Real animals infringe on Bambi

Cory Doctorow:

German photographer Tanja Askani has found and photographed a bunny and deer who are best friends and like to nuzzle each other. No word yet on whether Disney will be suing the dumb beasts of the woods for copyright infringement. Still, it's clear that unless this kind of unauthorized work can be stamped out, hard-working cartoons like Bambi will be demoralized and cease to produce the films we know and love, such as Bambi, Bambi II: A Twist in Time, Bambi III: Bambi and the Ring of Belief, Bambi IV: Milo's Return, Bambi IV: Bambi Rides Again and Bambi: The Widescreen Commemorative Edition.

Link

(via The Disney Blog)

Update: Of the photographer, Xeni sez, "man, her work is incredible."



(Via Boing Boing.)

Review: Mac OS X Shines In Comparison With Windows Vista

Amid the hype surrounding the release of Windows Vista, Mac users are taking solace from the fact that OS X is still a champ on many fronts. Here are some reasons our reviewer John C. Welch opts for Apple. I think this article sums up a LOT of differences between OS X & Vista...lots of small subtle differences that make a BIG difference.

Some notable quotes:

"Operational philosophy" isn't something that's written anywhere on a whiteboard or an inspirational poster. It's more of a "what does this remind me of" kind of thing. In other words, when I'm using an OS and I want to describe how I interact with it, what's the description that best suits it?

For Mac OS X, it's the classic English butler. This OS is designed to make the times you have to interact with it as quick and efficient as possible. It expects that things will work correctly, and therefore sees no reason to bother you with correct operation confirmations. If you plug in a mouse, there's not going to be any messages to tell you "that mouse you plugged in is now working." It's assumed you'll know that because you'll be able to instantly use the mouse. Plug in a USB or FireWire hard drive and the disk showing up on your desktop is all the information you need to see that the drive has correctly mounted. It is normally only when things are not working right that you see messages from Mac OS X.

Windows is...well, Windows is very eager to tell you what's going on. Constantly. Plug something in, and you get a message. Unplug something and you get a message. If you're on a network that's having problems staying up, you'll get tons of messages telling you this. It's rather like dealing with an overexcited Boy Scout...who has a lifetime supply of chocolate-covered espresso beans. This gets particularly bad when you factor in things like the user-level implementation of Microsoft's new security features.

To put it simply, you can work on a Mac for hours, days even, and only minimally need to directly use the OS. With Vista? The OS demands your attention, constantly.

(Via InformationWeek - All Stories.)

‘Warm winter wreaks havoc.’

This winter’s “curiously warm weather across the Northeast and much of the Midwest has played havoc with more than seasonal businesses. In Washington, D.C., springlike temperatures have faked out flora, causing dogwoods and daffodils to bloom.” New York City is expecting 70 degree weather tomorrow (an all-time high), and a college professor drowned last Sunday “after falling through thin ice on usually frozen Rangeley Lake.”


(Via Think Progress.)

CBS: Military Tells Bush It Has Only 9,000 Troops Available For ‘Surge’

A State Department official leaked word this week that President Bush is considering sending “no more than 15,000 to 20,000 U.S. troops” to Iraq. “Instead of a surge, it is a bump,” the official said.


This claim was bolstered last night by CBS’s David Martin, who reported that military commanders have told Bush they are prepared to execute a troop escalation of just 9,000 soldiers and Marines into Iraq, “with another 10,000 on alert in Kuwait and the U.S.”


Watch it:



Screenshot


The Washington Post reports today that “deep divisions remain between the White House on one side and the Joint Chiefs and congressional leaders on the other about whether a surge of up to 20,000 troops will turn around the deteriorating situation.” The Post also provides more context about an administration official’s recent claim that the escalation is “more of a political decision than a military one.“:


The U.S. military is increasingly resigned to the probability that Bush will deploy a relatively small number of additional troops — between one and five brigades — in part because he has few other dramatic options available to signal U.S. determination in Iraq, officials said. But the Joint Chiefs have not given up making the case that the potential dangers outweigh the benefits for several reasons, officials said.


