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25 new of 160 responses total.
jmsaul
response 131 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 10 03:00 UTC 2002

Atlanta *Flames*?  They named it after the burning of their own city?
dang
response 132 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 10 04:54 UTC 2002

Atlanta Thrashers.  Calgery Flames.
jmsaul
response 133 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 10 13:40 UTC 2002

Ah, okay.  I wondered.
dbratman
response 134 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 11 19:35 UTC 2002

"Atlanta Flames" wouldn't be that weird.  Have you seen the Florida 
license-plates with Challenger on them?  They commemorate on their cars 
the most infamous motor-vehicle accident to occur within their borders. 
Now that's bizarre.
senna
response 135 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 12 00:46 UTC 2002

It's both, actually.  The original Atlanta franchise that moved to Calgary
was called the Flames.  The new franchise is called the Thrashers.  

Chicago's Soccer franchise is called the "Chicago Fire," though they do
diffuse that somewhat by using the fire department's symbol as their logo.

dbratman
response 136 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 20:27 UTC 2002

I hate it when sport franchise names are in the singular.

Worst of all is my own university, which calls its teams the Stanford 
Cardinal.  I keep wanting to ask, the Stanford Cardinal WHAT?  Cardinal 
Sins?

I went along with dropping Indians, but I voted for the Robber Barons 
as the new name.
gull
response 137 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 21:14 UTC 2002

I would have suggested the Fighting Honkies, in case they wanted to
stick with racial references.
senna
response 138 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 23:33 UTC 2002

I hate singular names, too.

There's a small club sports team or something in the northwest that has one
Native American team called the Fighting Whities.  I don't know many other
details, but I think it's hilarious.

You could always go for the Fighting Irish, or ask the New Orleans basketball
franchise (formerly of Charlotte, of course) to change its name from the
Hornets to the WASPS.
polygon
response 139 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 21:58 UTC 2002

I thought the students at Stanford had voted (by a very wide margin) to
name the sports teams the "Robber Barons".
ea
response 140 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 15 05:58 UTC 2002

My school used to have as their mascot a native american warrior, known 
as the Saltine Warrior.  That was changed, in the name of political 
correctness, to a large citrus fruit.  (somewhat less intimidating, 
however, if I was approached by a 5 foot 5 inch tall citrus fruit in a 
dark alleyway, I think I'd be pretty scared)

(Said citrus fruit is currently one of 12 mascots that are up for 
the "Capital One Bowl Mascot of the Year" award.  Sadly, he's only got 
3% of the vote right now)
jmsaul
response 141 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 15 18:32 UTC 2002

Saltine?
remmers
response 142 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 15 21:58 UTC 2002

http://www.syr.edu/aboutsu/memorabilia/mascot.html

<remmers suppresses politically incorrect comment concerning citrus fruit
 mascot>
ea
response 143 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 15 23:48 UTC 2002

Syracuse was known as the "Salt City", presumably for a pretty decent 
number of Salt mines in and around the city.  The "Saltine Warrior" 
was, to the best of my knowledge, named to reflect this, not as a 
tribute to the tasty cracker of the same name. (It is not known as to 
whether or not the Saltine Warrior threw saltine crackers into the 
audience ;) )
gull
response 144 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 14:54 UTC 2002

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/28574.html

No particularly new information, but kind of amusing.
Excerpt:

Yesterday it [the RIAA] issued a press release announcing a piracy bust
in New York which unearthed 421 CD-R burners.

Only there weren't 421 burners, but "the equivalent of 421 burners."

In fact, there were just 156. How did the RIAA account for this discrepancy?

"There were only 156 actual burners, but some run at very high speeds:
some as high as 40x. This is well above the average speed," was the
official line yesterday.
krj
response 145 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 15:25 UTC 2002

http://www.cdfreaks.com   seems to have the best headline news roundup
these days, though much of the material is of shaky quality.  
They point to this story from usa today: 

http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/2002-12-12-record_x.htm
"Record industry braces for lumps of coal in its stocking"
 
Soundscan reports that USA album-length sales are down 11% this 
year, in year-to-date numbers.  "It's unlikely that the final 
stretch of Christmas shopping will pull 2002 out of a nose dive."
 
