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Killer cereals: The geek guide to presweetened morning cereals

Author: JT Smith

By Joab Jackson

Cyberpunk

It’s no accident that when post-cyberpunk sci-fi author Neal Stephenson
went around the country last year doing a book tour for his now classic tome
Cryptonomicon, the passage
he often recited at readings was the multipage treatise on the best way to
eat Cap’n Crunch.Stephenson was doing more than just dispensing etiquette — he was
offering up to us geeks in the audience some shared experience. We all
knew, even if we probably hadn’t thought about it too much, why the alt.cereal FAQ calls cereal the “Gravel of
the Gods.” Stephenson reminded us that nothing delivers bursts of instant
energy with such caloric efficiency better than sweetened cereal. Such gravel
provides a quick jack for the hot-running, glucose-sucking brains of
cerebral types everywhere. Just add milk.

Like any piece of pop culture, breakfast cereals have always written
their own aesthetic narrative — from Sugar Pops’ pre-Warholian clean,
bold overtones to the seemingly never-diminishing cult allure of Quisp. And while I don’t claim a formal
critical perspective on the field — I like what I like — I’d argue
that, as with any other pop-cult consumable, qualitative distinctions can be
made. So, with apologies to Brunching Shuttlecocks, the Web godhead of letter-grade ratings, we
present the Cereal Consumer Guide:

Cap’n Crunch (Quaker Oats): Simply put, Cap’n Crunch is the Rolling Stones
of sweetened cereals, the standard against which all others must be
judged. The breakfast-cereal-connoisseur site Empty Bowl proclaims it the “champion of the nonchocolate cereals.” In Cryptonomicon, Stephenson spends paragraphs lovingly doting over the physics of its pillowlike kernels. Simultaneously overpowering and sublime, Cap’n Crunch achieves a finely tuned complexity of texture with only a
minimalistic treatment of its crisped-corn flour. (Empty Bowl nailed it
precisely when it noted that the elusive taste the good Cap’n slyly
hints at is none other than vanilla.) Under milk, it degrades gracefully. And if you can’t
wait that long, and the roof of your mouth is rubbed raw from the chewing of
these crystallizations, well, that’s the price you pay for tasting
perfection. A+

Cookie Crisp (General Mills): Gotta give C-Crisp props for
being the first to come out of the cupboard. Once upon a time, cereals
strutted their sweetened natures freely. (Remember Sugar Crisp’s chop-licking Sugar Bear?) Around
the early ’70s, though, the nutrition Nazis moved in, engendering an ugly
climate in the industry that Bill Crawford, co-author of Cerealizing
America: The Unsweetened Story of American Breakfast Cereal
, labels
“sugar de-emphasis.” Sucrose-laden cereals were recast as “part of a
nutritious breakfast.” Cookie Crisp called BS on that jive. I remember
when CC, with its brazenly undisguised cookie-likeness, first hit the
shelves. There was no more hiding from self-deluded parents that this wake-up
fortification their wee ones craved wasn’t of the nutritional sort.
Still, nothing’s staler than yesterday’s revolutionaries. Not to be a sore
tooth about it, but this cereal just doesn’t work. Its chocolate flecks leave
an almost cigarette-ash aftertaste; its corn-meal texture is so grainy
that conspiracists could spot UFO images in it. Worst of all, its been
upstaged by the younger Oreo O’s — their cereal’s cookie emulations are far
better executed. D

Count Chocula (General Mills): Like any subgenre, the
hard-core chocolate cereals (Cocoa Pebbles, Cocoa Puffs, Cocoa Krispies) hammer
away at their mission with relentless singularity. And no doubt the
straight-edge types who prefer such uncut flavors probably feel that the leavening of
Count Choc’s dark pleasures with fruity marshmallows is a pandering to
commercial interests — the goth dude sold out. Myself, I dig medley.
That’s the trouble with purists: Their tastes are always too narrow. B+

Froot Loops (Kellogg’s): Is there any surer sign that a cereal
has reached culinary (and market) bankruptcy then when its creator resorts
to injecting novelty “Cherryberry Swirls” into its otherwise formulaic
loops?
C-

Mueslix (Kellogg’s): Deride me if you will for not keepin’ it
inside the stay-fresh pouch, but how can any self-respecting cereal
critic ignore the disingenuous health-food symbolism littering the Mueslix
box? Are people really fooled by the silhouette of the jogger or the wholesome
raisins, nuts, and other healthy bits flying about? Maybe the kind who
believe that this faux-Grape Nuts is good for you simply because whole
barley is subbed for corn meal, because the brown sugar smothers the
regular sugar, because the whole-oat shavings obscure the high-fructose corn
syrup. Indeed, the very nutritional sophistication this chow supposedly endows
on the saps who purchase it is betrayed by the fact that it carries a
higher percentage of fat than most of its hallucinogenic-cartoon,
mascot-sporting brethren. For gullible granola-crunching, Fresh Fields-shopping 120 IQs only. F

Reese’s Puffs (General Mills) Literalists beware: These
pellets no more resemble Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups than Lucky Charms resemble
Celtic talismans. But are abstract signifiers of trademarked candies a crime?
Perhaps not. These puffs certainly slide down the gullet agreeably
enough. The trouble starts when determined formalists claim to tell the
difference between the blackish “chocolate” balls and the brownish “peanut butter”
ones. I say they’re sensing ghosts in the whitewash of milk. Though
pleasant, such illusion is a pale replacement for honest-to-goodness
distinction. B-

Category:

  • Management

Copyright tracking companies join forces

Author: JT Smith

From Wired.com: “An alliance between three media file-tracking companies makes it possible to monitor, track, contact and shut down
the systems of users who engage in illegal activity on the Internet.

