ZARDOZ SPEAKS TO YOU, HIS CHOSEN ONES.
He speaks to you of his wonderful, magical, infuriating, nonsensical, visually bounteous film.
This review is the direct result of a number of comments noticed by Your Friendly Ruling Council of Eternals Admins which indicate that a disturbing number of you may not have seen this film. The original plan was to write the entire review as Zardoz, and post it using the Zardoz account. However, I tried it out for a paragraph, and trust me…as a reader, that gimmick has its limits.

The Flying Stone Head of Zardoz
The 1974 movie Zardoz is a passion project tossed as a bone to director, screenwriter, and producer John Boorman in appreciation of his wild success with the 1972 classic, Deliverance. If you haven’t yet seen that one, I’m afraid it’s a tad too conventional for Reviews You’ll Never Use. Deliverance is a completely mainstream film, and so will find no place in this column.
Zardoz marks only the second post-Bond film of Sean Connery. The actor was apparently having some trouble with typecasting, and not only accepted the role, but became fast friends with Boorman. Our other leading thespian is the beautiful Charlotte Rampling, a prolific actress known for many roles over the years, but perhaps best remembered by trash cinema & horror fans from her turn in the 1977 Richard Harris vehicle Orca, a brutally unsubtle Jaws knock-off.
Given carte blanche, Boorman oversaw every aspect of the film, from writing to post-production. In his director commentary it is obvious that he reflects on the film fondly but admits that he perhaps stretched too far. To which your humble author would reply, Ah, but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp, Or what’s a heaven for? Indeed what Mr. Boorman considers an ultimately flawed product, is still so delightful in myriad ways that I shudder to think what would have come about if he had succeeded in bringing the totality of his vision to the screen.

I wasn’t kidding about the drawn-on facial hair.
Our film opens in the year 2293 with a floating head providing exposition (explained by Boorman to be an ultimately unsuccessful attempt tacked on in post-production to reduce audience confusion). Interestingly, this narrator is fully self-aware and refers to his understanding that he is a fictional construct of the writer/director. The head inexplicably has a thin drawn-on mustache and goatee. We cut to a giant flying head that vomits guns and commands the “Brutals” worshiping it to go forth and kill, because, “the penis is evil” and overbreeding brings about a plague of men.
One particularly clever Brutal, our protagonist Zed, stows away in the flying head and is taken to a realm preserved out of time, where the enlightened scientific remnants of advanced humanity live eternal lives of unspeakable drudgery. Punishment in this society is conducted by forced aging, the senile being sent to live in what appears to be an endless New Year’s Eve party ala TGI McScratchy’s. Others simply give up caring about life, and become Apathetics, standing around catatonic and being given green bread on which to sustain themselves. The self-styled Eternals view themselves as the preservers of the past, collapsed civilization, and their Eden is run by a supercomputer known as the Tabernacle.

Charlotte Rampling

The famous costume that Sean Connery wore to his wedding, and still wears to all public functions to this very day.
The Eternals capture Zed and decide to study him, to find out how the vulgar strain of humanity has changed over the last two hundred years. One thing leads to another, as things inevitably tend to do in a story, and ultimately the Eternals find the answer to their weary prison of never-ending life.
This film feels like something that was going to be, supposed to be, could have been, a great artistic achievement. Boorman’s self-directed criticism is on solid ground; it’s all simply too much. The visuals are wonderful. The costumes, the colors, the backgrounds, are all rich and help to bring this very interesting world to life. The problem is that this world is so very rich, that it becomes simply impossible to do it justice while remaining focused on progressing the plot. Who cleans up the Apathetics and the prematurely aged Renegades? They’re all quite spotless. Where do these non-functioning individuals relieve themselves? How on earth do the Eternals plan to cope when, inevitably, everyone slips up and commits transgressions resulting in forced aging into senility? The psychological scenes, in particular, seem over-wrought, as one begins to slip the line of confusing complexity for its own sake and nonsensicality with an artistic statement.
For all that, I cannot find it in my heart to say this is a bad film. Imperfect? Surely. Plot holes you could drive a reasonably-priced sedan through? Absolutely. But the film is so lovely, the acting so involved, the entire production handled with such obvious love and hope, that it wins you over. Boorman is a good enough director to take what in anyone else’s hands would have become a tangled mess, and turn it into a modern bizarro masterpiece. While it lacks the raw insanity of House, it is obviously the vision of a man who knows exactly what he wants to express, and how he wants to express it, and that vision is sublime. Unfortunately, due to the limitations of time, budget, technology, etc, it is up to you as an audience member to take a step forward and meet the film halfway by taking the parts of that vision which are offered and completing it with your own mind and soul.
And yes, there are a fair number of titties.
I award this film 10 Severed Feet out of a possible 13.
Should I be first, even though I have no worthwhile input? Such an existential crisis….
Will the next review be for Killer Klowns from Outer Space?
Yes! Please review “Killer Klowns From Outer Space”!
Second.
Seems too mainstream. If he’s doing 80’s horror, I’d prefer a review of something like Puppetmaster or Ghoulies.
Well Susan,
I remember watching Ghoulies as a kid, and loving it. I personally think Gojira should go the Troma route, the Munchies route, or if he’s truly daring: the direct to video sequel route.
I suggest the Golan-Globus/Cannon movies.
I’ve always wanted to see The Passover Plot.
Troma films seemed a bit too self aware that they were producing low budget garbage, at least after The Toxic Avenger. Tromeo and Juliet is pretty much just how much titties can we fit on the screen while being disgusting as hell.
As Jon Stewart put it, it’s no fun to mock a clown, because what are you going to do, make fun of his clown shoes? He’s a a clown. There is nothing you can say that can debase him further.
