Entries from June 1, 2003 - June 30, 2003

Tuesday
Jun242003

Clackety YACCS And Other Stuff

So, I see the migration to Dano has munged up my comments. Working on it.

[Update]: All unmunged, comment away.

Lunch today with blawger and office building co-dweller Mike O'Sullivan.

Want them. (Got to be a way to link those iChat AV/iSight features to a blog interface, wouldn't you think?)

John Healey and the L.A. Times have more today on Altnet/Streamwaves plans to offer an industry-sanctioned, for-pay service on Kazaa. ("Streamwaves Aims to Get Kazaa Users to Pay;" earlier post.)

Monday
Jun232003

Next Stop:  Gattaca?

As my pregnancy percolates, I'm amazed to learn how much genetic testing has become part of the normal course of prenatal affairs. (At least for those who have attained my wizened state; could be worse, I s'pose.) Lil' BH (Baby Howell) thus far has been nuchal translucencied and AFP'd. Against its mom's better judgment (and certainly against its dad's, who gets bonus points for joining in these festivities), BH's parents will undergo some ominous sounding genetic counseling later this week. (Cue Michael Nyman.) The only silver lining involved is another ultrasound, and front row (in my case, horizontal) seats for some more amazing feats of tight-quarters aqua ballet.

Monday
Jun232003

Hey, You, Get Offa My Lap

With so much national legal news today, I thought you might also be in the mood for a bit of local color. Here in Los Angeles, the city council is refusing to take lap dancing sitting down: "An ordinance that would prohibit lap dances at strip clubs was agreed to in concept Wednesday by the City Council but will be reviewed for further study by city staffers.[*]" ("L.A. Council approves lap dance ban in concept," AP; Reuters also reports that "the council embraced the measure in principle...")

*Bet they didn't have too much trouble scaring up a couple of volunteers.

Monday
Jun232003

Affirmative Action Upheld At The University Of Michigan Law School

So says NBC News, with the Supreme Court opinion on undergraduate admissions policies expected soon to follow. Howard Bashman's and the SCOTUSBlog will be good places to go for more as this continues to unfold.

Friday
Jun202003

Read Her

I am a little late to the party on this one, but will chime in anyway.

Halley ("Read Me"): "Weblogs work the way women work, they invite conversation and interaction in order to solve problems. They are not designed with women in mind, but they are all about cooperation, conversation and transparency. They are perfectly suited to a woman's view of business."

This is a compelling essay (and I'm a huge fan of all things Halley), but I can't go along with its generalizations on gender lines. My days are too filled with encounters that blow such stereotypes to out of the water. Like:



  • men who were built for collaboration, women who can't stand it;

  • moms who can and do run big businesses, happily married to dads who can and do run the home front; and

  • couples who arrive at dynamic and mutually respectful divisions of domestic labor without judicial intervention of any kind


—to name just a few. Of course there remain enormous distances for women to cross in business and beyond. Of course the world is full of societies with values radically different from those I see every day. It is, however, a mistake to ignore how much Western corporate culture has changed and is changing still, and an even bigger mistake to make assumptions about a person's abilities, tendencies, likes, wants, needs or desires based on his or her gender. Reading a good cross section of weblogs is excellent proof of this concept.

Yeah, I know: "Just you wait 'til that baby is something more than a mere wardrobe inconvenience, and this might all begin to look a little different." But my take on this partly explains why I'm reluctant to find out if our kid-to-be is a boy or a girl. That, and I always liked Christmas gifts to be a surprise. =0

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