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Wednesday, June 30, 2004

June 29, 2004, 7:03PM

'Spider-Man 2' takes comic-book web-slinger to heroic new heights

By BRUCE WESTBROOK
Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle

Power, it is said, corrupts. But since his comics origin in 1962, Spider-Man has clung to an opposing mantra: "With great power comes great responsibility."

Director Sam Raimi -- a fan since childhood -- stayed true to that spirit in 2002's Spider-Man, dutifully retelling the origin of the heroic web-spinner and his humble alter ego, Peter Parker. Raimi then shouldered the responsibility of following up an $821 million global smash by daring to direct its sequel.

What a sequel it is.

Freed from the first film's expository constraints, Spider-Man 2 races from the gate with the gallop of a champion. Sensational enough for power-fantasy fans, it also tells a strong story that tugs agreeably on our heartstrings.

Hip to the special spark that humanity gives superheroes -- a formula that lofted Marvel from scrappy upstart to publishing giant -- Raimi plays up the soap opera of Peter's personal life without sacrificing action-movie momentum.

When last seen, Peter (Tobey Maguire) had isolated himself from his beloved Mary Jane (Kirsten Dunst) to protect her in case Spider-Man's enemies learned his identity. Two years later, Peter is missing college classes and failing at small jobs because he's been sidetracked saving New Yorkers from disaster.

Meanwhile, his sweet Aunt May (Rosemary Harris) is about to lose her modest home to the bank. And when Peter belatedly tries to reconcile with Mary Jane despite his better judgment, the webbing hits the fan.

Plagued by doubts, he even seems to be losing his powers. But there's nothing like a bad guy to focus a fella.

Enter Dr. Otto Octavius (Alfred Molina), a respected scientist whose experiments with fusion power involve four long mechanical arms. When a demo goes kerplooey, the arms weld to his torso and start showing wicked wills of their own. He then becomes Dr. Octopus, or Doc Ock, a durable Spidey villain since 1963's Amazing Spider-Man No. 3.

Warped by suffering, Ock is tangled in a web snaring Peter and friend Harry Osborn (James Franco), who blames Spidey for the death of his father, Norman Osborn -- the Green Goblin -- in the first film. An inheritance brat, Harry will fund Ock's experiments if he delivers Spidey for vengeance.

The ensuing melees are the most spectacular superpowered action ever seen on screen, especially a runaway train ride that builds to an excruciating crescendo. Raimi also draws upon his creepy Evil Dead flicks for a twisted emergency-room scene, the movie's darkest moment.

Even more spiderlike than Spider-Man, Ock skitters across walls and thunders like a Jurassic Park dino as he stomps Manhattan's streets with pounding, writhing tentacles, their voracious tips snapping like metal mouths. It's an inspired effect that couldn't have been achieved until the computer-generated era. Spidey's wild web-swinging through New York's steel canyons also gains zip.

Yet none of this plays as action for action's sake. Rather, it flows seamlessly from a tight screenplay by two-time Oscar winner Alvin Sargent. The result is the finest comic-book movie since 1992's Batman Returns, another first sequel. The second time, it seems, is the charm.

Even Maguire's typical mumbling and underplaying doesn't detract, since Peter so often is dazed by dilemmas. He'd be awful as a swaggering superhero, but as conscience-wracked Peter/Spidey, Maguire is touchingly downtrodden and resolute when forced.

Molina shows cunning and intelligence behind his flamboyance, and his Ock is conflicted -- as much victim as villain. He's also recognizably human, unlike Willem Dafoe's masked Goblin.

Mary Jane has become a top model and actress, a career arc that Dunst doesn't sell as well as her torch-carrying for Peter. A third side to their romantic triangle is John Jameson (Daniel Gillies), astronaut son of J. Jonah Jameson (J.K. Simmons), the boorish editor who rakes muck against Spidey with show-stealing histrionics.

Raimi keeps it all clipped and snappy without getting overheated, injecting humor in the right doses. Mostly he treats Spider-Man 2 as a thrilling adventure propelled by courage in the face of frailty.

