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November 8, 2008

Drilling down to the source of the problem

I had an interesting tuning case few days ago. The system serving high traffic using Innodb tables would be stalling every so often causing even very simple queries both reads and writes taking long time to complete, with progress almost paused (dropping from thousands to tens of queries per second).

On the surface the problem looked simple - in the processlist every so often you would see a lot of queries, mostly selects taking 10+ seconds while at the same time there was no significant iowait, neither high CPU usage. Closer examination showed there were hundreds of queries stuck in the innodb queue, with innodb_thread_concurrency set to 8

Happily enough innodb_thread_concurrency is the variable which can be set online so it is easy to try a few different values and see what works best. In this case we decided to try removing restriction on runnable queries all together by setting it to 0.

The change made things different. Now there was no more trivial selects taking a lot of time but there were a lot of write queries taking a lot of time being… many of which SHOW INNODB STATUS showed as waiting on famous Innodb AUTO-INC lock.

That would be an easy excuse to blame everything on this lock, suggest upgrading to MySQL 5.1 and call it a day. Learning more about the system I however found out there are only some 20 inserts per second going to such table (which should not be the big deal even if they are serialized) plus it is not only inserts to table with auto increment were stalling but also inserts to the tables which did not have auto-increment columns and general updates. The stall was not caused by row level locks too.

Taking a closer look at Innodb flush activity showed this is checkpoint related problem. Unfortunately Innodb fuzzy checkpointing algorithm is not very smart causing stalls waiting for large portion of buffer pool is flushed before queries can proceed. As this is a common problem we have the patch for it.

What is very interesting in this case how true issues can really hide because of layers of false problems. The queries we first saw in the processlist were SELECTs but this is just because most queries in the application are selects and as soon as the thread concurrency slots were busy it is mostly selects which were stuck waiting.

The next symptom was AUTO-INC lock which again was a false one - because single insert slows down a lot of inserts pile up waiting on the AUTO-INC lock. Though this is not the main problem the main problem lives below - why the original insert is taking so long letting hundreds of AUTO-INC insert to pile up.

This was also very interesting case about optimal innodb_thread_concurrency. I continue reading (and hearing at the conferences) conflicting recommendations - some suggest to set 0 to avoid queue blocks, other suggest some low value to reduce internal contention. In reality though this option best setting is highly application dependent and you should not blindly use somebody elses advice on it. Try different values and see what works best for you. As I mentioned in the start of this post changing innodb_thread_concurrency is happily online operation.


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President-Elect

I've amassed a large folder of links to election-related articles that I've enjoyed over the past few months.  Some of these articles have challenged my understanding of certain issues.  Others, like the Siglo 21 endorsement, struck me for their depth of feeling.  I wanted to share a few of these with you.  I think it's clear from my selections that I endorsed Barack Obama but I also want to call attention to Senator John McCain's concession speech.  I thought it was incredible--gracious, kind, respectful.   

The Poetry of Barack Obama (via NYT)
Obama, Poet by Rebecca Mead

Harold Bloom, who in fifty-three years of teaching literature at Yale University has had many undergraduate poems pressed hopefully upon him said, when reached by telephone in New Haven last week, that he was not familiar with Obama’s oeuvre. But after studying the poems he said that he was not unimpressed with the young man’s efforts—at least, by the standards established by other would-be bards within the political sphere.


The Candidate
by William Finnegan

People in Illinois seem largely unaware of Obama’s long, annealing trip into their midst, although they often remark on his unusual calm. Now forty-two and a state senator, Obama emerged, in March, from a raucous primary as the Democratic nominee for the United States Senate. In a seven-person field, he received a remarkable fifty-three per cent of the vote—he even won the “collar” counties around Chicago, communities that supposedly would never support a black candidate. And everyone recalls that, as the votes were being tallied at his headquarters on Election Night, he seemed to be the least agitated person in the place.

Our Support to Barack Obama (Periódico Siglo 21)

For Siglo21, the candidacy of Barack Obama means the freedom and equality made flesh and blood in a political leader.

That only has the meaning of a beautiful season to live, and we want to be here to live it, including, being able to narrate it.

John McCain's Concession Speech

I urge all Americans ... I urge all Americans who supported me to join me in not just congratulating him, but offering our next president our good will and earnest effort to find ways to come together to find the necessary compromises to bridge our differences and help restore our prosperity, defend our security in a dangerous world, and leave our children and grandchildren a stronger, better country than we inherited.

Whatever our differences, we are fellow Americans. And please believe me when I say no association has ever meant more to me than that.

President-Elect Barack Obama, Victory Speech

Let us remember that it was a man from this state who first carried the banner of the Republican Party to the White House (note: referring to Civil War president Abe Lincoln) ­ a party founded on the values of self-reliance, individual liberty, and national unity. Those are values we all share, and while the Democratic Party has won a great victory tonight, we do so with a measure of humility and determination to heal the divides that have held back our progress. As Lincoln said to a nation far more divided than ours, 'We are not enemies, but friends ... though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection.' And to those Americans whose support I have yet to earn ­ I may not have won your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your President too.

"Barack Obama is our new president. I think I speak for everybody when I say, ‘Anybody mind if..."

“Barack Obama is our new president. I think I speak for everybody when I say, ‘Anybody mind if he starts a little early?’”

- David Letterman

November 7, 2008

What Photoshop Would Look Like in Real Life


What do you want to build using Movable Type?

Movable Type has a well earned reputation as an incredibly scalable, flexible and powerful publishing platform and is used by large enterprises, publishers and bloggers alike. Movable Type however was not designed exclusively for large publishers - Movable Type is in fact suitable for anyone wanting to create a web site, big and small.

To help our users build the next generation of popular, innovative and ground breaking blogs we have begun to invest heavily in one of the community's most critical resources: documentation. Movable Type's developer documentation has already received an enormous overall, and now we turn our attention to our documentation for designers.

In fact, our work has already begun on that documentation; but before we make too much progress, we wanted to first check with our community and see if we are covering the right concepts, tutorials and topics. We therefore invite you to check out our new Movable Type Designer Guide's table of contents and give us feedback on the set of topics it outlines for our new designer documentation. Do you feel it will leave any major questions for you unanswered? Do you wish it would just cover one more thing? Let us know, we want to hear from you!

We are also working on training materials and will soon be offering free webinars on Building Web Sites with Movable Type, just as soon as we work through and develop a solid curriculum. Check out the following preview of just such a training session:

If you are interested in attending a free webinar, let me know and I will let you know when we schedule our first session.

Do you have a passion or interest in our documentation? Want to stay up to date with our documentation project? Check out the following resources:

And finally, want to see the progress we have already made on our developer documentation? Check it out:

02138


Spread from the December 2008 issue of 02138, designed by Luke Hayman and Shigeto Akiyama of Pentagram.

News: Carter Named Ducks Manager

The Long Island Ducks have named Gary Carter their manager for 2009.

According to the team’s website, the Ducks will introduce Carter as manager at a 1:00 pm press conference on Monday at Citibank Park.

A small audience at the Lincoln Memorial

When it looked as though Obama was going to win the election, former photojournalist Matt Mendelsohn went to the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC expecting to find a huge crowd of celebrants.

I'd spent most of election night in front of the TV in Arlington, Va. But around 11 p.m. I couldn't sit idle any longer, which is why I sped to the memorial. When I arrived, I found a TV crew sitting on the plaza above the Reflecting Pool, waiting, I assumed, for a mob to arrive. I approached with cameras in hand. One of them looked up and said with a slight roll of his eyes, "Nothing to see here."

Instead he found a small group of people listening to Obama's acceptance speech on a transistor radio and shot this wonderful picture of the scene. I can't think of an image that better characterizes the grass-roots, get-out-the-vote, small-donations-by-millions-of-people aspect of Obama's campaign. (via 3qd)

Update: Here's another view of the same scene. (thx, andy)

(link)

● 2666 by Roberto Bolano

2666 is a novel written by Roberto Bolaño and published posthumously in Spanish in 2004. The English translation hits stores next Tuesday and the reviews couldn't be better, especially considering the book's 912 pages. From Jonathan Lethem's review in the NY Times Book Review, reprinted in the IHT:

"2666" is the permanently mysterious title of a Bolaño manuscript rescued from his desk after his passing, the primary effort of the last five years of his life. The book was published in Spanish in 2004 to tremendous acclaim, after what appears to have been a bit of dithering over Bolaño final intentions - a small result of which is that its English translation has been bracketed by two faintly defensive statements justifying the book's present form. They needn't have bothered. "2666" is as consummate a performance as any 900-page novel dare hope to be: Bolaño won the race to the finish line in writing what he plainly intended as a master statement. Indeed, he produced not only a supreme capstone to his own vaulting ambition, but a landmark in what's possible for the novel as a form in our increasingly, and terrifyingly, post-national world. "The Savage Detectives" looks positively hermetic beside it.

Lethem also compares a part of 2666 to Murakami's The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, which means, like, hey sign me up. (thx, matt)

(More about this book...)

Starting Pitcher: The case for Perez

In a column for the New York Observer, Howard Megdal makes the case for the Mets re-signing Oliver Perez. He writes:

The most frequent attack on Perez is that he is too inconsistent to be relied upon. But leaving aside the fact that he just completed his age-26 season… the charge simply isn’t true.

From June 3 through the end of the season, Perez pitched at least six innings in 17 of 22 starts, striking out roughly a batter an inning and pitching to a 3.56 ERA… His effort from June 3 on matches almost exactly his 2007 season, when he struck out nearly a batter an inning and pitched to a 3.56 ERA.

Megdal uses historical comparisons to evaluate Perez’s case for returning against some of the other likely options, including free-agent starter Derek Lowe.

Speaking of which, I wrote a column on SNY.tv today about the frustrating rumor mill and the market for starting pitching.

I’m a bit concerned by all the Edwin Jackson talk, because I fear his perceived value might be a lot higher than his actual value:

Based on some surface-level stats, Jackson showed solid improvement in 2008, going 14-11 with a 4.42 ERA in 183 1/3 innings. That’s a fine season for a 24-year-old, but I’m concerned by Jackson’s lofty walk and home-run rates.

His youth, combined with a fortunate record in front of a great defense and strong lineup, will drive up his price. Plus Jackson still carries some of the mega-prospect cache from his teenage years in the Dodgers’ system.

For more on that, check out the column.

New Presentations published (Meetup and Highload)

We have finally found the time to update out presentation pages - we’ve added the presentation on MySQL Scaling by Sharding and Replication as well as Russian Language presentations I’ve given at HighLoad++ conference back in October.
Innodb Scalability and New Features (Russian),
Scaling MySQL-powered Web Sites by Sharding and Replication (Russian),
Wonderful World of MySQL Storage Engines (Russian).

Now some feedback about these events

Meetup had a pretty impressive turnout and I got the feeling it went really good. I really enjoy talking when there is a little time pressure though some people mentioned their invite mentioned it will be one hour only… bad luck.

It is also a great challenge to balance between presentation length, focus and area of detail. This presentation was indeed more overview though my experience from previous meetings shows most people on meetups are not very advanced and this presentation would be good match for them. Though this also means some people did not get the level of details they wanted to see. On the other hand focusing on the deep problems would require much more narrow topic for the same presentation length plus, really, the narrow topic means it is not only interested to less of the people but also it applies to less applications. General advice is broad but problem as well as exact solutions are very application specific. This is exactly how we can openly publish everything we know on the blog (and book) but still do consulting as a business.

For MySQL Users Conference I took the different approach this year having almost no general suggestions but rather very focused talks, such as “How to manage replication lag”. Lets see how this impresses selection board.

Now about HighLoad++. This was the fun conference though it was hard this year because I just arrived from the US the night before and so was rather tired to do my presentations. In general this conference had a lot of good presentations both from Russia and other countries and a lot of attendees which were interesting to speak to. At the same time many people which were on the conference this year there missing this time, going to the competing HighLoad conference taking place couple of weeks before. I guess the organizers had their differences causing conference to split but for me as a speaker and for many attendees it would be more values if these were united.

Another thing to improve is recording. First I should mention it is great there was an attempt to record all talks. On MySQL Users Conference, Velocity, or OSCON very few talks get recorded. At the same time recording could be better.

Anyway enjoy presentations and I’m looking forward to speaking in more events on more topics :)


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An observatory in your pocket: Star Walk for iPhone and iPod touch

Filed under: , ,


I've always had a fascination with astronomy. Even when I'm not lugging my telescope out to do deep sky work, I'm using my eyes and binoculars to see what's visible in the night sky. Now I can use my iPhone to help me figure out where some of the night objects are -- even when it's light outside.

VITO Technology
has just released Star Walk (click opens iTunes), a US$4.99 astronomy app that shows you what's in the sky above. It has an internal database of almost 9,000 objects including the planets, various stars and clusters, and more.

While not for serious amateur astronomers, this is a great tool for anyone who is interested in knowing more about the universe they live in. There's a moon phase calculator, a time machine function to show you what the skies were like or will look like on any day. If you have an iPhone 3G, Star Walk uses GPS to automatically determine where you are on Earth to adjust the view. First-generation iPhone and iPod touch users can select their city from a list.

Star Walk should be a great app for teaching youngsters or yourself more about astronomy.

TUAWAn observatory in your pocket: Star Walk for iPhone and iPod touch originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 07 Nov 2008 14:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

TPM in 2009 and Beyond

After each of the last three election cycles, we've expanded TPM and changed the kind of organization we are. Along the way we've gone from a staff of one in early 2005 to a staff of eleven today.

After the 2004 cycle, we began launching TPM's sister sites (starting with TPMCafe.com) and building our own original reporting capacity (starting with TPMmuckraker.com).

After the 2006 election, we took that small network of sites with commentary and focused original reporting and began expanding it into a full service news site for political and hard national news, with original reporting, news aggregation and breaking news. That involved our move into video (with TPMtv), hiring new reporters and redesigning the site's main page with the news section you see to the right.

Now that the 2008 election is over we wanted to share with you what we have planned for 2008 and beyond. TPM began during the 2000 recount. And its evolution has been always been bound up with my stance as a voice of opposition to the Bush administration. So the end of the Bush years and the beginning of a new Democratic administration presents us with something dramatically new.

In fact, I think it's important to step back to recognize just how new it is in the history of the country. On paper, there was last unified Democratic control in Washington sixteen years ago during President Clinton's first two years in office and before that during President Carter's presidency. Looks, however, are deceiving. For more than half a century before 1992, the Democratic party was actually two parties, even after the Civil Rights movement cleared the old-style segregationists and neo-dixiecrats from the party -- a national party and a southern one, a fact that created conservative governing majorities on numerous issues. What's more, both Clinton and Carter ran on platforms of bucking their party and its entrenched congressional majorities. For both these reasons and many others, what will begin in January is something this country hasn't really seen since the first half of the 20th century.

So January will usher in a new Democratic Ascendancy in Washington. And here at TPM we believe we are uniquely qualified to chronicle it. So to that end we are hiring two new reporter-bloggers to be based in Washington, DC, one assigned to the White House and one assigned to Capitol Hill. The Obama White House and the expanded Democratic majorities on Capitol Hill are unquestionably the political story of the next two years. And with your help we plan to be there on the ground and and here in New York, covering it in force, fully, critically and down to the minute. We want to keep you informed on what you'd know if you were reporting every day at the White House or on the Hill. Think of us, in that sense, as an insiders' publication for outsiders, which is how I've always thought of us.

Now, the big dailies have dozens of reporters on this story. And the VC-backed internet outlets have not many fewer than that. So we're not going to -- and it's never been our plan -- to compete on numbers. But we do have you -- an audience that is more engaged than that of any other publication covering what we cover. That's not only important in the sense of the general support you've given us over the years that has allowed us to grow to this point. You're also a critical part of our reporting model, our big leg up on everyone else. And that's a relationship and a resource we're going to continue to deepen and rely on as we make this big next step.

We'll be sharing a lot more details with you over the next few weeks and months. So much more to come. If you have any questions comments, I'd love to hear from you.

Reason to Like Rahm Emanuel as White House Chief of Staff

Spotted in today's Times story on Barack Obama's emergency economic agenda:

Mr. Obama is coordinating with Congressional Democrats behind the scenes on the stimulus plans, which would include more jobless benefits, food stamps, aid to financially strapped states and cities, and spending for infrastructure projects that keep people at work. His chief liaison has been Mr. Emanuel.

"You don't ever want a crisis to go to waste; it's an opportunity to do important things that you would otherwise avoid," Mr. Emanuel said in an interview. "In 1974 and 1978 we never dealt with it, and our dependence on foreign oil never changed."

Good stuff, except for that "foreign" part.

New Yorker profile of Obama from 2004

The New Yorker has posted an article written by William Finnegan about a young fellow from Illinois running for the US Senate in 2004. That young fellow's name was Barack Obama, profiled two months before he strode onto the national stage at the Democratic National Convention.

"Teaching keeps you sharp," Obama said. "The great thing about teaching constitutional law" -- his subject -- "is that all the tough questions land in your lap: abortion, gay rights, affirmative action. And you need to be able to argue both sides. I have to be able to argue the other side as well as Scalia does. I think that's good for one's politics."

In writing the article, Finnegan ran across some people who thought Obama could be President someday but chose not to include those quotes because it felt "not only absurdly premature but like bad juju".

