RIP Pig Champion

The recent death of Poison Idea guitarist Pig Champion has hit me pretty hard.  Poison Idea were playing hi-speed, brutal hardcore years before a lot of other bands caught on.  Their demo, Darby Crash Rides Again, is at least a few years ahead of the curve.  Pick Your King, their debut ep, is arguably the best hardcore record ever made.  I can't think of a way to dispute that.  As they went on they continued to put out solid record after solid, even experimenting a little bit with melody and heaviness.  They peaked with the early nineties LP Feel The Darkness, which combines the speed of the early stuff with a very “dark” tinge. 

We Must Burn was actually the first punk record I owned on vinyl.  I didn't even have a record player yet; but I ordered that, a Flipper CD, and the William Burroughs/Kurt Cobain Split CD from a record distro.  I was 13 probably.  Whenever 8th grade was.  I accidentally put down We Must Burn for vinyl (Orange!) and had to go to a friend's house to make a tape copy of it.  Whoops.  I wouldn't actually get a record player until a year or two later.  Pretty cool I got to hear a Gism cover in 8th grade though. 

Unlike a lot of bands, Poison Idea never did a bad record.  They never changed their sound to fit what the masses thought “punk” was about that week. 

The tributes have been pouring in from all over the net.  Here are some of them:

A Blaze In The New Jersey Sky
Something I Learned Today
Punk Vault
7 Inch Punk
Strange Reaction

Also here is an interview Suburban Voice did with Pig + Jerry. 

Colbert

The A.V. Club has an interview up with the hilarious Stephen Colbert.  I don't like The Daily Show as much as others do (despite how leftist it is supposed to be, I really hate how much Jon Stewart kisses ass with some of his more deplorable guests like Rick Santorum) but Colbert is really amusing and is always a thoughtful and interesting interview.

Mrs. WendT

My old Litt program buddy Michelle Wendt (for the last time people, she is not my older sister or my mom!  Our names aren't even spelled the same way!) is using blogs with her seventh grade students.  It's pretty exciting to see kids being exposed to blogging at such a young age.  Even if it is just for school the experience will be useful in the future I'm sure.

Unplayable Netflix Rentals

Hacking Netflix recently posted about unplayable Netflix rentals.  I've had this problem a few times recently as well.  A few have even been nicked up so much it looked like someone keyed the DVD.  Why does Netflix allow these to be in circulation still?  Not only that, but recently their service has slowed to a crawl.  Transactions which used to take two days now take four and five.  This is not acceptable.

Position Paper #2

William P. Wend
1/31/06
Prof Rettberg
Intro To New Media Studies

Position Paper #2

In the three pieces of hypertext we have looked at recently in class, each gave the reader a unique perspective and reading experience.  The reader has very varied choices while viewing and reading these pieces.  In Michael Joyce's Afternoon there are hidden links that the reader must mouse over with their mouse to discover.  The reader may also choose from a sidebar list of word destinations. Stephanie Strickland's The Ballad Of Sand and Harry Soot also has hyper-textual links.  Instead of links in a sidebar, there are also links at the bottom of the screen.  They change color like any normal web page to signify that the reader has viewed the page already.    There are also hyper-linked pictures which will take the reader to another place in the piece.  Caitlin Fisher's These Waves Of Girls has all of this plus a little more for the reader. There are hyper-linked pictures and hypertext which, when moused over, opens up to even more hypertext.  This is very fancy and pretty looking!  In the hypertext that opens there is more links and sub folders of links underneath it.

Being given these choices as a reader definitely effected what I clicked on next.  In Afternoon the choices were basically, unless the reader wants to spend time discovering links, limited to what is presented in the sidebar.  Afternoon is a wonderful piece of hypertext, but that is a bit boring.  In The Ballad Of Sand And Harry Soot the pictures are much more alluring and interesting to choose as a reader unless a specific word that peaks curiosity comes along. These Waves Of Girls has all of this and more.  This is a very pretty piece with beautiful visuals and exceptional writing.  Because of the subject nature of the writing I was immediately hooked and wanted to read the entire piece.  The presentation of so many different choices between clicking pictures, text, or discovering even more text made the piece enjoyable and made me want to go back for another reading. 

For the most part, the way the links were set up made my reading a better experience. In Afternoon, however, the set up was a bit awkward and bulky. Being able to choose from a bunch of different links on the side is nice and all, but as a reader I would rather choose from hyper-links. Afternoon is an older piece though, so I don't think it is fair to really hold this against an excellent work.  In both Strickland and Fisher's pieces the links enhanced my reading experience.  The pictures in Strickland were nice and gave me more options that my reading of Afternoon.  The depth of options for a reading in Fisher and Strickland's pieces made me eager to view, read more, and eventually complete the text.  The frames, while an outdated way to set up a webpage, worked for me despite their bulky and ugly look.  I enjoyed having a multitude of options in front of me as a reader while trying to complete the text.  More so than the other pieces, Fisher's work allowed for a complete reading experience. 

As stated before, the vast amount of choices given to the reader in These Waves Of Girls and The Ballad Of Sand And Harry Soot enabled me, as a reader, to explore the text and spend a lot more time in one sitting reading hypertext than I normally would.  Often I only read in short bursts, but for both of these pieces I spent a good amount of time exploring them.  Afternoon didn't necessarily disable my reading but I did feel like, because of the smaller amount of options available at any given time, it was a lot more linear than the other pieces I read.