web is packed
with critics devising coincidences that are more "ironic" than
Alanis' examples ("It's like rain, on your wedding day - if
you're marrying a weatherman! And he predicted that it wasn't
going to rain!"), but the song actually seems to deal in minor
everyday instances of *situational* irony, defined by the same
Guardian piece as "a state of affairs or an event that seems
deliberately contrary to what one expects and is often amusing
as a result". It's "often" amusing, but doesn't have to be:
a "black fly in your Chardonnay" therefore runs contrary to
the wine's la-di-dah connotations; "rain on your wedding day"
flies in the face of Western associations between happiness
and sunny weather. There's no doubt that Alanis could have
come up with more "ironic" examples if she'd studied genre
classics like Oedipus Rex - "It's like killing your father/
when you're trying not to/ It's like marrying your mother/
when that's socially taboo" - but her original scenarios were
probably more recognisable to the CD-buying public.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/weekend/story/0,3605,985375,00.html
- vs http://www.thudfactor.com/archives/001379.php
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Picture/7379/byrne.html
- of course Byrne is exaggerating for comic effect
http://www.marcusbrigstocke.com/pacman.asp
- and don't get us started on that "Pacman" quote
>> ANTI-NEWS <<
berating the obvious
... unusually Hollywood cast for a Dr Who fan-video:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00004CTDO/ - must
be Mark Gatiss' League of Gentlemen connections... Netscape
(falco!) memorial: http://www.ntk.net/2003/07/18/dohcack.gif
... Adobe demonstrates powerful global search and replace
feature: http://www.adobe.co.uk/products/acrobat/acrrfaq.html#A
... haunting Tony Kaye TV ads for Dunlop perfectly recalled by
fact-checking journalist not sloppy blogger Bill Thompson:
http://www.ntk.net/2003/07/18/dohpir.gif (see also
http://www.uktvadverts.com/Adverts/Adverts.aspx?artist=634 )
... let the train take the pain of your existence advises:
http://www.pembrokeshiregreenways.co.uk/frames.asp?sectionid=5
... unfortunate corporate URLs http://www.poo.uk.com/ compete
with unpleasant oval logo at http://www.pooldevil.net/ ... was
aiming for last one: http://www.ntk.net/2003/07/18/doheight.gif
... BBC test site ignores internal anti-NTK "be dull" guidelines,
dares to be exciting instead: http://www.bbc.co.uk/films/gateways/
... scorchio! http://www.ntk.net/2003/07/18/dohsco.gif ...
>> EVENT QUEUE <<
goto's considered non-harmful
Both b3ta and The Rockall Times are holding sophisticated
cocktail evenings tonight, perhaps scant consolation for those
of us who haven't made it to the world's first NIMBUS 2003
HARRY POTTER SYMPOSIUM (started yesterday, the Swan & Dolphin
Hotel, Walt Disney World, Florida, from $69.75 per day).
Papers include "Imperial Harry: Race, J.K. Rowling, and the
Postcolonial Context", "Strangers in a Strange Land: How the
Muggle-born are a Powerful Force for Social Change", plus
Daily Telegraph science editor ROGER HIGHFIELD, author of "The
Science of Harry Potter: How Magic Really Works", explaining
how putting the mystical incantation "Harry Potter" in the
title can supernaturally increase your book sales.
http://www.hp2003.org/
- vs http://www.geocities.com/buffyology/
http://www.therockalltimes.co.uk/2003/07/14/update-eight.html
- vs http://www2.b3ta.com/party/2ndbirthday.gif
>> TRACKING <<
sufficiently advanced technology : the gathering
Whose idea was it to run RSS news aggregators on the client?
There must have been a good reason, but whenever we think back
to recall it, a giant laughing face of Dave Winer balloons up
and then it goes black. Now here comes Mark "ONElist"
Fletcher's BLOGLINES, challenging the received wisdom by being
quite good. Bloglines is a server-based RSS reader. You
download a bookmarklet that you can stab at whenever you see a
blog, RSS-enabled monkey-torturing site, or whatever. Blogline
adds it to its spider crawl. You log on to their server to
read your carefully rendered RSS feeds. You can import OPML
feeds from your local newsreader too. Right now, it seems the
perfect solution: platform indy news reading from anywhere,
plus you're saving the bandwidth of all those poor sites. Why,
it's like Netscape Netcenter lives again!