BayTSP, Media Enforcer and Copyright.net — companies that have applications to search for copyrighted materials
— agreed to share their tracking technologies with each other as part of an equity deal that creates a loose federation
of companies involved in rights management.”

10th USENIX Security Symposium

Author: JT Smith

USENIX Association tells us about the 10th USENIX Security Symposium, August 13-17, 2001, in Washington, D.C.
http://www.usenix.org/events/sec01. Register by July 20, and save up to $200. The theme of the symposium is, “Practical Security for the Real World.” Keynote addresss by Richard M. Smith, CTO, Privacy Foundation: “Web-Enabled Gadgets: Can We Trust Them?”

24 refereed papers on the best new research:
Denial of Service
Math Attacks!
Key Management
Hardware
Managing Code
Firewalls/Intrusion Detection
Operating Systems
Authorization

Invited talks by leaders in the field:
* Matt Blaze, AT&T Research Labs
* Mark Eckenwiler, U.S. Department of Justice
* Eric Murray, SecureDesign, LLC
* John Young, Crytome.org
* Deborah Natsios, Carome.org
* and others!

In depth, immediately useful tutorials:
* Wireless IP Security and Connectivity
* Network Security

* Intrusion Detection and Network Forensics
* Hacking Exposed: Live!
* Cryptographic Algorithms Revealed
* VPN Architecture and Implementation

The 2001 10th Security Symposium is sponsored by
USENIX, the Advanced Computing Systems Association. www.usenix.org

Category:

  • Linux

MS launches counter PR attack against monopoly charges

Author: JT Smith

From Wired.com: “Microsoft’s enemies are wagging fingers once again, pointing
at the company’s ambitious plans for .NET, the launch of Office XP on
Thursday, and the scheduled introduction of Windows XP on Oct. 25 as
additional examples of Microsoft’s attempts to maintain its operating system
monopoly.

This time, however, Microsoft and its allies don’t view the threats as idle ones.
Since the 1997 antitrust case began, Microsoft has dramatically expanded its
Washington presence, moving its lobbying office downtown and hiring dozens
more lobbyists and lawyers.”

Save hours of coding with Apache’s Jakarta Taglibs

Author: JT Smith

From O’Reilly Network: “JSP (JavaServer Pages) development often consists of many tasks that
are common and repeatable. Wouldn’t it be great if there were
existing libraries that everyone could use without having to write
them? There are, and some of the most useful are Apache’s Jakarta
Taglibs. A recent article on ONJava.com covers the Jakarta Taglib
project, and how to advantage of some great open source JSP tag
libraries.” Here’s a quote from article author Sue Spielman: “The value of open source is that
you can use (and contribute) code that has been run, reviewed, and
tested by many…If you are using custom tag libraries in your JSP,
and you are not using at least one of the Jakarta taglibs in the
project, you may be spending money on development cycles that are
both unnecessary and wasteful. Simple enough.”

U.K. e-Envoy’s office defends Windows-only portal

Author: JT Smith

From The Register: “The Office of the e-Envoy is hotly – but not very convincingly – disputing claims
that the Microsoft-built UK government portal, gateway.gov.uk, constitutes a
Microsoft tax … In response to what seems to be a barrage of irate emails directed at e-Envoy
Andrew Pinder, one Keith Roberts of the Office of the e-Envoy has been sending
out a detailed explanation of the current situation. In, we kid you not, Microsoft Word
format.”

Napster hit with another copyright charge

Author: JT Smith

Reuters reports that MediaBay, a seller of old-time radio shows over the Internet, says it has filed a complaint against Napster, charging copyright infringement and unfair competition.

Gnutella: First among equals

Author: JT Smith

NewSecientist.com has a feature on Gnutella. “Gnutella was designed to create a more pure peer-to-peer network. The first version
removed the need for Napster’s central servers by sending requests for files to every
computer on the network …

Ironically, Gnutella is now moving back to a system reminiscent of Napster. Recent
refinements to Gnutella and related software reduce the burden on the network by
stopping clients with slow connections acting as servers. Instead, proxy servers – called
reflectors – host information for the slower clients and reduce the overall strain on the
network.”

OSDL to open first Asian Linux lab

Author: JT Smith

IDG.net follows up on reports that the Open Source Development Lab is opening a facility near Tokyo, in addition to the first lab at Portland, Ore. Founders hope to attract more Asian developers to the Japanese facility.

Category:

  • Open Source

Configuring Linux and Squid as a Web proxy

Author: JT Smith

SecurityFocus.com has the how-to article. “A web proxy server is a useful service to have on your network, or between your network and the Internet, as it provides an extra
security layer that insulates your users from the Internet. A proxy server can also act as a cache, allowing users to share downloads
transparently and speeding up Internet access, especially for frequently-used files. Squid is a high-performance and relatively secure
web proxy server that includes good caching facilities. It is one of the most commonly used proxy servers on the Internet.”

Category:

  • Linux