Trigger warning (so to speak): Slate article
“At Thursday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearings for Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch, experts and witnesses testified about Gorsuch, his past decisions, and his potential to shape the law. The most moving testimony came from Sandy Phillips, a self-described Republican gun owner whose 24-year-old daughter, Jessi, was killed in the 2012 Aurora, Colorado movie theater shooting….
“Phillips noted that she sued the dealer who sold the shooter these bullets, but her case was thrown out because of a federal law that protects gun dealers and manufacturers from civil liability. (Her family was forced to pay the ammo dealer hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorneys’ fees.)…
“It was then Jamil Jaffer’s turn to speak. Jaffer, a former Gorsuch clerk testifying in support of his one-time boss, began by awkwardly touching Phillip’s shoulder and saying, “Obviously a very a painful story from Mrs. Phillips and her daughter, Jessi.” He then proclaimed:
“”I think what I want to say to Mrs. Phillips and to members of this committee is that Judge Gorsuch—I’ve known him for 13 years. Judge Gorsuch is the kind of judge that Mrs. Phillips and that Jessie would want on the bench.”…
“…[Jaffer] read his laundry list of cases in which Gorsuch “ruled for the little guy,”…nothing in this list demonstrated that Gorsuch has any commitment to realizing that the Second Amendment has limits, so it was particularly bizarre when he closed his argument by again asserting that Gorsuch was the kind of judge Sandy and Jessi deserve.”
Yes, because obviously the company that sold a mass murderer bullets over the internet can psychically divine the intentions of the purchaser using his or her credit card number.
Bonus points for being a ‘self described republican gun owner’ as if that somehow gives you magic instant street cred against the second amendment or something.
By that logic, the company that made the SUV the recent London terrorists was driving should be liable for the victims. There is absolutely no way to logically separate one of those from the other. And on and on. Knife makers would have to be responsible for anyone stabbed with one of their knives. With leftists, it”s either one of 2 things, they’re retarded, or they’re disingenuous assholes.
Not only the manufacturer of the car but also Enterprise Rent a Car where he rented the car.
Don’t forget to sue the gas station where it was last fueled up.
What makes you think that the two things mentioned are mutually exclusive?
Obviously the answer is to ban all ammunition, duh.
I love the ‘Second Amendment has limits’ canard. I will tell you what has limits you slimy fucking pinkos, the patients of the people who you so desperately want to defile the rights of.
“Shall not be infringed,” motherfuckers.
Canards like that are not permitted, If they were “Canard” would appear in the First Amendment.
I mean, I’m pretty sure the amendment itself specifies that it doesn’t have limits.
No no, you need canards to forestall departure and separation at high AoA and low energy otherwise you’ll … wait, what are we talking about?
Alright, I’ll try it again, if I can find a decent copy.
OT: what is C#, and is it worth learning?
C# is a coding language. It’s extremely similar to c++, so much so I can’t even remember how they differ. If you want to learn how to code that’s a very good language to start with.
It’s much closer to Java than C++, in fact deliberately so. It’s probably the 3rd or 4th most used language behind Java, C, and maybe C++.
No idea what you want to do with it but if you’re on Windows it’s their “flagship” programming language. You can write Windows programs and websites (and lots more) with it. And recently it has been ported to Mac and Linux too but it’s not as prevalent there.
People still use Java????
To the OP: It doesn’t really matter what language you learn, just learn a language well enough that you feel very comfortable with it. The skills are quite transferrable.
^^^^this, the first language I learned was R, which is a statistical programming language, once you learn one well enough that the concepts sink in then transferring to another language is just learning a few new words.
For enterprise* applications, it is still the language of choice**, and for good reason. All of that verbosity has its benefits when you’re trying to write readable, maintainable code. The slower evolution of the language, as compared to many others, makes it a more stable target for longer term development. The JVM ecosystem is also massive; every JVM language (JRuby, Groovy, Scala, Kotlin, etc.) is compatible with libraries written in Java. Given that and Java’s large and established user base, driver libraries for external services (databases, messaging systems, etc.) are typically first-class citizens of their projects. For higher-level concerns, like managing injected dependencies, writing an MVC-based web app, employing enterprise integration pattterns, lightweight object-database mapping, etc., there’s the Spring Framework and its myriad libraries that can be used either independently or together.
That having been said, it is like any language in that reams of bad code have been written in it. Also, the use of Java on the desktop is, for good or ill, pretty much dead. If you want to write a cross-platform client application, you’ll have to target Qt, .NET, or the web instead. Java still owns the “large scale” server domain, although there are some notable challengers (Google’s Go, especially, comes to mind).
* = A heavily overloaded term that, for the purposes of this comment, means “what keeps the business running on the backend”
** = Outside of Microsoft shops, which are in my experience the minority
Also, if you want to do Android development, you have to use Java or another JVM language.
It’s tough to play the piano without it.
Nah.. You’ll just…be flat
pish posh, just stay in Cmaj/Am and you never need to touch the filthy black keys.
It’s a programming language in the .NET family. All such languages compile to a single language called IL (intermediate language) and from there to executables. It is C-like in its syntax and supports a lot of modern features that are found in other modern languages as well. As with all .NET languages, it has access to a deep code base, so a lot of the hard stuff is usually done already and it makes it good for rapid application development.
Should you learn it? That depends. If you want to do a lot of business programming in a Microsoft shop, it definitely would not hurt. It’s the most popular of the .NET languages. I wouldn’t call it a language that would stretch the limits of your programming ability in the academic sense. It is definitely very useful to landing jobs in its niche.
C# is Microsoft’s answer to Java. It is an object oriented language that runs on Microsoft’s CLI, common language interface. It is heavily inspired by C in its syntax, but otherwise had little relation to it. It is one of the most commonly used programming languages, so if you can learn it you can get a job with it.
Download the free version of visual studio, it is required to compile it. The Microsoft developers network is the final word on the language, and has a host of learning materials.