In-jokes include a glimpse of Spider-Man co-creator Stan Lee, a line about Marvel's Dr. Strange, a nod to the fan nightmare of having a comics collection tossed out and a sly stab at the back pains that almost sidelined Maguire. We also meet Dr. Curt Connors (Dylan Baker), who became the villainous Lizard three issues after Ock was born -- and who might be back for Spidey 3.

Raimi covers still more bases from the comics' early run, including a messy secret-identity spill. With 42 years of history to serve, he must have felt a great responsibility. With Spider-Man 2, he has honored it.

Grade: A+
HoustonChronicle.com - 'Spider-Man 2' takes comic-book web-slinger to heroic new heights

Tuesday, June 29, 2004


These guys look happy!
Posted by Hello
Welcome to Thottbot World of Warcraft Database
(The following is taken directly from the Thottbot site)

Welcome to Thottbot

Greetings, and Welcome to Thottbot!

I wrote Thottbot to save time. Every day I would read several messageboards and check several websites. Often there were no interesting posts on the messageboards. Often the websites weren't updated. Of course, I had no way of knowing these things without visiting.

Now Thottbot does all this for me. It finds posts I'm interested in, and knows which websites were updated. Instead of checking two dozen sites each day, I check Thottbot. From there, I go only to the places I know have something of interest. In the end, I get more value out of my limited time, and check more sites than I ever could have manually.

Thottbot tailors itself to the individual reading it. What I want to see likely isn't what you want to see. For example, I may want to see all posts by Everquest and PlanetSide developers, any post with my name in it, and any post mentioning my guild, Afterlife. Occasionally there are other search strings and games I'm interested in. Thottbot shows me these things.

Thottbot
Review: Spidey 2 sets new standard for superhero films

By ROGER EBERT UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

Now this is what a superhero movie should be. "Spider-Man 2" believes in its story in the same way serious comic readers believe, when the adventures on the page express their own dreams and wishes.

It's not camp and it's not nostalgia, it's not wall-to-wall special effects and it's not pickled in angst. It's simply and poignantly a realization that being Spider-Man is a burden that Peter Parker is not entirely willing to bear. The movie demonstrates what's wrong with a lot of other superhero epics: They focus on the superpowers and short-change the humans behind them (has anyone ever been more boring than Clark Kent or Bruce Wayne?).

"Spider-Man 2" is the best superhero movie since the modern genre was launched with "Superman" (1978). It succeeds by being true to the insight that allowed Marvel Comics to upturn decades of comic book tradition: Readers could identify more completely with heroes like themselves than with remote, godlike paragons. Peter Parker was an insecure high school student, in grade trouble, inarticulate in love, unready to assume the responsibilities that came with his unexpected superpowers. It wasn't that Spider-Man could swing from skyscrapers that won over his readers; it was that he fretted about personal problems in the thought balloons above his Spidey face mask.

Parker (Tobey Maguire) is in college now, studying physics at Columbia, more helplessly in love than ever with Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst). He's on the edge of a breakdown: He's lost his job as a pizza deliveryman, Aunt May faces foreclosure on her mortgage, he's missing classes, the colors run together when he washes his Spider-Man suit at the Laundromat, and after his web-spinning ability inexplicably seems to fade, he throws away his beloved uniform in despair. When a bum tries to sell the discarded Spidey suit to Jonah Jameson, editor of The Daily Bugle, Jameson offers him $50.

The bum says he could do better on eBay. Has it come to this?

I was disappointed by the original "Spider-Man" (2002)and surprised to find this film working from the first frame. Sam Raimi, director of both pictures, this time seems to know exactly what he should do, and never steps wrong in a film that effortlessly combines special effects and a human story, keeping its parallel plots alive and moving. One of the keys to the movie's success must be the contribution of novelist Michael Chabon to the screenplay; Chabon understands in his bones what comic books are, and why. His inspired 2000 novel, "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay," chronicles the birth of a 1940s comic book superhero and the young men who created him.The seasons in a superhero's life are charted by the villains he faces (it is the same with James Bond). "Spider-Man 2" gives Spider-Man an enemy with a good nature that is overcome by evil. Peter Parker admires the famous Dr. Otto Octavius (Alfred Molina), whose laboratory on the banks of the East River houses an experiment that will either prove fusion can work as a cheap source of energy, or vaporize Manhattan.