(link)

My Kid's First Presidential Election

A quick personal note on the election. My seven-year-old son, who's a far sharper political prognosticator than I, confidently predicted that Barack Obama would win the election way back in the early spring.

It took him about five seconds to figure it out. He was in the room playing with something or other while I was watching one of the Obama-Hillary debates, and I asked him who our next president would be. "Obama," he said, in the tone of someone patiently explaining that two plus two equals four, before returning to what he was doing.

I bring this up because it occurs to me that this huge historical triumph will be the first Presidential election he remembers. It's very possible that he will grow up in a period of sustained Democratic ascendancy. Unlike people whose formative years took place during the McCarthyism of the 1950s, or the tumult over Vietnam and Watergate in the 1960s and 1970s, or the Reagan revolution of the 1980s, or the impeachment circus in the 1990s, he could actually grow up perceiving our political system, and our leaders, as functional, effective, even sane.

His earliest memory of politics will be the sight of a black man getting elected president and running the country along with a cast of sober, responsible, even formidable Democratic leaders in Congress.

That's a humbling thought. It's a reminder how high the stakes were in the election and of just how big a victory it really was. And it's a reminder that all the work is just getting started, lest we take these gains for granted and they somehow slip away.

NYC is Not a Plastic Bag Hag... Maybe

anya hindmarch famous tote are you sick of it yet how red.jpgWho says the fashion people aren't ahead of the curve?

Practically eons after the canvas tote became the normal gift-with-product bag for every editor under the sun, New York City is finally catching on.

Mayor Bloomberg announced today that he's trying to push through a new plastic bag fee (or tax, depending on who you're talking to) for the City Council to consider, which entails charging shoppers $0.06 per every plastic bag used at the register, following in the steps of Ireland, San Francisco, and Ikea.

No word yet on whether the cost targets only delis and groceries, since many clothes stores (Macy's, H&M, etc) obviously use them, too.

We think it's a great idea. Not only would it pretty much kill the use of them, but we're totally prepared thanks to every event / party / fashion show / gift over the past couple years.


Poor man’s query logging

Occasionally there is a need to see what queries reach MySQL. The database provides several ways to share that information with you. One is called general log activated with --log (or --general-log in MySQL 5.1+) start-up parameter. The log writes any query being executed by MySQL to a file with limited amount of additional information. The other is slow log enabled by --log-slow-queries parameter (MySQL 5.1 requires also --slow-query-log), which was designed to store poorly performing queries that run at least 2 seconds. Percona actually extended the slow log to, among others, include any query regardless of the execution time.

The problem is that for both you need to prepare earlier either by enabling the logging before starting the database instance or, even more work, by applying the patch and rebuilding the entire database from sources.

I know that many databases out there run with none of these and it would require a restart to get the logging in place and possibly another restart to disable it when no longer necessary (though actually slow log can be disabled by simply setting long_query_time MySQL variable vale high enough).

So what can be done when you really need to see the queries, but can’t afford any downtime?

If you are a privileged user (i.e. root), you can use tcpdump on a database server to take a peek into a network stream and filter for packets that go to MySQL. Those packets contain queries. Here’s my quick one-liner which I will write in multiple lines:

garfield ~ # tcpdump -i eth0 -s 0 -l -w - dst port 3306 | strings | perl -e '
while(<>) { chomp; next if /^[^ ]+[ ]*$/;
  if(/^(SELECT|UPDATE|DELETE|INSERT|SET|COMMIT|ROLLBACK|CREATE|DROP|ALTER)/i) {
    if (defined $q) { print “$q\n”; }
    $q=$_;
  } else {
    $_ =~ s/^[ \t]+//; $q.=” $_”;
  }
}’

The output may contain little garbage, but it can be easily filtered out.

Obviously this method works only when applications communicate with MySQL through TCP sockets. When localhost (not to be confused with 127.0.0.1) is used as a MySQL host, this will not work since all traffic goes through a unix socket file.

Maciek


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Meet Our Advertisers #12: Lisa of Miss Helene's


Advance 9627


how long have you been in business? Since 1999, but I didn't start
selling patterns till 2000. I moved off eBay to Main Street Mall
Online's pattern mall three years ago, and I recently bought the
Vintage Fashion Library site, as well. Yeah, I'm not one to tolerate
not having anything to do!

what motivated you to go into the vintage patterns business? I was
looking for an interesting way to make some extra money on eBay. I
needed something that would be easy to hide from my rather OCD
husband, who hates clutter, so I started selling patterns, which were,
I figured, easy to hide in a closet. That was 17,000 patterns ago.
Hubby has now given up hope of having a room that is patternless.

what did you do before this? My "real" job is as a phone triage
nurse, taking phone calls from people who have medical questions.
It's pretty amusing, most days.

where are you based? Indianapolis. We live about 8 blocks from the
hospital where my husband was born, in the neighborhood he dreamed of
living in when he was a kid. Do I have a chance of moving? Never. I
did, however, grow up moving all the time, and had moved 12 times by
the age of 16. I like having roots now.

More fun questions:

what's the weirdest/best/craziest/most beautiful thing you've ever
found?
Most beautiful and best would
have to be my new favorite vintage pattern catalog (I collect). It's
a 1954 Spadea, full of Ceil Chapman, Tina Leser, Clare McCardell, Jo
Copeland
, and more. I'll sell it after I get it catalogued -- MAYBE.

Coolest would have to be the faux-lero pattern, which I'm still
waiting on Janet to sew, so I can see it (hint hint), another would
be a 1932 Vogue Pattern Book, that has a handwritten note next to one
dress, saying that she's wearing that dress on election night, "to the
Democratic candidate, Roosevelt's, house, on election night." Too
cool.

Craziest would probably be a vintage obstetrical corset, from the 40s.
I can't imagine strapping in a pregnant belly, but it came with
instructions on how to adjust it every month, as the belly grew. Oye.

what do you have in stock that you can't believe hasn't sold? The
Schiaparelli and Adrian patterns I have. But oh, they'd have to be
listed, right? Of my listed ones, I'd love to see the daring person
who snaps up this one!

what do you dream about finding? Pictorial Review catalogs from
the 1920s, with my grandmother's name in them. She was the original
Miss Helene, and was an editor for Pictorial Review.

what do you enjoy most about working with vintage patterns? I just love looking at them. It reminds me of years past, when ladies dressed like ladies, but it's also such a piece of history, watching the trends in styles, sizes, etc. I just love patterns, period.

what do you wish someone would ask you about your site? Not so much a question, but I like input as to what people like to see on the site. Probably my favorite thing is when people ask me "can you find XXX pattern for me because......" It's like a treasure hunt, and I have a pretty good success rate, even if they don't know the pattern number. And I just added credit card capability to the VFL, so now people don't have to just use PayPal, they can use plastic!

it's a good day at work when ...
I find a bunch of 30s patterns, or some Vogue Pattern books. Of course, no listing gets done, but I sure do enjoy looking at them.

if I ran the internet for a day I'd ... get rid of spam.

the blogs I read (other than ADAD are ...) The Girl Can't Help It
(hilarious!), The Vintage Traveler (such a nice read), The Vintage Goddess/Damn Good Vintage, and Zuburbia.


you'd laugh if you knew this about me ... I don't sew. I passed
home ec because I could cook. My sewing skills are rather limited,
but it's on my list of things to master before I die. God knows I
have enough patterns to choose from!


Oh, and a couple of other advertiser things to let you know about:

Sheila of Out of the Ashes decided to go camping this weekend and so she's having a special "gone camping" sale until Sunday, offering 15% off. Use coupon code GLAMIS!

Penny is renovating the Antique Dollhouse of Patterns, so her site will be down until December. Look for a big sale when she comes back, and you can still email her with pattern requests!

November 6, 2008

Truly Radical

As you may know the Obama's transition has now set up change.gov as the new transition website. And as TPM Reader SB points out there's already signs of the radicalism McCain and Palin warned the country about.

I've clipped out this section of their organization chart of the US government, which you can find linked on this page.

And as you can see, not only has the president been demoted to a position under the constitution. But the vice-president (as shown by the red arrow) has had his own fourth branch revoked and been reassigned to the executive branch ...

Pablo Cabado

pablocabado.jpg
I am not particularly a fan of the genre of photography that covers abandoned buildings or of the subgenre that covers abandoned amusement parks. Photographers are drawn to these places (myself included) because of the easy analogy to death and the perverse beauty of decay. Like many subjects imbued with easy emotional shorthand (unmade beds, grandparent's houses, strangers staring into the middle distance, gas stations at night, etc) the very attraction of hordes of photographers to abandoned theme parks turn most images of these things into tired clichés. But of course the thing about clichés is that they are also challenges. A good artists will take a cliché and turn it on it's head, or they will take an image so iconic that it becomes the defining image of the genre, or they will find subject matter so extreme in it's beauty that it forces us to consider it outside the context of the banal stream of other similar less beautiful images.

Argentinean photographer Pablo Cabado's 37*57'35"S 57*34'47"W is one of those projects that breaks from the pack. It's not just a bunch of pictures of a beautiful old abandoned amusement park, it's a self contained world gone topsy turvy. Large pigs roam the amusement park grounds only to be butchered by a band of rough looking men one would never like to encounter after dark. It's dark and heady stuff.

Also check out Cabado's much praised book, Cuba the 90s (Coleccion La Vista Gorda).

As a side note Cabado's bio notes he drives a 1971 Ford Falcon and anyone who drives a 71 Falcon is cool with me.

Filed under: photographers
Tags: Argentinean photography, pigs, roller coasters

Let's write a children's book called "Playground Sounds"

Rock rock rock

[Brrrrring! Turn the page!]

Climb climb climb

Bear_playground

Swing swing swing

[Brrrrring! Turn the page!]

Bridge bridge bridge

Look look look

Slide slide slide

The End.

Absolute redonkulousness brought to you by the letter "P" and Alaska Bear Playground by Umnak, Panda Cub by anitalee, Swinger by aqui-ali, queen of the castle by KCA, lookout by piggley, Sliding dog by fd.

About Last Night... PAPER's L.A. Project Opening Night Party with Santa's Party House

Last night, PAPER celebrated its arrival in La La Land with an opening night extravaganza hosted by the boys from our favorite New York nightspot Santa's Party House. Santa's boys/lil' helpers Andrew W.K., Spencer Sweeney, Derek Ferguson and Ron Castellano manned the decks as L.A. scenesters (Lady Tigra, Kelly Osbourne, Cindy Greene, Melissa Coker, China Chow, Malu Byrne, and a slew of others) sipped Asahis and Izzes in our storefront space on Sunset Boulevard. Adding to the excitement was a spontaneous anti-Prop-8 rally, which paraded along Sunset outside of our space. A jolly time was had by all. Photos by J. Everette Perry

TPMtv: They Couldn't Have Known

With the election over, the McCain campaign is in post-mortem mode. Could they really not have known what they were getting with Sarah Palin?

Full-size video at TPMtv.com.

Interview with Obama Cupcake Mosaic Artist

From Serious Eats

20081106-zillyrosen-interview.jpgCupcake blog Cupcake Takes the Cake interviewed Zilly Rosen, the baker and artist behind the 1,240 cupcake mosaic of Barack Obama's portrait, about how she made the mosaic along with other cupcake-related questions.

Top 10

I recently had the honor of being asked to do a guest Top 10 post for Blogs.com. My chosen subject: "The intersection of design and activism". It was nice to give some publicity to the blogs I enjoy reading. Check out my list HERE.

Bacon vs. Fries: The Serious Eats Nation Has Spoken

From Serious Eats

20081106-baconfries.png

Earlier today, I mentioned Bob Bacon trouncing Matt Fries in Colorado's District 14 State Senate election on Tuesday. In the comments there, Serious eater amanda0730 reminded us all of the "Would you rather give up bacon or french fries?" thread from July 29, 2008, in Talk.

With 56 serious eaters reporting, I'm ready to call that "election." Bacon wins by a landslide, giving this porky product a clear mandate to dominate our plates and palates for years to come. The eaters have spoken. The breakdown:

The issue: Would you rather give up bacon or fries?

Give up bacon: 15 (26.7%)
Give up fries: 28 (50%)
Undecided*: 13 (23.2 %)
Total serious eaters reporting: 56

Like some ballot initiatives, this one may have confused some voters, as a negative vote for one was a positive vote for the other.

* The elections commission here at SEHQ determined that undecided "voters" were those trying to give up neither, both, or folks who gave vague or hard-to-interpret answers.

Change.gov Is Up and Running

Updated 4:23 p.m. By Anne E. Kornblut It took a little while, but the Obama transition team Web site is up and running. With features on the inauguration, Obama's message and even how to apply for jobs, www.change.gov looks like it will soon be a fully functioning guide to the evolving Obama administration....Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.

New iPod game: Tamagotchi

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This week, Apple added a new game for the iPod nano and iPod classic. Tamagotchi: 'Round the World allows you to take care of a small pet, which you raise from birth. There are four pets to choose from, interactive environmental items, 6 mini games, and three activities to play with your pets.

Tamagotchi was created by Namco, which has other iPod games on the iTunes Store. This game is compatible with iPod nano (3rd & 4th Generations), iPod classic, and iPod 5th Generation (with video). It is available from the iTunes store for $4.99; a demo video is available.


Thanks to everyone who sent this in!

TUAWNew iPod game: Tamagotchi originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 06 Nov 2008 15:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Way Down in the Hole covers

Two covers of Tom Waits' Way Down in the Hole, the title song for The Wire: Tom Waits and Kronos Quartet and MIA and Blaqstarr. (thx, brandon)

(link)

budapest city hall by erick van egeraat



dutch architect erick van egeraat has been selected as the winner of the competition to design budapest’s
new city hall. his proposal combines restoration of the existing baroque building and a new contemporary
addition. the proposal aims to continually combine the old and new, attracting tourists and serving as
a public forum for citizens. a central forum will be located at the centre of the building, giving space for
theatre, conferences or exhibitions. a platform on the entrance gate will provide views of the entire city
and the building itself. construction will begin in 2011 and is set to be completed in 2013.

http://www.eea-architects.com









via world architecture news

Election Night in Harlem

A snapshot of my Harlem, my hometown, on the night Barack Obama was elected. I don't have any words yet, you're gonna have to give me a minute. [download version] | [youtube version]

Connected

TPM Reader JH lets us know how he kept up with the latest while waiting on the grass at the Obama election night rally ...

Designing NYC Streets for the 21st Century

rogers_section.jpg

Earlier this week Transportation Alternatives announced the winners of its "21st Century Street" design competition, selecting three entries from more than a hundred submissions re-imagining the intersection of Fourth Avenue and Ninth Street in Brooklyn.

Juror Michelle de la Uz, director of the Fifth Avenue Committee, listed safety and the pedestrian environment as her top concerns. "That intersection has been the site of significant injuries to pedestrians, and it's screaming for a re-design for all the different users," she said. "What's going on at that intersection is representative of the whole stretch. When you go to Sunset Park, there are four, soon to be five schools along Fourth Avenue. Public safety has to be a priority instead of just moving traffic."

The jury split top honors among three designs:

"The entries really ran the gamut," said de la Uz. "There were definitely elements in each one that DOT could cull from, not only for Fourth Avenue but throughout the city."

T.A. wants to see the competition's best ideas factor into the city's long-term plans. "A lot of the City's current work is about triage -- bringing paint and asphalt to streets that really need immediate safety fixes," says Wiley Norvell. "The design competition was about leapfrogging ahead of the current generation of street designs to provide much more active and dynamic public spaces. We hope the DOT and City Planning take note of what's been generated."

Lots of drawings after the jump.

streets_alive.jpgTeam LEVON's "Streets Come Alive"

streets_nutter.jpgMichael Nutter's "Shared Space"

Honorable mention went to Brooklyn's own Mark Anders, whose proposal was well received for deftly allocating space between multiple modes. T.A. staff selected as their favorite "HUMUS = HUMAN," which crams in as much vegetation as possible, capturing copious amounts of stormwater in the process.

streets_honorable.jpgMark Anders' design, shown in plan

street_humus.jpg"HUMUS = HUMAN"

In one of the wilder entries, Streetsblog technical director Nick Grossman and graphic designer Carly Clark teamed up with landscape architect Wayken Shaw on "The Underpass," which places two basketball courts beneath the F train tracks that cross over Fourth Avenue.

streets_underpass.jpg"The Underpass"

PadmaWire: Padma is back in the gossip...

2008_11_padma.jpgPadma is back in the gossip pages, just in time for the Top Chef premiere. Wondering if it's all part of her contract: "Lakshmi...has been linked with a growing list of money-men since she split last year from...Salman Rushdie. She dated billionaire (and permanent bachelor) Ted Forstmann...she was seen canoodling with Russell Simmons...Lakshmi was seen last week...'grinding on the dance floor with some tall, young guy with a shaved head.'" [NYP]

In Colorado State Senate Election, Bacon Trounces Fries

From Serious Eats

20081106-baconfries.jpg

John Scalzi

You might even say it's a landslide. That's Bob Bacon (D) vs. Matt Fries (R) running for Colorado's State Senate District 14. See the final tally here. I hope Bacon can reach across the aisle to Fries. I think their common ground is anywhere you can find a good burger. [via John Scalzi]

Obama is big news at the NY Times

Wednesday was the only the fourth time that the NY Times used 96 pt. type for the headline on the front page of the paper. In chronological order:

MEN WALK ON MOON
NIXON RESIGNS
U.S. ATTACKED
OBAMA

The Wednesday edition of the Times was very popular. It was sold out all over the city so people lined up outside the Times' building to buy copies. Copies are available on eBay for $100 or more.

