Saturday, November 30, 2013

100 Greatest Movies of the 1950s

My good friend Mark Sprecher recently reposted a list of "100 Greatest Movies of the 1950s" that David Ehrenstein originally posted on Facebook. The list includes posters from nearly all of the one hundred domestic and foreign films.

I have not seen the entire body of work, although I was surprised by how many I had viewed at some point in my life. I was not raised in a movie-watching household, except for the odd movie shown on network TV.

There's plenty of room for agreement, puzzlement, and outright disagreement. Have fun with the list.

I can't resist a few comments:
  • A few of the 100 are from the world of Japanese cinema. I've never acquired a taste for it, so the choices seem esoteric to me.
  • Some of the Disney selections were fun, and demonstrated an open-minded perspective (art house devotees, this is aimed at you).
  • The mix of 50s b&w and color films is worth noting.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Michael Jordan's Mansion to Be Auctioned

Basketball court inside
Michael Jordan's Illinois home
(photo: Concierge Auctions and NY Daily News)
When F. Scott Fitzgerald famously claimed the rich were different from financial mortals, he didn't have Michael Jordan in mind. At his athletic zenith, MJ was a world celebrity who became a global brand. The NBA star made zillions of dollars, some of which paid for a 56-room mansion north of Chicago. The basketball Sun King's version of Versailles is now going to be auctioned, according to a story in the Chicago Tribune.

I can't handicap the winning bid. However, when the house was made available for an old-fashioned sale, the asking price was $29 million. Apparently, there were no takers for the former Bull's luxurious corral.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

MOOC Player Coursera Hires Netflix, Facebook Execs


MOOCs, a/k/a Massive Open Online Course, have touted their ability to "disrupt" traditional academic education by changing "delivery models." These Internet-based schemes offer open courses, worldwide participation, and replay capability. Much as in traditional higher education programs, the Q&A sessions are left to poorly paid teaching assistants. What they don't offer is a walk-in classroom and a live human being delivering "knowledge."

Coursera, started by two Stanford University computer science professors, is in the vanguard of the MOOC movement. Their desire to reshape the higher education landscape recently took an interesting turn. Earlier this month, Silicon Valley Business Journal (SVBJ) reported that Coursera hired two Valley executives. One was poached from Netflix; the other was swept away from Facebook. What do these two men (yes, they are men) have in common? Well, neither are educators. The Netflix wiz understands algorithms that use predictive models to suggest "choices" for end-users. In Coursera's case, that would mean students. The Facebook "engineer" has a background in making video and other groovy "necessities" function in a social network environment.

The SBVJ story noted that Coursera was in Series B venture funding. In other words, it had a long way to go before the VC crowd could cash in on the bull rush to MOOC Ed. However, it also noted that Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg just invested in an "education analytics" firm called Panorama Education. There was no word on whether Panorama Ed received any interest from the Newark, New Jersey school system, which Zuckerberg so publicly donated stock around the time of the opening of the unflattering movie The Social Network.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Google Settles Over Unauthorized Cookies in Safari Browser

One irony of the Snowden-NSA revelations is how quickly Silicon Valley's data mining titans professed shock over the federal snoopers' lies. It's instructive to recall that the Valley's green giants (as in the color of money) have done their fair share of unauthorized collection of personal data. Today's edition of siliconvalley.com included an Associated Press story noting Google's quiet settlement of litigation alleging that the Mountain Valley firm conducted unwelcome data collection on Apple's Safari browser. This activity was in violation of Apple policy and Google's own statements of innocence in the matter. Google later claimed its actions were "inadvertent."

Uh-huh. This is the same company whose Google Maps crews routinely gathered data without permission. Meanwhile, Google has screamed and yelled about the NSA's volte-face on the feds' data mining. Googlers complained about how the NSA violated understandings and trust.

The question to ask Silicon Valley's repeat violators of personal privacy is the following one: how does it feel to be violated?

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Tina Turner Goes Swiss, "Relinquishes" US Citizenship

Anna Mae Bullock -- better known as the singer Tina Turner -- has come a long way in nearly 74 years of life.  She has moved from an obscure background in Nutbush, Tennessee to become a highly recognizable R&B icon. During her long career in show business, Turner discovered she preferred living in Europe to residing in the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave. Eventually, she pitched her tent in Switzerland, which she has called home for around two decades.