To handle the dangerous materials of his experiments, Octavius devises four powerful tentacles that are fused to his spine and have cyber-intelligence of their own; a chip in his spine prevents them from overriding his orders, but when the chip is destroyed the gentle scientist becomes Doc Ock, a fearsome fusion of man and machine who can climb skyscraper walls by driving his tentacles through concrete and bricks. We hear him coming, hammering his way toward us like the drums of hell.

Peter Parker, meanwhile, has vowed he cannot allow himself to love Mary Jane because her life would be in danger from Spider-Man's enemies. She has given up on Peter, who always is standing her up; she announces her engagement to no less than an astronaut. Peter has heart-to-hearts with her and with Aunt May (Rosemary Harris), who is given full screen time and not reduced to an obligatory cameo. And he has to deal with his friend Harry Osborn (James Franco), who likes Peter but hates Spider-Man, blaming him for the death of his father (aka the Green Goblin, although much is unknown to the son).

There are special effects, and then there are special effects. In the first movie I thought Spider-Man seemed to move with all the realism of a character in a cartoon. This time, as he swings from one skyscraper to another, he has more weight and dimension, and Raimi is able to seamlessly match the computer images and the human actors. The f/x triumph in the film is the work on Doc Ock's four robotic tentacles, which move with an uncanny life, reacting and responding, doing double takes and becoming characters of their own.

Watching Raimi and his writers cut between the story threads, I savored classical workmanship: The film gives full weight to all of its elements, keeps them alive, is constructed with such skill that we care all the way through; iIn a lesser movie from this genre, we usually perk up for the action scenes but wade grimly through the dialogue. Here both stay alive, and the dialogue is more about emotion, love and values, less about long-winded explanations of the inexplicable (it's kind of neat that Spider-Man never does find out why his web-throwing ability sometimes fails him)Tobey Maguire almost didn't sign for the sequel, complaining of back pain; Jake Gyllenhaal, another gifted actor, was reportedly in the wings. But if Maguire hadn't returned(along with Spidey's throwaway line about his aching back), we never would have known how good he could be in this role.

Kirsten Dunst is valuable, too, bringing depth and heart to a girlfriend role that in a lesser film would have been conventional. When she kisses her astronaut boyfriend upside-down, it's one of those perfect moments that rewards fans of the whole saga; we don't need to be told she's remembering her only kiss from Spider-Man.

There are moviegoers who make it a point of missing superhero movies, and I can't blame them, although I confess to a weakness for the genre. I liked both of "The Crow" movies, and "Daredevil," "The Hulk" and "X2," but not enough to recommend them to friends who don't like or understand comic books. "Spider-Man 2" is in another category: It's a real movie, full-blooded and smart, with qualities even for those who have no idea who Stan Lee is. It's a superhero movie for people who don't go to superhero movies, and for those who do, it's the one they've been yearning for.Minireview: "Spider Man 2" (PG-13, 125 minutes). A superhero movie for people who don't go to superhero movies - - and for those who do, it's the one they've been yearning for. Much better than the first "Spider-Man," a full-bodied movie that gives weight both to the action scenes and to the human stories behind them. Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst bring real poignancy to Peter Parker's troubled love for Mary Jane, and Alfred Molina is superb as Doc Ock, the good scientist who becomes a victim of his own invention. Director Sam Raimi finds the right balance between dialogue and action, and co-writer Michael Chabon brings a deep understanding of how superhero stories work, and why. The best superhero movie since the original "Superman." Rating: Four stars.
Gazette.com PM edition

ROCKETS: It's Official: Rockets Land McGrady

Monday, June 28, 2004

Sunday, June 27, 2004

Middlemen mine eBay as new profit source
Shops open up to prepare, ship items for auction

ATLANTA - Yes, people go to eBay simply to buy and sell stuff to each other. But as the Internet auction site becomes increasingly popular, it's attracting a fast-growing crowd of businesses that want to be part of the process. Global shipper UPS's recent decision to link up with a company that helps auction goods on eBay reflects how much money businesses think can be made as middlemen.

They see people like Lee Ann Fletcher as a promising customer base. Fletcher, 35, wanted to sell a piece of china, a vase and a few other odds and ends around her home. She just didn't have time to do the legwork after long hours working for her family's roofing business.