Thanks, guys. If, say I wanted to get into some sort of admin, what certs would I want first?
Windows administration, I presume? MCSA is the starting point. Also, if you want to do Windows administration, you’ll be better served by learning PowerShell instead of C#, if you don’t already know it.
If you meant network administration, CCNA from Cisco I’d where you want to start instead.
Thanks. I was looking around and saw some free C# courses and wondered. I think windows admin is what I’d want, I guess.
Maybe. I don’t know. I’m just getting too old for this physical stuff.
Well if you want to try your hand at programming, I offered to help DoomCO learn JavaScript. Might as well teach the rest of Colorado as well.
I would steer clear of JavaScript if you want to keep your sanity. It’s the only language I know that spurs popular meta-languages that emit it because coding in the original is so painful.
Programming would be cool. Can you get a job with certs or do you gotta have a fancy degree?
My sanity was lost years ago.
JavaScript spawns metalanguages because people keep trying to make giant client side code bases. Surprisingly, JavaScript sucks at large code bases. Just like ruby, python, PHP, or any other scripting language. But if your server code gets ought of control, you can migrate from your scripting language to a compiled one. If your client side code gets too large, well, sucks for the maintainer. Most people also never learn it correctly, especially those that come from other languages. I haven’t met anyone that learned another OO language before JavaScript understand prototypes. For some reason the idea of a class and an instance being the same thing mystifies them.
The language is bad though. Like I said, I have to teach it, so I’m a little defensive about it.
DenverJ, I’m on my phone so the threading is breaking on me, but drop me an email. Gwynapnaud at gmail. Put my username in the subject so I don’t spam bin you by accident. I’ll get some stuff together for you, figure out what help I can get you.
And no, for programming neither a cert or degree is necessary, but you’ll need to put together a portfolio if you have neither.
@Caput
Admittedly, client-side web stuff is not my bag so I’ve never learned it properly. I’ve recoiled in horror after a couple attempts, though.
I think what happened is JS became the “de facto web language” and got stretched way beyond what it was originally designed for,
@Denver
My experience was probably more common 15 or 20 years ago, but… I slid into IT by just teaching myself and then demanding a new position at my company. I don’t have any certs or a relevant degree. That might harm my chances if I should seek a job at another company but by now I’m hoping my 15+ years of experience is good enough.
Journeyman programmers really are a dime a dozen, and companies who certify MSCEs etc – are really just accreditation mills, so HR departments love ’em, but the guys who get to be a boss in your chain of command should be duly skeptical. It’s very hard to tell if a programmer really is any good before you see them sling real code for release in your own environment.
However, if you have a set of relevant business knowledge in addition to programming knowledge, you’re a lot more marketable, and a lot less offshore-able, so that’s very worthwhile to pimp, if you can do it. If your area of business expertise is in financial analysis, for example, that’s going to increase the buying interest substantially.
Just about every one of us probably knows at least one horror story of some development project that turned out to be based on some Cargo Cult concept of how something worked.
“I would steer clear of JavaScript if you want to keep your sanity.”
You’re never, as far as my experience goes, going to just stay way from JS. As a .NET dev, I use it a lot, especially the jQuery library. I almost use it daily.
@Rhywun,
From one Welsh bastard to another, no worries. That is pretty much what happened to JavaScript, it has become the only language on the browser, and browsers now to way too much for it to handle well. I do full stack development, almost all of it in JavaScript. Doesn’t help that HTML and CSS are piles of crap ether.
I prefer Scala, but that’s not what pays my bills.
That is a very good point. I have stayed in the insurance industry forever for that very reason.
WTF? You guys are Welsh also? SHOW YOUR GOATS OR GTFO!
Depends on your focus. I have never had to touch it professionally, ever. I do enterprise stuff, so mostly SQL – and ASP.NET or Java when I get to dabble in real programming any more.
Oh, and particularly with web development, don’t get hung up on learning some framework or other. Even the best of them tend to evolve so quickly that if you take a nap, your knowledge will be (at least a little) obsolescent. There are some technologies over and above ‘standard’ Javascript that are so common, it’d weird to not have a nodding acquaintance (JQuery, JQueryUI), but if you get a good practical foundation in Javascript they’re not a nightmare.
But really, it’s such a huge and varied topic, a key task is to narrow the field down a little.
Yeah, that handle of yours gave me pause. I am not Welsh, so far as I know. I love the language though (my degree was in linguistics) so I picked a basic word for my handle that I suspected wouldn’t be in use pretty much anywhere.
So you’re telling me you don’t do web applications? I’ve done plenty of enterprise development and have a huge system I’m developing right now, which is used world wide. But of course, it’s a web app. I haven’t written a strictly client app in almost 20 years.
I do a lot of SQL also, because of course, all of my apps access a back end SQL DB. I do everything on my apps, back end to front end, write all the stored procedures. The only thing I’ve stopped doing is front end design. I do the basics, but when I need to make things look pretty, graphics, icons, colors, all of that, I have a designer I bring in. But I still have no idea how you write a web application and never use JS.
All of the business’s web apps are either vendor’ed out or written in-house without any fancy client-side stuff (that’s me). So, no, I have never needed to touch JS.
Well, my clients demand fancy client side stuff and I’m an independent dev, so JS is a necessity.
Oh totally understood. I’m in a cube farm.
I’m primarily a JS developer (primarily front-end) and so I might be a smidge biased, but I tend to see JS as a pretty good language, all things considered. There’s a massive ecosystem of frameworks, libraries, plugins, meta-languages, etc., and that can be a positive or a negative depending on your perspective. Personally, I like the variety and I like that the culture is such that a bunch of smart people are competing with each other to develop better and better tools for free so that schmucks like me can use them and look clever.
