3 December 2004

buzzing on the entertainment

I've got something of an entertainment buzz going. Now that Nano's over and my vacation hold at the library is off (despite only writing four or five days last month I never turned my hold off) the good stuff is just rolling in.

I've been cracking up flipping through Interior desecrations by the very funny Jim Lileks. It's possible that I'm just tired but some of that stuff is side-splitting. Check out this book if you have any sense at all of taste or humour.

Last night I watched Suddenly, a thriller from 1955 that is more known for having Frank Sinatra as a villain than for being a pretty good movie that gives far more screen time to Sterling Hayden than it does to ol' blue eyes. This is not to say that Frankie doesn't turn in a good performance. He turns out to be a pretty decent psycho killer out to make a cool half mil to off the president, but pretty much everybody is good. I haven't seen the other film on the DVD, ostensibly with Frank again as a heroin addict or something like that, but Suddenly is well worth watching. Then again, I like to watch Sterling Hayden. If you have no idea who he is, go out now and track down The killing (one of Stanley Kubrick's forgotten early films about which I have written previously). It's a darn good movie and you shouldn't regret watching it. I don't.

I'm also happy to have finally stumbled across the excellent drama The Wire that HBO's been showing for a couple seasons now. Though it treads on the same turf as Homicide: life on the streets it's a different beast altogether. It's dense, clever, well-written, dark, gritty, and even funny at times, and I'm enjoying it immensely. Altogether I've done well to have waited and had all of these hit me at once.

Harshing the buzz considerably though is the continued stupidity of HBO's DVD people who cannot seem to consistently stick a chapter stop at the end of the opening credits. Why is this so difficult? I cannot be the only person in the world who does not want to sit through the entire theme song every fifty minutes when I'm devouring these shows. I am enjoying this show so much but when I watch five episodes in one night that means I need to fast forward four times (I did want to hear it all the way through, once) and tomorrow night I'll likely need to do it eight more times too if I know the way that I watch these things.

Then again I didn't pay for this (thank you Columbus Metropolitan Library) but I was thinking that I would probably be willing to pay an extra dollar or two (not more than two though) when I do buy discs of a show if it had chapter stops after the opening credits. At least until everybody figures out what the producers of M*A*S*H seem to already know. DVD makers, just put a chapter stop after the opening credits, please, damnit. This just gets to me for some reason.

On the upside, though, now I have a challenge. 'Roundabout the end of episode three ("The buys") I heard a familiar tune, albeit in an unfamiliar fashion. The song was one that I first encountered on the highly underrated soundtrack album for Batman forever called "The hunter gets captured by the game" and as far as I had known until today the song was done first by Tracy Thorn backed up by Massive Attack.

How wrong I was. Though that album is no stranger to cover tunes (Lou Reed's "Passenger" done by INXS's Michael Hutchence comes to mind) I'd never considered this song, one of my favorites of all time, to be one. Well, the one in the show sure didn't sound like Massive Attack and I immediately (and correctly) inferred that the version I knew and loved was likely a cover, but this one could well be also.

So I went out on the web, and I'm still not sure what I heard. Unfortunately "The Wire" is too common to help out on a search, and the HBO forums don't have a good enough search either. I'm pretty sure nobody else has asked about the song on there, and I moved my search over to the good old allmusic guide instead. There I discovered that the song was written by none other than Smokey Robinson and it was probably first performed by the Marvelettes. Unfortunately it's also been done by another five or six artists, too. So now the hunt begins.

I enjoy the hunt.

2 December 2004

blatant plug

Incidently, if anybody else is interested in picking up a Palm keyboard, the seller from which I bought mine still has a couple more at the same reasonable price ($1.99 + $9.95 shipping for an accessory that once listed upwards of $100). I really, really like mine.

Get yours here, but note that this is for the older-school palms, up to and including the m10x series (I've got a IIIx and I'm more than happy with it, in case that matters).

1 December 2004

avoid saprizo.com

It's strange searching Google and finding no results at all for something. Moreover it is strange to
'whois' a domain and find that it is available, despite the fact that it resolves to an existing address. I'm getting ahead of myself, though.