So the Atlanta woman took her wares to The UPS Store, which shipped them to California-based AuctionDrop, a company that posted them on eBay and will send her a cut when they sell.

"It's worth somebody else making a little bit more money just to save the time," she said.

Companies big and small are now seeing even a small slice of eBay's action as worth the effort. In its last quarterly report, eBay said customers exchanged more than $8 billion in merchandise in just three months. It expects its sales to easily exceed $3 billion this year. Based in San Jose, Calif., eBay boasts 104.5 million registered users.

"The historical notion of eBay being strictly a consumer-to-consumer platform is somewhat anachronistic," said Scott Kessler, an equity analyst with Standard & Poor's in New York. "You have hundreds of thousands of folks on there now that make their living on eBay."

Mom-and-pop retailers seeking to expand their markets long have been part of the eBay landscape. Now much bigger partnerships are blossoming.

For instance, Hewlett-Packard Co. announced recently it would set up a "photography zone" on eBay to help people photograph their wares, a key part of the auction process. It's also a way for HP to pitch its own products.

And eBay's online payment unit, PayPal, has announced an agreement with consumer credit provider GE Consumer Finance to give qualifying customers virtually instant credit.

The majority of eBay's registered users are buyers. So, the several dozen companies out there acting as middlemen figure there is a windfall to be made by making it easier to sell for people who are sitting on the sidelines watching.

Ebay's happy to have them. "We think the idea is great," said eBay spokesman Hani Durzy. "What it promises to do is open up the eBay marketplace to that segment of society that are not listing items on eBay for any number of reasons."

The teaming-up of Atlanta-based UPS and San Carlos,Calif.-based AuctionDrop has gotten the most attention.

Customers can drop off items worth at least $75 at any of the 3,400 UPS Stores in the United States. UPS packs and ships the items to AuctionDrop. Employees there photograph the items, test their functionality and post them on eBay.

If the item sells, AuctionDrop sends the money to the customer, minus a commission that ranges from 20 percent to 38 percent depending on the value of the item. AuctionDrop pays UPS for the shipping costs. The only other charge to the customer are some nominal fees eBay charges.

If an item doesn't sell within seven days, AuctionDrop returns it to the owner at no charge.

AuctionDrop Chief Executive Randy Adams said his 5,000-customer company has not yet turned a profit since opening its first store in March 2003, but he believes that will change soon thanks to millions in venture capital and the recent UPS deal.

"If you look at the amount of sales on eBay, ($24) billion worth of items in the last year, we believe there is at least that much of available merchandise a year sitting in people's homes that is just depreciating and not getting sold," Adams said.

Another eBay middleman with national aspirations is Pasadena, Calif.-based iSold It. The company has two walk-in stores and plans to open 50 more by the end of the year.

Unlike AuctionDrop, iSold It is sticking with building through franchising its own stores rather than through the stores of another company that does multiple things.

"I feel strongly that consumers are going to have more confidence in a single-minded storefront focus on eBay," said iSold It President Elise Wetzel, whose stores act solely as an eBay middleman. "To me, it's like when gas stations sold videotapes and then Blockbuster came to town."

Since starting in December, privately held iSold has turned a profit, Wetzel said, although she would not release numbers.

HoustonChronicle.com - Middlemen mine eBay as new profit source
Spam-Proof Your In-Box
Yes, you can turn the tide against junk e-mail. Our ratings of nine antispam tools reveal a surprising Best Buy.
MSN Tech & Gadgets

Saturday, June 26, 2004

EFloorz.com
Do it yourself for less
Links Page

Friday, June 25, 2004

Web Virus May Be Stealing Financial Data
News
19 men knocked out as they emerged thinking storm was over
MSNBC - Golfers describe surviving lightning strike
Does your dog obey commands? Would you like to teach him (or her) some tricks? Learn how to train your four-legged friend to stay, roll over, and even jump through a hoop. All you need is a handful of doggie treats, some patience, and a few tips from a trainer. Watch our expert train her dogs, and she'll show you everything you need to know to teach your dog a new trick.
Teach Your Dog Tricks on MSN KidZ

Thursday, June 24, 2004

Hotmail is boosting its storage allowance to 250 Mbytes to follow similar moves by rivals such as Google and Yahoo.
By Gregg Keizer, TechWeb News

Only a week after it had no comment on upping the storage capacity of its Hotmail E-mail service, Microsoft said early Thursday that it's boosting the allowance to 250 Mbytes to follow similar moves by rivals such as Google, Yahoo, and Lycos.

