Mildly Hurtful Sarcasm

Meaningless ranting, just like everybody else.

Monday, April 27, 2009

The Pacific coast line and California wild flowers

This weekend, the family went picnic at the Point Lobos State Reserve down at Monterey County.


It's spring, California Poppies along with blossoms of many colors bank the sand trail picturous it could have come out of the cover of Homes and Gardens magazine.



It was a windy day. The rock cliffs was splashed by powerful Pacific waves on one side, and blanketed by wild flowering cacti on the other.



The water was clear and the slopes were made brilliant with lush foliage.





China cove beach was closed, because it is the sea lion's breeding season, mothers nurse their young at this secret refuge.



Down at the shoreline, there were colorful pebbles...



... and some interestingly eroded rocks.



It almost looked like another country.

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

RSA 2009

From the police prowler parked outside to multiple Homeland Security presence at the expo hall to the number government attendees, you can feel big brother's presence here at the RSA conference 2009. With relatively liberal budgets in this economy I would imagine federal employees are quite welcomed; unlikely me who mistakenly took out a company badge (my employer is competitor with a lot of the exhibitors), I was barred from most booths.

Fear mongering is still the sales pitch this year: most presentations were about how easily you can be hacked, or what productivity/monetary loss will incur when that happens. Details were scant. Few got pass "we are the most secure solution and can help your manage and secure your business most effectively". Sigh. Microsoft had a guy presented a deck about trust model, looked educational but I only got to see the last 2 slides, others gave him deer in the headlights. Oh well, may be that's why "we are the most secure solution" was pitch of the choice.


Data loss prevention was surely in the picture. Quite a few appliances were on display that claim to help achieve compliance. Others were mostly encrypted storage. One company sells a hard disk enclosure + encryption solution: the enclosure has hardware that handles the crypto, you unlock it with a mini USB key. Interesting, never seen that before, works on existing hardware, sounds like a good solution. But the most prevalent of all DLP were, surprisingly, encrypted USB keys, for storing data or credentials. Gum'on, it's 2009, these are commodities available at the supermarket, you're cheapening the show.

The highlight of my day had got to be Garner's DLP solution on demo: the PD-4 Bulk Hard Drive Destroyer uses a 1/4 inch cutter to cut into a standard 3.5" hard disk, bending it the in middle. It costs almost $7000 so the question naturally came out "How is this better than a hammer?" "No flying pieces, plus you can watch." Right on.

The bucket full of trashed hard disks looked kind of awesome

In general, I was disappointed. There were no novel products introduced. All the same old encrypt the disk or scan the traffic were so done and yawn inducing. PGP got to be the most innovative, not in their product, but in their sales pitch: they were passing out kegs of free beer, and had Phil Zimmerman signing T-shirts. I don't drink but I did get his autograph - there was no line.


Reporting from the Expo Hall at the Mascone Center in San Francisco, it's RSA 2009.

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Sunday, April 12, 2009

Slumdog Millionaire (2008)

Spoilers ahead.



A few people I know, (some have seen the movie, others not) share the same experience: their Indian coworkers/friends going out of their ways to bring up the subject and proceed to explain that this is a good movie, but not the best from the great nation of India; and that there are plenty other better Indian movies (see for yourself on IMDB).

That said, I thought it was an OK, overrated movie too. I think the cinematography was only borderline good (quite a few cheap shots taken, especially at the train station, though there are few good ones too). The flashbacks, wasn't organized enough to be easy to follow, and there are quite a few flaws in the plot - for example, I don't think a detective harsh enough to electrocute a teenager would fall for a story as unusual as Jamal's so easily, especially when he admittedly grew up a street crook.

But at the end of the day, it was the story that saved the entire production. In my opinion, it's not about India or Indian movie or the slum of Mumbai - it is a love story about a boy overcoming overwhelming odds to win a girl. India was probably the choice of backdrop where crapper skipping religious killing police torturing (for a TV show) may be marginally believable; though sadly no, it's not. I am not convinced police beating would take place for that purpose. I am not convinced the boy would stay in love with that girl for so long even though he barely spent time with her. In fact we know next to nothing about Latika, there was simply no character building on her part at all. For that matter, for a love story, too much has been put into the boy's struggle and not much about the relationship, and that's the fault of the director.

The title of the movie says as much about the story as the movie itself - started off as an underdog, moved on to become the big winner. All in all, it was pretty entertaining, especially when Ganesh walks up to you and explains how it is a good film, but not India's best.

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Friday, April 10, 2009

How dare you tax them fish

Especially in this economy, when they are laid off by the thousands...




(taken at a local Chinese market)

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Friday, April 03, 2009

Easter celebrations at Longs Drugs

I went down to Longs Drugs and got their rebate booklet for Feb-May. It's all about Easter celebrations.


There are some very nice bottles on the cover...



... and look! Spirits, there's Absolut Vodka...


... next page is wine... well, California wine country is just north of here...



... huh, more wine...


... and, booze again... So what's with Easter? Did they mix it up with Saint Patrick's day? Are we supposed to just all get drunk?

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