Escalation backers have already begun distancing themselves from this plan. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said yesterday that not sending enough troops would be “worse than doing nothing.”


Digg It!


Full transcript:


REPORTER: The president is expected to give his speech on a new way forward in Iraq next week. CBS’s David Martin has learned military commanders told the President they could execute a ‘troop surge’ of 9,000 soldiers and Marines into Iraq, with another 10,000 on alert in Kuwait and the U.S. Two army brigades — about 7,500 troops — would go into Baghdad in an effort to control the violence, clearing neighborhoods and staying long enough for reconstruction projects to take effect. 1,500 Marines would go to the western province of al-Anbar, heartland of the Sunni insurgency. This, even though the Commandant of the Marine Corps was quoted as saying he did not see a need for more battalions. But aides say the President still hasn’t decided for sure on a plan.


TONY SNOW (CLIP): The President understands this is important and needs to be done right.


ANCHOR: And details for the President’s proposal on Iraq are still being hammered out, but Pentagon officials are sure the President will order more troops to Iraq.

(Via Think Progress.)

President Bush has quietly claimed sweeping new powers to open Americans’ mail without a judge’s warran


‘President Bush has quietly claimed sweeping new powers to open Americans’ mail without a judge’s warrant,’ the New York Daily News reports. ‘The President asserted his new authority when he signed a postal reform bill into law on Dec. 20. Bush then issued a ’signing statement’ that declared his right to open people’s mail under emergency conditions.’


Neoconservatives ‘have found themselves under attack in Washington policy salons and, more important, within the Bush administration,’ over the Iraq war. But now, ‘a small but increasingly influential group of neocons are again helping steer Iraq policy.’ Sens. John McCain (R-AZ) and Joe Lieberman (I-CT) will press for escalation at an event tomorrow at the neoconservative American Enterprise Institute.


Energy giant ExxonMobil borrowed tactics from the tobacco industry to ‘manufacture uncertainty’ about climate change, spending $16 million on groups that question global warming, the Union of Concerned Scientists documents in a new report.


The ‘surge’ becomes a ‘bump.’ A State Department official says that President Bush is considering sending ‘no more than 15,000 to 20,000 U.S. troops’ to Iraq. ‘Instead of a surge, it is a bump,’ said a State Department official.


‘A laboratory that has tested most of the nation’s electronic voting systems has been temporarily barred from approving new machines after federal officials found that it was not following its quality-control procedures and could not document that it was conducting all the required tests.’


The Washington Post highlights the plight of pregnant women in Iraq, who are ‘forgoing prenatal visits to doctors as a result’ of the ongoing violence. ‘Fearful of going into labor during the nighttime curfew, they are having elective Caesarean sections.’ They also suffer from a shortage of doctors, many of whom have fled the country, been kidnapped or killed.


The AFL-CIO has sued the Department of Labor to compel it to issue a rule requiring employers to pay for protective equipment used by an estimated 20 million workers to protect them from job hazards. By the department’s own estimates, ‘400,000 workers have been injured and 50 have died due to the absence of this rule, since 1999 when the rule was first proposed.’


2007 is ‘set to be the hottest on record worldwide due to global warming and the El Nino weather phenomenon,’ beating the last record set in 1998, the Britain Meteorological Office says today. ‘This new information represents another warning that climate change is happening around the world,’ the office said.


The New York Times may eliminate the ‘public editor,’ an autonomous watchdog position created after controversies involving faulty Iraq war reporting and the Jayson Blair plagiarism scandal. Executive editor Bill Keller says the position might be scrapped after the current public editor, Byron Calame, completes his term in May.


And finally: Paris Hilton and 89-year-old Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WV) have more in common than you thought, including ‘a penchant for wearing leopard print,’ spending a lot of time in front of cameras, and, The Hill reports, drinking Red Bull. ‘Although Byrd sometimes imbibes the hipster beverage, he’s not about to adopt a club-hopping lifestyle. ‘He likes Bob Evans and the Dairy Queen and Shoney’s,’’ a spokesman said.


What did we miss? Let us know in the comments section.

"

(Via Think Progress.)