In the latest development in the free E-mail space race, Microsoft will take Hotmail in-boxes from the current 2 Mbytes storage allotment to 250 Mbytes beginning in early July, said Blake Irving, an MSN VP.

InformationWeek > E-Mail Storage > E-Mail Space Race Heats Up > June 24, 2004
Gene mutation found in muscle man toddler
News
Hubble may have spotted 100 new planets
By ROBERT S. BOYD
Knight-Ridder Tribune News

WASHINGTON -- The Hubble Space Telescope may have discovered as many as 100 new planets orbiting stars in the Milky Way galaxy, astronomers say.

If confirmed, that would double the known population of alien planets since the first one was detected nine years ago, said Steven Beckwith, director of the Space Science Telescope Institute in Baltimore.

Astronomers are coming to believe that almost every sunlike star in the galaxy, and probably in the universe, is accompanied by one or more planets like our solar system, vastly increasing the chance that some form of extraterrestrial life could exist.

Hubble's expected harvest of previously unknown planets stems from a sweep of thousands of stars in the domelike bulge protruding above the flat disk of the Milky Way.

For seven straight days in late February, Kailash Sahu, an astronomer at the Baltimore institute, used the 14-year-old telescope to monitor the amount of light streaming from the brightest stars.

A tiny decrease -- less than a tenth of 1 percent -- in the light was a sign that something, perhaps a planet, was passing in front of the star. A similar phenomenon entranced millions of earthlings when Venus transited the sun June 8.

Sahu is now employing an older planetary-detection method to confirm that the transiting objects are really planets and not something else, such as dwarf stars or clouds of interstellar gas.

Using a large ground-based telescope in Chile, he's looking for small irregularities, or wobbles, in a star's motion that would prove that it's accompanied by one or more planets.

This is the method that's been used since 1995 to spot about 100 planets. Three more have been discovered by the new "transit" technique in the past year.

"If this is confirmed, in seven days we will have doubled the number of planets known in nine years," Beckwith told a committee of the National Academy of Sciences earlier this week.

The panel is exploring the future of the Hubble telescope.

HoustonChronicle.com - Hubble may have spotted 100 new planets

Wednesday, June 23, 2004

Disney's Desktop Stop - Your online home for screensavers, wallpapers and more!
Desktop Stop - Pinocchio

Tuesday, June 22, 2004

Lancast 4322 Series 10Mbps F/O Micro Transceivers
http://www.metrobility.com/support/manuals/5660-432201-001.pdf
ConnectGear Fast Ethernet Fiber (ST) multimode Converter
Model# GC-H01ST
Products

Monday, June 21, 2004

Hmmm.

"Steve loved the fans and his teammates. He's very friendly with Cuttino, but also pretty friendly with Yao. Many of us thought the beginnings of something there big with a great center and great point guard."

Francis has averaged 19.3 points, 6.4 assists and 6.1 rebounds in his five seasons with the Rockets. He averaged 19.2 points, 8.4 rebounds and 7.6 assists in the Rockets' first-round playoff loss to the Rockets.

Only Francis, Magic Johnson, Oscar Robertson and Grant Hill have averaged 15 points, five assists and five rebounds in each of their first five seasons.

HoustonChronicle.com - Rockets near deal to trade Francis

Sunday, June 20, 2004

No Gellar In Buffy Toon

The June 20 issue of TV Guide reported that voice actress Giselle Loren will take over Sarah Michelle Gellar's starring role in a proposed animated Buffy the Vampire Slayer TV series, for which a pilot is being produced. Sources told the magazine that Gellar chose not to reprise her role, leading creator Joss Whedon to recruit Loren, who previously voiced the character in the video game Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its sequel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Chaos Bleeds.

