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Thoughts & Experiences from the Mile High City
I just signed up for a blog on tumblr that will keep track of quicker and shorter thoughts that I have.
Visit milehighsoapbox.tumblr.com to see.
Keep coming back here for more detailed thoughts and perspectives.
To commemorate Digg and its users taking a stand against the DRM police, Geoff Smith (thegeoffsmith.com) developed a song, Digg the Code.
Well, Cali Lewis of GeekBrief.TV developed a music video to go along with it and it is great. View it here.
What is better than some Geoff Smith music and Cali Lewis dancing around.
Plus it sends a message to the DRM police.
You can Digg the music video at: Digg Music Video Starring Cali Lewis from GeekBrief.tv “Digg the Code”
In an earlier post, I discussed Why I Hate the NBA. It mainly came down to how bad the officiating is.
Well, there was a study done looking at several years of data and they found a bias in the officiating. In an article published today in the New York Times, Study of N.B.A. Sees Racial Bias in Calling Fouls, they found a racial bias in the officials calls.
In the study, they found that white officials called fouls at a greater rate against black players versus white players. They also found that black officials called fouls at a greater rate against white players versus black players, although not at as big as a rate.
Well the NBA has responded. In an article on ESPN, “NBA: Claims of racial officiating bias ‘flat-out wrong‘, the NBA claims “the study the report was based upon was wrong and contained flawed statistical methodology.”
The NBA even did their own study and NBA president of basketball operations Joel Litvin said, “We conducted our own study with experts in mathematics and statistical analysis, and those experts, looking at far superior data that included 148,000 calls, concluded unequivocally that there was no racial bias in officiating.”
But the New York Times did their work and even had both peer reviewed. In response to the NBA’s claims, Tom Jolly, the New York Times sports editor, had a response in the same ESPN article.
“We are confident that our article fairly and accurately reflects the findings of the Wolfers-Price study, and fairly and accurately reflects the NBA’s response to that study. Over the course of three weeks of reporting, Alan Schwarz spent several hours meeting with NBA. executives to discuss the Wolfers-Price study and the league’s own subsequent study.
As we reported, all of the data that was made available to us from both studies was reviewed at our request by three independent experts: Ian Ayres of Yale Law School, David Berri of California State University-Bakersfield and Larry Katz of Harvard University. They uniformly agreed that the Wolfers-Price study reflected a solid analytical approach and that the NBA’s study was significantly flawed.
In fact, after studying the NBA. data, Katz, one of the nation’s most respected economists, told us: “It was so poorly presented that it was hard to figure out what they were doing. And to the extent you could figure out what they were doing, there was such incoherence you couldn’t draw any conclusions from it.”
It will be interesting to see what comes of this. I know the NBA referees have biases, but this may be too much for them to handle or keep control on.
Well Digg listened to their members and stopped removing the offending code.
It will be interesting to see what happens in the courtroom on this issue. But the users have spoken.
You can read more in today’s San Francisco Chronicle: Digg relents under reader pressure
You can also read my earlier post, Digg Users Go Crazy.
Well the community is now going crazy over a pulled story on Digg.
Someone had posted the HD-DVD key that allows you to crack its security protection and Digg pulled that post. Now the user community is an uproar.
I think this is crazy. Digg and Kevin Rose are only doing what they feel best for the community and these unfortunate posts should not be made. There are rules, regulations and other things that Digg needs to adhere to.
They received a cease and desist declaration. Clear and simple. If not, Digg could have been taken down. Then where you would you go?
The user community needs to get over it and fight the laws, not Digg and Kevin Rose.
Read more on Gizmodo: Breaking: Digg Riot in Full Effect Over Pulled HD-DVD Key Story
Read Kevin Rose’s response: Digg This: 09-f9-11-02-9d-74-e3-5b-d8-41-56-c5-63-56-88-c0
Digg’s Response: What’s Happening with HD-DVD Stories?
It is becoming a familiar situation for the Nuggets.
Once again they are down in the first-round and again they are benching a player.
Last year it was Kenyon Martin and now it is JR Smith. It is becoming a all-to-comfortable excuse.
Oh well, there is always next year.
I always want to keep coming back to the NBA, but every time that I come back, I realize why I hate the NBA.
The officiating.
The officials always seem to favor the team in the lead and the team that is favored. And they always seem to swallow their whistles when the game is on-the-line and the non-favored team is trailing. They just can’t get any calls, even though they might be mugged going to the hoop.
Until the NBA improves the consistency of their officiating, I won’t watch and a lot of people won’t watch.
No wonder their ratings are hurting.
Well in my inspection of using an online reader for the New York Times, I stumbled upon the New York Times Reader.
This has been in Beta and is coming out of it soon. It may already be out of it.
This is really cool. It takes the paper and continuously updates it. If your device does not have internet access, you can read the latest version it downloaded. It is pretty simple.
It automatically scales to your screen size and it is quite easy to navigate between sections and pages. I think this will revolutionize newspapers and how they are read.
But there is one problem. The New York Times is charging $14.95 a month after 30 days. This is ridiculous. They sure know how to kill a good thing.
The New York Times is still living in the print world. If they want people to use it and make money, they need to charge a lot less. They would get a lot more subscribers.
A critical flaw has been found in Photoshop Creative Suite, CS3, CS2, and Photoshop Elements.
It is a flaw in a PNG plug-in that can cause a buffer overflow on a users system.
This is critical if you use these programs. There is no update at this time.
You can read more on CNET, Critical flaw found in Photoshop plug-in.
Well I kept up my part of the promise and headed out today to support Project Angel Heart and you can’t get much better than 240 Union.
240 Union has always been one of the best restaurants in Denver and it is located in Lakewood, a western suburb of Denver. The atmoshphere is always wonderful and so is the food.
Today I had the open faced reuben sandwich. If you have been reading this blog, you know I can’t resist a good reuben.
Well this reuben was different and that is probably the only thing I found with it. Part of the reuben sandwich that I like is sauerkraut. Well the reuben at 240 Union just had cole slaw and I would say that this is a drawback.
Overall it was decent, but it was not one of my favorites. The chips that were served with it were incredible and had an interesting cut to them.
The bread that was brought to the table was delicious. Especially the foccacia bread. It rivals some of the best that I have ever had.
It was a great lunch and 240 Union held their own again.