11 June 2013

A word about prisms...





For anyone who’s been following the Ed Snowden whistleblowing story, I can;t help being suspicious of anyone intelligent who claims a Powerpoint presentation is proof of anything. 


A bit of digging brought this up. An interview from 2008 for a ('factual') book, The Shadow Factory. 

Turns out, the whistle was blown way back then.


“And that’s what happened. NSA began making these agreements with AT&T and other companies, and that in order to get access to the actual cables, they had to build these secret rooms in these buildings.
So what would happen would be the communications on the cables would come into the building, and then the cable would go to this thing called a splitter box, which was a box that had something that was similar to a prism, a glass prism. And the prism was shaped like a prism, and the light signals would come in, and they’d be split by the prism. And one copy of the light signal would go off to where it was supposed to be going in the telecom system, and the other half, this new cloned copy of the cables, would actually go one floor below to NSA’s secret room. So you had one copy of everything coming in and going to NSA’s secret room. And in the secret room was equipment by a private company called Narus, the very small company hardly anybody has ever heard of that created the hardware and the software to analyze these cables and then pick out the targets NSA is looking for and then forward the targeted communications onto NSA headquarters.”



Why the media would want to pick up on this now is beyond me. 

Something to do with the Bilderberg Group Meeting going on at the same time? 

Something to do with the new push to tighten laws against digital piracy and internet porn?

Who knows. But Powerpoint slideshows, for all their prettiness, do not make evidence of anything except people can be so gullible.

02 June 2013

Running up more hills...



I love music. And, therefore, I hate music.

Some writers thrive on background tunes to stir their muse.

Not me.

Nuh-uh. No way.

I know better. Listening to music freezes every ounce of creativity and I go into Analytical Mode. I pick out guitars licks, key changes, and voice harmonies. I zone when I write (where ‘zone’ is a verb. I zone, you zone, he zones.) And I zone when I listen to music.

Thing is, they’re different zones. Moving from one to the other is sooo difficult. And I know that.

But tonight, a friend posted a link to Kate Bush’s cover of Taupin/John’sRocket Man.

 Bollocks. I can’t resist Kate Bush.

I remember that song so well. And man, she looks so much sexier on the video than I remember—and she looked pretty damned hot back then.

Caught up, I drifted to other tracks, remembering the Hounds of Love album I must have listened to a million times. A favourite if ever there was one. And Kate Bush led me to Dave Gilmour, led me to Neil Young, to James Taylor, and back through the years to Annie Lennox.

Jesus.

It’s easy to think Nostalgia messes me up emotionally, but it doesn’t. I’m not a nostalgic sort of person. They weren’t the ‘good old days’ at all. They were internet deficient, pre-computer days. Hell no, I’m happier today and I just hope I’m around to see what happens to computing over the next half century. It’s gonna be something else, you know?

"Ophelia" ~ John Millais
No, what messes me up is an appreciation of music. Some people get all mushy about artwork. They can faint at the joy some paintings bring them. Seriously. Visuals don’t do that to me. (Okay, apart Millais’ Ophelia, but that’s different, because in the early 70’s I fell in love with the model, Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s wife, Elizabeth, and I can’t see that painting without remembering what a sad and tragic life she had, and I get sort of mushy about her demise.)

Mushy. Yeah. Good music makes me cry. Deal with it.

I have two projects on the go, right now. First—and the most important because there’s a tight deadline (like, the end of this month)—of getting the autobiography of a friend’s father edited, and sourcing a decently priced printer (POD probably); and secondly, and a couple of weird and freaked out shorts—one of which kept me awake half of last night because I couldn’t sleep through the idea and just had to see how it looked in pixels.

I had all intentions of getting back to writing, tonight...

But, Momma, the songs are still playin’ in ma head.

Getting back to anything without hearing Lennox’s LittleBird or Young’s Heart of Gold, or Bush’s Running up that Hill is going to be a hill of its own to run up.

But, hell, look at this. Even with Kate’s vocals in my head, I’ve just done a blogpost. And it’s not even midnight, yet.

We survived another asteroid fly-by yesterday. Things are looking up, and I might not need to snip the wire to my laptop’s internal speakers after all.

Enjoy the links. I won’t be listening with you. Imma gonna take my shoes off and throw them in the lake.