(link)

November 5, 2008

A little over four years ago...

I attended the 2004 Democratic National Convention. Protesters, supporters, an abundance of police, armed forces and secret service milled around Boston's Fleet Center. Once inside, I was lucky enough to slide into some borrowed VIP seats in time to see Barack Obama deliver the keynote address. I wondered to my colleagues aloud at the end, "When can we have this guy as our President?". He delivered an amazing speech, a unifying speech and not just for the Democrats. He was commanding, eloquent and spoke honestly about how to heal a divided nation. When people have asked me why I have supported Obama I keep pointing back to that night that I had a glimmer of the hope that an Obama presidency would bring.


Barack Obama delivering the keynote at the 2004 DNC on Flickr

Last night, when the Obama landslide victory was announced, I welled up uncontrollably. I didn't cry for a politician, I think like many Americans I felt like a veil had been lifted. Seven years of fear mongering, misleading the nation and mishandling of both man-made and natural disasters are finally book-ended by a historic win for a deserving, intelligent leader. I finally feel truly hopeful about America for the first time in a long time.

This wasn't an easy win and I have friends and family who flew to battleground states, made phone calls, donated money and goods, held fundraisers and more. When it was all over there was dancing in the streets. DANCING. IN. THE. STREETS! When is the last time a political candidate inspired more than a cocktail party? Truly amazing.

I know it sounds corny and empty without action behind it but, I believe in Barack Obama, I believe in the hope he has already inspired and I know that will translate to action in the coming years. I can't thank all of you enough for voting for Barack Obama. Yes we did!

Speak up for Catalyst

By Kieren Diment

Over the past couple of months, Matt Trout and I have been putting together a book proposal for the Catalyst web framework. We did this because a. we want to publish a book about Catalyst, and b. because a publisher approached us. Now that the proposal is in, the editorial board are concerned that there is insufficient market.

I've looked at a bunch of statistics (mailing list size, Google hits, IRC channel size, Amazon sales rankings and more) to compare the size of Catalyst to a group of other web frameworks. Catalyst comes out at the bottom of the top of this list, in that it's the least popular of the "big" frameworks - Ruby on Rails, Django and so on. On the other hand, it's clearly an order of magnitude more popular than the small frameworks (Pylons, Turbogears and the like). We also know that Catalyst runs some pretty big streaming media websites, including some that we're a bit embarrassed (NSFW) to talk about. Catalyst is also rumoured to be running the BBC iPlayer.

Our publisher now has cold feet, and wants to collect more data on the size of the market before they give us the go-ahead, so if you use Catalyst, please answer a short survey for us . My aim is 100 responses (10% of mailing list subscribers).

The questions are as follows:

  • What country are you in?
  • How many people are on your team?
  • How many of those people are writing code with Catalyst? If there are non Catalyst coders on your team, how many of the whole team would you like to be writing Catalyst code?
  • How many people using Catalyst on your team are subscribers to the Catalyst mailing list?
  • How many people writing Catalyst code on your team use the #catalyst IRC channel on irc.perl.org?
  • What do you see as potential for growth of Catalyst in your organisation? How many people do you think will be using Catalyst in your organisation in 12 months? In 2 years?

Please email your answers to kdiment@uow.edu.au.

Kieren Diment is a Researcher at the University of Wollongong in Australia. He uses Perl and Catalyst for the social science research that he does.

How President Obama could disappoint me

I feel like one of the laziest tricks in argument is the post hoc misrepresentation of one’s expectations. People often lie, particularly to themselves, when hindsight takes over.

So as a form of insurance, I’m going to write down some ways that President Obama could fail to meet my expectations. Then, a couple of years from now, I’ll be able to look back and see for myself whether the Obama Presidency is what I thought it would be.

Back in June, I linked to an article about good and bad process. It was one of those things that in a small way changed how I think about most everything. The basic argument is that process is under your control, outcome is not. Even the best process in the world can be outdone by bad luck or unforeseen events. The key to evaluating performance is to measure the effectiveness of a process, aside from the results that are ultimately achieved.

For example, had the Obama campaign failed, I still would have argued that their process was good, even if the outcome had not been the one I’d hoped for. In this case, the outcome vindicated the process, but the process was good regardless.

It’s in that spirit that I make this list:

  1. President Obama could decline to put an end to the regime of torture, extraordinary rendition, and imprisonment without charges that has defined the Bush administration for me. The President has almost complete discretion on these issues, and I expect a complete reversal of the Bush administration’s position on them.
  2. President Obama could extend the “imperial Presidency.” The Bush administration argued at every turn that the President is not accountable to Congress or to anyone else. Any new President will be tempted to maintain the power that he inherits. President Obama should give some of it back.
  3. He could govern narrowly. I expect President Obama to promote legislation that will be tough for Republicans to vote against. I don’t expect him to put through a lot of legislation that passes on party line votes.
  4. He could opt out of the standards he has set for himself with regard to transparency. If there’s one thing that worried me about the Obama campaign, it’s that it was not particularly open. I think that the secrecy of the campaign was a powerful tool, but I hope that the habit doesn’t follow Obama to the White House. He has talked about running a transparent White House. I sincerely hope he follows through. If he practices radical transparency, it will prevent him from making many of the other mistakes that could disappoint me. I’d hate for the Obama Presidency to be one where inexplicable decisions are made, and no explanations are ever offered.

That’s my stake in the ground. I’ll be able to look at it in the years to come and see if Obama lived up to my hopes as they were when he was elected.

I could make an alternate list of what I hope Obama will accomplish, but that would just be silly. He has his priorities and I have mine. I just hope he reacts intelligently to the problems he volunteered to take on, and that he makes progress in keeping the promises he made during his campaign.

Election night

Today was epoch day in American history. Maybe even most important day this year, but it’s not what I’d like to write about here. What does it mean for US citizens and all other people around the world? We know, but what does it mean for us - IT professionals and/or internet portals serving news for end users?

Increased number of requests to webservers, high network utilization, and huge number of queries against your databases (while on duty last night, I saw customer servers handling 10 times larger traffic than usual)..

How to deal with it? How to prepare for such events?

In the moments like that, the most important thing is to assure the continuity and high efficiency.  How to accomplish it?

The best way is through preparation for the planned event.  From past experience, we know that during the ongoing event, it is often impossible to deal with the effects of the traffic intensity. You need to deal with it in advance.

Considering the above, and reaching out to our client’s expectations, we offer the wide array of services enabling them to face the challenge:

  • Consultant Time Hire for MySQL“- to keep an eye on your system during whole period of event and to perform fast and proffesional reaction in case of any problems.

Entry posted by Piotr Biel | No comment

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Summoning Summers?

Am I missing something or are there like four or five completely independent reasons not to appoint Larry Summers Treasury Secretary? I'm really having a hard time understanding this one.

Just at the level of optics, since the economy is issue number one right now (and not just the real economy of jobs and living standards but the financial architecture itself) and you're trying to look forward not back, why would you pick someone for Treasury who was not only in the Clinton administration but was actually Treasury Secretary in the Clinton administration. Not understanding that.

Next, management shortcomings and controversial statements about women's brains that got him canned as President of Harvard.

And on top of that, the new Treasury Secretary will be charged with instituting a beefed up framework of financial sector regulation. But Summers was a key player in the 1990s deregulatory consensus that laid the groundwork for a lot of these problems. Not that that makes him verboten -- a lot of other people did too. But it does create an element of of cognitive dissonance going into the job.

I'm not sure any of these strikes against would be determinative in themselves. Perhaps each taken together would not be if the crisis of the moment demanded Summers. But is he really the only one available?

I don't mean that in a snarky or denigrating sense. Clearly, Summers is an extremely bright and accomplished guy and a highly respected economist. But really, he's the only person with the economist chops and political instincts to manage this arduous task?

A Legal Precedent For Being Funny As Shit

Shared by Eve
Next Halloween I'm going as Oscar the Bitch
Gregory Garre
"Gollywaddles!"

Solicitor General Gregory G. Garre (no seriously, his initials are "GGG"!) aspires to the title of Most Ridiculous Person In The World today with his impressive and absurd display of intellectual dishonesty, as quoted in the New York Times article today on the Supreme Court's reconsideration of profanity on television:

“The world that the networks are asking you to adopt here today, where the networks are free to use expletives,” said Gregory G. Garre, the solicitor general, may include “the extreme example of Big Bird dropping the F-bomb on ‘Sesame Street.’ ”

It's Big Motherfuckin' Bird, people! It's Oscar the Bitch! (No Elmo.)

Additional delights in this story abound, with the image of the supreme justices throwing around all kinds of euphemisms for common expletives, and even culminating in what I sincerely hope becomes the law of the land: Any joke is okay, as long as it's sufficiently funny.

Justice John Paul Stevens suggested a novel standard for judging indecency. Is it ever appropriate to consider, he asked, “whether the particular remark was really hilarious — very, very funny?” Mr. Garre said funniness could play a part in the commission’s analysis of whether a remark was shocking, titillating or pandering. Justice Scalia jokingly summarized the new standard: “Bawdy jokes are O.K. if they are really good.”

It is a new day, people. A new day.

Heights History: Hotel St. George , 1900

Shorpy.com writes about this photo:

“Hotel St. George, Brooklyn, circa 1900-1906.” Plus a ghost or two in this time exposure of the hotel’s Clark Street facades. This Brooklyn Heights landmark, which by the 1930s was New York’s largest hotel, with 2,632 rooms in a complex of buildings spread over a block, started with the 10-story dark brick structure, completed in 1885. After more than a century, it was destroyed by fire in 1995. The adjoining white building with the flagpoles, designed by Montrose Morris in the 1890s, still stands.

A ridiculously clear and large version of the photo above is available here.

pantime


SPD: Interview with Designers at The Knot

Paul Schrynemakers talks to Lori Richmond, Design Director of Online Editorial, and Kristen Dudish, Online Designer for the cross-media wedding brand. It’s a nice interview, but I mostly wanted to point out how impressed I am that The Society of Publication Designers, an organization that could easily succumb to the misguided temptation of turning its nose up at digital media, is making a real effort to understand and engage digital audiences. Hats off, particularly, to Paul, who has been writing about Web sites extensively on the organization’s blog.

Moving Forward

CAUTION: LONG COLUMN...BUT PLEASE READ THE WHOLE THING (The best stuff is at the end)

The dust has settled. Barack Obama is the President-Elect, Joe Biden is moving into the Naval Observatory, John McCain is headed back to the Senate, and Sarah is going back to Alaska...hopefully to continue the dramatic progress she has made in upsetting the political establishment and making government work for the people.

Meanwhile, those of us who supported Sarah in her run for Vice President get to begin the process of moving forward. So, as we launch a new phase in our movement, I think it's time to start talking about what we want to see in the future from the Republican Party, Sarah Palin, and our own movement. I have a few thoughts on each. Some of this is stuff I've already read, some of it isn't.

WHAT I WANT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY TO DO

Forget about the 2012 presidential race for two years. We're never going to unseat Obama if we don't unite the party and build a solid foundation. Instead of lining up behind our respective horses for the next round of primaries, we need to focus on getting good leadership in place in Congress and the Republican National Committee (RNC). In Congress, I think this means turning the House Leadership over the the "Young Turks" of the party. More than likely, this will involve the eventual installation of a new Minority Leader from a younger generation (likely Eric Cantor of Virginia). For the time being, John Boehner has indicated his desire to remain Leader, and Cantor is probably going to run for Minority Whip. However, in the next few years, there should be moves to eventually replace Boehner with Cantor and trade the aging leadership team in for dynamic new faces like Paul Ryan (Wisconsin), Thad McCotter (Michigan), and Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Washington). They will be able to produce and market 21st Century conservative alternatives to President Obama's proposals.

At the RNC, there needs to be a new Chairman who can rev up the party faithful, rebuild the GOP fundraising machine, and help new Republicans win election. The Democrats figured out how to find such a person in 2005 when they elected Howard Dean, a charismatic former presidential candidate who could barnstorm the country. We could replicate that phenomenon by turning to Fred Thompson or Rudy Giuliani.

WHAT I WANT TO SEE FROM GOVERNOR PALIN

1. Don't pay much attention to 2012 speculation and focus on being Governor. Cement yourself as a presence on the national scene, but top priority is getting that gasline built (thereby giving yourself another major accomplishment as Governor and potentially lowering energy prices down here in the lower 48...you can run on that in 2012)
2. Launch "SarahPAC" as soon as possible. You are a force to be reckoned with when it comes to fundraising potential, and lots of people will be happy to give you lots of cash to distribute to candidates around the country (this also gives you an excuse to occasionally go on campaign trips). You can use SarahPAC (or whatever you decide to call it) to establish a reputation for helping other Republicans win, and gain some loyalty from the Congressmen that you want to endorse your eventual candidacy.
3. Write a bestseller. The subject is irrelevant, though including a good deal of policy talk would probably be helpful. The American public needs to know that you are an intelligent and capable leader, so show them how smart you are. Plus, it never hurts to have to do a bunch of interviews to promote your new book, and if you wrote on energy policy, you could establish yourself as a "preeminent authority" on the subject.
4. DO NOT RUN FOR THE U.S. SENATE. You need to stay far away from Washington and continue to build your resume (and ensure that you get the credit for that shiny new gasline). If you want to run for something, run for re-election.

WHAT I WANT TO SEE FROM OUR MOVEMENT

Sarah cannot start openly tooting her 2012 horn for at least two years, and frankly neither can any other high level GOP operative or major media personality. On the other hand, we "internet nuts" are bound by no such standards of propriety. Our job moving forward is to wave pom-poms and yell "Sa-rah! Sa-rah!" at the top of our lungs for the next few years. We're the ones who will be making sure that Sarah's accomplishments in Alaska continue to be highlighted (need I mention the gasline again?) and that she stays at the top of any and all lists of potential 2012 candidates. This is what we do best, and we need to get back to that sort of operation.

We also need to pursue two objectives from an operational standpoint: institutionalization and decentralization. Institutionalization means putting in place mechanisms to ensure that the Palin Movement remains intact and cannot be broken up. Decentralization means making sure that there are multiple sources of pro-Palin chatter. We've already done well at decentralizing, with a plethora of Palin sites popping up earlier this year (Palinforamerica.com, Palinforvp.com, mccainpalin2008.blogspot.com, etc.), but we need to continue to build stronger networks and more sites. This will ensure that we cannot be shut down by the departure of one or two bloggers. I'll be honest here, I have no clue what I will be doing in four years or whether my career path will allow me to continue an independent partisan blog. We need to make sure that NO ONE can kill this movement or this site, not even me. Hence, I will be looking to build a stronger network of Pro-Palin blogs and re-networking with some of the connections that I have not been able to keep up during the recent frenzy. I will probably also be looking to add new bloggers the team here at palinforvp.blogspot.com.

If we take these steps, we should be able to set up a sustainable movement that, God willing, will help propel Sarah to the Presidency in four years.

God bless America.

Remembering Michael Crichton

The great popularizer of hard science, Michael Crichton, died yesterday. In his books, millions of readers were introduced to scientific concepts such as cloning, the spread of new diseases, nanoassembly, deep-sea exploration, quantum computing and the discussion around climate change. From a note to fans on MichaelCrichton.net:

Through his books, Michael Crichton served as an inspiration to students of all ages, challenged scientists in many fields, and illuminated the mysteries of the world in a way we could all understand.

That was a special thing about his books: he truly cared that we, the general reader, understood what he was talking about. With his combination of scientific rigor and storytelling chops -- and his deep and abiding concern for what's next in science and tech, and the unintended consequences they might bring -- it's not surprising that Crichton spoke at a very early TED Conference, at TED3 in February 1992. We're hoping to bring this talk to you soon.

Meanwhile, here's a selected playlist of TEDTalks in the spirit of Michael Crichton:

+ Craig Venter's "On the Verge of Creating Synthetic Life": Bold ideas about what is coming up next, and a walk through the consequences they may bring
+ Larry Brilliant's TED Prize wish: "Help Stop the Next Pandemic": A vision to build a worldwide system to understand and stop new diseases and disasters
+ Robert Ballard's "Exploring the World's Oceans": Pure enthusiasm for sharing scientific discoveries -- and an inspiration for the next generation to discover even more

2009 Topps preview


Here you go

More in a moment.

*UPDATED*

2009toppspujols

Okay, so looking through them, the base set harkens back to the simpler of the 1990’s designs.  Not sure what it is about card companies getting shots of Pujols in that position, but there you have it.  There’s actually a white border around the card that the blog doesn’t pick up.  I’m a bit nervous that players will once again get lost in the smaller pictures, but the look on the cards shown is very nice.

2009toppsprice

It appears the the CMG stars get their due with cut sigs, game used, and possibly fake patches, all a part of a “Legendary Linage” insert series.  Also added will be a 2009 WBC redemption card (meh!), a Career Best series (modern autos and jersey patches), more Ring of Honor cards (Yankees, of course), and some Turkey Red to boot.

I’m actually more excited about the look of these than I am 2009 Upper Deck base.

What missing?  Presidents!  And hopefully, gimmicks!