JS gets a bad rap because it doesn’t natively do things that “real” languages do–strong typing, proper recursion–and, because many people come to it without a background in a traditional programming and start by learning enough jQuery to make an accordion they don’t learn good coding style. It’s comically easy to write terrible, terrible JavaScript (as is the case with PHP, btw), but that’s not a failing of the language per se.
That said, the newest standard of JS goes a long way towards adding good features that support clean, sane, maintainable code without imposing the limits that more strict languages use. A lot of the meta-language stuff has gotten incorporated, and it seems like the direction the language is taking is towards a more structured model.
If you’re looking for admin work, then there is no reason (drink?) to learn C#. If you want to do actual programming then it is a great language to learn, though I’d start with something easier. Granted, I train people in JavaScript as part of my job, so I may not be impartial on that front.
For Windows admin you’ll want to get your MCSA and MSCE certs if you don’t have prior IT experience.
Much thanks
Yeah, you won’t be writing code as a network admin, and you won’t be making as much money either. Programming is harder, you’re going to need logic and analytical aptitude and lots of patience because hard to solve problems happen.
You should be writing code as a network admin. Historically it wasn’t important in the MS world but lately the admins at my company use PowerShell to script stuff out.
That’s not programming, it’s just scripting.
Or let me put is this way, it’s scripting, not solution development, not software engineering, not application development. Anyway, you know what I mean. Networks admins are not software engineers, they’re just writing some automation scripts.
It’s still programming.
I can write a full-blown “program” in the same language that my admins use to push out changes to thousands of machines. Sure there are different skill sets involved but you can’t say scripting isn’t programming.
No idea. I’m a self-taught developer – I don’t have any MS certs. The admin world is a black box to me. I wouldn’t start with C# for that – although you will eventually have to learn PowerShell (highly recommended!) which will lead you to .NET anyway.
I would start with C#. I definitely wouldn’t start with C++, although it was my first gig. I actually started with line basic and assembler as a self taught developer, yeah, I’m old. Then I got a CompSci degree and have an MS dev cert, which hasn’t been updated for a while. At this point in my career, I don’t see any point for further degrees or certs, my client base is pretty secure. Sometimes I do think about going in a different career direction, I’m really interested in Biotech.
When I started out, I picked up a book on C++ because I heard that was the hot language and I slogged through a couple chapters until a friend pointed out that I really ought to be learning Java. (C# didn’t exist at the time.) It really is NOT the language anyone should start with, and when I heard that AP classes were being taught in C++ for awhile I almost fell out of my chair.
Yeah, for someone just starting out with no prior experience I’d steer away from most compiled languages. I had to learn C++ because that’s what the college taught, and I made it through alright, but I had access to a lot of resources. Starting by yourself I’d suggest python, ruby, or JavaScript.
The problem with learning one of the scripting languages first is its easy to pick up bad habits. Going from a weakly typed dynamic language to a strongly typed static one is a shock at first.
Alternative suggestion, if you want to make sure you’ll never develop bad habits, give Rust a try. It’ll be a slog to start, but your code will always be immaculate.
If you want an easier syntax for a full scale development language, then just start with VB.NET. At least there are no curly brackets, but you still have to understand object oriented programming.
The thing is, in the USA, if you want a job as a dev, then C# is best bet. I could teach it to anyone quickly if they have the aptitude. I was actually offered a job as CompSci prof at a private college once. I honestly told them ‘I’m not a teacher’. I was sort of worried I’d throttle one of the brats. Sometime I wonder about the wisdom of that decision. I’d be making a lot less than I am now, but I would have had tenure long ago.
C# is pretty popular, I just have qualms telling people to tie themselves to Microsoft. Nothing against them, really, I just think it is better to learn tools that are applicable in multiple environments. I think C. is a better language then Java, but I’d suggest Java over C# because it can be used in more environments. Actually, I’d suggest any JVM language other than Java, because Java is the bane of my existence, but my point remains. Our it doesn’t, I don’t know I’ve been drinking.
Java is probably better in most other countries than the USA. I personally hate it. My daughter-in-law and her husband are Java devs in Germany.
Not sure how popular it is outside of the US. When I did consulting most places were java shops, but that’s anecdotal. They were also using a large amount of older software, so newer stuff may be more commonly written in C# these days. I’ll take your word for it. My experience is mostly limited to financial companies in and around NYC, so I can’t speak to national trends.
Java seems very popular outside the USA. Just from my personal experience. In the USA, I still say go for C#.
Yeah, learning C# is worth doing, because it’s pretty mature now and by default it’s hard to write REALLY nasty, unmaintainable code. Even if it’s not the language you end up using in that sweet gig you’re going to get, you will have been browbeaten into strict typing, considering scope of variables and yes – you’ll get to learn the difference between classes, instances and things like polymorphism.
A grasp of all that stuff isn’t merely academic, it’s vital when you’re working on, and creating legacy code that other people will have to maintain.
Learn SOLID. For the love of all things holy, the next developer that looks at me like I grew a second head when I tell them they violated Liskov is getting punched in the throat.
Heh. I had to look that up and put my steel neck guard on.
Or skip all that OO crap and go functional 😛
… and then convince companies with a huge investment in boring old OO code bases to scrap the lot, on your say-so.
Our slowly switch them over with Scala without them realizing what you’re doing.
And for the record, my JavaScript looks like Haskell without the type signatures.
Heh, people do that. Not me but it happens.
If I were a young dev just starting down the development path, I would either go for games programming, or ever better, AI dev. Or if you’re a really hardcore glutton for punishment, pick up the new open source for Qbit programming.
Machine learning is great as well.
Yeah. I know a dev who has one of the same clients I do, and we’ve been talking a lot about AI. I don’t have much time, but the conversation has been getting more serious. He’s a very bright guy and a good dev. Maybe we’ll decide to dig in to this and take on a project together.
