Tag Archive for 'Internet'

The Origin of Vulturo

Been ego surfing this lazy Sunday afternoon. Courtesy of socialmention, I stumbled upon two wonderful videos featuring Vulturo, Prince of Darkness.

Many new people I meet me often ask me about the origin of this internet handle. I had already documented this over at my 1.0 blog, but that has long since been destroyed.

Guess this is as good a time as any to do it again: Vulturo is a Hanna-Barbera super villain from the late sixties, who appeared on a few early episodes of Birdman, and was then since revived in Cartoon Network’s parody spoof Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law.

As kids, my little brother and me often watched Cartoon network for hours on end – the non desified variety, remember the Yogi Bear era? – and had numerous disagreements about the stuff that came on air. One of the most common ones was my brother choosing to root for the good side while I chose to side with evil, often out of awe, and sometimes just to spite him.

For example, my brother rooted for the Centurions while I did so for Doc Terror. There was Autobots vs Decepticons too. Birdman was this extremely annoying series which we often watched with ambivalence. Brother always rooted for Birdman, I didn’t care. Then Vulturo came along, a formidable adversary for the irritating Birdman, and I became an instant fan.

Here are those nostalgic videos:

Vulturo, Prince Of Darkness

Birdman’s sinister foe Vulturo suddenly appears at an astronomic conference and threatens the whole assembly unless Birdman agrees to meet him in a duel that will match Birdman’s superpowers against the awesome powers that Vulturo has devised. He even has a match for Avenger, a mechanical bird called Dirth. Fighting off each attack, Birdman’s powers begin to fade; he flies evasively, but finds out that the lives of the scientists at the conference are under threat of a time-bomb. Given back some strength by a passing comet, Birdman rushes to the scientists, as Vulturo escapes.

The Return Of Vulturo

An old enemy begins operation revenge by luring Birdman’s young companion, Birdboy, to his laboratory. First weakening him, he puts Birdboy on a conveyor belt directed toward a bottomless pit and waits. When Birdman arrives, the schemer causes the sky to cloud over to keep out the sun’s energy, locks him in with a paralyzing ray, and puts him on the conveyor belt too. Avenger stops the motion of the belt to allow Birdman time to wrench himself free, intercept the revengeful Vulturo, and have him locked up.

Come to think of it, the classic episodes don’t look so cool, and come across as frankly, quite stupid and cliched given the advances in animation and changes in modern sensibilities. But they were released in 1967/1968, more than 40 years ago, and were still entertaining for us Indian kids in the 90s.

Memorably enough, certainly, for me to choose Vulturo for an internet handle on IRC in early 2000, followed by MSN Chat, Blogger and everything else.

Internet Etiquette #1: Don’t Digg Your Own Blog Posts

Of late, I’ve been a very heavy consumer of social media and eagerly look forward to links, pictures and other stuff that my friends share online. The reason I pursue such content is because I value my friends’ tastes and hope to discover new things through them. I click through to most reasonable sounding links in my social stream and am rewarded more often than not.

It then pisses me to no end, when some of my contacts digg stories from their own blogs, or share stories from their own blog on Google Reader. The entry title more often than not is ambiguous, and its hard to tell who wrote the article.

I feel tricked when I discover that the cool story that you just dugg or shared through Google reader wasn’t something good you found online but something only you believe to be great, and just want to plug. If I’m really interested in what you write, I’ll read your blog. Just stop spamming them pipes.

Don’t get me wrong – It is absolutely cool to plug stuff from your own blog into your Twitter posts or Facebook Notes, for example. Those services are meant for people to communicate with their friends and self plugs are fair game there. As a matter of fact, I suppose Twitter Tools is going to crosspost a link to this blog post on Twitter clearly mentioning it as such.

But then, Digg is meant for for people to indicate appreciation of other people’s stuff. Google reader is meant for people to share interesting stories written by other people. Delicious is meant for sharing interesting links that you come across on the web. None of these are ideally meant to be used as self-advertising platforms.

Abusing your social stream isn’t good internet etiquette. So stop when you can.