Erwin Bach and Tina Turner
(Image: today.com)
Earlier this year, Turner, who speaks German fluently, married her long-term boyfriend, a German music producer named Erwin Bach. (No one knows if Mr. Bach became Mr. Tina Turner.) According to an article in today's Washington Post, Ms. Turner took the oath of Swiss nationality in April of this year. Adding spice to the story, on October 24th, Tina went to the US Embassy in Bern to voluntarily "relinquish" her American citizenship. Under Yankee law, relinquishing is not quite the same as renouncing citizenship. The Post article noted there are certain tax advantages relinquishment provides the relinquishers, which may offer some insight into motivation for the singer's decision.

Tina Turner's high octane songs, sexual energy, and stage acts have been her meal ticket. However, my favorite tune -- What's Love Got to Do With It -- was produced during her "comeback" years. The song has a wistful sweetness and vulnerability that felt more in touch with what I imagined her off-stage personality resembled. The YouTube of the color video version of it, circa 1984, is linked here. (Ignore the ghastly, stylized b&w version.) For connoisseurs of a vanished New York City, the street scenes are fun to see. Meanwhile, Tina's strut is a welcome reminder that when she entered a room, she was the coolest person there. Her citizenship may have changed; her coolness remains constant.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Amazon, USPS Sign Sunday Delivery Deal

The Amazon-friendly Obama Administration has just concluded another Amazon-friendly deal with the secretive tech company. According to a story in today's Seattle Times, the PO and Jeff Bezos' firm will begin Sunday deliveries in time for the Christmas shopping season. The arrangement is currently limited to the New York and Los Angeles metropolitan areas, the two leading retail markets in the United States.

The deal gives Amazon a significant commercial advantage, in that it can use the USPS infrastructure and staff to deliver goods. The extra available delivery day is also another arrow in Amazon's competitive quiver.

How taxpayers benefit from this agreement was not exactly spelled out, although Amazon will pay for the privilege of going postal. It's public knowledge that the USPS is desperate for money. Amazon has the cash, and the clout with the Obama Administration, to make a deal. According to the Seattle Times story, any firm could have negotiated with the Postal Service for a Sunday gig. However, USPS officials acknowledged only Amazon pursued a deal. One wonders why.

Amazon's Chattanooga, TN facility,
cited by President Obama as an example of
"middle-class" job creation
Of course, as with all things Amazon, the contract is under seal. Inquiring minds would like to know why a federal contract not connected to national security should be a closely guarded secret.

This is Amazon's second federal contract coup this year. Earlier in 2013, the Seattle-based enterprise signed a contract to provide the CIA with cloud-based data systems and management.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

World's Manliest Hotels

This Australian hotel was not included on Linda Zavoral's list.
(Image: tripadvisor.com.au)
San Jose Mercury News journalist Linda Zavoral cooked up a list of the planet's ten manliest hotels. While she specifies what qualifies each accommodation as manly, she doesn't offer a precise definition of the term. It doesn't matter: the list is fun to read.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

ProctorU Offers Online Eyes for Online Testing

MOOC's movers and shakers
(Image: Chronicle of Higher Education)
When the MOOC phenomenon began a couple of years ago, the hype suggested the world would soon receive free courses from the globe's top academic minds. That siren song has slowly evolved into universities paying for MOOCs. The P&L for MOOCs versus live teaching was just too attractive for the institutions and profs to ignore.

One issue that emerged alongside the MOOC stampede was the matter of secure testing. The standardized testing world, especially in Asia, is corrupt and prone to profound bouts of cheating. That situation has created what Americans like to characterize as an "opportunity." In this case, a few enterprises, whose purpose was to provide online monitoring of online testing, were started. One of anti-cheating firms, ProctorU, was the centerpiece of a feature story in today's siliconvalley.com.

Ironically, PU's proctors are typically college-aged students who earn less than nine dollars per hour for their snooping. The U makes proctors available at any time of day, probably to accommodate international students. According to the siliconvalley.com story, students are charged $20 for the service.