Back on Admin, as noted upstream, HR departments love ’em, but most hard-nosed CTOs will want more evidence of excellence.
That being said, you have *ix administration (Linux, Unix etc), Microsoft administration, and then specialty stuff like mail servers, web servers, database server, LAN, WAN each with different products and underlying technologies, and therefore, different skillsets.
If the *ix path, you have to know stuff like how the filesystem works, a reasonable body of shell scripting, and a basic level of IP4 Networking
If Microsoft, pretty much the same, except a solid grasp of Powershell is becoming, by 2017, pretty much essential.
Mail Servers – Exchange (for MS) is a job in its own right, and if you want to do that, an MSCE is actually worth doing.
Database Servers – you name the database product, there’s going to be a load of skills specific to it. DB Admin is complicated.
Web Servers – Again, product specific, but the three most common will be Apache, IIS and (probably) nginx. Most of the concepts of one apply to all
LANs and WAns – Well, basic networking of IP4 and an appreciation of IP6, Routing, Bridging, Protocols etc. This is another one worth doing an MSCE for.
So, if the above hasn’t pinned your ears back to the side of your head, “admin” can mean many things – and I’m in the invidious position of defending MSCEs and their equivalent purely because if you do the course and pass it, you’ve at least been exposed to the intricacies of the subject you addressed – but beyond a checkbox on a recruiter’s criteria list, they’re of limited value.
HOWEVER. And I’m gonna get some flak for this, but I actually got Libertarian GirlChild thinking about this.
If you know ANYTHING about CRMs and desktop databases, consider looking at Salesforce.com. It’s a nasty-ass piece of software except that it doesn’t crash (much), and Marc Benioff has convinced millions of business-class travelers that it’s the only way to save their companies from utter ruination.
These business class travellers then go back to their companies, browbeat the technical team into implementing it, saying “it’s so easy, we can run it ourselves”, implement it, start paying $100 per desk, per month for a crappy database that looks very pretty, and 6 months in, realize they need an admin who understands more than they do, They discover that really, they need a load of other addons if they want things like mailing campaigns, customer portals etc., all of which are costing them on a per desk, per month basis. It’s not unusual to see SF installations costing $300/desk/month.
The schoolyard crack dealer has them hooked, and at $(N*x*12) per year, they have an expensive habit. A habit that makes your salary start to look like small change.
And here’s the kicker. You can sign up on SalesForce tonight, and start doing what they call “Trailhead” courses for free.
I fucking HATE the product, for practical and aesthetic reasons, but if I *ever* end up unemployed, that will be how I pay the mortgage – by freelancing and administering a couple of small companys’ SF installations.
Oh, and for his SJW Activism, Benioff can suck a second bag of dicks.
I just looked up Benioff. That man has one hell of a punchable face.
Their “Trailhead” program includes option units such as “How to bring greater diversity into your workplace”. I can imagine some SFDC Admin going into the CEO’s office and saying “Boss, we HAVE to recruit Milo Stewart, pronto!”
Alternative to salesforce that has the same dann business model is ServiceNow. Keeping that monstrosity up to date and happy is how I make my bread. They are actually taking business away from salesforce. Learn either, or both and how to migrate data between them, and you’ll be a god.
Actually, my specialty is Structured Data and Wire Protocols, and it keeps me busy enough.
Unfortunately (and coincidentally) if they do see me as some kind of god, they’re probably thinking ZARDOZ now.
My last 2 years after a punishing systems migration has been an unending sequence of meetings between myself and stakeholders where I resist saying “I told you so” and them reading my mind, and then asking me to fix it because “the business has evolved”.
They then (correctly) read my mind as I think “Our design team planned for that business change in the original spec, and you dolts said that it would never happen and demand we drop it”.
So it’s a bit like a Vulcan Mind Meld between two immovable and bitter enemies.
Oh sweet baby Jesus. Fuck ServiceNow up the ass with whatever you have sitting around. That is one of the worst ticketing systems I’ve ever worked with. I remember when I asked our ServiceNow “developer” for a data dictionary, and they said that there was none.
He lied. Or he’s an idiot, take your pick. My specialty is cleaning up after people like him.
6 of one, half a dozen of another. I would love it if you could send me a link to the data dictionary. My handle at Gmail.
Sent.
What’s the underlying engine for ServiceNow? Did they do what SF did, and fuck up a perfectly nice SQL engine and turn it into a half-assed Key-Value database?
N/M.
MariaDB and a load of abstraction logic on top of it. Optionally, a BYODB licensing model.
Sounds peachy.
I’ll tell you this much, 6. I have never regretted for even one minute, my choice to go into IT as a career. And I still recommend it as a solid choice for now. It’s going to be a while yet before bots take our jerbz. Better yet, write your own AI and get it to work for you, (;
Well, I may well be changing real soon, and not of my own choosing. I’m right at the stage where companies start wondering if I’m not so old that I’m a liability, despite my skills set.
Me? I always have a trick up my sleeve, which is why I’m currently skipping between this browser and pgAdmin hooked up to a DigitalOcean droplet and getting familiar with 9.x.
But looking at the situation from a slightly more detached point of view, I can make money doing this shit until they nail the lid on the box. Financial firms always have a “come to Jesus” moment and realize that there are pivotal role in tech that need to be filled with either an employee, or a consultant who really understands financial instruments.
It’s the same as D♭.
Accidentally.
C# is .NET with C++ style syntax. It compiles into the exact same code as VB.NET, so it depends on which syntax you prefer. I code in both. But C# if you want to go down the software engineering career path, is the best language you can learn.
The next thing I’m learning.
You imply that it wasn’t. Heresy!
I hope ZARDOZ does not take offense!
*shivers*
What the hell is going on here? You mean there are articles to comment on here at night, too?