Are older fans less likely to download/trade unauthorized copies, 
or are they just more interested?  "The exception ((to the sales
decline)) seems to lie in the long-ignored demographic of older
fans.  Such adult-skewing artists as James Taylor, Bruce Springsteen, 
the Dixie Chicks and Alan Jackson seem immune to the industry malaise."
 
From other stories which I can't reference right now: the sales 
of Mariah Carey's "comeback" album are mediocre, and the sales of 
Whitney Houston's new album have to be considered catastrophic, given
that she was signed to a $100,000,000 contract.   "Death of the Divas"
stories are running in a number of places.
dbratman
response 146 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 21:55 UTC 2002

I chuckled at the redefinition of 156 CD burners as 421 burners because 
they ran at high speeds.  I suppose Roger Bannister got to cast extra 
votes at elections, counting as additional persons, because he ran at 
high speeds.

I am reminded of a strategem in the current attempt to prove that 
poorer people are undertaxed: their social security tax is not counted, 
on the grounds that this money is eventually returned in the form of 
benefits.
orinoco
response 147 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 23:35 UTC 2002

"Adult-skewing artists"?
mcnally
response 148 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 00:47 UTC 2002

  Sure.  Lots of people who like the Dixie Chicks wind up pretty skewed.
  Why do you think they had to take that "Earl" song off the air?
gull
response 149 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 03:05 UTC 2002

Re #146: According to a Wall Street Journal editorial, poor people need
to be taxed more heavily so that they'll develop a healthy hatred of
government.  Presumably they'd then vote Republican, like all right-thinking
people.
krj
response 150 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 04:02 UTC 2002

(resp:147 :: Probably I'm mangling the language.  Artists who tend 
to draw an older audience than the music business is used
to marketing to.)

(resp:149 ::  we're really drifting here, but I wonder if the Wall
Street Journal considered that Maggie Thatcher tried the exact
same maneuver.  To get lower-income people upset with their 
local government, she attempted to force the local governments
to levy a per-person tax amount -- this was called a poll tax
in the UK.  The plan was to make people demand a lowering of 
the tax amount and deep cuts in social services; the result, 
however, was close to a general uprising and Thatcher was forced 
out of office.)
russ
response 151 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 04:19 UTC 2002

Maybe the extra 265 burners exist in virtual reality.
krj
response 152 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 18:17 UTC 2002

How are other media markets doing?  USA Today (paper edition) reports
that book sales are down 7% for fall 2002, a decline roughly 
comparable to what's being projected for the music industry.

Amazingly, the book industry spokespeople don't
blame the internet or copy machines  :)   ; instead they 
talk about the soft economy and the fall in popularity of several
megablockbuster authors.
gull
response 153 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 21:40 UTC 2002

The U.S. government has lost its DMCA case against Elcomsoft for
producing a product to decrypt Adobe e-books.

http://online.securityfocus.com/news/1857

'Lawyers for the Russian company said Elcomsoft's program simply allowed
users to make backup copies of eBooks and be able to read them on other
devices, something permitted under the "fair use" concept of copyright law.

'Jury foreman Dennis Strader said the argument made a big impact on the
jurors, who asked U.S. District Judge Ronald M. Whyte to clarify the
"fair use" definition shortly after deliberations began.

'"Under the eBook formats, you have no rights at all, and the jury had
trouble with that concept," said Strader.'
krj
response 154 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 22:07 UTC 2002

Wow, this is huge.  In the early reporting it sounds like a case 
of "jury nullification."  Thanks, David!
dbratman
response 155 of 160: Mark Unseen   Dec 18 01:18 UTC 2002

I hope it's not jury nullification, because then it could be 
overturned, and wouldn't have any precedential force.  What we need is 
what resp:153 quotes the jury foreman as saying, that ebook use 
restrictions are a direct violation of established fair use provisions.
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