Monthly Archives: August 2005

Blogcasting live from Oglethorpe University!!!

Yo, peeps, hooligans, and whatnots. I’m here at the Oglethorpe University library’s computer lab in my second full day as a college student.

So far, its been going OK. Plus, I’m finding the Fresh Focus class (mine is “Si Amigo: an introduction to Spanish culture” [sic]) to be very thought-provoking. Plus, I’ve found a few computer/vg afficionados who’re as deep into this stuff as I am, lol.

Class officially starts tomorrow, so I’m hoping that it isn’t that challenging (as to the point that I would say “the hell with it”).

Oh, and I’ve come across a few new ideas for Mozilla to work on in the near future:

Windhorse/Media project – creating a Gecko-layout media platform that resembles, at once, both Winamp and Realplayer in its functionality but still holds the Mozilla trademark. Windhorse is standalone, while Media is an extension for both Firefox and Thunderbird which allows you to listen to/watch online media (and gives you the choice as to whether to stream or save-as), and it is accesible through both the preferences toolbar (on top) and its own sidebar (alot like Internet Explorer’s Media bar as well). Windhorse even comes with a “bookmarks system” which resembles Winamp in that it preliminarily provides both NSV and Shoutcast directories, and allows you to bookmark online media and, if you want, save it onto your hard drive. Windhorse will use codec extensions (.xpi), among others, in order to extend the accessibility for all formats (including extensions for Real Alternative and Quicktime Alternative, from http://free-codecs.com, as well as Winamp Alternative from http://fileforum.betanews.com/detail/Winamp_Alternative/1119628827/1), thus making it universal-format and non-reliant upon other media players.

I’ll tell you more, gotta go!

Open-Source Government

Open-source….Man, how this term has been buzzing in people’s ears since Linux, Mozilla, and quite a few other phenoms first entered onto the computer scene within the last decade or more.

Basically, the term itself says it all: the allowance for developer wannabes who, mind you, have the skill, tact, and resources to have their way with the development of a particular computer feature, be it a simple application, script, plugin, extension, or maybe an *entire* operating system. Or, if the guy or gal is *that* ambitious, he/she can use the source code (which has been posted for all the world to gaze upon in awe) as the basis for the creation of a whole ‘nother feature of his/her own (or, even better, his/her fellow developers).

It doesn’t rely that much on money, and it doesn’t usually use money as a linchpin for further development. In fact, with the further decrease (and, in many circles, decrying) of the importance of proprietary rights, money will sooner or later be thankfully phased out as an issue in the ongoing evolution of the computer industry.

OK, so enough about the computer industry. That diddy only serves as the preceding example or basis for an expansion of the topic at hand: “Open-source”.

Now, a while ago, there was this now-defunct company in Toronto called “Opencola” which created collaborative software, including a desktop application which, according to the article of the same name from Wikipedia, “which enabled users to search, acquire, manage and share information from multiple data sources, including the Internet, peers on the Opencola network, and existing proprietary databases, from a single interface.”

However, before the company and its desktop thingy was sold to Waterloo’s own Open Text Corp. in the summer of 2003, the company was able to achieve notoriety, not for its desktop application (which, I guess, didn’t get the company that much money by way of propriety), but rather for a soft drink which had served, originally, as a promo tool for the explanation of open source software. The company’s idea caught on, and, before folding, was able to sell some 150,000 cans of the caffeinated concoction.

Supposedly inspired by this, an Italian “spinoff” of sorts, with no commercial value, was started up by a few FLOSS ethics activists. This version is clear (like Sprite or Fresca), by the way.

Furthermore, the rather-rudimentary recipe for Vores Øl (“Our Beer”) was published under the Creative Commons license by students at IT-University in Copenhagen, in association with Superflex, a Copenhagen-based art collective, in order to, as put by Wikipedia, “illustrate how open source concepts might be applied outside the digital world.” Initially derided by many online brewing afficionados because of the lack of numerous necessary details within the recipe, the idea soon caught on, since one of the leading developers, Rasmus Nielsen, admitted that the creators behind the recipe were (by any means) lacking the experience and knowhow in the development of a *perfect* recipe (thus asking for help from others who may possess such resources); furthermore, Nielsen stated that the brew was meant as a statement against “dogmatic notions of copyright and intellectual property that are dominating our culture.”

——————————————

So, open-source beverages, you say? OK, so now the open-source revolution can be extended outside of the realm of IT?

