Joe Maller.com

Phuket

In 1998 Michelle and I spent the first five days of our honeymoon in Phuket. Now, more than ever I want to go back. We stayed at the Katathani resort, which was the resort farthest south of Patong. The resorts on Kata Beach seem to have been largely sheltered by the uninhabited ‘hat’ island just offshore. This is the most comprehensive report about Phuket I’ve found so far, in many cases contradicting much of what the cable networks were reporting for the first several days. A remarkable number of hotels in Phuket escaped damage.

Thais in Phuket are cleaning up.

Most big trash has now been removed, the electric is back, the water is back [by Dec 30] (everybody needs it to clean the mud!)… Car wrecks have been removed, Some boats are still on the beach and will probably be removed later as it take special machines. Anyway they became the local attraction for tourists.

Hundred of people have join the cleaning effort, all construction companies have been reassigned to the cleaning. Every single shop is doing its own cleaning and all together the amount of work already done is amazing!

If you want to help Phuket and the people living here… come for holidays!

From all that I’ve read, Phuket did not seem to get nearly the worst of the wave. Not that things weren’t bad, but other, poorer places are incomprehensibly worse. Third-world poverty is very difficult to understand, even after having witnessed it firsthand. The effect on those populations was beyond catastrophic.

Hardest hit

Many of the other hardest hit places have also been sites of ongoing violence and unrest.

  • Indonesia – The destruction on Sumatra, hit by the original earthquake and could have grave effects for all of Indonesia since the island is responsible for 70% of the country’s income. In the worst hit areas, GAM Separatists have been fighting the Indonesian government in the ethnically distinct northern Aceh province since 1976. Recently local Islamist groups, an outgrowth of Aceh’s more fundamentalist flavor of Islam have also been in the news, being responsible for inflaming the Islamic Insurgency affecting three provinces in southern Thailand. The entire Aceh province has been under martial law for most of 2004.
  • Sri Lanka – A two decades old civil war has only recently cooled between the island government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam who have achieved notoriety for recruiting children as soldiers. The government also suffers from rampant corruption though there seems to have been recent progress on that front as well.
  • Maldives – In August 2004 there were riots to overthrow their government. The country only recently eased that political state of emergency.

The eastern coast of India has especially high population density, and appears to have a very flat coastline. These firsthand NGO reports from the area near the coastal city of Cuddalore are extremely disturbing.

Sumatra did not move 100 feet.

Visual Media

The most telling and often gruesome source for images is GettyImages Most of the major newspapers often source images here.

There is a certain perverse irony in using bitTorrent to distribute tsunami videos. Jordan Golson has finally gotten torrent files up for the disaster videos he’s been keeping track of. Here are the direct torrent links: TsunamiTorrentV1 (164MB) and TsunamiTorrentV2 If you have downloaded these, keep BitTorrent open, the way this works is for everyone to contribute to the download pool. (torrents updated Jan 4, both are working)

DigitalGlobe has an extensive gallery of Tsunami material, including two highly informative PDFs analyzing their satellite imagery. Space Imaging only has a few IKONOS images online even though I’ve seen others pass on the newswires.

US Aid

The US has increased our contribution tenfold to $350 million. When combined with private and corporate donations, America has so far donated well over half a billion dollars to the relief effort.

U.S. Pacific Command has mobilized a remarkable aid force, very little of which was intially reported in the mainstream media. I’m finding it a little difficult to tell exactly how many ships are actually going to the Andaman sea, mostly because I have no idea if Maritime Prepositioning Ships are counted as part of the carrier and expeditionary strike groups. Three Marine disaster relief assessment teams were on the ground by the 30th, in Thailand, Sri Lanka and Indonesia. Thousands of Marine ground troops are attached to the deployed strike groups. News reports of direct US military aid are starting to filter out.

Deployed forces:

I found this astounding:

The [USS Bonhomme Richard] squadron also has 43 Reverse Osmosis Water Purification Units, each of which is capable of producing 600 gallons of potable water per hour from sea water. Five of the ships are also capable of making 25,000 gallons of fresh water a day using the ships’ evaporators. The ships can pump water from ship to shore from up to two miles away using an Amphibious Bulk Liquid Transfer System of floating hoses.