*UPDATED*  I should have known that JayBee would have this first:

These are beautiful!!! Give me a minute, I need to stop hyperventilating!!!

I think that means he likes them.

      

Drivers Respect Grand Street Parking-Protected Cycle Track

grand1.jpg

Though modest by comparison, here's another first for this historic day. Manhattan Community Board 2's Ian Dutton sent over photos of the new Grand Street cycle track, the city's initial attempt at a parking-protected design.

Says Ian:

With a one-block exception, from Varick St. to Centre St. seems to be open for business, only lacking the bicycle symbols on the lane itself. The section through Little Italy and Chinatown is nearly complete, with a few minor surface details remaining.

My experience on two circuits today was that it worked beautifully. Cars were parked as expected and the "mixing zones" accommodating turning vehicles across the bike lane were handled unusually respectfully from drivers, who were probably not sure how to treat them. Not bad for the first (or maybe second) day.

There were a few pedestrians who stepped off the curb to cross the street and waited in the bike lane, but that is no different than any other bike lane. I'm very hopeful that we're off to a good start.

Photo pool contributor Jacob-uptown had similar things to say after cruising the new Grand: "Cars have learned where to park ... This is a huge precedent for creating these cheap yet highly effective bike lanes."

More pics after the jump. Note the overhead signage.

grand2.jpg

grand3.jpg

President Obama

Obama_omg-20081104-201609

After watching McCain's concession speech last night, I realized it was John McCain's election to lose. From a mile up, the race was between a guy with tons of experience and some pretty hardcore wartime stories going up against another guy that was new to the senate and was basically unknown before 2004 to most voters.

I really liked John McCain in 2000, and wanted him to win the republican primaries. I probably would have voted for him as well (if I ignored some of his social conservative tendencies) because he seemed like such a centrist (or at least not too far from center on most issues, especially compared to Bush) and I found Gore totally and completely unexciting (I ended up voting for Nader).

When the republican primaries began in 2008 I was pulling for McCain as well, since I remembered the guy I loved on all those talk show appearances over the last several years. I was also pulling for Obama for the past year and was happy when both my early picks ended up on top.

Then the campaign happened. It didn't come on quickly, but I'd say definitely after the GOP convention, the old McCain I loved was gone. I don't recall much of any talk from McCain from the last two months about his detailed plans or reasons why someone should vote for McCain, instead all I heard about was why I should against Obama. That's never a good path to take -- when you don't accentuate your positives and instead focus on negatives, even if you convince others to avoid the opponent you end up with followers that don't have much to be proud of.

To this day I can't tell if it was McCain's choosing to do what he did at the end of the summer of if it was his true personality finally coming out. I like to think he became a slave to the GOP election machine that likely told him playing it straight with Obama and fighting on the issues wasn't going to rile his voting base as much as attacks and fear mongering could.

McCain's concession speech was eloquent, impressive, and left me with the admiration I remembered in the McCain from 2000 that I used to like. That the crowd surrounding him boo'd every time Obama's name was uttered makes me think maybe the McCain I used to like might be the guy still at the core but unfortunately let others run the controls during the election.

Anyway, for the first time since 1992 I was truly ecstatic on an election night. I knew the polls were looking good but I didn't want to be disappointed and a big part of me never thought Obama would actually win, but he did it. I'm glad my daughter gets to grow up and will remember her first president being an inspirational guy that proves anyone can still make it in America.

Of course, we've left Obama with a pretty tough nut to crack and I imagine once he gets in office all the crazy "socialist!" and "marxist!" talk will quickly go out the window as he'll move to the center and make some tough choices. I predict we'll see people on both extremes displeased with some choices but I find that a mark of a good leader. Bill Clinton made a heck of a lot of choices I disagreed with, but at the end of his term he turned a recession into a boom and kept us out of war and I hope Obama can do the same (obviously, without the intern thing).

Lehman Dog Throws Down Gauntlet, Looks To Fuld And Friends To Pick It Up

Picture 145.pngIt's official: the employee ID once owned by former Lehman Brothers guard dog Bella, who has passed on since being laid off from by Barclays, sold for $810 in our little auction. We were going to give the proceeds to laid off Brothers and Sisters but the peanut gallery decided it would prefer the money be donated to some sort of canine charity, and we've obliged. We'll be sending a check to the Animal Medical Center. Two things.

Today is a new day

The Big Picture: The next President of the United States

SBJ: The System Worked

Kottke: 2008 Election Maps

Sippey: Election Night Home Pages and Wordle.net visualization of Obama's speech

I've never been prouder to be an American than today.

Today is a new day

The Big Picture: The next President of the United States

SBJ: The System Worked

Kottke: 2008 Election Maps

Sippey: Election Night Home Pages and Wordle.net visualization of Obama's speech

I've never been prouder to be an American than today.

Barack Obama and Blogging

We'd like to extend our hearty congratulations to everyone who voted in the United States elections here yesterday, especially in the historic and endlessly surprising Presidential campaign. We've been thrilled to point to our own efforts like politics.typepad.com, which showcases TypePad bloggers who talk about political issues, and of course the politics section of Blogs.com, which has been a must-read for months.

But perhaps most of all, we should extend our congratulations to the campaign and innovative technological team behind BarackObama.com. Just as with the blog of outgoing President George W. Bush's 2004 campaign, key parts of Barack Obama's campaign website have been powered by Movable Type, and we're proud to have played a part in knitting together a successful strategy that's combined blogging with a compelling presence across dozens of social networking sites. It's a tradition that began at the national level with candidates like Howard Dean and John Kerry making tentative steps four years ago. But we're not satisfied merely to count the campaign blogs of two successive U.S. Presidents among the community of Movable Type users.

obama-site-image.jpg
Now that the election is over, we're sincerely hoping that politicians across the political spectrum, and citizens of any stripe, will demand that these social publishing tools be used for a lot more than just raising funds online or getting out the vote. We firmly believe that our platforms, used intelligently and in combination with the many other services and networks on the web, can be powerful tools for better governance.

Blogging, especially when combined with a social publishing platform that bridges multiple social networks, is far too powerful a medium to be dragged onto the national stage once every four years. If, as has so often been stated, this is a "change election" here in the United States, then we hope that one change we'll see, not just at the national level but at a state and local level, is our government making better use of the web.

Given the long tradition of bloggers leading the conversation around politics, policy and government, we hope to play a part in encouraging government to make the same leap into the social web that so many of us have made in our personal and professional lives.

Report: Threats To Obama Rose As Palin's Crowds Grew More Frenzied

During the campaign the frenzied crowds at Sarah Palin rallies did seem indicative of something frightening in the air, and it turns out that there was a reason to conclude this, Newsweek reports:

The Obama campaign was provided with reports from the Secret Service showing a sharp and disturbing increase in threats to Obama in September and early October, at the same time that many crowds at Palin rallies became more frenzied. Michelle Obama was shaken by the vituperative crowds and the hot rhetoric from the GOP candidates. "Why would they try to make people hate us?" Michelle asked a top campaign aide.

Newsweek also reports that Palin launched an attack on William Ayers before the campaign had finalized their plans. And it turns out Palin's expenditures on clothing were far greater than previously known, infuriating McCain aides.

Relatedly, it's worth noting that the American people really did show great judgment when it came to Palin. Recall that when she first spoke at the GOP convention, at a point when she was barely known, it did look as if she was going to be a compelling asset for McCain: Good looking, forceful, independent-seeming, energetic, etc., etc.

But little by little, the dimensions of the Palin fraud were revealed by the media, and more important, the public caught on. It wasn't just that her unfavorable ratings rose. The key was that the American people correctly concluded that the choice of Palin should raise grave doubts about McCain's judgment.

The media revealed the truth about Palin, and the voters got her right. It's just one other thing about this amazing election that restores one's faith in our political process.

A Legal Precedent For Being Funny As Shit

Gregory Garre
"Gollywaddles!"

Solicitor General Gregory G. Garre (no seriously, his initials are "GGG"!) aspires to the title of Most Ridiculous Person In The World today with his impressive and absurd display of intellectual dishonesty, as quoted in the New York Times article today on the Supreme Court's reconsideration of profanity on television:

“The world that the networks are asking you to adopt here today, where the networks are free to use expletives,” said Gregory G. Garre, the solicitor general, may include “the extreme example of Big Bird dropping the F-bomb on ‘Sesame Street.’ ”

It's Big Motherfuckin' Bird, people! It's Oscar the Bitch! (No Elmo.)

Additional delights in this story abound, with the image of the supreme justices throwing around all kinds of euphemisms for common expletives, and even culminating in what I sincerely hope becomes the law of the land: Any joke is okay, as long as it's sufficiently funny.

Justice John Paul Stevens suggested a novel standard for judging indecency. Is it ever appropriate to consider, he asked, “whether the particular remark was really hilarious — very, very funny?” Mr. Garre said funniness could play a part in the commission’s analysis of whether a remark was shocking, titillating or pandering. Justice Scalia jokingly summarized the new standard: “Bawdy jokes are O.K. if they are really good.”

It is a new day, people. A new day.

More election maps

I added ten more maps to the 2008 Election Maps page, including one drawn on a dry erase board.

Dry Erase Election Map

(link)

I Didn’t Vote For Obama Today

Written by eastside93

I have a confession to make.

I did not vote for Barack Obama today.

I’ve openly supported Obama since March.  But I didn’t vote for him today.

I wanted to vote for Ronald Woods.  He was my algebra teacher at Clark Junior High in East St. Louis, IL.  He died 15 years ago when his truck skidded head-first into a utility pole.  He spent many a day teaching us many things besides the Pythagorean Theorem.  He taught us about Medgar Evers, Ralph Abernathy, John Lewis and many other civil rights figures who get lost in the shadow cast by Martin Luther King, Jr.

But I didn’t vote for Mr. Woods.

I wanted to vote for Willie Mae Cross.  She owned and operated Crossroads Preparatory Academy for almost 30 years, educating and empowering thousands of kids before her death in 2003.  I was her first student.  She gave me my first job, teaching chess and math concepts to kids in grades K-4 in her summer program.  She was always there for advice, cheer and consolation.  Ms. Cross, in her own way, taught me more about walking in faith than anyone else I ever knew.

But I didn’t vote for Ms. Cross.

I wanted to vote for Arthur Mells Jackson, Sr. and Jr.  Jackson Senior was a Latin professor.  He has a gifted school named for him in my hometown.  Jackson Junior was the pre-eminent physician in my hometown for over 30 years.  He has a heliport named for him at a hospital in my hometown.  They were my great-grandfather and great-uncle, respectively.

But I didn’t vote for Prof. Jackson or Dr. Jackson.

I wanted to vote for A.B. Palmer.  She was a leading civil rights figure in Shreveport, Louisiana, where my mother grew up and where I still have dozens of family members.  She was a strong-willed woman who earned the grudging respect of the town’s leaders because she never, ever backed down from anyone and always gave better than she got.  She lived to the ripe old age of 99, and has a community center named for her in Shreveport.

But I didn’t vote for Mrs. Palmer.

I wanted to vote for these people, who did not live to see a day where a Black man would appear on their ballots on a crisp November morning.

In the end, though, I realized that I could not vote for them any more than I could vote for Obama himself. 

So who did I vote for?

No one.

I didn’t vote.  Not for President, anyway. 

Oh, I went to the voting booth.  I signed, was given my stub, and was walked over to a voting machine.  I cast votes for statewide races and a state referendum on water and sewer improvements.

I stood there, and I thought about all of these people, who influenced my life so greatly.  But I didn’t vote for who would be the 44th President of the United States.

When my ballot was complete, except for the top line, I finally decided who I was going to vote for - and then decided to let him vote for me.  I reached down, picked him up, and told him to find Obama’s name on the screen and touch it.

And so it came to pass that Alexander Reed, age 5, read the voting screen, found the right candidate, touched his name, and actually cast a vote for Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Oh, the vote will be recorded as mine.  But I didn’t cast it. 

Then again, the person who actually pressed the Obama box and the red “vote” button was the person I was really voting for all along. 

It made the months of donating, phonebanking, canvassing, door hanger distributing, sign posting, blogging, arguing and persuading so much sweeter. 

So, no, I didn’t vote for Barack Obama.  I voted for a boy who now has every reason to believe he, too, can grow up to be anything he wants…even President.

CNN vote coverage marred by hologram stunt [Media]

Shared by Eve
When Will I Am appeared holographically, we were laughing so hard we were crying. Un Nec Essary.

Throughout this election, self-interested vendors of neophilia have touted tech's ability to transform old-school politics. In reality, it has put a new facade on an old building: touchscreen vote analyses and Twitter quotations are just new ways of presenting exit polls and man-on-the-street interviews Barack Obama's heralded social-networking tools? Merely an update of the ward-boss operations of old. CNN's "virtual Capitol" on election night was the ludicrous culmination of this trend. When Wolf Blitzer thanked a holographic correspondent — "Jessica, you're a terrific hologram, thank you so much" — I realized that tech is not transforming the political process; it is debasing it.


Yes, we did!

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Obama's victory last night was literally one of the most amazing events of my thirty-five-year lifetime; I sat there with Shannon, among a group of close friends and new friends, and soaked in the history of the moment. (Annabelle, alas, was asleep upstairs, totally oblivious to the raucous cheering, singing, and joy just ten feet below her.) As a friend said to me this morning, our generation hasn't yet had a leader this inspirational -- Barack Obama motivated more than 135 million Americans to get out of their homes and vote, and as of this moment, 52 percent of them declared that an African-American with a message of hope is the best choice to lead the nation. I've been smiling at random strangers all morning, noticed heads held high and spirits soaring everywhere I've been, and couldn't be prouder to be an American.

All that being said, I'm also a bit disappointed in a few results from yesterday's voting, each of which stands a bit in contrast to the monumental achievement of President-Elect Barack Obama.

First, Don Young (definitely) and Ted Stevens (probably) are returning to Washington, DC to represent the Great State of Alaska as its Congressman and Senator. Don Young has been Alaska's sole Congressman since before I was born, and is almost certainly going to be tried and convicted of taking bribes; he's also the one that faces Justice Department investigation for violating the Constitution by changing the text of a bill after it had passed Congress but before it reached the President's desk for signing. Ted Stevens is a convicted felon, the fifth sitting Senator to ever be convicted of charges, and is almost certainly going to be evicted from Congress. If these are the people that Alaskans feel are their best representatives to the federal government, then perhaps Sarah Palin really isn't out of the norm up there... and the state is being openly mocked by the lower 49 this morning.

Second, it looks like California's Proposition 8, amending the state constitution to ban gay marriage, is going to pass -- this, in addition to Florida and Arizona also voting for similar amendments to their state constitutions -- is a reminder that while Obama's shattering of a racial divide is notable, it's all the more so because of the persistence of other divides that are equally shameful. For people to cast their votes to deny a class of fellow citizens the right to enter into legal relationships with the people they love is as abhorrent as it would be to tell those same people they can only love those of their same race, something that was certainly prevalent a few generations ago but now is obviously and mockingly bigoted and wrong. I can only hope that we continue our inexorable march towards greater tolerance, and we can wipe this period out of existence in the next generation.

Finally, in a similar move, Arkansas citizens approved a ban on adoptions by unmarried couples, in an end-run attempt to remove yet another privilege from gay couples by grouping them into the less-offensive category of people who live together but don't have a certificate of marriage to validate their relationship. For some reason, these voters really feel that the nine thousand-plus Arkansas children in foster care are better served there or in group homes than with loving families; that's just as bigoted and wrong as banning gay marriage, but it carries with it a real harm to the least-fortunate youth of Arkansas. What a shameful statement to be making.

(with comments)

Michelle O Hearts Narciso

michelle.jpeg Ok so last night was a completely historic day and the dreams of Democrats which had been dashed for 8 years have come true in living colors! Oh and Barack won also! What MM is referring to is Michelle Obama in her Narciso Rodriguez dress! How chic was she and how fun are the next 8 years going to be watching her support amazing American designers?

The next President of the United States

In a vote of historic proportions yesterday, Senator Barack Obama became President-Elect of the United States of America with a 52% majority in the popular vote, and more than 349 electoral votes. Over two years of campaigning was resolved with a record voter turnout, as the Republican candidate John McCain conceded graciously at 11:20 pm eastern last night. With such a high level of interest and attention, there have been millions of words written and photographs taken of the candidates over the past year. Here is a collection of some of the best photos of President-Elect Barack Obama over the past several months. (35 photos total)

Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama speaks at a campaign rally in Fayetteville, North Carolina, October 19, 2008. (REUTERS/Jim Young)

The System Worked

A thousand important things have been said already about the milestone of our first African-American president (and perhaps just as important for future demographic trends, our first mixed-race president.) But I've been thinking about something else this morning: not just Obama's election, but the entire system that led up to this moment. We hear so often that the American political system is broken, but I think the last two years suggest that our national politics are healthier than we have been led to believe.

It starts for me with Bush's approval rating. You run the country with breathtaking incompetence for eight years; you defy the constitution and the Geneva Conventions; you let an entire city drown; you fail to ask for an inch of sacrifice from the rich during the greatest concentration of wealth in our country's history. You do all those things, and it turns out the American people pay attention: you become the least popular president since the invention of polling. Yes, it took too long for the country to realize how disastrous the Bush Administration was, but 9/11 left us with a kind of political post-traumatic stress disorder that made it too hard to turn on our leader in time to vote him out the first chance we had. But eventually the country woke up.