Today I found an interesting message in my inbox, with the unassuming subject line "You've won a Microsoft X-Box, (This is not spam)." I was immediately suspicious (but also curious, since it had made it through my filters) so I opened it cautiously. The sender was unfamiliar, and I doubted that I could win a contest I never entered. Click below to see the text of the email and the rest of what I found.

Return-path: <administrator@saprizo.com>
Envelope-to: --me--Delivery-date: Tue, 30 Nov 2004 23:53:09 -0800
To: --me--From: "Saprizo" <administrator@saprizo.com>
Message-ID: <2004-lzckqqge.lzckqqge-lzckqqge.ilwsvlpz.mail@saprizo.com>
Date: Wed, 1 Dec 2004 07:52:50 +0000 (GMT)
X-SA-Exim-Connect-IP: 129.105.16.56
X-SA-Exim-Mail-From: administrator@saprizo.com
Subject: You've won a Microsoft X-Box, (This is not spam).
Content-Type: text/html
X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.0.0 (2004-09-13)rawhide.frogspace.net
X-Spam-Status: No, score=4.8 required=5.0 tests=BAYES_60,DCC_CHECK,HTML_20_30,
HTML_MESSAGE,MIME_HEADER_CTYPE_ONLY,MIME_HTML_ONLY,
RCVD_IN_BL_SPAMCOP_NET,YOU_WON autolearn=disabled version=3.0.0
X-Spam-Level: ****
X-SA-Exim-Version: 4.1+cvs (built Mon, 18 Oct 2004 15:55:05 -0700)

Greetings,

Your email address was entered into our Microsoft X-Box promotional competition at
http://www.Saprizo.com

This is a prize draw, you have actually won a brand new Microsoft X-Box Gaming Console!

Your package also includes these top 5 games:
- Halo: Combat Evolved
- Grand Theft Auto Double Pack
- Madden NFL 2004
- Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time
- Tom Clancy's Rainbox Six 3

You are now invited to login to our website and claim your prize that you have won.
There are only 3 winners in total this month, out of thousands of emails, so do count yourself lucky!

We have provided the following web link for you, it is temporary and expires in 72 hours.
If you do not login within this time, your X-Box shall unfortunately be returned to the prize pool.

Here is your link!--link removed--On this page you will need to enter this pass code number to proceed:

204197

This is very important. Do not lose that number!
Put in your address, and we will send your X-Box to you.

We hope that you will enjoy your new X-Box gaming console.

Best Regards,

From Microsoft and the Saprizo.com team!
So I tried the link, after removing as much personal information from it as possible. I ended up at saprizo.com, which whois tells me is unregistered.

Hmm, that's odd.Please note that following these links is quite possibly very stupid. I do not encourage you to do this, though I am providing them anyway.I ended up here, once I stripped away the frames and changed my email address: http://www.saprizo.com/cgi-bin/server.cgi?registrant=garbage@in.garbage.out&code=a&xm=1

I typed in my special code to get to this: http://www.saprizo.com/cgi-bin/server.cgi?entrycode=204197®istrant=garbage%40in.garbage.out&xm=0&enter=enter

Which still looks legitimate, I suppose. There's an address form, and then these paragraphs:
Due to several people attempting to hack our website to claim free prizes, we now require that you pay for shipping costs as verification that you are an actual winner. We apologize for this inconvenience but it is to make sure that YOU get your X-Box, not someone else!

You will only be charged for the shipping option that you select below. The X-Box itself is of no charge.
People hacking their website? Nearest I can tell it just now sprung into being. I read on and immediately was sure that this is a scam:
Shipping:
Shipping option:
12-01-04:

At this time only debit card transactions are able to be processed, due to technical reasons. We hope to have credit card processing online as soon as possible. Thank you kindly for your patience.

Card Type:
Card Number:
Expiry Date:
PIN

Don't worry, I stole only their form, not the stuff behind it. They want debit cards and PINs? Oh yeah, like I would hand that information out on an insecure site that seems to be somewhere in, oh, I don't know, Korea somewhere (66.41.135.100). Sign me right up.

So I surfed back around the site, and ended up sending them an email asking if there was any possible way to pay without a debit card. I'll update this if Kento Kawaguchi or one of his colleagues ever reply, but I'm not holding my breath.

I just didn't find anything about the site when I searched Google nor does the domain reveal anything. Please feel free to add comments below or link to better information.