Dec. 3rd, 2003

waider: (Default)
One of the more irritating side-effects of the so-called "war on terror" is the co-opting of words derived from "terror" to describe any person, group or act you disagree with sufficiently. If you're not sufficiently supportive of a cause, for example, you're somehow "aiding the terrorists". The phrase, "the terrorists have already won" was so overused that it's now a wholly ironic statement completely devoid of whatever usefulness it might once have had. People who were formerly dissidents, freedom fighters, rebels, insurgents, or any other not-aligned-with-establishment-thinking label are now almost invariably terrorists. Security alerts are now almost invariably "terror alerts". Any time something falls over, crashes, floods, collapses, or otherwise fails, officials hasten to assure us - frequently, it seems, before any facts have been discovered - that it's "not a terrorist incident". All this overuse is weakening whatever effectiveness the various phrases might once have had, although given the general cynical nature of the world and the media that reports on it, I'm not even convinced the words had useful currency before they started being overused.

I've more to say on this, but I do need to think some more about it. Ultimately, I feel the devaluation of phrases is at least in part attributable to the rise of soundbite news media, where a stock phrase with no useful meaning is more important than an even slightly indepth item.
waider: (Default)
In my little technological backwater where we use that pansy GSM protocol pretty much exclusively, I've never once owned a carrier-locked phone. In fact, I've happily swapped my two carrier "identities" (one personal, one work) between an Ericsson GA528, Ericsson SH888, Nokia 5100, Nokia Card Modem, and Siemens S45 - and that's just my own phones. I've also used my personal number in a rented phone in San Francisco and in various friends' phones when my own batteries died. I think the prepay phones - i.e. the ones where you don't have a minimum-duration contract that the carrier can use to recoup the €150 or so subsidy they apply to handsets - may have been carrier-locked when they first appeared, and may still be, but beyond that it's a free-for-all.

giggling

Dec. 3rd, 2003 05:31 pm
waider: (Default)
trying to debug something here, and I just noticed this whizzing by in the logs: Wed Dec 3 17:27:09 2003:[19818]:CRIT:HELP ME! I'M SPINNING! WEEEE!

Profile

waider: (Default)
waider

April 2017

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425262728 29
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 31st, 2025 03:22 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios