« October 14, 2007 - October 20, 2007 | Main

October 27, 2007

Rhizome re-launches!

rhiz-new.gif

A superb upgrade of the new media community site

Some of the changes:

1. A major change (for RHIZOME_RAW email list subscribers) is the breaking up of the list into 3 different categories: discussion, opportunities and an arts calendar. This required me to redo my email filters a tad, but also gives me the option to filter categories I don’t want or filter them more granularly.

2. The member pages have been transformed into profiles pages with lots more features: enhanced portfolio section (unclear of whether the portfolio entries get added to the artbase automatically), ability to upload audio and video (very cool) and include the feed from your blog. The organizational improvements to the profile page makes it much easier to read and see how the person is interacting with the platform.

3. There has been a major visual re-design. The front page is easier to scan quickly and is laid out more logically. The top navigation has been improved.

4. The discussion board is much better. One can now drill way back in time very quickly. The only problem is that it seems to go back only to 2002. Also, it would be nice to filter these pages (Max Herman is just as annoying now as he was then) but I suppose that’s what the advanced search is for. Which brings me to…

…Bugs. I did run into some bugs. The biggest bug being that the advanced search form isn’t working (I’ve been waiting and waiting this feature). I’m hoping to see major speed improvements in the search. Also with search, it would be nice to have the same sort of pagination in the search results as we get in the discussion area.

But enough of bug talk. This is a major, major upgrade for Rhizome and a big improvement. Lauren, Patrick and Marisa should be very proud. Congrats!

October 26, 2007

All Things Considered

In what might be the first interview on park effects in the history of the show, I was on with Melissa Block on All Things Considered this afternoon to consider how Coors Field and Fenway Park are impacting the World Series. You can listen to the audio here.

Macaron Week Round-Up

macarons-itsover.jpg

Of course those are Pierre Hermé macarons.

I hope you enjoyed reading this week's macaron posts as much as I enjoyed writing and doing research for them. And by "doing research" I mean "eating a lot of macarons."

Here's a round-up of the posts in case you missed any of them:

In a related Talk topic, Sandro asked, "People just pretend to actually love macaroons, right?" My answer would be, "No, I'm quite sure I love them. But maybe I should eat another one just to be sure."

For more macaron goodness, check out Carol Gillot's latest post on Paris Breakfasts where she visits Gérard Mulot's macaron-filled kitchen. Aside from the photos of muti-tiered macaron-filled tray carts, the part of the entry that most grabbed me was this paragraph:

Many of the stagieres / workers are from Japan. There are (are you sitting down!) 18 Gerard Mulot shops in Japan just selling ONLY MACARONS!!!! WOW! They all come to Paris to learn the recipe and get the training. Hello? YOW American pastry chefs get off your duffs and get on!

I'll gladly go to Paris to be properly trained in the macaron arts.

● FFFFOUND!, art curating for the masses

Alexander Bohn wrote a glowing review of FFFFOUND! at Speak Up the other day. My FFFFOUND! fandom is documented elsewhere, so I'll comment instead on an observation Bohn made in his initial paragraph:

Graphic design might not work in the white cube, but it flourishes on a white background. A new mutated strain of design blog has evolved: The Randomly Curated Other People's Images White Background Site, or RCOPIWS. Sites like Manystuff, Monoscope, Your Daily Awesome, and VVORK (among countless others) offer designers and design aficionados a constant flood of typographic morsels, interesting photos, arresting new art, and the like. One such site sets itself apart, notably, from the other RCOPIWSes: the collaborative image-bookmarking site ffffound.comallegedly, but unconfirmed, initiated by online fiend Yugo Nakamura.

Among the many things that the internet has democratized is curating, a task once more or less exclusive to editors (magazine, book, and newspaper), art gallery owners, media executives (music, TV, and film), and museum curators. They choose the art you see on a museum's wall, the shows you see on TV, the movies that get made, and the stories you read in the newspaper. The ease and low cost of publishing on the web coupled with the abundance of sample-ready media has made the curating process available to many more people. Smashing Telly is David Galbraith's rolling film festival (or TV channel). By simply listening to the music that you like, Last.fm allows anyone to put together their own radio station to share with others. kottke.org is essentially a table of contents for a magazine I wish existed. Shorpy has freed old photography from the nearly impenetrable Library of Congress web site and presented it in a compelling blog-like fashion.

In the case of FFFFOUND! and other RCOPIWSs, I would argue that these sites showcase a new form of art curating. The pace is faster, you don't need a physical gallery or museum, and you don't need to worry about crossing arbitrary boundaries of style or media. Nor do you need to concern yourself with questions like "is this person an artist or an outsider artist?" If a particular piece is good or compelling or noteworthy, in it goes. The last week's output at Monoscope would make a pretty good show in a Chelsea art gallery, no? It'll be interesting to see how this grassroots art curating will affect the art/design/photography world at large. Jen Bekman, who has roots in the internet industry, is already exploring this new frontier with her nimble gallery and the Hey, Hot Shot! competition. Others are sure to follow.

Sarah Hepola has a pair of interviews up on her site...

Sarah Hepola has a pair of interviews up on her site with two Mormon teens (first interview, second interview).

Joseph Smith was evil incarnate -- a little insane, but more evil. Sort of like Charles Manson, only slightly better looking.

I hereby declare the interviewees the two most articulate teenagers on the internet. (via the morning news)

(link)

Ben Tesch is about to launch a collaborative weather site...

Ben Tesch is about to launch a collaborative weather site called cumul.us. It'll aggregate weather information and harness the wisdom of crowds to see if they can make better weather predictions than the experts.

Will this all work? Who knows, but it only took me two months to make, and I wanted to find out.

Unlike so many other types of information, the web has had little impact on how weather reporting is done (the Weather Channel stuff is still rudimentary), so it'll be interesting to see if this works.

(link)

Peak oil: Chevron CTO's best guess

News.com's blog reports on how much oil we have left, in the estimate of Chevron CTO Don Paul: About 1 trillion gallons that we can extract, and another trillion that, for now, we can't. In a hallway conversation with a News.com reporter, Chevron's Paul estimated that we will have consumed half of all the oil that ever existed -- 1.5 trillion gallons, out of 3 trillion -- by 2012. From the story:

Thus, peak oil--the theory that we're about to get into declining numbers on conventional oil--is probably real. However, Paul said, "I don't think it has to be the catastrophe that other people have predicted, because there are other ways to make fuel."

Watch TED.com in the coming weeks for more on alternative fuels, including Juan Enriquez's recent talk at TED's fall Salon, on new ways to grow energy -- related to his exciting work with Craig Venter at Synthetic Genomics.

Or take the point of view of TEDTalks favorite James Howard Kunstler. Near the end of Kunstler's talk on modern suburbia, he describes a post-peak-oil future that actually doesn't sound that bad: We'll work and eat locally. We'll rely on our neighbors. We'll ... walk.

October 25, 2007

Wes Anderson is racist. Dr. James Watson is racist....

Wes Anderson is racist.
Dr. James Watson is racist.
Tyler Perry critics are racist.
The fashion industry is racist.
Halle Berry is racist.
The Department of Homeland Security is racist.
Indie rock is racist.
Global warming is racist.
Martin Amis is racist.
Iggy Pop is racist.
Pixar is racist.
Michael Bay is racist.

(link)

World Series Ticket Website Hacked?

Maybe:

The Colorado Rockies will try again to sell World Series tickets through their Web site starting on Tuesday at noon.

Spokesman Jay Alves said tonight that the failure of Monday's ticket sales happened because the system was brought down today by an "external malicious attack."

There was a presale that "went well":

The Colorado Rockies had a chance Sunday to test their online-sales operation in advance.

Season-ticket holders who had previously registered were able to log in with a special password to buy extra tickets.

Alves said the presale went well, with no problems.

But some people found glitches, such as being told to "enable cookies" and to set their computer security to the "lowest level." And some fans couldn't log in at all.

Alves explained that those who saw a "page cannot be displayed" message had "IP addresses that we blocked due to suspicious/malicious activity to our website during the last 24 to 48 hours. As an example, if several inquiries came from a single IP address they were blocked."

Certainly scalpers have an incentive to attack this system.

William Safire, who now does the On Language column for the...

William Safire, who now does the On Language column for the NY Times, wrote a speech for President Nixon in 1969 in the event that something happened during the Apollo 11 mission to strand the astronauts on the moon.

Fate has ordained that the men who went to the moon to explore in peace will stay on the moon to rest in peace.

(via cyn-c)

(link)

10 questions that are illegal to ask during a job...

10 questions that are illegal to ask during a job interview, including where were you born? and Do you have children?

(link)

Japanese Manhole Covers

Manholes

One more reason to visit Japan. Via bbGadgets.

Jessica Seinfeld and plagiarism

Jessica Seinfeld's cookbook is unoriginal, but it's not plagiarism.

Shit We're Diggin': Edina Tokodi's "Green Graffiti"

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You can learn more about Edina's work on Inhabitat.

Natalie Portman's Naked Mistake

natalie portman's naked mistake
Serious actress Natalie Portman gets naked in her new short film, Hotel Chevalier, and has decided that it was a mistake to show off her goodies.

The shots of the actress baring her ass-etts (see them here) in the film hit the internet weeks ago, and Nat says that she regrets showing her stuff-- and should have listened to her heart.

"I'm really sorry I didn't listen to my intuition," she said. "From now on, I'm going to trust my gut more. Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is say no."

Really? I thought the most powerful thing you could do was strip down naked and tell everyone to kiss your skinny, white butt. Silly me.
iVillage Daily Blabber Widget

October 24, 2007

Ranking College Football Teams

Three years ago I fooled around with doing my own computer rankings of college football teams. I’ve decided to try it again, this time using some ideas from elementary kinetics.

The quality of each team is determined by its position on a line. Teams with better wins and better losses have a higher position than teams with worse wins and worse losses. All teams start out at position 0, and then move around the line based on the games they played, their scores of these games, and the quality/position of their opponents. This movement is modeled as follows:

  • is the number of points that team i scored against team j.
  • is the set of opponents that team i has played.
  • is the quality and position of team i.
  • is the velocity of team i
  • is the drag coefficient, which dampens the oscillations in the system.
  • is the net force being exerted on team i by its opponents. It is calculated by the following equation: .

If is a small unit of time, then the velocity and position of team i are updated as follows.

From the starting position of all teams at 0, the system is allowed to run according to the above equations until it stabilizes within a certain tolerance.

Running the algorithm on the games played so far with and a stabilizes at iteration 2056. The full results can be found in this file. Below is a table of the top best fifty teams. Their positions have been scaled based such that the best team has a position of 100, and the worst 1-A team has a position of 0.

RankTeamRecordPositionRankTeamRecordPosition

1LSU7-1-010026Oklahoma St5-3-066.76833079
2Ohio State8-0-091.9177020627Georgia5-2-066.26334342
3Oregon6-1-090.3764905928Texas Tech6-2-064.5558861
4Florida5-2-089.9865003429Clemson5-2-064.43963901
5Kansas7-0-088.5602859930Michigan6-2-063.79715507
6Oklahoma7-1-088.1665458431UCLA5-2-063.37091573
7South Florida6-1-084.7003824932Illinois5-3-062.57093573
8Arizona St7-0-084.6453838733Colorado4-4-062.11719707
9Auburn5-3-083.0329241834Vanderbilt4-3-061.96470088
10West Virginia6-1-083.0179245535Washington2-5-061.9359516
11Kentucky6-2-079.3217669636Boise St6-1-060.91472713
12Missouri6-1-078.8542786437Georgia Tech5-3-060.79973001
13Kansas St4-3-077.7968050838Brigham Young5-2-059.90100247
14Arkansas4-3-074.7406314839Michigan St5-3-058.60603485
15Rutgers5-2-072.4256893640Virginia7-1-058.51728707
16Penn State6-2-071.1894702641Florida St4-3-058.44603885
17Cincinnati6-2-070.991975242Texas A&M6-2-057.41231469
18Southern Cal6-1-070.6069848343Louisville4-4-057.29856754
19Alabama6-2-070.5544861444Purdue6-2-056.90607735
20Texas6-2-070.3432414245Maryland4-3-056.90232744
21Virginia Tech6-1-069.7370065746Tennessee4-3-056.70733232
22South Carolina6-2-068.9957751147Miami FL5-3-056.48983775
23California5-2-068.8007799848Oregon St4-3-056.1398465
24Connecticut6-1-067.8183045449Wake Forest5-2-055.73110672
25Boston College7-0-067.5258118550Troy5-2-054.97737557

Now how do we know these rankings are any good? There is no “right” way to rank teams. However, there are two things that I think every computer rating system should be able to roughly do: 1) sort out the divisions and 2) sort out teams based on records. This ranking does both of these, so I’d call it a success. I still need to work on balancing blow-outs and shut-outs. I think I’m currently giving the offenses too much control over the rankings.

Report from San Diego: I'm Having a Hard TIme Getting Started on my Blogging with All the Fires Around Me in San Diego

San Diego Fires - How 1 fire compares to the island of Manhattan, NYC (all the fires are bigger than the tri-state area!)Hello YouMeiTI readers, as part of my October list to-do's now that I am all settled from traveling- blogging on YouMeiTI was my top priority. But I have a good excuse this week for slowing down again just as I was about to warm up - my city is burning up! Seriously.
I spend quite a lot of time in San Diego, CA - and right now I am surrounded by swaths of uncontained fires. I have friends who are evacuated at my house, and friends who trying to anticipate the direction of the capricious winds.

I usually don't blog about personal events on YouMeiTI, but I thought I this is an appropriate post because I can give you a first hand report about how seriously big the fires are in San Diego. The large news conglomerates in the USA are primarily focusing on the Los Angeles fires because of all their celebrities. But the fires in LA pale in comparison to the SD fires. In addition, when the SD news covers the fire, it mainly focuses on the luxury mansions in North County. In reality, it is also affecting the middle-lower class neighborhoods of South County - where there are more Mexicans - and it is 5-10 miles from the Mexican border. San Diego FireS

Just to give you an idea of how big this fire is, here is a map with the city of Manhattan imposed on top of just ONE fire. There are at least 8 large fires burning right now. I am not burning, and neither is my house. The air is so horrific here that I have constant headaches, burning nasal passages and nausea. I am at least 15 miles (and many canyons) from the closest fire. I am updating about the fires on a regular basis at my personal blog where I have some video, pictures and media analysis. So give me a few more days to get myself resettled in San Diego. - tricia

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Apple Wireless Keyboard LED at 40X: Ever wonder how the power LED shows through the aluminum of Apple's new wireless keyboard when it's on, but blends into the metal when it's off? Here's how. (thanks, John)

Overheard on Lafayette & Houston

If only the Pope were Japanese!

Oh, if only...

I love people...sometimes.

i really just want to be like jason

There's nothing better than chatting with customers...especially when you're reading their book at the same time. (OK, not at exactly the same time. You know what I mean.) Now on Everything TypePad, a brief interview with Alex Ross.  (And that, ladies and gentlemen, makes Ross the direct or indirect subject of three of the last five posts here. I'll move on soon, I swear.)

The director of the Rotterdam Natural History Museum is looking...

The director of the Rotterdam Natural History Museum is looking for someone to donate pubic lice, which lice are difficult to find these days, possibly because of a decrease in pubic hair due to waxing.

When the bamboo forests that the Giant Panda lives in were cut down, the bear became threatened with extinction. Pubic lice can't live without pubic hair.

(link)

NYTimes == scooped by me :)

NYTimes == scooped by me :)

"Microsoft to Pay $240 Million for Stake in Facebook" While this is clearly insane (unless you are an investor), this quote from the article sums up why Facebook should be/will be more successful than MySpace:
"MySpace is not based on authentic identities. Facebook is based on who you really are and who your friends really are. That is who marketers really want to reach, not the fantasy you that lives on MySpace and uses a photo of a model,” [venture capitalist Lee Lorenzen] said.

How to Make Macarons

macarons-recipe.jpg

My friend Lisa making passionfruit macarons at Jacques Torres Chocolate Haven.

I'm ashamed to admit that while I have eaten many macarons, I've never made them on my own.

Thankfully, plenty of other people must more skilled in the culinary arts than I am have bravely attempted to make macarons in their home kitchens and have shared their results on that massive virtual brain called the Internet. I'm going to list the most promising recipes I found while aggressively sifting through the web and, from those, pool together a list of tips and tricks for optimum macaron creation. All that info follows after the jump.

Clement's recipe at A La Cuisine was the most often cited recipe I found while searching through blogs. It also differed from almost every other recipe I found due to giving measurements in volume rather than weight. I would assume that weight is the more accurate way to go, but many have successfully reproduced his recipe. To the best of my ability, I converted his measurements from volume to weight and compared them to other recipes I found below to give you a basic macaron cookie recipe.

Basic Macaron Cookie

Steps adapted from A La Cuisine. Ingredients adapted from A La Cuisine, Chubby Hubby, Veronica's Test Kitchen, Ladurée and Yochana's Pierre Hermé recipe.

The number of cookies the recipe makes depends on how large you form your cookies. Most recipes failed to give an estimate. If I had to make an educated guess I'd say you could make 30-50 macaron sandwiches with this recipe.

Ingredients

225 grams icing sugar
125 grams ground almonds
110 grams egg whites (about 4), aged overnight at room temperature
30 grams granulated sugar
Pinch of salt

Procedure

1. On three pieces of parchment, use a pencil to draw 1-inch (2.5 cm) circles about 2 inches apart. Flip each sheet over and place each sheet on a baking sheet. [Note: You only have to draw circles on the parchment paper if you want absolutely even-sized macarons. If you're skilled with piping and don't mind eyeballing the amount of batter per cookie, skip this step.]

2. Push almond flour through a tamis or sieve, and sift icing sugar. Mix the almonds and icing sugar in a bowl and set aside. If the mixture is not dry, spread on a baking sheet, and heat in oven at the lowest setting until dry.

3. In a large clean, dry bowl whip egg whites with salt on medium speed until foamy. Increase the speed to high and gradually add granulated sugar. Continue to whip to stiff peaks—the whites should be firm and shiny.

4. With a flexible spatula, gently fold in icing sugar mixture into egg whites until completely incorporated. The mixture should be shiny and 'flow like magma.' When small peaks dissolve to a flat surface, stop mixing.

4. Fit a piping bag with a 3/8-inch (1 cm) round tip. Pipe the batter onto the baking sheets, in the previously drawn circles. Tap the underside of the baking sheet to remove air bubbles. Let dry at room temperature for 1 or 2 hours to allow skins to form.

5. Bake, in a 160C/325F oven for 10 to 11 minutes. Use a wooden spoon to keep the oven door slightly ajar, and rotate the baking sheet after 5 minutes for even baking.

6. Remove macarons from oven and transfer parchment to a cooling rack. When cool, slide a metal offset spatula or pairing knife underneath the macaron to remove from parchment.

7. Pair macarons of similar size, and pipe about 1/2 tsp of the filling onto one of the macarons. Sandwich macarons, and refrigerate to allow flavors to blend together. Bring back to room temperature before serving.

Bittersweet Chocolate Cream Ganache

Adapted from Chocolate Desserts by Pierre Herme by Dorie Greenspan.

- makes about 2 cups (550 grams) -

Ingredients

8 ounces (230 grams) bittersweet chocolate, preferably Valrhona Guanaja, finely chopped
1 cup (250 grams) heavy cream
4 tablespoons (2 ounces; 60 grams) unsalted butter, at room temperature

Procedure

1. Place the chocolate in a bowl that's large enough to hold the ingredients and keep it close at hand. Bring the cream to a full boil in a heavy-bottomed saucepan. While the cream is coming to the boil, work the butter with a rubber spatula until it is very soft and creamy. Keep the butter aside for the moment.

