Yet more seam carving

When last we visited the wonderful world of image "retargeting" by means of the cunning seam carving technique, I envisaged a decent free seam carving Photoshop plugin in the near-ish future.

Well, that hasn't turned up yet. But a couple of options besides rsizr.com and that GIMP plugin have.

The inventively named Content Aware Image Resizer is a simple command line utility that can only cope with BMP format images, but gets the job done (a bit slowly...), is multithreaded, and is GPL-licensed so C++ hackers can fiddle with the source.

Resizor is a standalone Windows app, which is only single-threaded but still seems a bit faster than CAIR (I think rsizr.com is faster now than it used to be, too), has a bunch of fancy resizing algorithms as well as the seam carving "Retarget" option, and has a graphical interface too.

Resizor only lets you make an image smaller by seam carving (one of the interesting features of the technique is that it can just as easily enlarge images as shrink them), but it does what most people want to do.

Rugose squamous pathos

If you, like me, are a cynical depressive type, you should probably not read about the latest adventures of the luckless Mr Tehn.

Oh, sure, in Lovecraft books people who look like him are always rising from the too-deep mines by night to claim the sanity of mortal men, or getting up to NSFW hi-jinks with Japanese schoolgirls.

But that's all just racist nonsense that completely ignores the very real plight of the tentacled abomination in today's world.

Poor Mr Tehn.

At least, if this previous strip is to be believed, he has a cat.

(Now, those Schlorbians - they have a ball.)

(And please allow me to repeat my strong recommendation of Tim Kreider's two books.)

New frontiers in pseudoscience

High-tech dowsing rods have a storied history.

Their reason for being is simple enough. You can't really make a lot of money by selling the regular kind of dowsing rod or divining pendulum, you see, since anybody can make their own from coat-hanger wire, a stick, or any old thing on the end of a string.

(Pendulum enthusiasts often seem to believe that their pendulum needs a bob made from some exotic mineral or other, but there's not a lot of money to be made there, either.)

But you sure can make a lot of money if you make a special technomalogical box with some lights on it and an antenna sticking out which does, in essence, the same thing as a dowsing rod.

Which is nothing, of course. But plenty of people believe in dowsing, despite the repeated failure of dowsers to actually detect any darn thing in controlled tests.

But people insist on continuing to believe in dowsing, especially if it's dressed up with modern trappings. So other people are pleased to make decorated dowsing rods and sell them, or just their special expertise, for enormous prices.

There've been a few high-tech dowsing doodads over the years. The Quadro Tracker, the DKL LifeGuard, various and sundry other "Locator" devices; the list goes on. Several of these devices have been purchased - or, at least, the their promotors hired at great expense - by business and governmental entities. Not once have these things actually managed to find human life signs under rubble (in the case of the LifeGuard) or... well, just about anything (in the case of the Quadro Tracker), but hope springs eternal.

South African ex-cop Danie Krugel's incredible human-locator, though, is a significant step forward in the modern scam artists' constant struggle to further improve their money-to-effort ratio.

You just give him anything from the body of a lost person - a bit of hair, say, with or without the roots that contain the actual DNA - and his magic box will locate said person, by means of super-scientific quantum GPS DNA resonance. Apparently his box can also find oil or, um, bacteria.

Many dowsers and pendulumists believe they can do their thing over a mere map, without having to actually go to the place where people are trying to find oil or water or the Lost Treasure of the Aztecs or whatever. Danie Krugel is running the same sort of operation; he's not leaving the house if you don't provide a camera crew (and, I suspect, a substantial fee...).

And, apparently, the money rolls in!

Some terribly cynical people have reached the conclusion that Mr Krugel's magic box is a bit of a rip-off. Ben Goldacre just commented on it; he's less than impressed with some recent uncritical coverage of it in the UK papers. Apparently Mr Krugel has located "traces" of the missing child Madeleine McCann "on a resort beach", and in so doing catapulted himself into the same exalted category as those "psychics" who make money by stringing along grief-stricken families and annoying the police. (Sometimes they manage to parley this sort of thing into considerable celebrity.)

This South African blogger is also less than entirely impressed by Mr Krugel. Here's her post about Krugel's performance on a South African show, mentioned in glowing terms on the above-linked Canada Free Press article.