So now, we can have open-source this, open-source that, open-source etc…

Now…what about open-source *government*?

You read that right. Open-source government.

That means: open-source executive, open-source legislative, open-source judiciary, open-source bureaucracy, open-source electoral process, open-source defense and public order, and so on.

Now, I bet that you’re wondering, “How can there be such a thing as an open-source government, of all things?”

Well, let’s first talk about government in the basic.

————————————————-

Everybody loves democracy, whether it be the term itself, its definition, or its implementation. However, all three features of this term are shrouded in the utmost controversy of debate, since, like most other things in life, it comes in a spectrum of shades and colors rather than in simple black and white.

The interpretations of democracy, as a principle and ideology, vary wildly from extreme to extreme. You have the anarchist definition, the communist interpretation, the bureaucratic approach, the militarist stance, the free trade/speech construing, and, of course, the fascist dismissal (“bunch of hogwash”).

However, as the etymology of the term derives from the Greek for “people’s rule”, I guess that the concentration of our query should center even further upon “rule”, and what that actually consists of.

Now, the “rule” is most often taken as being “law”, the “as is”, the “standard”, the “endgame”, the “final and ultimate say-so on most matters”. So, if this thing called “law” or “rule” is in the hands of the people, the public, the common for its molding, shaping, and total use, then how is it that, in a supposedly-democratic nation, the same common hands its possession of the rule to a few select men?

Think about that.

Now, let’s look, once again, at the concept behind open source, as I quote from the “Open Source Definition”, as explicitly stated from OpenSource.org:

“Open source doesn’t just mean access to the source code. The distribution terms of open-source software must comply with the following criteria:

1. Free Redistribution

The license shall not restrict any party from selling or giving away the software as a component of an aggregate software distribution containing programs from several different sources. The license shall not require a royalty or other fee for such sale.

2. Source Code

The program must include source code, and must allow distribution in source code as well as compiled form. Where some form of a product is not distributed with source code, there must be a well-publicized means of obtaining the source code for no more than a reasonable reproduction cost preferably, downloading via the Internet without charge. The source code must be the preferred form in which a programmer would modify the program. Deliberately obfuscated source code is not allowed. Intermediate forms such as the output of a preprocessor or translator are not allowed.

3. Derived Works

The license must allow modifications and derived works, and must allow them to be distributed under the same terms as the license of the original software.

4. Integrity of The Author’s Source Code

The license may restrict source-code from being distributed in modified form only if the license allows the distribution of “patch files” with the source code for the purpose of modifying the program at build time. The license must explicitly permit distribution of software built from modified source code. The license may require derived works to carry a different name or version number from the original software.

5. No Discrimination Against Persons or Groups

The license must not discriminate against any person or group of persons.

6. No Discrimination Against Fields of Endeavor

The license must not restrict anyone from making use of the program in a specific field of endeavor. For example, it may not restrict the program from being used in a business, or from being used for genetic research.

7. Distribution of License

The rights attached to the program must apply to all to whom the program is redistributed without the need for execution of an additional license by those parties.

8. License Must Not Be Specific to a Product

The rights attached to the program must not depend on the program’s being part of a particular software distribution. If the program is extracted from that distribution and used or distributed within the terms of the program’s license, all parties to whom the program is redistributed should have the same rights as those that are granted in conjunction with the original software distribution.

9. License Must Not Restrict Other Software

The license must not place restrictions on other software that is distributed along with the licensed software. For example, the license must not insist that all other programs distributed on the same medium must be open-source software.

10. License Must Be Technology-Neutral

No provision of the license may be predicated on any individual technology or style of interface.”

(Copyright © 2005 by the Open Source Initiative, opensource.org)

Furthermore, let us also take notice, via Wikipedia, of how the Participants in the development of Open Source software are basically constituted:

“Participants in OSS development projects fall broadly into two categories. There are the Core and the Peripheral.

The Core or Inner Circle are developers who modify codes that constitute the project.

The Peripheral are usually made up of users who use the software. They report bugs, and suggest fixes.

The participants may then be further divided into the following.

1. Project leaders who have the overall responsibility (Core). Most of them might have been involved in coding the first release of the software. They control the overall direction of individual projects.
2. Volunteer developers (Core / Periphery) who do actual coding for the project. These include:
* Senior members with broader overall authority
* Peripheral developers producing and submitting code fixes
* Occasional contributors
* Maintainers who maintain different aspects of the project
3. Everyday users who perform testing, identify bugs, deliver bug reports, etc. (Periphery)
4. Posters (Periphery) who participate frequently in newsgroups and discussions, but do not do any coding.”