That sounds like tip money until you start doing the math. A full-time student typically takes at least five courses per semester. That's $100 for the online testing portion of their semester's academic experience. Meanwhile, over 6.5 million students took online classes in fall 2011. Multiply that figure by $100 and you come close to what Twitter's IPO generated, without any SEC or Wall Street analyst hassles to outfox.

The next time someone suggests there is no money in education, think about ProctorU's cash-strong business. Yes, something stinks at PU.

Monday, November 4, 2013

DC School Agency Pays Consultancy $89,000 For One Day of Work

Think about all the times you've heard "there's no money in education." Well, it's not quite that simple, as District of Columbia residents recently discovered to their regret. According to a Washington Post' story, a politically connected consultancy received nearly $90,000 for one day of work.

Some of the more salient details of this outrageous sham are worth noting:

  • The contract (which was technically a grant) was no-bid
  • The winning firm -- the publishing arm of SPC Consulting -- is owned by a husband-wife team. The wife is a former US Department of Education official; the husband is the chairman of the Illinois State Board of Education
  • The DC bureaucrat responsible for signing the consultancy had done prior business with the firm in Chicago
  • The DC fee paid for a half-hour speech, three 45-minute workshops, and (heaven help us) a book signing of the wife's book!
  • The books cost $30 per unit
  • SPC charged DC $250 per person for its workshops, with 300 participants included in the grant. The same product was offered to Chicago public schools for $70 per person less than what DC was levied. Why the spread for DC? According to consultancy spokespeople, the seventy dollar per head toll covered travel and expenses for three people. In this case, the math isn't complicated: $70 x 300 = $21,000
  • An SPC spokesperson defended its fees, characterizing them as "below normal industry rates."
What's wrong with education in the United States? Beats me.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

First US Combat "Frogman" John Spence -- RIP

John Spence (right)
with Congressional Medal of Honor winner Jonathan West
(Image: bendbulletin.com)
Prior to World War II, the notion that divers would participate in combat missions seemed as fanciful as a Jules Verne story's plot device. A principal reason for the change during "The Big One" was the work of Navy enlisted man John Spence. After Pearl Harbor, the native Tennessean became part of a secret group trained in what at the time was the new and highly dangerous world of underwater warfare. According to Spence's recent obituary in the Los Angeles Times, he became our nation's first combat "frogman". The word was allegedly coined by someone who saw Spence emerge from the water in his complete diving equipment.

Spence had to keep his story quiet for years, partly to keep the frogmens' breathing device a closely held national secret. Once the government declassified the record of his military activities, Spence received public honors from a Navy SEAL organization that saluted him as a kind of godfather for their service. Part of their admiration was their appreciation for Spence's guts.

As Navy SEAL Museum executive director Rick Kaiser told the Times, Spence "fought for our country with nothing more than a Ka-Bar knife, a pack of explosives and a diving rig....In today's age of drone strikes and worldwide instant communications, it's hard to imagine going to war depending on nothing but your training, your cause and your teammates."

John Spence didn't have to imagine it. He just did it.


Saturday, November 2, 2013

Queens Reimagined: A Day at CitiField

Today's New York Times included an article extolling the virtues of living in the borough of Queens. The piece walked a line between "successful" new apartment developments, depressingly defined as a $2,000 per month studio, and "bargain" residences that included working fireplaces and enough elbow room to manageably raise a one-child family. In my lifetime, I have lived in two of the neighborhoods the journalist cited: Astoria and Sunnyside. One advantage each area offered residents was its affordability relative to Manhattan's zillionaires playground and the concept known as "Brooklyn".

Florent Morellet,
in front of his eponynous and long-closed restaurant
(Image: blogs.villagevoice.com)
In the same Times issue, a front-page piece talked about Florent Morellet's move to Brooklyn's freshly spawned "it" enclave, Bushwick. The Frenchman used to own a diner in the Meatpacking District that was fun to visit. He finally closed when the neighborhood denizens were fashionistas instead of transvestites and the rent on his establishment escalated beyond any reasonable sum. What became evident in the piece was how selective the notion of "Brooklyn" had become. The former Bushwick of food stamps, gangs, and bad schools was rapidly transforming into a hipster heaven, with wine bars, tablet-armed graduate students, and art walks. Morellet insightfully called this classist dreamscape New York's "East Bank," and he's right about that. (He's not always on the money: Morellet's reverie about the Cypress Hills neighborhood, one of the city's deepest, dreariest Siberian outposts, as resembling San Francisco has to be read to be believed.) Alas, there remains plenty of the Brooklyn the Times routinely ignores, especially the residents chained to foreclosure anxieties, underreported crime, and substandard services.