Then when the campaigns began, they were serious, engaged, and hard-fought. Voters consistently out-manoeuvred the media consensus at pretty much every turn. Giant financial advantages or name recognition did not inevitably lead to victory. There were what, thirty debates? For the most part, the debates were serious and issue-driven to the point of being dull. But we slogged through them all.

Most importantly, the primary campaigns actually ended up selecting the best candidates. Both Obama and Clinton were top-of-their-class (both in their original education, and their current political standing.) They were both gifted and committed leaders, each of whom represented a demographic breakthrough that would have been unthinkable a generation or two ago. And on the other side, McCain was by far the most interesting and deserving in the Republican field. These were all people who -- unlike George W. Bush -- had the stature and intellect and instincts that we should expect in our Presidential candidates.

And when the system finally narrowed our options down to two choices, the campaign that followed had many commendable qualities. The debates were watched by record audiences. Crowds normally reserved for U2 concerts showed up to hear the candidates speak. Yes, there was an insane amount of money flowing through the Obama campaign, but the money was itself a measure of how engaged the electorate was, since the vast majority of it was coming from small donors. While many on the left prodded him to be more aggressive, Obama kept his legendary cool and ran an incredibly civil campaign all the way through. (Remember how people griped that he kept agreeing with McCain in the first  debate -- but then ended up winning it hand-down?)

The one glaring episode that smacked of the "old" American politics of illusion and pseudo-candidates -- the Sarah Palin pick -- looked for a few short days to be a successful ploy, but her boastful ignorance and her complete disregard for the truth were relentless chipped away by the media and the satirists. (We always complain that the media don't ask the tough questions any more -- who knew that the tough question would be "So, what newspapers do you read?") By the end, Palin was a net negative for McCain, and the condescending notion that McCain could win over Hillary voters with a candidate who shared none of their values was decisively rejected in the battlegrounds of Ohio and Pennsylvania.

And when it came time to vote, everyone showed up, waiting in those five hour lines to have their voices heard. This is the most engaged electorate in modern times, and encouragingly, it's the youngest generation that seems to be the most intent on participating in the system.

So I look out at that landscape, and I think: yes, the country is in a terrible state, and it's going to take an immense amount of work and sacrifice and intelligence to turn things around. But the system that lets us choose our leaders seems to me to be as healthy as it has been in a long time. We get the leaders we deserve. For once, that's a good thing.

Red Oceans vs Blue Islands



Red Oceans vs Blue Islands

Proud To Be an American


I voted for President Elect Obama.

The rest of my votes went almost exclusively to Republicans , Libertarians and Independents.

In looking at the Democratic platform, there are a few things I agree with, but on the economic side, other than being ok with him raising my effective tax rate to 40pct, there isn’t a lot of his economic policy that I do agree with him on. So why did I vote for him ?

Its simple. Having an elected black President will do more to energize this country than any economic or social policy ever could. In a single day of voting, our amazing country once again reinvigorated the dream that any child in this country, no matter what circumstances they are born into, can grow up to be anything they want, including President of the United States.

That dream, staying viable, being reinvigorated, will do more for this country than any economic policy or any legislation that could ever be passed.

I have said it before, the power of the American Spirit is what separates our country from every other. We have been able to overcome the stupidity that politicians do every year, and will do for ever more.  The election of Barack Obama is a shot of adrenaline for those who felt they could never participate in the American Dream.

How do you stimulate and turn around the economy in this day and age ? Motivate those who in the past couldn’t , wouldn’t or didn’t, into those who can and do. Motivate those who can and do, to continue to innovate and increase productivity.

As any successful CEO will tell you, leadership, vision and motivation has far more impact on results than any tax cut or increase.  While I prefer lower taxes, I can tell you that no entrepreneur or CEO worth a damn in this country gives up or works less because of a change in tax policy. In this country you work harder to achieve your dreams and goals.

I can honestly say that I never thought that I would see a black President in my lifetime.   I’m incredibly proud and excited to be part of this moment in our history. I believe that the election of President Obama will energize many, many more of our fellow citizens to work harder to achieve our goals.

I’m Bullish on America.

ShareThis

      

Ending our agreement with Yahoo!

In June we announced an advertising agreement with Yahoo! that gave Yahoo! the option of using Google to provide ads on its websites (and its publisher partners' sites) in the U.S. and Canada. At the same time, both companies agreed to delay implementation of the agreement to give regulators the chance to review it. While this wasn't legally necessary, we thought it was the right thing to do because Google and Yahoo! have been successful in online advertising and we realized that any cooperation between us would attract attention.

We feel that the agreement would have been good for publishers, advertisers, and users -- as well, of course, for Yahoo! and Google. Why? Because it would have allowed Yahoo! (and its existing publisher partners) to show more relevant ads for queries that currently generate few or no advertisements. Better ads are more useful for users, more efficient for advertisers, and more valuable for publishers.

However, after four months of review, including discussions of various possible changes to the agreement, it's clear that government regulators and some advertisers continue to have concerns about the agreement. Pressing ahead risked not only a protracted legal battle but also damage to relationships with valued partners. That wouldn't have been in the long-term interests of Google or our users, so we have decided to end the agreement.

We're of course disappointed that this deal won't be moving ahead. But we're not going to let the prospect of a lengthy legal battle distract us from our core mission. That would be like trying to drive down the road of innovation with the parking brake on. Google's continued success depends on staying focused on what we do best: creating useful products for our users and partners.

Posted by David Drummond, Senior Vice President, Corporate Development and Chief Legal Officer

Kottke's Election Map Collection

Jason Kottke is collecting election maps produced by various media outlets; his page gathers a screenshot and a link to the map in question. (The screenshot is often from early last night, so does not reflect the final results --...

● 2008 election maps

Last night as the election results were coming in online, I took screenshots of a bunch of the now-familiar red/blue electoral maps being used by the larger media sites to show election results and posted them all on this page. (There are currently 25 maps...I'm adding more in a few minutes.)

NY Times Electoral Map

Hit me on my burner if you run across any others. A couple of quick notes:

1. No one strayed from the red and blue. The red/blue combo is overwhelmingly symbolic but there are plenty of other colors in the crayon box; I would like to have seen someone try something different.

2. In the 2000 and 2004 elections, the red/blue map was the focal point of the media coverage. People were fixated by it. This time around, it didn't matter so much. The maps were interesting for 3-4 hours until the overwhelming nature of Obama's victory became apparent and then, not so much. By this morning, the maps are already shrinking or disappearing from the home pages of the Times, CNN, and the like.

3. Nate Silver and the rest of the 538 guys nailed it. They got Indiana wrong and there are a couple more states that are still too close to call, but they got the rest of the map right. Their final projection had Obama getting 348.6 electoral votes and they currently have him at 349.

How I will celebrate for the next four years

I was optimistic about the election and my wife bought me something special to celebrate.

Yes, for the next four years, I will be drinking those sweet, delicious Republican Tears. Of course, they are best when accompanied by a good rant first.

So keep up the crying, I'm thirsty!

A New Day

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Filed under: snapshots
Tags: happy, nyc, obama

is obama president dot com

is obama president dot com

Help me, Wolf Blitzer. You're my only hope.

Keeping to my promise to keep the blog non-political, the only thing I want to touch on about last night's election coverage is this: for reasons passing understanding, CNN decided that election night was the perfect time to unveil a...

Zine Yearbook #9

zineyearbook.jpg
Just got a package in the mail from Microcosm Publishing with a copy of the hot-off-press brand new Zine Yearbook 9. Over 100 excerpts from zines put out in the last couple years, it looks to have some great stuff in there, including zine world favorites like Doris, Peops, Ghost Pine, You, Duplex Planet, The Match, Kerbloom, Spread, and tons and tons more. It also includes some photos excerpted from my zine Pound the Pavement #10.

November 4, 2008

a few home pages

Election-night-homepages

I grabbed some screenshots of some news site home pages from around the web tonight; they're collected in a Flickr set.

yes we can

Obama-speech-wordle

Wordle.net visualization of Obama's acceptance speech.

YES WE CAN

Celebrating at Union Square

Jenn is Crying Happy Tears

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nov4victoryspeech.jpg

Filed under: this moment
Tags: election night, obama, television

Obama: My Election Demonstrates That "The Dream Of Our Founders Is Alive"

President-Elect Barack Obama (did I write that?) just spoke in Chicago's Grant Park, and cast his election as the momentous historical event that it is.

But rather than refer directly to his historic triumph over racial barriers, he instead cast his election as proof of the power of American self-renewal and the enduring achievement of the country's Founding Fathers. From the prepared remarks:

If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible; who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time; who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.

He immediately set about preparing the electorate for the hard road ahead:

The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there in one year or even one term, but America -- I have never been more hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there. I promise you -- we as a people will get there.

There will be setbacks and false starts. There are many who won't agree with every decision or policy I make as President, and we know that government can't solve every problem. But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face.

Obama is reported to be worried about the powerful emotions and soaring expectations he's unleashed from the electorate. Those expectations, naturally, will be inflated by the scale of his victory, and channeling and managing the electorate's tumultuous passions in the days ahead will be a challenge even for a man who is perhaps the greatest public communicator in decades.

But if anyone is up to it, it's this extraordinary, and thoroughly unlikely, figure. When all the punditry and analysis is said and done, Obama's victory was made possible by no one but Obama himself.

For months and months Obama projected such calm, such steadiness and unflappability, and even such fundamental decency amid all the ugly political combat that he reassured and won over the trust of a nation embroiled in two wars abroad and an anxiety-provoking economic crisis at home -- even though he's black and his middle name is Hussein.

Video soon. Obama's full speech after the jump.

Late Update: Here's the video:

If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible; who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time; who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.

It's the answer told by lines that stretched around schools and churches in numbers this nation has never seen; by people who waited three hours and four hours, many for the very first time in their lives, because they believed that this time must be different; that their voice could be that difference.

It's the answer spoken by young and old, rich and poor, Democrat and Republican, black, white, Latino, Asian, Native American, gay, straight, disabled and not disabled - Americans who sent a message to the world that we have never been a collection of Red States and Blue States: we are, and always will be, the United States of America.

It's the answer that led those who have been told for so long by so many to be cynical, and fearful, and doubtful of what we can achieve to put their hands on the arc of history and bend it once more toward the hope of a better day.

It's been a long time coming, but tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America.

I just received a very gracious call from Senator McCain. He fought long and hard in this campaign, and he's fought even longer and harder for the country he loves. He has endured sacrifices for America that most of us cannot begin to imagine, and we are better off for the service rendered by this brave and selfless leader. I congratulate him and Governor Palin for all they have achieved, and I look forward to working with them to renew this nation's promise in the months ahead.

I want to thank my partner in this journey, a man who campaigned from his heart and spoke for the men and women he grew up with on the streets of Scranton and rode with on that train home to Delaware, the Vice President-elect of the United States, Joe Biden.

I would not be standing here tonight without the unyielding support of my best friend for the last sixteen years, the rock of our family and the love of my life, our nation's next First Lady, Michelle Obama. Sasha and Malia, I love you both so much, and you have earned the new puppy that's coming with us to the White House. And while she's no longer with us, I know my grandmother is watching, along with the family that made me who I am. I miss them tonight, and know that my debt to them is beyond measure.

To my campaign manager David Plouffe, my chief strategist David Axelrod, and the best campaign team ever assembled in the history of politics - you made this happen, and I am forever grateful for what you've sacrificed to get it done.

But above all, I will never forget who this victory truly belongs to - it belongs to you.

I was never the likeliest candidate for this office. We didn't start with much money or many endorsements. Our campaign was not hatched in the halls of Washington - it began in the backyards of Des Moines and the living rooms of Concord and the front porches of Charleston.

It was built by working men and women who dug into what little savings they had to give five dollars and ten dollars and twenty dollars to this cause. It grew strength from the young people who rejected the myth of their generation's apathy; who left their homes and their families for jobs that offered little pay and less sleep; from the not-so-young people who braved the bitter cold and scorching heat to knock on the doors of perfect strangers; from the millions of Americans who volunteered, and organized, and proved that more than two centuries later, a government of the people, by the people and for the people has not perished from this Earth. This is your victory.

I know you didn't do this just to win an election and I know you didn't do it for me. You did it because you understand the enormity of the task that lies ahead. For even as we celebrate tonight, we know the challenges that tomorrow will bring are the greatest of our lifetime - two wars, a planet in peril, the worst financial crisis in a century. Even as we stand here tonight, we know there are brave Americans waking up in the deserts of Iraq and the mountains of Afghanistan to risk their lives for us. There are mothers and fathers who will lie awake after their children fall asleep and wonder how they'll make the mortgage, or pay their doctor's bills, or save enough for college. There is new energy to harness and new jobs to be created; new schools to build and threats to meet and alliances to repair.

The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there in one year or even one term, but America - I have never been more hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there. I promise you - we as a people will get there.

There will be setbacks and false starts. There are many who won't agree with every decision or policy I make as President, and we know that government can't solve every problem. But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face. I will listen to you, especially when we disagree. And above all, I will ask you join in the work of remaking this nation the only way it's been done in America for two-hundred and twenty-one years - block by block, brick by brick, calloused hand by calloused hand.

What began twenty-one months ago in the depths of winter must not end on this autumn night. This victory alone is not the change we seek - it is only the chance for us to make that change. And that cannot happen if we go back to the way things were. It cannot happen without you.

So let us summon a new spirit of patriotism; of service and responsibility where each of us resolves to pitch in and work harder and look after not only ourselves, but each other. Let us remember that if this financial crisis taught us anything, it's that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers - in this country, we rise or fall as one nation; as one people.

Let us resist the temptation to fall back on the same partisanship and pettiness and immaturity that has poisoned our politics for so long. Let us remember that it was a man from this state who first carried the banner of the Republican Party to the White House - a party founded on the values of self-reliance, individual liberty, and national unity. Those are values we all share, and while the Democratic Party has won a great victory tonight, we do so with a measure of humility and determination to heal the divides that have held back our progress. As Lincoln said to a nation far more divided than ours, "We are not enemies, but friends...though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection." And to those Americans whose support I have yet to earn - I may not have won your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your President too.

And to all those watching tonight from beyond our shores, from parliaments and palaces to those who are huddled around radios in the forgotten corners of our world - our stories are singular, but our destiny is shared, and a new dawn of American leadership is at hand. To those who would tear this world down - we will defeat you. To those who seek peace and security - we support you. And to all those who have wondered if America's beacon still burns as bright - tonight we proved once more that the true strength of our nation comes not from our the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals: democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope.

For that is the true genius of America - that America can change. Our union can be perfected. And what we have already achieved gives us hope for what we can and must achieve tomorrow.

This election had many firsts and many stories that will be told for generations. But one that's on my mind tonight is about a woman who cast her ballot in Atlanta. She's a lot like the millions of others who stood in line to make their voice heard in this election except for one thing - Ann Nixon Cooper is 106 years old.

She was born just a generation past slavery; a time when there were no cars on the road or planes in the sky; when someone like her couldn't vote for two reasons - because she was a woman and because of the color of her skin.

And tonight, I think about all that she's seen throughout her century in America - the heartache and the hope; the struggle and the progress; the times we were told that we can't, and the people who pressed on with that American creed: Yes we can.

At a time when women's voices were silenced and their hopes dismissed, she lived to see them stand up and speak out and reach for the ballot. Yes we can.

When there was despair in the dust bowl and depression across the land, she saw a nation conquer fear itself with a New Deal, new jobs and a new sense of common purpose. Yes we can.

When the bombs fell on our harbor and tyranny threatened the world, she was there to witness a generation rise to greatness and a democracy was saved. Yes we can.

She was there for the buses in Montgomery, the hoses in Birmingham, a bridge in Selma, and a preacher from Atlanta who told a people that "We Shall Overcome." Yes we can.

A man touched down on the moon, a wall came down in Berlin, a world was connected by our own science and imagination. And this year, in this election, she touched her finger to a screen, and cast her vote, because after 106 years in America, through the best of times and the darkest of hours, she knows how America can change. Yes we can.

America, we have come so far. We have seen so much. But there is so much more to do. So tonight, let us ask ourselves - if our children should live to see the next century; if my daughters should be so lucky to live as long as Ann Nixon Cooper, what change will they see? What progress will we have made?

This is our chance to answer that call. This is our moment. This is our time - to put our people back to work and open doors of opportunity for our kids; to restore prosperity and promote the cause of peace; to reclaim the American Dream and reaffirm that fundamental truth - that out of many, we are one; that while we breathe, we hope, and where we are met with cynicism, and doubt, and those who tell us that we can't, we will respond with that timeless creed that sums up the spirit of a people:

Yes We Can. Thank you, God bless you, and may God Bless the United States of America.

● President Barack Obama

Hell Yeah Obama Won

There will be no t-shirts this time but all this other stuff will come to pass.

Reaction

As much as anything I am astounded by the emotional reaction Obama supporters, including me, are having to the election result.

Hundreds of thousands of people are in the streets, celebrating, as though our nation has won its independence. People are elated! Full of pride, hope and excitement, invigorated in a way this country has not been in years, if not decades.

Today marks a seismic shift in how America views itself, and how the world views America. We can elect a minority candidate to lead our nation. We can back and accept an intellectual who does not hide his intelligence or pander to the ignorant (to which I refer Clinton as well as Bush). We crave pragmatism, we crave leadership, we crave class. We are ready to grow beyond the baby-boomer ideals and standards that have defined us for decades. We are not afraid of change.