*looks outside, sees sun*
Where the fuck do you live?
Unfortunately I live near the belly of the beast, though at least I’m on the Virginia side.
We need to have a DC glibertarians meetup! I don’t know a soul out here.
Souls are not permitted in such close proximity to DC.
Okay, I’m gonna spend 3$ and watch this on Amazon prime, that’s almost enough to but 2 Strohs, so it better be worth it! Also the book I’m reading is depressing as hell and I need a break.
Are you reading The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk?
Classic Eddie-bait, but I’m too smart to take it.
Nah, I was just reading an article about it the other day and it was on my mind.
Very interesting. Of course the author thinks anti-Catholicism in that era was a “right-wing” phenomenon.
There was a yuuuge overlap between the Catholic-baiters and the Northern Protestant reformers who supported the liberal revolutions of 1848, supported the “common schools” (government schools) and preached (usefully or otherwise) against slavery.
Whereas the Catholic leaders tended to be of a conservative disposition.
But of course bigotry is always right-wing, so never mind that these bigots were into the kind of stuff progrs say they like.
MONEY WELL SPENT!
If The Anderson Tapes is on Amazon Prime, you may want to watch that. Or even The Terrorists.
The Anderson Tapes is available for $3.99, right on my impulse buy threshold but I added it to my watchlist. For The Terrorists I’ll have to buy a DVD copy for $6.14. that would buy a sixer of The High Life pounders, I’m gonna need to think on that.
The Anderson Tapes is directed by Sidney Lumet. That alone makes it worth a shot.
I watched House. Sober. I did not heed Gilmore’s advice and paid the price. Also, for the love of Zardoz, can someone tell me where I can find a good copy of “In the Shadow of Kilimanjaro”?
I can’t help you out because I’ve never heard of that one… But where did you find House???
Amazon streaming.
Every time i read one of these descriptions, in my mind i put it in the mouth of a pitch to a producer like in the beginning of “The Player“, where the producer is nodding like, “that’s good that’s good monkey movies are trending”
http://www.ioffer.com/i/in-the-shadow-of-kilimanjaro-dvd-474473970
22 bucks.
Tried. Never came it. Had to dispute it with PayPal.
A certain torrent site (whose name I will not mention here out of respect for our hosts but which specializes in “bad’ movies) has both a DVDRIP of a Fan Dub (!) of this film which uses the Italian DVD video and the english dub VHS audio and the aforementioned VHSrip.
Done. Horrible. I am actually looking forward to getting back to reading about Ebola killing six year-olds now. Thanks .
I don’t know about anyone else but I haven’t been able to watch this entire movie. It’s usually too late and I’m too drunk and/or high to make any sense of it.
me neither. i’ve started it a few times. needs to be something to watch with friends while high.
Did they ever ‘do’ ZARDOZ in Mystery Science Theater 3000?
Nope. Rifftrax hasn’t done it yet, either.
Meanwhile in Afghanistan, Taliban brutals recapture strategic town held by govt since 2007. The town is in Helmand province, which is where the US suffered the the most casualties.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/23/world/asia/afghanistan-taliban-helmand-sangin.html?_r=0
That is not a good sign. The Talib avoided the ANA when I was there – they usually concentrated on the police, who were stretched too thin.
Taliban brutals
Hmm…. Zardoz?
i was under the impression we had ended our combat mission there (confused face) Ugh, I knew Trump was going to take us back to war.
Oh… definitely on the docket for this weekend.
Heads up, you’re on TCM right now.
I could totally go for some floating head right about now.
The famous costume that Sean Connery wore to his wedding, and still wears to all public functions to this very day.
Ok, now I know I am being fucked with. I saw that dude riding a lawn tractor on Banjo’s womans day post.
If it’s the year 2200 why does Connery have a webley? It should be a plasma rifle, preferable between 30 and 50 watts.
He’s an Originalist
Outside The Vortex, they don’t have recharging stations.
That’s not just ANY Webley, I’ll have you know.
I know. It’s an automatic like the Rhino.
Sadly, far less reliable than the Rhino. But parsecs cooler.
Go PAC-12!
How is USC doing?
Funny! Better than the #1 seed in the NIT.
You’re underestimating the life lessons learned by losing to Cal State Bakersfield. It’s incredible Life Experience!!!
I try avoiding those type of “life experiences,” but they keep finding me.
It’s OK to start out in Bakersfield, but it’s not OK to end up there.
Ian Christie of the Daily Express said in his review “if this is intellectual thinking, then Donald Duck deserves the Nobel Prize”.
Fake news!!!1!!1
Obama already got it.
Leo Messi @messi10stats
Police in Peru have seized 1,417 kilograms of Cocaine worth €85 million, with photos of Messi on it.
6:13 AM – 23 Mar 2017
That is a bit of coke there. Was he planing a party?
and or planning
He’s more of a tax avoider.
My guess is it’s just a brand label. Even the underworld engages in advertising.
Johnny Chimpo.
BRETT RATNER BLAMES ROTTEN TOMATOES FOR THE DESTRUCTION OF HOLLYWOOD
“If you look at some of the shit that gets unbelievably high RT scores just because the directors’ politics matches up with the OVERWHELMING majority of Liberal critics (COUGH…..Michael Moore….COUGH), you have to see that the reviews and scores can be completely misleading.
On the other hand, Ratner has made some complete crap movies that have deserved every criticism they receive.”
Go look up Dinesh D’Souza’s movie. They savaged it. If the message is liberal ‘it’s thoughtful’ and it’s okay to accept stretching of the truth or manipulation of facts. They don’t apply and extend that logic and courtesy to conservative film makers I think.
…it was awful though.
Rrrracist!
D’Souza’s one of those people who gets shit on constantly, but it’s actually really, really hard to defend him because he deserves at least some of it (10-25% tops).