Now, in those definitions of the essence of Open Source, I believe that we now have laid our eyes upon a link between open source and democracy that could forever revolutionize the way that government is operated.

[With that being said, I’ll stop at this point in order to let you think about it. In the meantime, I’ll begin work on the world’s first open-source constitution and human rights charter (the counterpart to “source code”), which I’ll eventually post on a website for distribution.]

 

Last week in WR

Get Firefox!

Well, as I said in my LJ, ladies and gentlemen, the time is almost here.

This is my last week in Warner Robins, Ga.

*sigh*

13 years in this military town, and now, all of a sudden, here’s college? and in Atlanta, of all places?

Geez, I don’t know what to expect, but then again, such a plight is already somewhat familiar to you all, if you’ve followed my stuff that long enough.

Meanwhile, though, I’ve been using Ubuntu Linux on my HP Pavilion a317x as an alternative to Windows XP. However, I’ve decided to go back to XP, since 1) I miss my online media, 2) the graphics for Ubuntu (and Kubuntu, its KDE counterpart) are nothing more than needlessly terrible (even the screen resolution is fixed at an aggravating 640×480!), and 3) there are plenty more .exes than .debs (the only type of acceptable executable for Ubuntu; you have to convert tarballs and rpms into .deb, if you want to know). Plus, I’m sick of dependencies, dependencies, dependencies. Check out the recent screenshot if you want.

So I’m sorry to any of the Linux community who may reside at DA and who are offended by what I’m about to say, but Linux (or at least its Debian-based family) has a LONNNNNG way to go before it can match the caliber and integratedness which makes Windows the leviathan of an OS that it is at present.

So back to the Windows ghetto I go….damn.

Anywho, we just obtained the shot records today, and I’ll probably pack my bags on Friday or something. I’ll still come back to WR (often, probably), so I’ll leave a great deal of my stuff here at the house.

Also, I’m trying to build up a field of contacts in Atlanta in advance of my move. I know that DragonCon will take place shortly afterward, and I doubt that I’ll be able to go (with college and money, of course, being the main issues), so I hope that anyone who may be going will have the best of times there.

Well, that’s it for now. I’ll probably submit some more stuff before I leave, and I don’t think that this will be the last time that I make a post at DA, so I’ll be back. Until that day, though, *love and peace*!

That was from Trigun, btw.

www.spreadfirefox.com/?q=user/…

Special report: What goes around comes around

Amazing…this week actually starts off with the reappearance of Martin Sargent (aka “The Sarge”) from the late TechTV’s late night spectacular Unscrewed: http://www.sargeworld.com/; my rediscovery of Kaijima’s art from the blessed WebArchive’s cache of his now-offline Drakenfluegel; the reemergence of Call for Help (with, as Leo Laporte has admitted, a TSS flavor) on G4 (which I don’t know if I’ll be watching); and a bunch of other good stuff (now I’ll need to pull up a couple of articles from WebArchive’s Africana.com archive, but I’ll do that in the wee hours of the morning, as usual).

Still waiting for that XP CD, and still awaiting Saturday, of course. But at least I’ve come across a few things which were once lost, but now found (like that song…you know…the rather long-winded “Negro spiritual” that was written by that British guy who sailed a slave ship…oh well…).

In the meantime, I’m perusing Yahoo Groups for any Atlanta groups which may deal in any way with the wierd stuff that I’m interested in.

Cheery-oh!

A week with Ubuntu; my last week in WR

Well, its my final week here in Warner Robins.

Man…over 12 years of being here at this place…I don’t know what to actually expect when I move to Atlanta this Saturday.

For those who are new to this journal, I will be moving from Warner Robins to Atlanta in order to attend college at Oglethorpe University. Me and mom have been wrangling with records, transcripts, loan apps, and other such nonsense for the last couple of days…turns out that I’ve (yes, I) have been AUDITED by the IRS because of a few technicalities in the FAFSA that I had filed several months back. So it seems that we’ll be suffering some repercussions from that within the next couple of months. Oh well…

In the meantime, I’m trying to develop a field of contact in the “A”, as it is popularly known down here. Dunno if I’ll be going to any cons as of yet, as there seems to be few of them; I know that Atlanta has a big-ass “alternative” community (at least, in proportion to the size of the city proper) that could possibly rival that of San Francisco (especially Atlanta’s famed BDSM crew), but other than that, its not that much to see up there, from the looks of it. I know that Williams Street Productions, which makes Adult Swim and Toonami (two pioneering television blocks in their respective rights), is based in Atlanta; I know that “Furry Weekend Atlanta” takes place in February; there is a vibrant religious community (more than just Christianity, actually) up there; and, well, there are a few pseudo-science practitioners up there (mostly hypnotists and hypnotherapists, among others).