The United States is no longer a country defined by narrowmindedness or simplicity. Our president-elect is wordly, clever, and cool. The nation is excited to follow his lead. Remarkable.

Draft Sarah 2012

Well, looks like it's over. McCain just gave a very gracious concession speech, and we should congratulate him and Sarah on a great campaign. We give our best wishes to President-elect Obama, but at the same time we officially inagurate the "Draft Sarah 2012" movement. As far as we are concerned, victory is still in sight and there will be no settling for second banana next time.

You've all done a wonderful job and I like to thank all of you for reading and commenting during the past year. For as much as I have received much credit for this movement, it would have gone nowhere without you, my readers. I look forward to continuing to work with you.

Our prayers are with Governor Palin, and God Bless America.

Yes We Did

(hat tip, lovepuppy)

 

What a Great Day

20081104obama.gif
Illustration by Patrick Moberg

Yes, I am in paradise, but I'm also pretty pumped about my man Obama.

What's surprised me is how pumped everyone in Thailand is about this election. Every time I hopped in a cab and they asked in broken English where I'm from, the first response to "New York City" is always "Barack Obama!" Oftentimes, they'd go on and talk to me about who has more foreign policy experience or if America can really elect a Black President. Sure, the US elections affect everyone, but it's amazing how knowledgeable my cab drivers have been.

Anyway, with this election seeming pretty much wrapped up, I'm going to go hang on the beach.

What’s Your Design?

Branch Rickey famously said that “luck is the residue of design.” Or something like that.

So with the GM Meetings ongoing, the Winter Meetings a month away, and the Hot Stove heating up, what’s your team’s design? Here’s my challenge to you — name your team and then in twenty-five words or less, state what your team’s plan is for next year.

Here’s an example:

RAYS: Consolidate 2008 gains, continue developing talent and transferring to ML roster, while focusing on revenue sustainability in home market. In other words, stay on plan.

The Futures of Entertainment

I've been thinking about this a lot lately. And when Souris posted to a mailing list about it, I tried to put my rather vague thoughts into more coherent terms. I realized that I had been noticing four big trends that are already shifting the tectonic plates of the vast entertainment industry. I need to do some more thinking in these areas but my initial thoughts are that the futures of entertainment will be shaped by:

1. Tension between Immersion and Transparency.
What I think of as Big Media -- giant, big-budget movies, games, TV Shows -- seek to really *immerse* people in a spectacle of scale and sensation. And we say that we love that feeling of being utterly transported -- but at a My Bloody Valentine show I went to recently, what did I see? People were texting on their phones! Taking video of the band! Twittering! I was doing it too. We were *layering* these ambient communications transparently on top of what was supposed to be this overwhelmingly big experience, because we wanted to *share* this experience with others, we wanted to record it for ourselves. This has to do with what Linda Stone calls "continuous partial attention." I call this "transparent" because I don't believe it in any way diminishes the experience of, say, a rock show; it's simply a new way of experiencing it.

Future entertainment will find clever ways to accommodate, even encourage, this behavior.

2. Asynchronous Instant Communication.

Most of my friends have embraced Twittering, text messaging, Facebook, and the like. One of the things that is really new and intriguing about these forms of communication is that they are simultaneously instant and asynchronous. The update happens instantly--and the recipient can read or answer at her leisure. Or not. Facebook status updates are absolutely brilliant ways for expressing an immediate state, and allowing someone else to browse the "immediate states" of friends. Entertainment will increasingly make use of these styles of communication in the backbone of the product itself.

3. Credible Advertising with Integrity.
For a child of the 80's like me, this seems like a ludicrous notion. Advertising in that decade was so transparently slick and false that we quickly grew inured to it and scorned it. It seems designed to trick people into buying things they didn't need. Arguably that is still, at base, the aim of advertising. But it doesn't have to be that way. With targeted ads there is a chance to serve the consumer with something that she actually *wants* to see. The ad becomes both a form of entertainment and a service to the consumer.

Media companies that accept advertising should become increasingly picky about the ads they accept. They will accept ads that align with their values and their mission.

As an example, look at Penny-Arcade: the creators of the popular web comic have stated that they will only accept advertising for products that they themselves believe in. That endorsement is a HUGE win for both the consumer, who is a fan of Penny-Arcade and of their values, and for the advertiser.

4. Tools *are* the Content.
"Content is king." Well, there's about to be a revolution and some regicide. The consumers of tomorrow want content for free. And they will make their own content. That is potentially more fun and more interesting than consuming carefully planned, carefully made, well-mannered content from a professional. Films and TV are already at that point where they are consumed and remixed freely by consumers. Music was there long ago. Games will be there soon.

The content of the future will be in tools. Tools like the ones shipped with Little Big Planet (although I suspect it's still too early for that game to start a true paradigm shift.) Tools that will let consumers engage directly with the content.

Actually, this is the tipping point when "consumers" become "users". Consumers are passive. Users, active.

So, these are my initial thoughts. I need to work on them some more and flesh them out, but I think there is something to think about here.

Design Has No Name: Oscar Wilde Booklet


Bill Ayers Speaks

By Peter Slevin CHICAGO -- In his first interview since he became an issue in the 2008 presidential campaign, Bill Ayers, the former Weather Underground leader, said today that he had a distant relationship with Barack Obama and that Obama's opponents had turned him into "a cartoon character." Ayers, now an education professor at the University of Illinois-Chicago, said he thought the accusation by Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin that Obama had been "palling around with...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.

Cartoonists on Obama’s win

It’s still several hours before any results pour in for the U.S. presidential election, but that hasn’t stopped editorial cartoonists from making predictions and readying their submissions. Daryl Cagle’s online hub of editorial cartoons has already started compiling cartoons depicting Obama’s victory.

MAD cartoonist Tom Richmond also recently posted a look at MAD’s efforts to not predict election results, but to prepare two versions of features or cover art that feature a winning presidential candidate.

Vote, Baby, Vote!

A little blast from the past as we choose our futures. Lady Miss Kier, you brought us good luck in 1992, now bring us home!

Success from the something that nothing provides

Gladwell: Can an unlikely group succeed in a counterintuitive fashion? Can underprivileged outsiders have an advantage? As evidence, Gladwell cites the story of Sidney Weinberg, a high-school dropout who rose from the mailroom at Goldman Sachs to become a senior partner in the company and one of the most connected and powerful men on Wall Street.

This is the great mystery of Weinberg's career, and it's hard to escape the conclusion that Carnegie was on to something: there are times when being an outsider is precisely what makes you a good insider. It's not difficult to imagine, for example, that the head of Continental Can liked the fact that Weinberg was from nothing, in the same way that New York City employers preferred country boys to city boys. That C.E.O. dwelled in a world with lots of people who went to Yale and then to Wall Street; he knew that some of them were good at what they did and some of them were just well connected, and separating the able from the incompetent wasn't always easy. Weinberg made it out of Brooklyn; how could he not be good?

I read Gladwell for the anecdotes.

(link)

When the Real Contest Begins

Today will determine whether Barack Obama will be President of the United States beginning 12:00 noon, eastern standard time, on January 20, 2009. The next question is what he can accomplish thereafter.

Each of Obama's major initiatives – affordable health care, high-quality schools along with early-childhood education, an end to oil dependence along with a cap-and-trade system that reduces carbon emissions, a more equitable tax system, and a withdrawal from Iraq – would be difficult to achieve on its own. Together they comprise one of the most ambitious presidential agendas in living memory.

Is it achievable? Not even a Democratic majority in both houses of Congress – not even sixty Democratic votes in the Senate – can easily overcome the obstacles.

First are the corporate and financial interest groups that will lobby intensely to preserve the status quo or get a disproportionate share of whatever the government is handing out. Pharmaceutical companies, insurers, and giant hospital chains will seek control over any health-care initiative. Teachers unions, textbook publishers, and state and local education interests will want to take over any educational reform. Producers of coal, ethanol, and nuclear power will try to dominate the energy and environment agenda. Military contractors will want a say over defense policy.

Wall Street will seek to retain control over its massive bailout.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff will demand that defense expenditures remain high, however quickly the Iraq War winds down.

Fiscal conservatives – including a newly-enlarged group of “blue-dog” Democrats – will fret over the ballooning budget deficit brought on by slower growth and the enormous expense of bailing out Wall Street. They’ll want to put any new spending initiatives on hold.

Business groups, Republicans, libertarians, talk-radio hosts, and the Wall Street Journal and Fox News will emit a constant and consistent cacophony of bilious rage over anything resembling a tax hike on the rich or big corporations.

Obama’s agenda may survive all this – if a deepening economic crisis focuses the public’s attention and mobilizes its support; if Obama communicates to the public clearly and compellingly why his agenda is necessary to the future; and if his vast campaign network of volunteers and Netroots transforms itself into a movement to take back politics from the lobbyists, naysayers, pork peddlars, and moneyed interests that normally run things in Washington.

In other words, if Obama wins today, the real contest begins tomorrow.

Glam Media Blames Economy, Slows Down Payments To Publishers

Shared by Jake Dobkin
This is why outsourcing sales to third-parties is a bad idea. At the first sign of trouble, they screw you, and screw you hard. Doubling payment times is going to bankrupt at least a few publishers.

Glam Media, the always interesting womens network (and now men’s network) is back in the news this morning.

Glam is both a direct publisher of content and an advertising network. A big part of their business model is float management - making sure that they collect money before the pay it out to partners. If they pay too soon, they could get hit with bad debt when advertisers don’t pay. Pay later, and they keep the interest they earn on partner money.

That’s why they’re extending the payment period to already beleaguered publishing partners. In a notice today, Glam blames the economy and extends payment terms from 60 or 90 to 120 days:

Dear Publisher,

Please be advised that to better prepare for the current financial situation, Glam anticipates a significant slow down in collection payments from advertisers. Therefore we will need to align the expected timing of payments from advertisers with the payments we make to our publishers. Accordingly, as of November 1, 2008 the revenue payments will now be scheduled on 120 day payment terms. However, in order to help minimize the impact to you and avoid gaps in payments, you will be paid as follows:

For publishers with 60 day payment terms:

Dear Publisher,

Please be advised that to better prepare for the current financial situation, Glam anticipates a significant slow down in collection payments from advertisers. Therefore we will need to align the expected timing of payments from advertisers with the payments we make to our publishers. Accordingly, as of November 1, 2008 the revenue payments will now be scheduled on 120 day payment terms. However, in order to help minimize the impact to you and avoid gaps in payments, you will be paid as follows:

November Revenue: 50% will be paid in January and 50% will be paid in February
December Revenue: 50% will be paid in March and 50% will be paid in April
January Revenue: 100% will be paid in May
Note: There are no changes in the amount you will earn or receive with this payment revision.

We appreciate your cooperation and we will do everything we can to make the transition to the new payment schedule as smooth as possible.

This agreement will go into effect November 1, 2008.

For publishers with 90 day payment terms:

Dear Publisher,

Please be advised that to better prepare for the current financial situation, Glam anticipates a significant slow down in collection payments from advertisers. Therefore we will need to align the expected timing of payments from advertisers with the payments we make to our publishers. Accordingly, as of November 1, 2008 the revenue payments will now be scheduled on 120 day payment terms. However, in order to help minimize the impact to you and avoid gaps in payments, you will be paid as follows:
November Revenue: 50% will be paid in February and 50% will be paid in March
December Revenue: 100 will be paid in April
January Revenue: 100% will be paid in May
Note: There are no changes in the amount you will earn or receive with this payment revision.

We appreciate your cooperation and we will do everything we can to make the transition to the new payment schedule as smooth as possible.

This agreement will go into effect November 1, 2008.

Long payment terms are just business as usual with ad networks - it often takes our partner Federated Media six months or more to get us payment for ads served on TechCrunch. This is more of a sign of Glam’s ongoing transition from making guaranteed payments to publishing partners to a more stable and traditonal revenue share model. But for partners, it’s the equivalent of skipping 2-4 months of revenue as they wait out the new payment period. For some it will mean laying off writers and cutting other costs as the effects trickle down.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Dust Buster

keiraheartsanya.jpgDid you catch this on Friday?

Vogue UK called out Keira Knightley's Anya Hindmarch dustbag.

Instead of busting out one of her $1,000+ Anyas - which she had to have bought to get the free dustbag - she carried around the little tote one would be packaged in.

Now, this might go back to when everyone started carrying their peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in designer shopping bags - apparently, it makes lunch a little more bearable when you pull a Chanel-bag lunch out from under your desk.

But now that public bag recycling has moved on to the shopping bag innards, we wonder what the next step in designer re-packaging will be. We predict we'll get lots of Christmas gifts wrapped in Marc-branded tissue paper this year.

Maybe it's the economy (could designer dustbags be the answer to the overpriced designer It Bag? Is this the official death knoll for being seen carrying exorbitantly priced fashion goods at the moment?) making some stretch their designer purchases just one step further, or maybe they're just so pumped to have that new bag that they want to remind the rest of us that we don't have one.

Either way, we just thought we'd tell you about it.

--KYLE HAYES


curated vs aggregated

this title really should and will be a longer post, but for now it can serve as a placeholder for a short list of sites I mentioned in a call with someone earlier today about a content idea.
aggregators:  outside.in, alltop.com
interesting newsletters that back into sites: headbutler very short list, dailycandy, photojojo, Manhattan User's Guide

Patrick Moberg: Today is a big day.



Patrick Moberg:

Today is a big day.

8 Years Later

This has been blogged pretty heavily, but a friend hadn’t seen it so I’m posting it here. This is my favorite video short of this election cycle. It shows so much in just two minutes, telegraphing familiar characters from their past comfort into the present crises, riding humor into pathos and back again into hope. For readers outside the US, the video is based on a short film that became a popular, heavily aired ad some 8 years ago. More at wikipedia.

The crowd that knew too much?

Blogging for the Demos think tank, Samuel Jones comments on a new piece by James Surowiecki in this week's New Yorker. In the article, Surowiecki suggests that one of the root causes of today's financial panic is that we simply have too much information coming at us. Jones makes an elegant suggestion: the problem might not be too much info, but too few ways to frame it and understand it:

It's not that masses of information is a bad thing, far from it. What is an issue, however, is how we manage it. The more we know, the more fragmented we can become, and - as Onora O'Neill wrote in her Reith Lectures - the harder it becomes to trust and operate within the institutions by which we seek to manage our society.

Read the blog post from Samuel Jones on Demos >>
Watch James Surowiecki's TEDTalk on the power of shared information >>

That Cool Elections Results Map

You see that election results map to the right in our feature section. Starting at 6 PM Eastern the map will start streaming live election results for the presidential, Senate and House races. You can either hover over a state or district to see the results or click on the state or district to see results down to the county level. One thing. You don't need to refresh the site to get new results from the map. It's all automatic. So do not refresh the whole site. You don't need to to get the latest results from the map.

You can test out the map now to see how it works and we also shot this video yesterday that explains how it all works.

kevindavidcrowe: patrickmoberg: Today is a big day. It very...



kevindavidcrowe:

patrickmoberg:

Today is a big day.
It very well could be

My vote!!!


My vote!!!
Originally uploaded by tuckergurl
I sort of can't believe this day. I couldn't sleep so I voted at 6:15 am. I waited in line for an hour but I couldn't complain. This is what we have been waiting for.

I haven't had much to say on my blog lately, partially because my computer is dead and partially because I've just been really active in life and less active on the computer.

Overall, I wish I had done more to help Obama win. I've been so busy that I haven't been out in Pennsylvania grabbing folks in the streets. But I have been praying for him which is something I only do for my parents and my brother.

My friend and I were talking about today and how, as an African American, we've been so cautiously hopeful. Today is the first day that we feel like folks that we know are finally being able to grasp the possible concept of a Black president. But really, it's not just a "Black" president. It is the best candidate and an overall amazing man.

Like I've said before, this whole process of following and supporting Barack Obama has been like falling in love. It is incredibly scary and every day, I am scared that this amazing feeling will go away.

My line was intense, an hour at 6:15am! One guy got annoyed and the moment he was about to get angry, a woman just looked at him and, "Not today sir. Not today." And he just shut up. He knew that today was not the day to throw a fit. It is too beautiful a day.

Today is a big day. (via patrickmoberg, hrrrthrrr)



Today is a big day. (via patrickmoberg, hrrrthrrr)

Readers, Thank You

As I think Atrios put it on the eve of the 2006 elections, whatever happens today, we'll all get up tomorrow and just keep on working away. This is only one chapter in a much bigger story, and what a story it is. Wow.

But with this election about to end after two years, it seems like a good time to pause and thank you all for your loyalty and help throughout this amazing campaign, and to give you a sense of what's next on this site.

We wouldn't have been able to make this blog work without you. It got a little tense at times, no question, especially during the Dem primary. But you've all been an indispensable feature of this site. You all kept us in line -- rather aggressively -- when we were wrong or being dimwitted. You all kept the comment threads lively and incredibly smart.

Many of you provided us with no shortage of tips that made it possible to break stories here that -- I hope -- had some kind of impact, however limited, on the race. And you boosted traffic here at this site to an amazing degree -- on recent weekdays Election Central has been pulling in around a quarter of a million page views each day, and frequently more.