1. While the cream is at the boil, remove the pan from the heat and, working with the rubber spatula, gently stir the cream into the chocolate. Start stirring in the center of the mixture and work your way out in widening concentric circles. Continue to stir—without creating bubbles—until the chocolate is completely melted and the mixture is smooth. Leave the bowl on the counter for a minute or two to cool the mixture down a little before adding the butter.

3. Add the butter to the mixture in two additions, mixing with the spatula from the center of the mixture out in widening concentric circles. When the butter is fully incorporated, the ganache should be smooth and glossy. depending on what you're making with the ganache, you can use it now, leave it on the counter to set to a spreadable or pipeable consistency (a process that could take over an hour, depending on your room's temperature) or chill it in the refrigerator, stirring now and then. (If the ganache chills too much and becomes too firm, you can give it a very quick zap in the microwave to bring it back to the desired consistency, or just let it stand at room temperature.)

macarons-finished.jpg

Finished macarons filled with passion fruit-flavored white chocolate ganache.

More Macaron Recipes

A Few Tips

Sift your ingredients, multiple times if necessary. You want your ground nuts to be powdery. No lumps! Almond and icing sugar mixture may be pulsed in a food processor to make finer.

Use old egg whites. No really, leave them out for three days at room temperature if you don't mind waiting for that long. Using fresh egg whites is more likely to result in macarons that are too fragile and flat. Read Veronica's Test Kitchen for more info.

Cooked Italian meringue may be used instead of the uncooked French one. Read Foodbeam's recipe to learn how to make it.

The final macaron batter should have the consistency of magma. What's the consistency of magma? Not too liquidy, nor too stiff. If you form a peak, it should slowly and completely sink back into the batter.

If the cookies form peaks on their tops after piping, flatten them with a wet fingertip.

Although many recipes call for it, letting the batter sit after piping may not be necessary. David Lebovitz didn't think this was an important step.

Prevent your macarons from burning by using a double layered baking sheet (stack two sheets on top of each other) and by propping the oven door open with a wooden spoon for the entire baking period or halfway through the baking period (depending on how large the macarons are or what recipe you're using).

To make it easier to remove the macarons from the parchment paper after baking, pour a little bit of water underneath the paper. After a while the steam will have loosened the macarons.

Let the macarons rest for a day before you eat them. They're supposed to taste better with a bit of rest. This might be the hardest rule to follow.

● Errol Morris finale on the Roger Fenton photographs

Errol Morris has posted the third and final installment of his quest to find out which of two Roger Fenton photographs taken during the Crimean War came first. It is as excellent (and lengthy) as the first and second parts. Morris asks "How can the real world be recovered from the simulacrum?" and arrives at a compelling answer (which I won't give away here) via sun-maps, shadow experts, The Wisconsin Death-Trip Effect, and ultimately, the Dust-Plunging-Straight-Down Test.

It is insane, but I would like to make the claim that the meaning of photography is contained in these two images. By thinking about the Fenton photographs we are essentially thinking about some of the most vexing issues in photography -- about posing, about the intentions of the photographer, about the nature of photographic evidence -- about the relationship between photographs and reality.

Morris' posts make me a bit sad though. Yes, because the series is concluded but also for two other reasons:

1. Morris' investigation sticks out like a sore thumb, especially compared to most popular media (newspapers, magazines, blogs, TV news). Why isn't Morris' level of skepticism and doggedness the norm rather than the delightful exception? Choosing the easy answer or the first answer that seems right enough is certainly compelling, especially under limited time constraints. Once acquired, that easy answer often becomes tied up with the ego of the person holding the belief...i.e. "this answer is correct because I think it's right because I'm smart and not easily duped and it proves the point I'm trying to make and therefore this answer is correct". Morris encountered dozens of easy and plausibly correct answers and rejected them all based on a lack of evidence, which allowed him to finally arrive at a correct answer supported by compelling physical evidence.

