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November 27th, 2008

Is Batman Effective?

Posted by intake in Comics, Movies  Tagged , , , ,



I just got back from seeing The Dark Knight a second time, and something struck me, not just about the film itself, but about Gotham City’s ongoing problems with crime.  Batman has been around for almost seventy years now, but his home turf still looks pretty sketchy.  Sure, there is a lot of suspension of disbelief that goes into writing a comic book, but shouldn’t there be some degree of change over time with regard to how Gotham City as a whole responds to Batman’s work?  We don’t know the crime rate, but does it ever go down?  Don’t things get quieter over there?  Why don’t some of the more powerful criminals just move on down the road?

Batman is ultimately a fantasy, so most of these questions go unanswered, but there may be some logic to why things don’t change.  Criminals–well, actually, people in general–have a natural lust for power, and with Gotham being the metropolis (pardon the obvious allusion) that it is, not even a superhero can prevent someone from wanting to be the main source of contraband in the city.  These crooks jockeying for a monopoly on drugs run into trouble, but the Gotham P.D. and Batman only prevent the city from being overwhelmed by depravity.  They never truly clean up the streets; there’s always a noticeable layer of grime.

So is it worth it for Batman to go to all the trouble?  Probably.  Crime is crime, and somebody has to fight it.  But he could certainly use some help, and not just from Robin.

November 21st, 2008

Netflix Will Give You $1 Million…

Posted by intake in Movies, Science  Tagged , , ,



…if you can find a way to improve Cinematch’s accuracy by ten percent.  Cinematch is the program that matches customer ratings with recommendations, and Netflix’s own programmers have hit a wall in trying to improve it.  The New York Times has a great piece about the teams of programmers (many with no programming or mathematical background) who are trying to win the prize.  Two years have passed with no one reaching that ten percent target.

One problem for many of them?  This movie.