Otherwise, that’s about it. *sigh*

Meanwhile, I’m waiting for HP to send that XP CD in the mail so that I can reinstall it before this week is over with. I’ve tried my best with Ubuntu (both in GNOME and KDE), and have tried to look on the bright side of it (at least its open-source…), but now I await a return back to the ghetto with which I am most familiar: Windows XP.

nyeh…

Anyway, that’s what’s up with me. Plus, I had a “sort-of” fight at , but its over with now, since I posted a revised edition of my first and prior post. Now to deal with those DFs at the place…um…nevermind (waste of time anyway).

Peace!

PS: hopefully, this won’t be my last post at LJ.

This kind of stuff pisses me off

(@ african_gothic)

http://lincolntribune.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1977

http://lincolntribune.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=2013

OMG, stories about Protestant preachers who save Haitian children from the devil religion Voodoo!!! Haiti was dedicated to Satan in a Voodoo ceremony in 1791, and now the “love of Christ” is being spread on the poverty-stricken, “godless” former slave colony!!!

While the rectum from heaven rains down golden, glittering showers of piss upon the rest of us…

Oh, and new community: yoruba_world. Its self-explanatory, so get your ass in gear.

Harry

And yet, life changes again….

Yo, haven’t been here for quite a while. So exactly where have I been?

Well, had a stint back at DA (I may never completely quit that place). Plus, I’ve been DLing stuff as usual, mostly for the Mozilla family of applications, and man…you guys *need* to check them out if you haven’t tried them yet:

http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/central.html

http://www.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird/

http://www.mozilla.org/projects/calendar/ (check out Sunbird as well)

http://greasemonkey.mozdev.org/

http://aimfire.mozdev.org/ (YES, it *does* exist!!!)

http://deviantart.arphire.com/deviantgallery/

http://www.deviantart.com/view/17654031/

http://www.deviantart.com/view/15443055/

http://moeffju.net/dA/hack/

http://www.deviantart.com/view/17401992/

And a few other stuff which I’ll mention later.

Also, in my open-source sojourns, my dibblings, and my dabblings, etc., I also tried to switch my HP Pavilion from Windows XP to Ubuntu Linux.

Yes…I tried.

Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending upon your liking of the Blue Screen of Death which we *all* fear), it didn’t go. Every time I rebooted, hoping to get the live CD (which I left downloading overnight, since it took more than a day to DL) to kick in whatever startup I could, would, or should have been seeing, the dreaded Windows XP bootscreen always showed up in order to spite me.

Thank God that I don’t have a gun license…

Anyway, long afterward, my favorite news network of all time, Newsworld International, went off the air this past Sunday.

*sniffsigh* I recorded it into the annals of my editorial writing history at DA before, during, and after the *Black Screen of Contextual Journalism-based News Television Death* appeared, after which I turned off the TV…probably for good (with the exception of Adult Swim Saturday Night).

Damn…everything good *has* died, as put by Disturbed in their song “Down with the Sickness”.

Also, in my wanderings, I’ve often frequented Yahoo Groups, where I run the *only* Fanmi Lavalas YahooGroup in existence (just got through writing Marguerite Laurent, btw). Plus, everyday, I check out http://news.google.com/news?q=haiti&hl=en&lr=&sa=N&tab=wn in order to find out the latest shit to happen in Port-au-Prince.

In fact, did you guys know that Michaelle Jean from CBC/Radio-Canada will, on Oct. 1st, become Canada’s first African-descended Governor-General? Yep, North America’s first Black head of state. This is gonna be something….

Well, trying out the few versions of BlackBox for Windows…seems rather complicated, since I’m trying to get that smooth, minimalist environment that I’ve always wanted for my desktop.

Oh, and I’m at Yahoo 360, if you want to know.

Peace!

A tribute to NWI

Tonight, I’m sad. I’m angry. I’m emotional as hell.

NWI, or Newsworld International, probably the only reason for why we (me and my Mom) continue to keep Directv, is signing off as of 12:00 am tonight.