2. At the same time, lessons in photography and philosophy aside, what did we really learn? In the course of this investigation, Morris spent dozens of hours, wrote thousands of words, flew to the Ukraine, enlisted the help of several experts, and probably spent thousands of dollars. Based on seemingly insignificant details, he was able to determine that one photograph was taken slightly before another photograph. If so much energy was put into the discovery of that one small fact, how are we actually supposed to learn anything truthful about larger and more significant events like the Iraq War or global warming. Presumably there's more evidence to go on, but that's not always helpful. Does this completely bum anyone else the fuck out?

Despite Monitoring, Workplace Porn Persists

The Star-Ledger ran a story in July about a couple of local brothers who were going on a reality TV show because they invented a new kind of golf practice net that returned balls automatically. Of course, I had to...

October 23, 2007

new camphone post


I like newborns

I'm behind in several baby updates, but we have 2 new babies in our circle. Plus, we have one more coming in 30 days or so in North Carolina. All so exciting.

Now that I have Tesla, and know how precious newborns are, and how fun it is to see them grow into little beings, I'm all gaga over holding them and just looking. See how happy I am holding Aesha? The pictures are from about 5 weeks ago when she was just born. Both Ari and Toni look so wonderfully happy as parents too.

Last weekend, they all came over for dinner, and Michelle & Sofia too. Wtih Sofia and Tesla's toddler energy, our attention was divided, but we had a fun time. By the end of the evening when Sofia went home and Tesla was asleep, we all got to take turns comforting Aesha who started getting fussy. It was such a pleasure to hold her. Dav was so cute holding such a tiny baby again. Both Toni and Ari are doing great, and I got to pass down a bunch of T's summer clothes to Aesha.

Ben and Mena just recently welcomed Penelope, a much anticipated baby in our Six Apart world. Both Dav and I love that name. And isn't she just the cutest? I'm looking forward to seeing more of Penelope as Ben and Mena settle into family life. There are several babies at Six Apart now, and I love that Tesla is part of them.


mapping the electorate mood

passion_pulse.jpg
an online polling & visualization application that maps the mood of the (Australian) electorate in regards to specific quotes of politicians. in Passion Pulse, a timeline shows how levels of "passion" vary from controversial quote to quote, combining the participation rates & the cumulative intensity of each user's reaction.

users can also explore what is concerning the electorate by rolling over the "Passion Pulse graph" or comparing the distributions along the geographical or electorate map of Australia.

[link: ninemsn.com.au|thnkx Paul]

The Italian Job

2007_10_asti.jpgClutched like a shot put by a chef in Le Cirque's kitchen, here’s a photo we took of that $7000 truffle that has been making the news this week- it even landed in the Daily News' gossip pages. In true Page 6 style, we became ad hoc truffle paparazzi Tuesday night in an effort to score a candid of the truffle at the restaurant. Armed with our crummy digital camera and generally warded off by Le Cirque valets, we knew the moment had arrived when the delivery car pulled up: From 5 yards away, the October air literally filled with the smell of truffles as the car doors opened. This particular white truffle was found Monday in Italy and was rushed to Malpensa Aiport in Milan, where it boarded a flight for New York. There it was intercepted by renegade “truffle man” John Magazino of Primizie Fine Foods, and rushed with “bodyguard” in tow (Magazino’s friend, it turns out) to Le Cirque. Magazino, who was profiled last year in the New York Times, is currently shopping around the remaining few thousand dollars worth of truffles from the same haul as the mammoth fungus.

Gmail Gets IMAP

Huge news. This makes Gmail much more attractive to those using a desktop email client — or to anyone reading mail from an iPhone.

7-Up and OBP - the Red Sox and Rockies in Long At-bats

The Red Sox are known for having a patient approach at the plate, but they haven’t worked a significantly large number of long counts in the postseason.  In 10 games, Boston hitters have had only 38 plate appearances in which they’ve seen seven or more pitches (3.8 per game).  They have just six hits in those opportunities – three singles, a double, and two home runs for a batting average of .158 – but boast a .421 OBP thanks to having drawn 10 walks.  Of the 22 outs that were recorded against them,