And you thought YOUR flight was bad!

This makes our trip to New York and our lost luggage adventures seem like a walk in the park.

“Sewage flows down aisles of trans-Atlantic flight,” a Seattle TV station report, which includes video– not from the flight, happily. Here’s a quote from the first few paragraphs of the story:

Passengers on a Continental Airlines flight had to hold their noses for hours as sewage overflowed from toilets while they were high over the Atlantic.

“To be blatantly honest, I was more nervous than I had ever been on a flight,” said Collin Brock. The University Place man was on board Continental Airlines flight 1970 from Amsterdam to Newark, New Jersey last week when things went bad.

“I’ve never felt so offended in all my life. I felt like i had been physically abused and neglected. I was forced to sit next to human excrement for seven hours,” said Brock.

I’m curious to see what bad flight experience is gonna top this one….

Even more reasons to get a Wii


Rejected Wii Games – Watch more free videos

I’ve been fascinated by the Wii for a while now. The original plan was that Will and I were going to go and buy one while Annette was at this conference she was at last week. Well, besides the fact that I was simply too busy to do this sort of thing, you just can’t buy these things right now. Go ahead. Try. I dare you. I stopped by a couple of different game stores around town to ask, and the people who work at them told me that people literally are waiting at the door in the morning to find out if the delivery truck came in. These things stay in stock for hours at best.

Well, maybe Will and I will try again this morning on our way to his day camp today. Regardless, we still won’t be getting these games….

A month of potty-talk!

The Independent Film Channel web site had a celebration of the best dirty words in the movies last month– how could I have missed it originally? Here’s a link to the cleanest of the lot, the famous “frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn” bit from Gone With the Wind, but from here, you can scroll down to get all of the rest. Many of them are, um, bad words.

Highlights for me include scenes from Bad Santa, Clerks, Pulp Fiction, and The Big Lebowski, which was actually featured in this blog just over a year ago here.

Photosynth demo

This is one of those things that I am sure is more cool in demo-mode than it could ever possibly be as a fully deployed application. Still, it is pretty cool, even if it is a quasi-Microsoft product, and it seems to only run on the MS OS:

I think the examples of looking at books or newspapers with this thing is rather compelling, besides the obvious Notre Dame example.

Flip video (and a sample including my dog)

This is one of those (many?) times in which my unofficial and official lives seem to at least cross, which is why I’m posting about this here tonight (even though I already posted about it on my unofficial blog): for reasons that I already discussed on the UOB, I ended up getting a Flip video camera for Father’s Day this year. I got mine at Costco for $90. Basically, they are tiny (a little bigger than a cell phone), low-end, easy-to-use, and (relatively) cheap digital video cameras. Mine holds up to 30 minutes worth of video on 512MB worth of flash memory– they make a 60 minute/1 GB version too. You can watch the videos on a tiny screen on the unit itself, on a TV with a cable, and, of course, on a computer.

It took me a little monkeying around and some DivX downloads to make it all work the way I wanted, but I can edit the video in QT Pro and in iMovie. Here’s an example:

I would have filmed something other than my dog, but Sophie was the only one who was willing to appear on camera. For some reason, I think the quality here is better than what Will Richardson demonstrated on Weblogg-ed about this; maybe an indoor/outdoor thing, maybe more of a close-up.

Now, these people are obviously going for the YouTube/viral video/let’s-make-a-movie-at-a-party-kind of crowd– they even describe YouTube and a site called grouper as partners– and I for one will enjoy my little tool/toy in this way too. But I got to say this makes me think in terms of teaching. I mean, while I did have a few software glitches getting it to work on the Mac, the hardest part about using it so far has been getting it out of the industrial-strength plastic wrapping. And at $100 a pop– well, that’s approaching a price where buying a whole bunch of them to check out to a group of students in first year composition or a related class seems perfectly reasonable.

Sophie the stupid dog on my Flip video camera

Annette was out of town most of last week, and because of that (and both of us are just swamped with school and work stuff, really), she overlooked an organized Father’s Day gift for me. So I bought my own: a Flip video camera.

Basically, it’s a small (like the size of a digital camera or a big cell phone) and cheap video camera that can store up to 30 minutes of digital video, which can then be watched on the camera itself, on a TV, or downloaded to a computer. It took some finagling with the format and converters and stuff, but I did ultimately get it to work on my iMac, so I can use it with things like iMovie, too.