In brief, he actually achieved such amazing feats as saying that the body of a girl abducted by a now-dead paedophile was somewhere close to the paedophile's house - the location of which was public knowledge. They went there, they "narrowed it down", they dug up an old dumping ground and found 101 kinds of random junk including some little bits of bone that almost certainly had nothing to do with the missing girl, they handed those bits of bone over to the distraught parents, then they declared victory and went home.

Every now and then, a psychic says a missing person is dead (and often that the body is "near water", a claim that could mean it's just about anywhere except the middle of the Kalahari...), but that person later turns up alive and well.

Even that, though, seldom seems to dent the psychic's popularity.

The vendors of techno-dowsing gear often make more definite claims about their equipment, which can lead to problems when it clearly fails to, say, find people trapped under rubble.

Danie Krugel's playing it smart, by hybridising psychic-detective claims with techno-gibberish. People who'd never think of retaining the services of a psychic may be more kindly disposed to his "scientific" equivalent.

(A few days later, Ben Goldacre wrote a Guardian column about Krugel, who did not distinguish himself in a phone interview. And the day after that, the Observer apologised, more or less, for printing such abject bullshit.)

UPDATE: A couple of years after I wrote the above, it came to light that a different version of these idiotic electro-dowsing-rod things has been sold, at the usual outrageous prices, to the Iraqi government. They use them to detect bombs at security checkpoints. Or, you know, to not detect bombs at security checkpoints.

Yet more on Firepower

I only now got around to reading Gerard Ryle's latest Sydney Morning Herald article about "troubled" gasoline-improving-pill company Firepower, and its "colourful" directors.

The piece is pretty much just an updated recap of the sordid saga documented in previous articles, but more and more of the Firepower principals' background is coming out, and it's entertaining stuff. The nonexistent contracts, fake tests, string of previous financially questionable fuel-saving companies and guys linked to Nicolae Ceausescu and Halliburton, we already knew about. But there's more.

Kitchen renovations and standover men! Child-sex allegations! And, less excitingly, the continuing slow turning of the gears of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, which may finally see these swindlers thrown in jail.

Don't count on it, though. For every "high flying" rip-off artist that actually sees the inside of a comfortable minimum security prison for a few months, there are ten who just declare bankruptcy yet again and then head off in a "borrowed" private jet to their next important meeting.

Fzat!

I've been somewhat distracted by some things that arrived for review yesterday.

Ay chihuahua.

It's a "Crossfire" from Techlasers, the "off brand" store operated by Wicked Lasers, who sent me the less powerful laser about which I rambled on last year.

Techlasers, basically, sells the same superpowered lasers that various other stores sell, only cheaper. They blatantly list the names their competitors use for the same products, with the prices, to make your comparison shopping easier. I like that.

With the money you save, please, please buy some safety goggles.

Posted in Toys. 7 Comments »

Three alarming links

While reading Tim Kreider's commentary for his most recent (Not Safe For Work, if your work is not awesome) comic, I was intrigued by his passing mention of a torture device called the "tongue screw".

That device is, for some reason, not listed on Occasional Hell's well-known (and probably also NSFW) Infernal Device site.

But it didn't take me long to find this page (probably SFW), which both shows you the device, and summarises its strange connection to modern Mennonite culture.

Some people will look at the three above-linked pages, shudder, and try to forget them.

Other people will still be reading four hours later.

Even if it does get them fired.

(Once you've lost your job, you will of course have more time to read Tim Kreider's excellent books.)

It's all fun and games until someone gets sued

Technology Associates, whose Web site is the somewhat unfortunately named techass.com, were some of the first makers of commercial LED flashlights. I reviewed several of their products.

They haven't come up with anything much new for a while, but their one new-ish product - which has actually been around for more than a year now, but which I only just discovered - was worth waiting for.

It's got the same control electronics in it as their perfectly good little "Derringer"...

Technology Associates flashlight

...but it's got a crank charger.

So they decided to honour one of the world's premiere cranks by calling it... the GeneRay X1!

I invite you all to submit, in the comments, your suggestions for other products that should be named after a celebrity.

Another milestone reached

I'm happy to say that I have now contributed an article to that supreme productivity-reducer, the TV Tropes wiki.

I've done little edits there in the past, but never had the chance to create an article. But a couple of days ago I noticed that they didn't have an article on one of the staples of sci-fi TV and movies: The Ridiculously Dense Asteroid Field.

So I made one. It's already been considerably improved by other users.