Nixta Sinks

The Joey Chestnut of Cupcakes


Nixta has moved.
Check out Nixtarolls: a tumblelog, idiot (and yes, you can comment)

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Public humiliation

I tried to have my mother taken off my plan since she passed away and the rep actually said to me "Don't you have someone else that could use the phone"


Consumerist (via), in a fury even greater than YBNBY's, have posted the phone numbers of a bunch of Sprint's top brass just to get even.

If only I hadn't let go to waste my YBNBY contributor's account.

Friday, February 16, 2007

Loon Loses Mind

John Lennon had the sense to step back and apologise for saying the Beatles were "more popular than Jesus" (even though he was probably right). Madonna suffers from no such sense of humility. The Bitch With The Sinewy Groin tightens one more strap around her straitjacket. What a freaktard.

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Thursday, February 08, 2007

Flickr Banner, simple, but fiendish

That little 6x3 flash-based Flickr thing at the top right doesn't look like much, but boy has it taken some sleuthing and reverse engineering, not to mention some pretty slick code, to get it to work and to make it customisable.

Can you have one? Actually, yes. But I need to document the parameters to my web page/service first. Watch this space. And let me know if you're keen. You're able to specify which set, the grid dimensions, and the grid cell size...

If you want to play...

nixtasinks/.../Default.aspx?NSID=34751625%40N00&rows=3&cols=6&cellsize=29&transition=fade&set=72057594068279083 should give you a clue or two... The only bit you now don't know is that the other transition known to man is 'bigThenSmall'.

And of course, it suddenly doesn't work in IE. I bet Safari complains too. Back to the drawing board.

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Wednesday, February 07, 2007

iDiocy War: Letter to Senator Kruger

I don't know what's stupider. People that get run over because they're on their phone (I know, I know, that's what Madame Korma said would happen to me, but I don't believe that for a moment), or people that decide that laws will fix the issue. Looking at the photo at Senator Kruger's website, I'm even less sure.

I should point out that I am no fan of people listening to music in public, with their headphones turned up far too loud, interrupting in a very tinny manner any hope I might have of concentrating on anything other than identifying which one of many iPod suckers staring into space is the most irritating. Nor can I abide by the number of people who not only shout into their phones, but have them set on speakerphone as they walk around, or use them as walkie-talkies with beeps indicating when the next person may have their voice projected irksomely at remote passers by (have you noticed how these people are always too large to safely assault?).

Here's the letter I've written to Senator Kruger (if indeed that is his real name) hoping that he will back down from his foolish proposition.
Dear Senator Kruger,

Although I do not use an iPod as I walk around the city, and although I am careful not to use my cellphone as I cross the street, I feel your proposal to ban them is ridiculous, poorly thought out, crude, short-sighted, probably illegal (and so hopefully doomed to a very short lifespan) and above all utterly missing the point.

Just as you teach children to look both ways as they cross the street (and take time to educate them in the dangers of not paying attention to large hulking chunks of metal potentially driven by fools) rather than banning them from crossing the street in the first place, so the money that will be wasted in misplaced police efforts to enforce the proposed law should rather be invested in an education program similar to that reminding people that it's a good idea to buckle up. Just remind people to check for cars when they're crossing the street regardless of what else they might be doing (whether it be eating a hot-dog, buttoning up a coat, petting their Chihuahua, reading the New York Times or indeed listening to music). Granted, seat-belts are enforceable by law, but there is longstanding empirical evidence linking them to prevention of deaths and reduction in injury in both the people wearing them and in others. Not wearing an iPod has not been shown to prevent death and as far as I can tell wearing one is only in passing linked to incidents that could have been avoided regardless; remember that careless and stupid people are run over, injured by machinery and fall off things all the time.

As a pedestrian in New York, I am much more afraid of cyclists riding the wrong way through red lights than I am of cars that I cannot hear, but I am prepared to tolerate them and look both ways on a one-way street because I expect idiots wherever I go, and because I prefer my food delivered warm.

Please, if you hold your reputation or rational reason at all dear, don't divert perfectly useful funding into firstly a campaign to introduce this law and secondly a doomed enterprise to enforce it.

Sincerely yours,

Nicholas Furness.

Monday, February 05, 2007

Lifesaver Mechanical Turk

Missing at sea
Amazon and Google have got together to shove a Satellite out to search for Jim Gray (via Gizmodo), who went missing lately.

While this is a great gesture and there's no arguing with it, Amazon should not insist you accept the HIT before you do it, and many of the images are delivered to me as blank/black, which I'm sure is a mistake.

Being totally untrained in spotting flotsam, my criteria change as I see more images. I fear that even with the fine examples they provide of what exactly I'm looking for, a piece of software would do as good a job as they'll be flagged with many false positives unnecessarily. Furthermore their sample images do not tell you what to look for in terms of life-rafts, assuming that the boat will be intact and upright. And then of course remember that software is not comprised at least partially of misguided teens and arseholes.

Google/Amazon, give us more examples of what would be useful. An upright floating boat is presumably one of the less likely options here...

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