What he’s basically saying is he wishes we could go back to the old-days when big budget films were all given blowjobs by a press that was mostly co-owned by the same people who own the studios; instead review-aggregators like rotten tomatoes actually weight reviews heavily to indy-nobodies who sneer at schlock pop cinema but melt like klondike-bars-in-a-crock-pot for super-woke movies like “Get Out”
I mean seriously why didn’t people say nice things about BATMAN V SUPERMAN?? it had a gay scene and everything
*that said, = i agree with his basic point that “a number” is a bad way to evaluate the merits of a film.
Its sort of like the bullshit that politifact does with their “mostly true”/”mostly false” mid-range of qualified ‘maybes’. Its how they can take lies from one person say, “ok, there’s some stuff wrong, but overall its OK”; and the same lies from someone else are “well they dressed it up in some facts, but in the end total FAIL”
It used to be critics actually told you *about* the movie, and clarified what parts of it were worth seeing, and what were painful. A number doesn’t really capture the qualitative value.
Didn’t something like Starship Troopers (verhoeven) get panned by critics? See, the net-score there is “50”, which is terrible… but that’s because it was polarizing, and half thought it was terrible, and others (like Ebert) thought it was brilliant. Who turned out to be right? the IMDB score (which i think is mostly users) is over 70.
so… basically i think he has half a point. He’s right that the number is misleading – but what does he care? he pointed out that Batman v Superman made tons of money. So what that a few people decided not to see it because of the hipster-score?
The real fun right now is the Iron Fist series on Netflix. The critics hate it, yet the fans like it. The girlfriend and I burned through it the first weekend it was out, and most of the complaints were complaints about the ethnicity of the character and some of his actions. He’s a rich white kid because that’s actually an important part of his character, he doesn’t fit in anywhere after being in a mystical kung-fu city for 15 years. He was able to walk into an Asian woman’s dojo and best her without throwing a punch because in the Marvel universe, he is the best martial artist of them all. The slagging on the dialog and characterizations, I can agree with to a point, but Luke Cage and Jessica Jones had some cringe-worthy stuff as well.
Geek fight!
in the Marvel universe, he is the best martial artist of them all.
FALSE. Shang Chi, Master of Kung Fu is the best. Danny had to rely on the Fist to avoid being defeated by him.
Even if I am willing to concede this point, do you agree that Danny Rand would be able to best a random owner of a Dojo in New York?
Sure.
I’ve binged thru as well. My major complaint was that there wasn’t a good villain. All of the other Marvel/Netflix series had villains at least as good as the heroes.
i agree with his basic point that “a number” is a bad way to evaluate the merits of a film.
So movie reviews are now at the point that video game reviews have been at forever.
I think there’s a better case to be made that games deserve a ‘score’, while films don’t.
Films are highly subjective and are primarily about their narrative; games can actually have a crap narrative and still provide solid gameplay.
and are primarily about their narrative;
So you haven’t watched Zardoz.
no.
and i think ‘failed narratives’ can still have some entertainment value. I think “Battlefield Earth” is great as long you treat it as a comedy.
Games still fall under the critic problem of ‘Did you like it, why or why not?’
Trying to objectively score them on things like graphics or story doesn’t really work. So for example, I can heartily recommend Bioshock to someone, but acknowledge that it’s a fairly middlng FPS gameplay wise, but it has a great story and good graphics. I can also recommend something like Crusader Kings 2 or Dwarf fortress, which have graphics that are serviceable at best, and no actual plot, beyond what you make from them.
Fucking terrible. Turned it off.
Funny you mention Get Out!. An African American coworker has been ranting and raving about it. “You have to see it”. Ok. Fine. I told her I’d watch it if she watched Cube. Somehow my interpretation of the movie as a bureaucratic government gone wild was not compelling. It was about societal restraints. How do you watch Cube and get that interpretation? I like her and we get along pretty well, but if she is touting Get Out! as some cinematic masterpiece, I’m gonna pass.
Actually I watched Get out and really liked it. Of course, I took a completely different message away from it than most other people.
I love reading stuff from the Harlem Renaissance and I could give a totally different interpretation of someone like Langston Hughes than a modern lefty would. It’s the post modern tendency to destroy everything so that we can rebuild it BETTER that annoys the hell out of me. Willing to give Get Out a shot, but I see what’s coming.
I’m interested in seeing Get Out, but I avoided it initially since it looks like just a reskinned Stepford Wives. I would appreciate it, if without spoilers, you could correct that impression for me.
It’s not really Stepford Wives, it’s…weirder. But not that weird.
“Get Out!” is probably a good movie – my point was that a 99% positive rating for *anything*? is at least 25% bullshit.
that’s like Saddam Hussein’s voter-approval-rating.
The black guy is so authentic! He’s not even a proper PoC!
Of course it’s worth 99%!
Occupy Wall Street’s 99% was BS? Who knew?
I can’t watch Gonzaga anymore. Jesus, turn over machine.
Oh, and utterly OT.
Minds.com really is an utterly wretched hive of scum and villainy.
Thank you for your attention.
Venezuela: Queuing to survive
Maduro truly is a piece of shit. Fuck him and suck Sean Penn and the rest of the idiots who laud his great socialist experiment.
I’d prefer to not suck Sean Penn.
How the fuck did I make a typo like that?
We’re still open at 10pm EST?
How the fuck did I make a typo like that?
Oh, you know… You just have to admit it to yourself.
Well, they stopped lauding it when the great Bolivarian revolution ran out of other people’s money. You know, that same thing that happens every single fucking time and yet they deny even exists? Now they just pretend that Venezuela doesn’t exist.
Usually societies that don’t produce enough food will try to produce more food. Crazy thought: How about letting people farm and keep most of what they produce? Deng Xiaoping is going to crawl out of his grave and beat the living hell out of Maduro. That’s a movie I’d watch, anyway.