The whole premise of this blog is that it's possible to join with readers in actually caring about the outcome in politics while simultaneously doing real reporting with integrity and fairness. The conventions of political reporting have long held that this is a no-no. So be it -- we reject that idea. We think you can call McCain's robo-calls what they are -- robo-slime -- while simultaneously doing good journalism. I hope we pulled off this balancing act with some measure of success, and I hope we continue to do so.

What's next? We're going to keep right on going tomorrow, right through the transition and into the new administration. We need your help covering the next chapter.

Which is to say, come back tomorrow, and the next day, and the next. We won't be able to get it right without you.

New Couple Alert! Bette Midler & 50 Cent?

bette50.jpg

-Photo by Getty Images-


No, sillies, but that's funny to think about, isn't it?

Bette Midler and 50 Cent collaborated Monday to celebrate the opening of "The Curtis '50 Cent' Jackson Community Garden" in Queens, New York.

So, how'd that happen?

"I called and nagged him," the Divine Ms. M said. "His G-Unity Foundation gives a million dollars away every year in grants to non profits all over the city ... They're just brilliant."

"When Bette calls you don't say 'no.' Not if you want your reputation to stay the way it is," the rapper said.

The garden is located in Jamaica, Queens, where the 50 grew up. Neighborhood children will use the grounds to learn about how food grows. "I wish I had this to come to when I was growing up around here," he said. "The opportunity to create this garden for the youth and the community is a great one."  

So, is this beginning of a beautiful friendship? "Absolutely!" 50 promised, before giving her a big hug.

"He's producing my next record," Bette jokingly concurred. "I will be rapping. He's writing a song for me right now." 

That I'd like to see.

Election Central Morning Roundup

Poll Closings
Here are the closing times in some of the key states: Most of Indiana closes at 6 p.m. ET, with the remainder closing at 7 p.m. ET; all of Virginia, most of Florida and most of New Hampshire close at 7 p.m. ET, with Florida panhandle and the remainder of New Hampshire closing at 8 p.m. ET; North Carolina and Ohio close at 7:30 p.m. ET; Missouri and Pennsylvania close at 8 p.m. ET; Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico close at 9 p.m. ET; and Nevada closes at 10 p.m. ET.

Obama Has Voted
Barack Obama has just finished voting, and was met by applause from other voters at his polling station.

Obama Greeting Voters In Indiana, Biden In Virginia, Then Off to Chicago
Barack Obama will be getting in his last bit of hand-shaking today, meeting and greeting voters in the Indianapolis area. Joe Biden will be meeting voters around Richmond, Virginia, and then going off to Chicago -- meaning that both members of the Dem ticket will be doing their final campaign activities in states that haven't gone Democratic in 44 years.

McCain Holds One More Rally, Palin Back In Alaska
John McCain is holding an Election Day rally -- a rare event -- at 2:15 p.m. ET in Grand Junction, Colorado. He will then greet voters in New Mexico, then spend Election Night in Phoenix. Sarah Palin will vote this morning in Alaska, and is then off to Phoenix.

Zogby: Final State Polls Paint Good Picture For Obama
The final round of Zogby swing-state polls gives Barack Obama the lead in several of the biggest swing states: Obama is up 49%-48% in Florida, 53%-42% in Nevada, 49%-47% in Ohio, 52%-45% in Virginia, and 51%-41% in Pennsylvania. McCain has a 50%-49% edge in North Carolina, a 50%-45% lead in Indiana, and the two are tied 49%-49% in Missouri.

Obama's Final Rally Gets Over 85,000 People
Barack Obama's final rally last night, held in Manassas, Virginia, had a strong turnout of more than 85,000 people. It's quite possible that the whole election could turn on tonight's result in Virginia.

McCain Held Home-State Rally Last Night
John McCain spoke to a crowd last night in Prescott, Arizona, winning last-minute votes in his home state. "We're closing in the polls," McCain said. "All we've got to do is get out the vote."

This Is It
If you are eligible but have not yet done so, please get out there and vote.

Voting Irregularities Already!

The donkey is universally recognized as the symbol of Democratic Party of the United States. Except inside voting booths in New York State, where affiliation with the Democratic party is marked by a five-pointed star. Midwestern voters indicate the Democratic ticket with a rooster, except in Missouri, where the symbol has traditionally been the Statue of Liberty — coincidentally also the symbol of the Libertarian party, which appealed to use the symbol when they joined the ballot in 1976. They’ve settled for using the Liberty Bell instead, though some Missouri Libertarians also use the symbol of the mule. Not the Democratic mule, mind you, the Missouri mule. The mule is the state animal of Missouri.

Those who suspect that Republican iconography will show the same mastery of political organization as the rest of that party are correct: Republican candidates are always signified by an elephant, except inside voting booths in Indiana, New York, and West Virginia, where an eagle is used instead. And in these states, as well as the 47 others, the eagle is also the national symbol of the United States itself.

The Chicago typefoundry of Barnhart Brothers & Spindler showed these “Election Typecuts” in their Catalog 25-A, published around 1930, and 78 years later I think my district is still using this same art. Cheerily Barnhart Brothers accompanied their samples with this legend:

When changes in the political situation — the birth of new parties, revision of election laws, or other causes call for new emblems or characters other than shown above, our facilities enable us to produce the material promptly at moderate cost.

I’m ready. You? —JH

Amazon's Frustration-Free Packaging

Amazon has introduced something that the company is calling Frustration-Free Packaging.

The Frustration-Free Package (on the left) is recyclable and comes without excess packaging materials such as hard plastic clamshell casings, plastic bindings, and wire ties. It's designed to be opened without the use of a box cutter or knife and will protect your product just as well as traditional packaging (on the right). Products with Frustration-Free Packaging can frequently be shipped in their own boxes, without an additional shipping box.

As CDs and DVDs are quickly being replaced by digital downloads, I expect that Frustration-Free Packaging will eventually be replaced by Packaging-Free Packaging as Lego sets, Barbie dolls, computer mice, and running shoes will be downloaded to your HP Personal Real Printer for manufacture and customization in the home. (via 37s)

(link)

The cracker over there/He try to keep it yesteryear

Time to Vote

At about 2am last night I took a cab from Manhattan to Brooklyn. It was my fifth cab of the day and this driver and like all the other drivers today wanted to talk about the election. The men were a diverse lot ranging from a Bangladeshi immigrant to a man who moved to New York from New Orleans after the flood, but all the conversations had a common theme. They men started by asking me who I was voting for and when I said Barack Obama, they would say they were so glad and that they hoped he would win too. Then they enumerated their reasons for supporting him but all ended with a variation of "They won't let him win."

The election stealing conspiracies varied from computer fraud to hidden racism, to vote fraud, but despite my protestations none would allow themselves to believe that Obama could win, almost as if the disappointment of losing would be to great. I'll spare you a long oratory (I suspect blog audiences are largely self selecting and the vast majority of you are already in the Obama column). But I wanted to say, let's prove the fears of these men unfounded. Get out there and do this thing right.

Filed under: daily life
Tags: nyc, obama

November 3, 2008

Question: Where are the Best US Elections Result Graphs?

us_election_results.jpg
During today and tomorrow, data visualization will be on the forefront of everyone's attention. Everywhere in the world, people will be exposed to a plethora of bar, line and pie charts twinkling in distinct bright blue and red colors. Graphic design departments of magazines and newspapers go into overdrive, overlaying the US map with diverse statistics. In the meantime, real-time media outlets like television stations and websites grapple how to represent uncertainty and predictions in a visual way.

So I am wondering: What online US Presidential Elections visualizations are you currently watching, and why? Or vice versa, which one do you think is ineffective (and why)? Can the infosthetics crowd come to a consensus of the best election results graphs online?

Please leave a comment below!

Here are some links to get you started (many maps, few graphs):
· CNN ElectionCenter Map
· Fox News Interactive Map
· ABC News Map
· Yahoo Election Dashboard
· MSN Election Map Room
· MSNBC Election Map
· NPR Election Map
· Wall Street Journal Electoral College Calculator (browser resize!)
· 270towin.com
· idashboards.com Election 2008 (results?)
· NYTimes Election 2008 (results?)
· BBC News Elections 2008 (results?)
· USA Today (results?)
· Newsweek Politics (results?)
· Time Magazine (results?)
· Google Maps 2008 Elections Gallery
· Forst and the Trees Election Center (results?)
· Color-Weighted Election 2008 Cartograms (results on 5 November).

almost.

I really need to start blogging something other than the Times, but alas, here's Virginia Heffernan on her Kindle.

I can’t seem to put it down. It’s ideal for book reading — lucid, light — but lately it has become something more: a kind of refuge. Unlike the other devices that clatter in my shoulder bag, the Kindle isn’t a big greedy magnet for the world’s signals. It doesn’t pulse with clocks, blaze with video or squall with incoming bulletins and demands. It’s almost dead, actually. Lifeless. Just a lump in my hands or my bag, exiled from the crisscrossing of infinite cybernetworks. It’s almost like a book.

Those Prop 8 Ads

As those of you living in California know, early on Monday some pro Proposition 8 ads starting running on TPM. They came through Google. So we didn't know about them until we heard about them from readers. But we did allow them to continue running after we found out. Not surprisingly, we got a lot of unhappy emails asking why we were letting the ad run. I answer the question in a post I just put up at TPMCafe.

mirza: This Is What I AM Afraid Of



mirza:

This Is What I AM Afraid Of

David Klein

There’s so much good stuff here it’s almost overwhelming. David Klein designed and illustrated numerous travel posters for TWA and many broadway show window cards during the 1950s and 60s. His abstracted shapes and playful typography are a real inspiration. In addition to the examples of his brilliant graphic poster work, the site includes a detailed biography and career history of Mr. Klein.

Collectors note that Tepper Galleries in NYC will be hosting an auction of Klein’s work on November 12.

Rough seas ahead

This page on kottke.org is the #1 result when you Google "obama wins". Servers may get a little melty around here in the next couple of days. That's ok...this is what Twitter's servers are going to look like tomorrow night:

Fail bomb

Imagine this video, but with the fail whale instead of a real whale and a nuclear device instead of dynamite.

(link)

McCain Goes for the "Sad Grandpa" [Politics]

Shared by Eve
"During the day he gets almost no exercise, eats the candy and junk food strewn all over his bus, and naps slumped in his seat in the curtained-off front section of his plane." Now I regret mocking dancearobics

McCain is expected to lose the election tomorrow, and the NYT's penultimate campaign article makes it sounds as if he's suffering a serious case of senioritis. He passes the time on his campaign bus with his young friends Joe Lieberman and Lindsey Graham, telling his favorite Henny Youngman "Take my wife, please" jokes. Who but our grandpa LOLs at borscht-belt comedians? And then there's his current regimen: "During the day he gets almost no exercise, eats the candy and junk food strewn all over his bus, and naps slumped in his seat in the curtained-off front section of his plane." Sounds exactly like Gramps—but don't be fooled by appearances. McCain is only executing the last-ditch secret "Sad Grandpa" plan he was supposedly joking about on SNL this weekend. After the jump, see the sketch.


Serious Eats Pumpkin-Carving Contest Winners

From Serious Eats

We know you've been waiting for this, so we won't keep you in suspense any longer, bwahahahahahah. The winners of the inaugural Serious Eats Pumpkin-Carving Contest are:

20081103-pumpkin-winners.jpg

1. Grand Prize
OMNOMNOMNOMNOM, by sunkid
Prize: Viking Professional Chef's Cutlery Starter Set (includes: 5-inch flexible boning knife, 8-inch chef's knife, 4-inch paring knife).

2. First Runner Up
Castle of the Wicked Witch, by stike
Prize: 8-inch Viking Professional Chef's Knife

3. Second Runner Up
No Country for Old Men-o'-Lantern, by gavinworth
Prize: 4-inch Viking Professional Paring Knife

4. Third Runner Up
Joker-o-Lantern, by jenhappy
Prize: Williams-Sonoma Pumpkin-Carving Kit
Note from the Serious Eats Team: Hope your thumb is healing nicely!

Thanks to everyone who entered. This was a really tough decision, with everyone here arguing for different pumpkins. This was a lot of fun. Can't wait till next year!

WP-Hyphenate 1.0 beta

Another increment of finer typographic control for the Web: an apparently effective, server-side plug-in for WordPress that enables elegant and automatic hyphenation of words. “The end result is text that can be jus­ti­fied with­out ghastly word spacing.” Supposedly works with left-aligned blocks of text, too. It’s a step forward, but it may not be the full step forward some might hope for. Unfortunately, I don’t use WordPress so I won’t have the opportunity to put it into practice.

My role in the Obama interview cover-up

Shared by Eve
Phil tried to talk me into approving a satirical post where he said it *was* a cover up, and elaborated on how and why it was done. I said "no," and he said "you never let me have any fun." How did this become my life?
It's hard to pack in righteous indignation, outrage and a big 15 minutes of fame all at one time. That's pretty much where we are here at the Chronicle after Governor Palin's claims over the weekend that we suppressed comments about the coal industry by Barack Obama at a...
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From cave paintings to the internet

A fantastically extensive timeline of recorded information "from cave paintings to the internet". It's an expanded version of the timeline that appears in the book, From Gutenberg to the Internet (more info), which seems really interesting.

From Gutenberg to the Internet presents 63 original readings from the history of computing, networking, and telecommunications arranged thematically by chapters. Most of the readings record basic discoveries from the 1830s through the 1960s that laid the foundation of the world of digital information in which we live. These readings, some of which are illustrated, trace historic steps from the early nineteenth century development of telegraph systems -- the first data networks -- through the development of the earliest general-purpose programmable computers and the earliest software, to the foundation in 1969 of ARPANET, the first national computer network that eventually became the Internet. The readings will allow you to review early developments and ideas in the history of information technology that eventually led to the convergence of computing, data networking, and telecommunications in the Internet.

(via design observer)

(link)

Obama's Grandmother Dies At Age 86

Obama's Grandmother Dies At Age 86:

Oh no… what absolutely horrible timing. One day before finally, most likely, seeing her grandson become President.

Now he has to win. Because now it would be so much worse if he didn’t.

Obama's Grandmother Passes Away

Here's the statement just in from Barack Obama and his half sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, on the death of their grandmother:

It is with great sadness that we announce that our grandmother, Madelyn Dunham, has died peacefully after a battle with cancer. She was the cornerstone of our family, and a woman of extraordinary accomplishment, strength, and humility. She was the person who encouraged and allowed us to take chances. She was proud of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren and left this world with the knowledge that her impact on all of us was meaningful and enduring. Our debt to her is beyond measure.

Our family wants to thank all of those who sent flowers, cards, well-wishes, and prayers during this difficult time. It brought our grandmother and us great comfort. Our grandmother was a private woman, and we will respect her wish for a small private ceremony to be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, we ask that you make a donation to any worthy organization in search of a cure for cancer.

His grandmother, his primary caregiver for many years, passes away today. And he's very likely to be elected president tomorrow. It's hard to imagine what the emotional tumult must be like.

Late Update: John and Cindy McCain have released this statement:

"We offer our deepest condolences to Barack Obama and his family as they grieve the loss of their beloved grandmother. Our thoughts and prayers go out to them as they remember and celebrate the life of someone who had such a profound impact in their lives."

2008 College Football Rankings---Week 10

Florida takes over the top spot after beating Georgia and having Texas lose. Texas still has enough quality wins to stay at #2. Alabama and Texas Tech are a bit lower because they don’t have as many huge victories as the other two. If Texas Tech can win big against one of its future opponents, they’ll move up. Alabama might need to blow out LSU or Auburn if it wants to finish the regular season at number 1.

RankTeamRecordQuality
1Florida7-18.5834
2Texas8-18.2730
3Southern Cal7-18.0990
4Penn State9-07.9110
5Alabama9-07.8763
6Texas Tech9-07.7709
7Oklahoma8-17.7539
8Georgia7-27.4821
9Utah9-07.3119
10Missouri7-27.1778

Palin's Rising Star?

I know there's a lot of talk in Republican circles that Sarah Palin is going to be the star, the new face of the GOP in the post-Bush, post-McCain era. And this speculation has been goosed by Palin's own hints that it's full speed ahead with Palinism on the national stage if she and McCain fall short on Tuesday. But for me the whole idea has never really added up. I'm certainly not the target audience. But my own sense is that Palin's appeal is uniquely and paradoxically tied to the dynamics of this particular election -- an election in which Republicans are expecting, rightly or wrongly, to be beaten decisively and the most aggrieved are uniquely drawn to Palin's bright eyed and unapologetic appeal to resentment and victimology.

As I think Noam Scheiber said a week or two ago, Palin is the first Republican presidential or vice-presidential since Richard Nixon to so genuinely appeal to the politics of resentment. Sure, the Bushes and McCain have played to it. But either economically or socially or both, these men were all to-the-manor-born -- elites who've lived their whole lives on greased rails.

To use a different analogy I think Palin (and perhaps Joe the Plumber too) appeal to the brainstem of conservatism, where the most primitive and persistent impulses are registered, even as the areas of higher reasoning and cognition (frontal lobes and all that) are flat-lining or tracking into oblivion.

Even a week or so back a poll of Republicans found that Palin came in third behind Romney and Huckabee in their choice for a 2012 nominee.