I found out a month or two ago the fate of this network. Al Gore (yes, the former VP) heads the group which bought NWI last year. Unfortunately, the group decided not to renew NWI’s contract, and decided to replace it with its own news channel, Current.tv. Its a news network which, expressly, will dedicate most of its content to the 18-to-34-year-old audience in the United States. Personally, considering that this is the same group to which is dedicated most of the content on the MTV Networks (MTV, VH1, Nickelodeon, BET, etc.), I would like to designate this demographic as the D.F. (dumbf**k)…hold…hold on a minute….

(goes to the television, does a long salute to the TV as all of the NWI staff make their last and final goodbyes to their American and Caribbean audiences)

(TV goes black………..then a show called Google Current comes on the air, with an MTV-like interface…..)

(I turn off the TV….possibly for good….the room is dark, save for the computer screen)

*sniff*

Sorry…..I’m…just feeling crappy right now.

Its over.

Ladies and gentlemen, I have just witnessed the (possible) death of the best news channel on US cable/Satellite television.

I have just witnessed the demise of an era, and I am gladdened to have seen it to the very end of this network.

And the end of good American television.

*huh*…….I wonder if this is what death feels like.

I mean, shit, this is the same thing that happened to TechTV! When f**king Comcast decided to replace a good, solid and diverse TV network for those who happen to focus on things of a generally electronic nature with a sorry excuse of a channel for videogamers, I was deeply outraged, as were millions of other viewers.

I missed Unscrewed with Martin Sargent and Laura Swisher (which covered, in its own way, the 2003 recall election with such guest candidates as cult-figure/child actor Gary Coleman, porn film director Lorraine Fontaine, well-endowed adult film actress Mary Cook, and Mary Jane advocate Bruce Martin Margolin), The Screen Savers with Patrick Norton and Leo Laporte (who now hosts Call for Help on G4TechTV in Canada while operating a now-popular podcast, This Week in Tech), Eye DropsCall for HelpTechLive, and several other programs which were as diverse in content as most shows on US televsion *aren’t* these days. F**k Comcast forever!!!

*ahem*

Anyway, back to the subject at hand. Its hard to say goodbye to something which has become a part of your personal life for sometime within its 11-year tenure on American television. I couldn’t find an alternative elsewhere on US television, not with CNN, and *HELL NO* with Fox News.

NWI, during its existence, became a provision of fresh air in a nation(s) which is chock-full of sterile, biased, redundant news “coverage” which only benefits those who are in power, be it economically, politically, or socially. It based its news coverage upon a concept which has been dead on US and Caribbean television for over a decade by now, and now only exists on the Internet and Internet-based networks: “contextual journalism”.

This approach took each story in its rawest, most complex form and simply translated it into basic English (and not just within the language context, either). It never blew anything out of proportion, and it gave to the audience the least-biased telescope on the story. It broke the story down in order for it to be at least partially digestable for the common viewer, and it gave the viewer the exclusive right to taste the story for his or herself.

This approach, as different as it was from average American-made news television, had made NWI both a valuable cultural asset for Canada’s news media and an eye-of-the-storm type of asset for the US’ news media. Thus, with the departure of NWI from the scene, Canada has lost its best-possible connection to the U.S. and its citizens, while the U.S. has just witnessed the full and final passing of exceptionally-approachable, exceptionally-simple, exceptionally-intelligent news coverage from television, save for maybe PBS, which has a minimal news service of its own, but nothing that could replace NWI in its coverage of the events which have, more or less, affected us Earthlings, no matter where we may be (even the Discovery shuttle mission) for over 11 years.

I will miss Bill Cunningham, Sandra Lewis (who hosted the last broadcast), Ron Izawa, Chris Henry, Terry Glecoff, Nerene Virgin, Karen Hawryluk, Helen Mann (who hosted the very first broadcast), Henry Champ, Jordan Kerbel, and several others whose names escape me at the moment, and I will miss them all sorely.

However, as this is the month of August, which is known in the US as the “television debut month”, and given that US/American-controlled-or-sponsored media is becoming increasingly too sterile, pasty, and polarized for the tastes of many Western Hemisphereans, there are what former British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan called “winds of change” on the horizon of international media.

Next year, Al-Jazeera (the reincarnation of BBC’s Middle Eastern division), the famous news network which has brought Arab-centered news to most of the Middle East and has gained notoriety in the West for claiming first dibs on Osama Bin Laden videotapes, will break ranks with other Middle Eastern newscasters and become the first of them to bring Arab news to the West, particularly the United States (FCC permitting and Nielsen allowing, of course) and Canada (CRTC permitting as well), in English. Well this is going to be interesting, lol.