Other Buffy regulars—including Alyson Hannigan (Willow), Nicholas Brendon (Xander) and Anthony Stewart Head (Giles)—will voice their characters in the pilot, the magazine reported. The pilot will be screened for potential distributors next month, TV Guide reported.
Sci Fi Wire -- The News Service of the Sci Fi Channel

Thursday, June 17, 2004

Best Places to Work in IT 2004

This year's survey of nearly 17,000 IT employees found that once again,
the three most-desired benefits are technology, training and flexible
work schedules. Our 11th annual special report names the top 100 IT
employers and highlights how to give workers the job fulfillment they
crave. Computerworld Careers Report

Wednesday, June 16, 2004

Come back here... Blogger Knowledge

Tuesday, June 15, 2004

Pistons win 2003/2004 NBA Finals. They beat the Lakers 4 games to 1.
Kobe sure stunk up the place this series, please don't compare him to MJ, he doesn't come close.
I wouldn't have minded seeing Karl get a ring but otherwise I can't stand the Lakers so I'm happy they lost.
Yahoo! Sports - NBA - Pistons 100, Lakers 87
Xircom® RealPort™ CardBus Ethernet 10/100+Modem 56 GlobalACCESS Adapter (RBEM56G-100) Download Search Results

Monday, June 14, 2004

How can you find out what channels your neighbor's wireless networks occupy? That's easy. If you have a supported Wi-Fi chipset, you can just download NetStumbler to sniff your neighborhood and see whose AP is hogging your airwaves. NetStumbler.com - The World Of WiFi

Sunday, June 13, 2004

Thursday, June 10, 2004

Ex-President Bush still plans parachute jump
After attending Reagan service, he'll leap to mark 80th birthday

President Bush is planning to go ahead with an 80th birthday parachute jump this weekend following the week of mourning for former President Reagan.

Bush and his wife, Barbara, will attend Friday’s Reagan memorial service at the National Cathedral in Washington, then immediately return to Houston for a birthday party Saturday in Houston and the Sunday parachute jump over College Station, said Jim McGrath, spokesman for the organizing committee, 41(at) 80. The group’s name is for the 41st president at 80 years old.

Bush, a Navy pilot who bailed out from a damaged plane during World War II, also made a parachute jump on his 75th birthday.

He will be accompanied by members of the Golden Knights, the Army parachute team, but will not be linked to a younger jumper, McGrath said.

“This is a very, very important thing to the president, this is a solo jump. There will be knights around him, but it is not a tandem jump,” McGrath said Tuesday.

MSNBC - Ex-President Bush still plans parachute jump
Happy Birthday SOK!! I am a proud co-father! Sterling Order of Knights :: View topic - Happy Anniversary SOK!

Monday, June 07, 2004

President Ronald Reagan dies.

The greatest president in my lifetime. Probably the past 100 years. MSNBC - American Dreamer

Sunday, June 06, 2004

Shelf Design Guidelines Shelves

Saturday, June 05, 2004

Friday, June 04, 2004

Thursday, June 03, 2004

A listing of all you can make with leatherworking in WoW. Looks like there is quite abit of other WoW stuff on this site. Thottbot WoW: Leatherworking

Wednesday, June 02, 2004

The purpose of autism-how-to.com is to provide a series of step-by-step guides for teaching important skills and behaviors to individuals with autism and related disorders. Throughout our professional involvement, we have observed the many challenges encountered in meeting the pervasive needs of people with autism spectrum disorders. A variety of treatment approaches have emerged over the years, some of which have proven effective, while others unfortunately, have not. Through our “hands on” experience what we have found to be the most effective intervention for individuals with autism spectrum disorders is good, sound teaching utilizing the principles of applied behavior analysis (ABA). This teaching can occur with anyone involved in the child’s life. Parents, siblings, extended family members, educators, therapists, and friends can be, and often are, excellent teachers given the proper tools and resources. autism-how-to.com
Poor bastard trying to get a business started. I wish him luck. PC Doc - Service and Support for Houston

Tuesday, June 01, 2004

PC Parts & Service - Houston

Information such as how to benchmark a video card, build a computer, install a motherboard, install a video card, and how to set up a basic network.

Helpful Information
PC Parts & Service - Houston (by Willowbrook Mall)
Who links to me?