I couldn’t find the story which mentioned this, but I read that the crew of the USS Bonhomme Richard is foregoing freshwater showers and other non-essential water use so the ship’s evaporators can get the maximum possible amount of fresh water to shore.

We donated to the relief effort through AmeriCares, a four-star charity whose institutional commitment to high-efficiency and local NGO cooperation is reflected in a remarkably low operational overhead.

Amazon’s Red Cross Donation page should go over 13 million sometime Monday.


I finally installed SleepWatcher, and used the .sleep script from this script on MacOSXHints. This combination makes my powerbook switch back to the multi-user login screen whenever it sleeps. This is great whenever I have to share the computer with someone else since I usually set up a quick user account for them.

The only deviation from the simple instructions was adding SleepWatcher’s default installation location to my global PATH variable. I store mine in /etc/profile, so I ran “sudo pico /etc/profile” and added “:/usr/local/sbin” to the end of the existing string. Everything else was the default install and process described on the MacOSXHints page.


A few random thoughts in no particular order:

  • Any device with a rechargable battery and a USB port should be able to recharge by USB trickle.
  • Online trading of out of print recordings should be encouraged.
  • There is very little moral distinction between trading MP3s and buying/selling used CDs.
  • iPhoto’s biggest shortcoming is not organizing still-camera movies
  • VHS is obsolete. Overdue.
  • iSync needs to support more phones, even if those phones have lousy firmware.
  • I would learn how to make polyphonic ringtones for my LG phone, but when I finally have time to learn how, I’ll likely already have a new phone which will play MP3s as ringtones. That’s going to be fun.
  • Wiggle-sticks just got more plausible.
  • A well crafted algorithm can be stunningly beautiful
  • Potatoes are beautiful
  • A good centering bit and jig beats a carefully aligned center punch
  • It’s been too long since I’ve spent any time with William Merritt Chase’s edges
  • The new MoMA is an absolute triumph. The building dwarfs it’s contents. Monet’s waterlillies have never been seen like this.
  • iMacs are a really good deal from Amazon.
  • Too many artists like to fall back on really tired cliches when answering simple questions.
  • I’m thinking about a complete concept-up redo of this site. Who knows when that will happen. I’m sort of glad I don’t have time right now.

Found this PDF via Google, it’s one of the best references for video formats, tape formats and other technical specifications for digital video I’ve seen in one place.

Digital Television Standards (pdf)


I started on a longish posting tonight and wanted to include some hand-drawn diagrams when I realized (again) how much I still hate the whole process of including images in web pages. Ten years later and it’s still just a total drag. I swear I originally got into computer graphics because I hated scanning physical art.


A remarkable collection of illustrated and animated Sorting Algorithms with links to Java source code. Seeing how Quicksort compares to other methods of sorting reinforces why it’s one of the most important algorithms in current use. This page has examples of Quicksort implementations in a bunch of languages.

Quicksort uses a recursive divide and conquor approach to sorting lists. It was created by Tony Hoare in 1960.

Here’s another QuickSort animation which shows exactly what is happening during the sort. It’s a little slow, but after watching one or two iterations, it’s very, very easy to see what is happening.

While I don’t understand how they measure the O(n) space optimization, I love the thinking that goes into these.


No church bells this year, at least none that seemed to correspond to anything. I walked by two fire stations; Engine 5 is across the street from my apartment, Ladder 3 is on 13th Street between 3rd and 4th. There was some sort of family lunch inside the ladder 3 station house, I passed by quickly not wanting to gawk. Engine 5 had flowers outside the door. There weren’t any earlier in the morning when we headed to the playground at Tompkin’s Square.

For much of the day I was trying to figure out why I felt a certain numbness to this anniversary. Today was another milestone in time, but September 11th, 2001 has never left me. Earlier I looked at several photos and read a few stories which hardened the pit in my stomach, but in some ways it felt like I was forcing the pain. Maybe that’s what today is supposed to do.

I haven’t forgotten. There are constant reminders and, as one friend described it, there is “a certain low level paranoia about living in New York City.” I notice it most when I’m not here.

The Towers of Light are back and I can see them from our front window. I considered walking down to get a closer look and some photos, but decided to stay in and work instead.

September 11, 2003
September 11, 2002
September 11, 2001



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