Here’s a sample of Sophie the stupid dog chasing a ball. Actually, it’s not so much that Sophie is dumb; she just didn’t say no to me filming her for my blog(s):

No, it’s not professional quality. But basically, these people are looking for the YouTube et al crowd. As far as “family fun” and “movies” goes around here: I can easily see pairing this with my other digital camera for a cool vacation movie in the near future. I can also see this as a pretty handy teaching tool too– but that’s going to be on the official blog later.

Not all of higher ed hates the Spellings Commission

Kind of an interesting piece in yesterday’s Insider Higher Ed about the Spellings Commission report, “What Took You So Long?” Here are the opening paragraphs:

You’d have been hard pressed to attend a major higher education conference over the last year where the work of the Secretary of Education’s Commission on the Future of Higher Education and the U.S. Education Department’s efforts to carry it out were not discussed. And they were rarely mentioned in the politest of terms, with faculty members, private college presidents, and others often bemoaning proposals aimed at ensuring that colleges better measure the learning outcomes of their students and that they do so in more readily comparable ways.

The annual meeting of the Career College Association, which represents 1,400 mostly for-profit and career-oriented colleges, featured its own panel session Thursday on Education Secretary Margaret Spellings’ various “higher education initiatives,� and it had a very different feel from comparable discussions at meetings of public and private nonprofit colleges. The basic theme of the panelists and the for-profit college leaders in the audience at the New Orleans meeting was: “What’s the big deal? The government’s been holding us accountable for years. Deal with it.�

Well, not so fast there, for-profit and career-oriented colleges. This is something I know something about, though that knowledge is fairly small and rather indirect.

Between about 1990 and 1993, I worked in a variety of jobs (first as a temp office grunt, and then ultimately as a “public relations representative,” which was really a job as a tech writer and desktop publishing document designer), I worked for the Virginia Student Assistance Authority, which was a student loan guarantor and processor. Interestingly enough, when I did a search, I discovered that in 1998, the VSAA was abolished by the state of Virginia, I assume because in the mid to late 90s, the student loan business went from a lot of regional players to consolidated and national ones. But I digress slightly. Anyway, most of this work was before the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act of 1992 which held for-profit and career-oriented colleges to the higher standard they are complaining about now.

Do you want to know why they are being held to this higher standard? Well, from what I recall from my brief time there, it was because there were too many for-profit and career-oriented college scams going on. These “educators” were setting up these schools in bartending or massage or whatever, charging a tuition that was just high enough to allow the students to be eligible for certain kinds of easily obtained loans (and by “students,” these schools meant anyone they could find who would be willing to sign up– people on the streets, etc.), cashing the checks, and folding up the tent within a couple years. It was, in short, a con.

Now, I realize that this might sound all elitist and all coming from me, a guy who teaches at one of these fancy-panted, sanctioned, traditional universities. But I think these schools that have (as a cohort) a reputation for fly-by-night practices ought to be held to a different standard. Regardless, it’s clear that the whole Spellings Commission thing has a long ways to go before that group figures out just what the hell to do, if they’re going to do anything at all.

Foundations in the virtual world

Via my department head, I learned about this, “MacArthur President Jonathan Fanton and Second Life CEO Philip Rosedale Are Inviting Us,” and by “Us,” they mean HASTAC. There’s some more information on all this at the MacArthur Foundation web site too. Basically, there’s going to be a Second Life gathering next week (June 22, 9 am PST) in the virtual Second Life world about (virtual?) philanthropy.

I dunno. I might have a bad attitude, but I think that Second Life is… well, um, kind of goofy. And I say this as someone who went through a phase of playing the equally (even more) goofy game of The Sims. Maybe these virtual envirionments will be the “next big thing;” or maybe the money being made here is just the latest tulip.

Rudolf Arnheim, 1904-2007, RIP

I am not typically an obituaries reader, but I stumbled across them in the Ann Arbor News this evening. Talk about coincidence (or, given Arnheim’s interests in Jung, “synchronicity“) I learned that Rudolf Arnheim died over this weekend. He was 102 years old, and (of all places!) he died in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

I only know Arnheim’s work indirectly, through writers like Molly Bang and Ann Wysocki. They make a good point that he’s someone worth reading. But I have to say, I’m fascinated by the fact that this guy lived to 102 years old and he was a local! Go figure!