Furthermore, Telesur, which has been described as “the Latin American Al-Jazeera” and is jointly-sponsored by Venezuela, Cuba, Uruguay, and Argentina, first broadcasted its television signals last Sunday. Currently, being headquartered in Caracas, it has news bureaus in Colombia, Bolivia, and Brazil (which also has its own similar Portuguese-language venture, TV Brasil International), but NBs in Argentina, Cuba, Mexico City, and Washington D.C. are in the works as we speak. By the time that it is fully operational, it will be available not only to Latin America, but also to the U.S., the E.U., and North Africa via sattelite.

You know that the folks on the Hill are having a field day with this one. And its possible that maybe NWI’s demise was timely in these regards to change in the structure of world, and US, news media.

Japan is making its presence known through its now-rather-popular-in-a-cultish-way exports to the West, particularly in anime, manga, j-pop (and the succeeding waves of k-pop and c-pop which have followed), and in the most recent game show phenomena, such as Takeshi’s Castle (known to the US as MXC: Most Extreme Elimination Challenge) and Hey! Spring of Trivia. With the offering of NHK’s Newswatch and What’s On Japan via NWI, it has probably made some inroads into American news viewers’ television sets. Thus, with the axeing of NWI upon a butcher block of greenbacks, NHK may evaluate its impact upon America, and, if all goes well, will widen its English-language horizons in a similar manner as that of CCTV, China’s state television network, to the point that it may offer its own English-language network on a full-time basis, be it through cable/satellite (with their foreign language packs and all) or, even better, on the Internet with streaming video (.asx may be preffered in that wise), since, of course, it also has Radio Japan, which broadcasts online live via Real Player. Furthermore, ITV News in Britain may have to do something of the same in order to increase its American audience and compete with BBC World. Its newscasts are extremely popular in Great Britain and, thanks to NWI, the United States as well; plus, whenever they present a graph or diagram in order to demonstrate the issue at hand in graphical terms, I’ll say that the effects are sometimes close to hilarious (particularly, if at no other time, the April general election for Parliament. 3-D graphics galore!!!).

Meanwhile CCTV (Beijing), DW-TV (Berlin), and, of course, CBC (Toronto) needn’t worry that much about their American audience: both of the formers already have their own 24-hour live streams on the web, while the latter has updated Hourly Newscasts from CBC Newsworld, plus Canada Now (which is also featured, with local variations, on the local divisions of the CBC web domain, but was never shown on NWI for some reason) and the ever-famous National with Peter Mansbridge (who, in most American viewers’ opinions, was the best alternative to Tom Brokaw, who is friends with Peter and was featured on CBC’s coverage of the elections last year). CBC may, in the light of NWI’s demise, expand its online newscasting to include the rest of CBC Newsworld’s original programming in order to accomodate American viewers. Furthermore, DW-TV’s broadcasts and documentaries are still being shown on LinkTV, which may be the last-ever bastion of community-based news and information programming on U.S. television (LinkTV also has Mosaic, a Peabody Award-winning newscast which showcases segments of daily newscasts from several independent or state-owned broadcasters in the Middle East, so you might want to check that out), while CCTV has a few Mandarin-speaking channels on most international packages for American cable/satellite.

However, nothing will be able to replace NWI by itself, since I was particularly fond of Bill Cunningham’s Special Assignment (he’s retiring this year, as well as the CBC’s Washington correspondent David Halton). I’m going to miss it’s presence on TV, and I may not turn on the TV anymore (Mom doesn’t watch TV at all, though, so its no loss on her part). Life after today isn’t going to be the same as it was before. As things have changed in this manner, it seems like, while it is necessary to move on from that which is past to that which is new or has already become an alternative, its rather hard for me to look at the world in the same way as I used to. Change, for the most part, is always like that to anyone who is easily sentimental or nostalgic. It nags and even rips at your soul, as merciless as it is. However, it is still necessary to allow such changes in order to become better people.

Yet and still, though, I do hope that Newsworld International can return to the U.S. and Caribbean, as negotiations with other cable/sat providers are still pending at this moment (as the Exec. Pro. himself explained on the last broadcast). Who knows? It may happen eventually.

But for now, as Ron Izawa always put it at the end of World Watch, “Thanks for Watching”.