CitiField, home of the NY Mets baseball team
(Image: nycgovparks.org)
Queens rarely resembles Brooklyn, as I observed earlier this week during a business event at the CitiField baseball stadium. The conference focused on public school librarians' professional development; I attended as a book company sales representative promoting my firm's products. The gathering took place in a large dining/banquet room that included floor to ceiling windows overlooking my former home borough and, in the distance, midtown Manhattan. While the three-hundred-strong librarians listened to a prolonged James Patterson address, my attention drifted to CitiField itself and to the view beyond the ballpark.

Joan Payson Whitney with Casey Stengel (left)
Opening Day, Shea Stadium 1962
(image: artnet.com
original photo: Louis Requena)
This was my first visit to CitiField, and my first to a baseball stadium of any kind this year. (I usually make it a point to see one major league game in person during the season. This year was an exception.) The event's participants walked through the Seaver VIP entrance, named after a New York Mets' pitcher whose best years were nearly a half-century ago. (I can legitimately brag about how I saw Tom Seaver pitch a nearly perfect game in the searing heat of a pennant race against the Chicago Cubs in 1969.) The area featured other nostalgic reminders of a franchise leveraging its past to burnish its Madoff-tarnished present. One of my relatives was general manager of the Mets during their 1969 World Series championship season. (Yes, I did get free tickets and passes to the luxury dining area.) It was a different era, when a Whitney could own a baseball team because it was a sporting thing to do, like owning a race horse. Joan Whitney Payson took more than a sporting interest on which players stayed, played, or sat. Well, it was her team. She also brought Willie Mays back to New York, something my mother, who was raised in a baseball household, deeply appreciated.


Of course, those days are long gone. Looking out toward Flushing Bay, I could see a hint of the World's Fair Marina. It's not exactly anyone's dream getaway, with its proximity to LaGuardia Airport runways, scuzzy water, and a cheerless parkscape bounded by expressways and service roads. Yet, I knew a billiionaire (when there were precious few in the world at the time) who kept his yacht there. My first wife prepared meals for the money man, his wife, and their guests, onboard during the warm weather months. Sometimes, I got to sail on the vessel. Yes, it was nice. Those days are long gone, too.

Main Street, Flushing
(Image: nytimes.com)
A glance to the south showed the outline of the apartment tower where my teen years were spent; to the east, a Flushing where Caucasians enjoy Chinese food and Asians enjoy living. I considered dining there after the library event with my colleague, who had briefly lived in China. However, the grim reality of Queens' late-afternoon traffic created a sense of urgency to get out while we could.

I drove straight home, and wondered how the world had changed to the extent that public school librarians held a meeting at a baseball stadium during the World Series.


Friday, November 1, 2013

California Driver Ticketed for Wearing Google Glass

A spoof on Google Glass
When Google Glass emerged into the public, casinos were among the first institutions to ban its use inside its domains. The elite gadget has also caught the attention of law enforcement. Delaware and West Virginia are currently considering legislation that will prohibit automobile drivers from wearing the device while driving.

Meanwhile, the California Highway Patrol recently moved ahead of the Golden State's solons. According to an Associated Press story picked up by siliconvalley.com, Cecilia Abadie was cited for being distracted by a video or TV device. She was also given a speeding ticket, which apparently Ms. Abadie does not plan to fight. However, the southern California software designer is considering her legal options for her vision violation.

The Google Glass phenomenon has caused some to question the product's commercial viability. In particular, its daunting entry price ($1,500), invitation-only status, and expensive "value-added" products suggests Google Glass' market may be limited to first adopters and show-offs. I admit I would purchase one if I had $1,500 with nothing else to do. I've tried on a pair and I was intrigued. I just don't know what use it would have in my office environment, where my desk has a quaint PC and even quainter monitor. Well, I would be the coolest guy in the office...for a day. What would I do for my next trick?