http://www.bloglines.com/register
- logon. And save that password, cos the cookies are session only
http://www.bloglines.com/help/easysub
- here's the bookmarklet
>> MEMEPOOL <<
ceci n'est pas une http://www.gagpipe.com/
http://www.blogjam.com/ vs www.brunching.com/weblogfaqk.html
...(unidentified) satellite net "was even able to turn on
Studabaker's [satellite?] mobile when it was switched off":
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/allnews/page.cfm?objectid=13186085&method=full
- or give Marines these: http://www.gametrac.com/track/ ...
what every summer barbeque/ clan "induction" session needs:
http://www.game-storm.net/services/brander_overview.aspx ...
startlingly overlooks ability to "mod his lady's Playstation":
http://www.cyber-mag.com/station/me2.htm ... now, if only he
could do something about their automatic voice recognition -
Caller: "Swiss Cottage", Booking line: "You have selected
Odeon Manchester": http://www.dracos.co.uk/odeon/ ... NME.com
readers do it (a strict maximum of) once a week (question 13):
http://microsites.nme.com/glastosurvey2003/ ... KEVIN WARWICK
turning Reading into the closing scenes of "Terminator 3":
http://www.spy.org.uk/cgi-bin/morgui.pl ... saved for nation:
http://digdug.cx/quotes/ ... http://www.grumbletext.co.uk/ -
thanks everyone, that ought to do it...
>> GEEK MEDIA <<
get out less
TV>> here's hoping ALT-TV (7.30pm, Fri, C4) emphasises that
the DIY reactor kid was not following the official curriculum
for the Boy Scouts of America "Atomic Energy" merit badge:
http://www.ece.cmu.edu/~griffin2/scouts/rd-response.html ...
spotting the pointless movie references might keep you awake
during Paul Anderson "Shane" remake stinker SOLDIER (9pm, Fri,
C5): http://www.imdb.com/Trivia?0120157 ... while the racial
role-reversal of John Travolta parallel universe misfire WHITE
MAN'S BURDEN (11.45pm, Fri, BBC2) means there's still hope for
our alternate reality pitch in which - get this - men rule the
entire planet and women are virtually second-class citizens...
they really owe it to the fans to play Shatner's "Rocket Man"
http://www.bentmen.com/realaudio/rocketman.ram over the end
credits of STAR TREK - AFTER THEY WERE FAMOUS (9.15pm, Sat,
ITV)... the plaintiffs in LAW AND ORDER: SPECIAL VICTIMS UNIT
(10pm, Sat, C5) were originally going to be developmentally
disabled... and Angelina Jolie and Dave "Eurythmics" Stewart
consider a "28bps" modem and "million colour" screen "insanely
great" in the unwittingly hilarious HACKERS (9.35pm, Sat, C4)
... North Korea's Kim Jong II is profiled as THE REAL DR EVIL
(7.15pm, Sun, BBC2)... DON'T DROP THE COFFIN (8.30pm, Tue,
ITV) appears to be "The Real" SIX FEET UNDER (10pm, Sun, C4)
... and HORIZON: THE DAY THE EARTH NEARLY DIED (9pm, Thu,
BBC2) is "The Real" DEEP IMPACT (8.15pm, Sat, BBC1)... the
non-binding phone-in judgements of ASYLUM: YOU THE JUDGE (8pm,
Wed, BBC1) loosely imitate Uri Geller's adoption game-show
idea: http://tinyurl.com/71ov , actual Australian immigration:
http://www.how2immigrate.net/australia/preassessment-form.html
... "Shatner, Shatner... no, doesn't look like he's in" the
magnificent MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000: THE MOVIE (11.20pm,
Wed, ITV)... daughter of disgraced former Tory MP Victoria
Aitken shows an unexpected inability to rap in YOUNG, LOADED
AND POSH (10.30pm, Thu, ITV)... leaving you with this week's
second "Shane" remake, Eastwood's PALE RIDER (9pm, Thu, C5)...