Maduro actually told the citizens of Venezuela to grow their own food. Problem is, a significant portion of them live in high rise apartments in Caracas.
Do you know how much food you can grow on a 10×5 ft veranda? Correct answer: Not enough.
I don’t want to gloat, but I called this a few days ago:
Trump to House: Pass Trumpcare or I take my ball and go the fuck home.
Know what I would call my health plan?
Hitler?
RufurstResponder?
Take what you want and pay for it?
I think I’m in love.
I enjoyed her riding the rocket.
The intended audience for that was clearly the “I FUCKING LOVE SCIENCE” crowd, since the material would have been new and revolutionary to people fed on a constant diet of Bill Nye – because really, that was 6:20 of “meh” and 0:30 of unsubtle phallic symbolism.
Woman plays Kerbal Space Program and gets into orbit faster than anyone I’ve seen, then proceeds to talk about Project Man High and 50s spaceplane vs. rocket debate.
I can’t ask for this shit on OkCupid man.
She’s cute, and i’m genuinely interested in the topic (its sort of like the law of the sea applied to space, w/quirks)
**the way she says “reconnaissance” is an irritation.
Do you get annoyed when your date eats her peas one at a time?
is that some kinky sex-slang i’ve never heard before?
The main argument for space travel and the existence of an endless universe, is the potential to escape from bureaucrats and the ability to lure them into their own demise.
Ah yes, the Golgafrinchan ark program idea.
Space lawyers?!?
I’m just a bird lawyer.
Thought you were a dentist. Heading to mine right now. I can’t believe those fillings I got 25 years ago even lasted this long.
I’ve been accused of being a lot of things. But this is the first time anyone has tossed the “Dentist” slur my way.
Lol. No, I ready did think you were a DDS. Having trouble keeping my commenters straight.
I know a fair amount about dental hygiene.
If you have borderline cavities, ask for MI Plus paste. If your dentist doesn’t know what that is, find a new dentist.
It should be easy in Japan. MI Paste was invented there.
Will do. Late 40’s. Parents get elderly and your teeth start failing. Don’t remember who said that, but true in my case.
If it’s enamel/surface failure, that’s an easy fix. MI Paste. If it’s root structure, it’s a bit more complicated.
Looks like you can’t buy it OTC in the US.
They have it on the shelf at my local (non-chain) pharmacy OTC.
Their strategy is to sell it through dentist’s offices at a 350% markup, but no prescription required.
And … you’re in Manhattan? The real one? NYC?
Manhattan Beach, CA 90266
THE REAL ONE
my son got all four of his wisdom teeth yanked today, so that was my Dentistry Fun Times of the Day story.
Better now that later.
Mine came in without me knowing in my 20s. They destroyed my molars.
I knew I was in trouble when I saw a Ferrari in the parking lot of the Dentist’s office.
I’m not a dentist, but I play one at the office. For a couple hundred dollars an hour.
Space law in this country is not governed by reason.
The person that did those subtitles should be shot.
So… has anyone played ME Andromeda yet?
Last I knew, someone had attempted it on some sort of circular platter that was last heard of like 100 years ago, and it didn’t work because no one even knows how to read those things now and they were invented by white slave owners.
Everything I’ve heard or seen is some variation of ‘it’s garbage and Bioware is dead to me.’
So meh?
Wow. I didn’t really expect that. Oh well.
some commentary.
Bioware went Meh to me with Dragon Age 2. I still enjoyed ME3, but understood why people were upset by the ending. I just recently picked up DAI on sale, and I’m working through it now. The AI is pissing me off, as ranged people decide they need to run into melee range.
as ranged people decide they need to run into melee range.
I believe you can fix that in the tactics menu.
Dragon Age 2 was a shitty misstep, and then ME3 was total crap to me (wasn’t just the ending) so I had no interest in anything they produced after that. It seems like they’ve decided to go off the deep end, but I’m perfectly fine with the Witcher 3 (which remains a really, REALLY high bar for them to top).
Sorry, I was thinking of Origins with the tactics menu, I don’t know about Inquisition, maybe they cut features like they always do.
Unfortunately, you can’t fix the idiotic AI in the tactics menu. As they decided to make the tactics “simpler” (as in DA:O had a better tactics menu then DAI). Witcher 3 is on my list of games to get, the problem for me is that I still haven’t finished the first two (although I’ve enjoyed what I’ve played in them), so I wait for the price to drop. If it helps, my ultimate RPG is still Fallout 2 (with Fallout: New Vegas as a favorite as well).
You might want to check out some of Obsidian’s newer games. I liked pillars of Eternity and heard good things about Tyranny. (I’d steer clear of Alpha Protocol though. It’s not bad, but obviously shipped in an unfinished state.)
That’s because Bioware had nothing to do with the Witcher games, those were made by CD PROJEKT RED.
I’ve well aware, I’m talking about how they basically blew the talky-face story RPG genre out of the water and now Bioware would have to be playing catch-up even if they made something close to their older products.
After both Witcher 1 and Witcher 2 failed to hook me, I gave 3 a pass.
I can’t blame you. An hour or two into the Witcher, it was all hey let’s have a sewer level.
Yeah, no. All sewer levels suck balls, and the The Witcher was no exception,
I couldn’t get into the first one either, and I had to constantly go to the wiki to understand a bunch of stuff in 2, but 3 is probably the best open world game in terms of world building I’ve ever seen. It’s a really hard act to follow, and even old Bioware’s tricks seem trite in comparison. New Bioware is just a disaster in comparison.
I submitted my review to Glibertarians to post at their leasure. The review is in review.
This really felt pretty clever to me in places, and absolutely contrived and nonsensical in others. Still I can’t deny how damned original the concept is, even if it has whiffs of The Time Machine (minus the Marxism.)