FILM>> the improbable F/X of "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon"
meet the numbing psychodrama of "The Ice Storm" in Ang Lee's
spectacularly disappointing Jennifer Connelly CGI yawn HULK
( http://www.capalert.com/capreports/hulk_the2003.htm : shape
shifting, numerous; electric torture, sadistic; I wrote a book
on the handling of radiation accident patients by paramedical
and hospital personnel and wish I could share with you a few
things that make what is portrayed absolutely stupid)...
still, it makes a good smokescreen for covering up unacclaimed
turkeys like Denis Leary, Steve Buscemi and Liz Hurley -
together at last! - in bizarre indie police drama DOUBLE
WHAMMY ( http://www.cndb.com/ : you get about 25 frames of
[Hurley's] nipple if you want to pause and zoom)... or Heath
Ledger/ Kate Hudson cowardly history-frolic THE FOUR FEATHERS
( http://www.screenit.com/movies/2002/the_four_feathers.html :
we see rugby players in the locker room after a match, with
some having just towels around them. We then see a very brief
shot of several of their bare butts)... though that doesn't
seem to include the modern-day "Sgt Bilko" antics of Berlin-
based still-unreleased-in-the-US military tell-all BUFFALO
SOLDIERS ( www.bbfc.co.uk : strong language and hard drugs
references) - could never happen in real life, of course:
http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101030714/wairport.html ...
CONFECTIONERY THEORY>> and http://www.snackspot.org/ is also
back from its summer break, currently alternating between the
latest UK product releases, the edible unusualness we've
encountered on our recent travels - and, in the case of WILD
BERRY SKITTLES (45p), methodical cross-cultural comparisons
between the two. In the former category: a relative thumbs-up
for STARBURST SOUR CHEWS (33p, and "sour as a bastard" -
Stuart Campbell), PENGUIN CHUKKAS ("I was a [bit] concerned
that the biscuit bits might have been from dog biscuits...
halfway though the pot, I don't care anymore"- Josh Roulston)
http://www.snackspot.org/thread.php?story=0304221946sbc , plus
whatever madness is currently emanating from WALKERS CRISPS
flavour labs, in the form of their ORIENTAL CRACKERS, GREAT
BRITISH TAKEAWAYS CRISPS, and FRENCH FRIES FISH AND CHIPS
FLAVOUR... but it hasn't all been plain sailing: WALKER'S
SHOTS appear to be gravitating towards bargain bins nationwide
http://www.snackspot.org/thread.php?story=0304142342cas , and
Stuart Campbell (again) slammed the artificially-sweetened
BANANA AND PEACH LILT for "tasting of about 4% banana, 0%
peach and 96% dirty radioactive metal", further clarifying
that "IF I WANT THE FREAKING DIET VERSION I'LL BUY THE
FREAKING DIET VERSION, YOU FREAKING TOSSWIPES"... on the
international front, Adrian Furby and his team from Australia
were swift to dismiss the "mint-flavoured" SPRITE ICE ("looks
a little bit like diluted blue Listerine"), and went on to
document the antipodean arrivals of TWIX WHITE, CADBURY'S
PICNIC ROCKY ROAD ($1.60), and NESTLE KIT KAT BITES ($2.30),
while receiving the intriguing accolade of being the first
contributors to have their pics "borrowed" by another site:
http://www.foodlineweb.co.uk/FoodWeb/newsletter/july03/product.asp
... over in the US, tasters were largely underwhelmed by
drinks like RUSSELL SIMMONS' DEFCON 3 and PEPSI BLUE, but did
enjoy MCDONALD'S RASPBERRY TRIPLE THICK SHAKE, ideally
accompanied by an as-seen-on-The-Money-Programme maple syrup
MCGRIDDLE. And as NTK goes to press, Snackspot is currently
assessing currently unconfirmed sightings of the sunflower-
based SNICKERS MAD MIX plus MCDONALD'S GREEK MAC, and still
think the Fast Food Rockers' song "McDonalds, McDonalds,
Kentucky Fried Chicken and a Pizza Hut" has potential as a
"Natwest-Barclays-Midlands-Lloyds"-style anti-capitalist anthem:
http://home.arcor.de/starluver/manics/lyrics/natwest.htm ...
>> SMALL PRINT <<
Need to Know is a useful and interesting UK digest of things that
happened last week or might happen next week. You can read it
on Friday afternoon or print it out then take it home if you have
nothing better to do. It is compiled by NTK from stuff they get sent.
Registered at the Post Office as
"not a huge liquorice fan"
http://www.55379009.com/mediaassassin/
NEED TO KNOW
THEY STOLE OUR REVOLUTION. NOW WE'RE STEALING IT BACK.
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