The conventional wisdom seems to be that only the conservative 'intellectuals' have a beef with Palin. But I'm pretty sure the post-election view is going to seem very different. The chatter out of the McCain campaign only confirms what her two months on the public stage has made painfully clear. Palin wasn't simply unprepared for intense scrutiny of a national campaign. The woman is an ignoramus of almost unprecedented magnitude in the annals of national politics. It's not just that virtually every-non-Republican has a negative view of her. I just don't see a national party getting behind someone like that. And before you snark, "What about George Bush?" Sorry but there's no comparison. Whatever else I think of him, he's not a moron. And while he appears to be astoundingly incurious, there's simply no comparison to Palin.

I guess I could imagine a rump Republican party nominating Palin. It could be Palin with perhaps Mark Levin as veep to nail down the all important angry, middle-aged DC Jewish male, right-wing ravanchist vote and Joe the Plumber to run her Phalangist paramilitary. But my strong hunch is that if McCain loses tomorrow that will be the end of Sarah Palin's national political career even if there are some persistent twitches and jerks over the coming months.

Cocotron lets you develop in Cocoa for Windows, with a little extra work

Filed under: , , , , ,


It kind of sounds like a developer's dream: create an app in Cocoa that automatically works on Windows, too. But that's what Cocotron promises, and the folks at Ecamm say the dream is there, even if it requires a lot of elbow grease. They tried using Cocotron to port an app called FileMagnet, and two months after they started, they say they did it. You can see the results above, and as they say, "Visual Studio was never opened."

But of course it wasn't exactly one-click. They had to implement a number of Apple-specific methods, and there were UI bugs, strings support, and dreaded Vista compatibility to work out. But the good news is that Cocotron is all open source, and from what the Mac Daddies say, the devs working on the project are super helpful and supportive. So, not only is it getting better every day, but every bit of implementation that gets done is something that won't have to be repeated. Sounds like a lot of "fun" (for varying values of "fun" of course) for developers to be had here.

The lines between Mac and PC, no matter what the commercials say, are blurring more and more every day, and this could turn out to be a way to develop in an environment as welcoming as Cocoa, and then bring programs back into an environment as widespread as Windows.
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zaha hadid at sonnabend gallery


‘kloris’

zaha hadid
sonnabend gallery and 168 tenth avenue, new york
november 1 – december 13, 2008
 
sonnabend gallery and kenny schachter of rove are currently presenting new large scale sculptural
installations by zaha hadid in two new york city gallery spaces. the works on show reflect hadid’s vision
of a new urbanism which blends art, architecture and design. some of the installations are based on
architectural commission from hadid’s practise., like ‘masterplan’, which was originally part of hadid’s
citywide plan for the asian side of istanbul. one of the other works is ‘kloris’, a cluster of sculptural
seating elements inspired by the shapes of flower petals. the show builds on the excitement
accompanying hadid designed ‘chanel contemporary art container’ currently on show in central park.

http://www.artnet.com/sonnabend.html
http://www.zaha-hadid.com


‘masterplan’


‘kloris’


‘stalactites’

New MacBooks and MBPs can handle up to 6GB of RAM

Filed under: , , , ,

Is it just me or is it pretty mindblowing what Moore's Law is doing to our computers these days? I remember when 64mb of RAM was great, and even a few years ago, I wondered why anyone would ever use 1GB of RAM (I've got 2GB in my gaming PC, and I still almost think it's too much). But apparently TidBITS has been doing some testing, and they've discovered that not only can the new MacBooks hold 4GB of RAM as Apple recommends for a limit, but stuffing a whopping 6GB in there is possible and doable. There are two DDR3 slots in the new MacBooks and MacBook Pros, and they come with either 1GB or 2GB in each DIMM slot.

TidBITS says you can switch out one of those 2GB DIMMs for a 4GB, and voilà, as long as they're the same speed and type, apparently almost everything is hunky-dory. TidBITS says there are two drawbacks: one, that dual-channel architecture requires identical DIMMs, so that's out if you're running a 4GB and 2GB configuration. Plus, it'll cost you an arm and a leg, especially if your leg is priced at around $600, which is what a 4GB stick runs. Even the DDR2 is pricey at that level (then again, if you don't like memory prices, just wait about five minutes, because that's basically how often they change).

And for some reason, there's an issue with running two 4GB sticks in there (for a total of 8GB), but TidBITS surmises that may be fixed by the time Snow Leopard rolls around. Personally, I'd love to see a program that needs 6GB of RAM -- maybe a high end 3D modeler or a financial simulator of some kind. But it's good to know that if you really need that much memory (and have the cash to spend on it), there you go.
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Lots of Homers, not Enough Fear

In 1961 Roger Maris hit 61 homeruns without being intentionally walked.  Since then only 1 player has hit more homeruns with being intentionally walked than Carlos Quentin did in 2008. Here are the leaders since 1961.

    1 Roger Maris         61     0 1961  26 NYY AL 161 698 590 132 159 16  4 142  94  67   7   0   7  16   0  0  .269  .372  .620  .992 *98
    2 Alex Rodriguez      42     0 1998  22 SEA AL 161 748 686 123 213 35  5 124  45 121  10   3   4  12  46 13  .310  .360  .560  .920 *6/D
    3 Carlos Quentin      36     0 2008  25 CHW AL 130 569 480  96 138 26  1 100  66  80  20   0   3  16   7  3  .288  .394  .571  .965 *7
    4 Andruw Jones        36     0 2000  23 ATL NL 161 729 656 122 199 36  6 104  59 100   9   0   5  12  21  6  .303  .366  .541  .907 *8
    5 Geronimo Berroa     36     0 1996  31 OAK AL 153 643 586 101 170 32  1 106  47 122   4   0   6  16   0  3  .290  .344  .532  .876 *D97
    6 Tony Armas          36     0 1983  29 BOS AL 145 613 574  77 125 23  2 107  29 131   2   0   8  31   0  1  .218  .254  .453  .707 *8D
    7 Eric Karros         34     0 1999  31 LAD NL 153 639 578  74 176 40  0 112  53 119   2   0   6  18   8  5  .304  .362  .550  .912 *3
    8 Vernon Wells        32     0 2006  27 TOR AL 154 677 611  91 185 40  5 106  54  90   3   0   9  13  17  4  .303  .357  .542  .899 *8/D
    9 Ellis Burks         32     0 1997  32 COL NL 119 477 424  91 123 19  2  82  47  75   3   1   2  17   7  2  .290  .363  .571  .934 *8*7
   10 Ron Gant            32     0 1990  25 ATL NL 152 631 575 107 174 34  3  84  50  86   1   1   4   8  33 16  .303  .357  .539  .896 *87/9

On the opposite end of the spectrum Omar Vizquel tied for the ninth most IBB in history among players without homerun.

    1 Don Kessinger        18    0 1973  30 CHC NL 160 643 577  52 151 22  3  43  57  44   0   7   2  15   6  6  .262  .327  .310  .637 *6
    2 Doug Flynn           14    0 1980  29 NYM NL 128 474 443  46 113  9  8  24  22  20   0   6   3  15   2  2  .255  .288  .312  .600 *4/6
    3 Ozzie Smith          13    0 1986  31 STL NL 153 609 514  67 144 19  4  54  79  27   2  11   3   9  31  7  .280  .376  .333  .709 *6
    4 Jose Lind            12    0 1992  28 PIT NL 135 506 468  38 110 14  1  39  26  29   1   7   4  14   3  1  .235  .275  .269  .544 *4
    5 Tim Flannery         10    0 1982  24 SDP NL 122 423 379  40 100 11  7  30  30  32   2   6   6   4   1  0  .264  .317  .330  .647 *4/56
    6 Bill Almon           10    0 1978  25 SDP NL 138 442 405  39 102 19  2  21  33  74   0   3   1   6  17  5  .252  .308  .309  .617 *56/4
    7 Doug Flynn           10    0 1978  27 NYM NL 156 572 532  37 126 12  8  36  30  50   1   6   3  14   3  5  .237  .277  .289  .566 *46
    8 Roger Metzger        10    0 1976  28 HOU NL 152 543 481  37 101 13  8  29  52  63   0   8   2  11   1  1  .210  .286  .270  .556 *6/4
    9 Omar Vizquel          9    0 2008  41 SFG NL  92 300 266  24  59 10  1  23  24  29   0   7   3   4   5  4  .222  .283  .267  .550 *6
   10 Steve Jeltz           9    0 1986  27 PHI NL 145 510 439  44  96 11  4  36  65  97   1   3   2   9   6  3  .219  .320  .262  .582 *6
   11 Tony Scott            9    0 1980  28 STL NL 143 460 415  51 104 19  3  28  35  68   1   5   4   8  22 10  .251  .308  .311  .619 *8
   12 Dave Bergman          9    0 1978  25 HOU NL 104 228 186  15  43  5  1  12  39  32   0   1   2   5   2  0  .231  .361  .269  .630 *37
   13 Manny Mota            9    0 1973  35 LAD NL  89 327 293  33  92 11  2  23  25  12   1   6   2  11   1  3  .314  .368  .365  .733 *7
   14 Rod Carew             9    0 1972  26 MIN AL 142 591 535  61 170 21  6  51  43  60   2   9   2  11  12  6  .318  .369  .379  .748 *4
   15 Jake Gibbs            9    0 1969  30 NYY AL  71 245 219  18  49  9  2  18  23  30   0   0   3   3   3  4  .224  .294  .283  .577 *2
   16 Dal Maxvill           9    0 1966  27 STL NL 134 439 394  25  96 14  3  24  37  61   2   6   0  11   3  0  .244  .312  .294  .606 *6/47
   17 Woody Woodward        9    0 1966  23 ATL NL 144 516 455  46 120 23  3  43  37  54   4  17   3   9   2  2  .264  .323  .327  .650 *4*6

participation, silence and online works

As part of the upcoming exhibition The Art of Participation (which I'm looking forward to almost as much as the Martin Puryear show, which opens the same day), SFMOMA will be staging performances of John Cage's 4'33" in the galleries. Also part of the show are a few online works that will tickle the memories of oldtimers, including Bumplist and Communimage.

Second Base: Right Now, It’s Luis Castillo

In a column for the New York Times, Jack Curry takes a look at 12 free agents, not named Sabathia, Teixeira or Ramirez, such as Orlando Hudson, Derek Lowe, Juan Cruz and Joe Beimel.

According to Curry, “If the Mets ate most of the $18 million left on Luis Castillo’s contract and traded him, they could sign Hudson.  Still, GM Omar Minaya said, ‘Right now, I think Castillo is going to be our second baseman.’

i love how that is prefaced by, ‘Right now,’ which is classic…i mean, right now, it’s Monday…tomorrow, it will not be

i sense the Mets have interest in hudson, and they like him a lot, for a variety of reasons, but i do not think he’s a priority – at least in terms of how they spend their money, and how to fill the roster…if, for some reason, they get iced out of other positions, like left field, or catcher, etc., things could change

By the way, speaking of second base, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Cardinals 2B Adam Kennedy requested a trade in late August of last season.

The ecstasy of influence

From a review of A Christmas Tale, a movie by French director Arnaud Desplechin:

Artists who believe in the mystique of originality are often reluctant to reveal their inspirations. But the magpielike Mr. Desplechin revels in what the writer Jonathan Lethem has called the ecstasy of influence. "I didn't invent anything," he said. "Being a director is not such a grand thing. My job is just to show the audience what I love."

The funny thing about the "ecstasy of influence" quote is that it was used by Lethem in a well-known Harpers article about plagiarism that was itself, in Lethem's words, "stole, warped, and cobbled together" from a variety of other sources, which sources he lists at the conclusion to the article.

The phrase "the ecstasy of influence," which embeds a rebuking play on Harold Bloom's "anxiety of influence," is lifted from spoken remarks by Professor Richard Dienst of Rutgers.

The ecstasy of influence would make a good name for this here blog. (via snarkmarket, another ecstatic influence fan)

(link)

At Liberty to Say

Peoples! Did you know there's a new book out about Liberty in the 1950s and 1960s?



To say that I want it would be an understatement. Luckily, I've pre-ordered it on Amazon (Amazon.uk also had it, but has sold out) and soon, soon, a copy will be on the way to me. (I can't believe they didn't find me and offer to send a review copy; somebody at that publisher needs a quick refresher course in online marketing, if you ask me.)

And in other fantastic Liberty news, Anna Buruma, the archivist for Liberty has kindly agreed to answer some questions for you, dear readers. I've put in the first batch below ...

What do you think has been the most popular Liberty design of all
time?

The most popular design is impossible to say, but there are some very long-lived designs.

Hera, the Peacock Feather design, first appears (not at Liberty) in the 1870s; Ianthe (the art nouveau design) was picked up by the Liberty designers in the 1960s and has been identified with Liberty ever since; I think perhaps the most typical of all the Liberty classics is Poppy & Daisy which was designed for Liberty in the 1910s and has been in the fabric range on and off ever since.

Liberty has made Tana lawn, Kingly cord, Jubilee wool/cotton, silk (does it have a name?) and jersey, that I know of ... were there other fabrics, too? Flannel? Oilcloth? Some polyester in the 1970s that nobody speaks of now? Hemp, during the war?

Liberty has always experimented with different cloth bases: many different cottons from very loosely woven ones to coarse to tana lawn; different wools of which the most famous one is probably varuna wool; lots of different silks, we have three different ones at the moment; velvets, and certainly man-mades, from rayon in earlier times to nylon in the 1960s and polyester and viscose in the 70s, 80s and 90s. We don't have any man-mades at present, but never rule out any good bases.

Are there plans to put little biographies of any of the Liberty
fabric designers on the new Liberty blog?


There are no plans to put biographies of Liberty designers on our web site at the moment. Many of the earlier designers are in fact unknown as Liberty wanted to promote their own name rather than that of others.

What is the oddest thing that has ever been made from Liberty?

Lots of odd things: someone made a teapot that was sold in the shop; there was a Cacharel/Liberty sailing boat in a race in the 70s with a Liberty sail; there have been various marketing campaigns for Liberty fabric, for example one where Elvis's blue suede shoes were substituted by tana lawn ones.

Can you think of other questions you'd like to ask of Ms. Buruma? Let me know, and I'll pass them along ...

Khoi Vinh on Social Networks

For many months, my position has been: email me and instant message me all you want, but please, whatever you do, don’t make me sign into Facebook. It’s just too much of a drag.

I completely share Khoi’s attitude here. There’s a couple of social networks that I’m completely addicted to; Flickr and Twitter, but apart from that they seem like something for the younger more social set. Hence the name I suppose. However as a professional in the field I find that I need to keep up with this stuff. Khoi goes on:

I admit that’s a bad attitude. Actually, it’s an irresponsible attitude for someone who purports to be a forward-looking designer. It’s a disservice to my colleagues and my employer, to begin with, as it basically amounts to sleeping on the job.

Read the whole thing. He’s as good a writer as he is a designer.

Read: Beltran, Best Defense per James and Co.

According to Bill James Online, the 2008 Fielding Baseball Awards were selected by a panel of 10 baseball experts, including John Dewan and Bill James.

This year, the panel named Carlos Beltran the Best Defensive Centerfielder in baseball.

Meanwhile, David Wright finished sixth among third basemen and Jose Reyes finished 10th among shortstops.

No other Mets finished in the top 10 at their position.

Update2:32 pm

Actually, Johan Santana finished sixth among the best defensive pitchers.

Pimpin' the Blogs... Pimpin the Blogs...

I've got a whole bunch of blogs to pimp today. It's a combination of new stuff I've found, a couple of friends who took the plunge, some stuff I'm not sure if I've pimped before, and some people who begged for the pimpin'.

Before I do any pimpin' however, I need some help from my dear readers.

Last week, I found a cool blog I'd never seen before dedicated to someone's collection of cards with the number 5. Every card was number 5 - not serial numbered, mind you - just was number 5 in the set. There was a really slick Frank Robinson oddball card as the top post when I found it. I was lazy and waited to link it in my blogroll, and then...........

Computer crashed.

Blog go poof.

I can't find the damn thing again for nothin.

If anyone knows what blog this is I'm talking about please post the link in the comments. I want to read this thing and I promise I'll link right away from now on if I can just find this blog again. And now back to your regularly scheduled pimpin'.

Update: FOUND. Thanks to everyone who helped. This blog will take top spot in my next pimpin' post.

Waxaholic

Blogger Captain Canuck finally started up his own blog after getting his feet wet over at A Pack A Day. A fellow Braves fan, the man knows how to do a good rant. The poor guy is stuck up in the frozen north with very few card shops so check out his blog and maybe send him a LaRoche card or two to get thim through the cold, cold winter. Warning: He'll send you Hoops.

PunkRockPaint

This could be my favorite blog of all time, I just don't know it yet. Don't believe me? Just look at this. Now look at this. Oh yeah. This is the shiznit. He's also a Padres fan. I am SO happy to find a Padres fan blogging. Now I can pick out the Padres to give a good home while desperately looking for Royals, Indians and Dodgers to send off to other bloggers. PunkRockPaint also contributes to this blog:

Things Done To Cards

This is a blog I should really be writing for, but I'm having a hard enough time writing for my 12 other blogs. So what is it? It's a blog about cards like this. Cards like this. Cards like this. And, of course, homebrew cards like this. You like cards like that, don't you? Sure, we all do!

Padrographs; Abner to Zimmer


Autograph cards! Everyone loves autograph cards! And almost everyone loves the Padres! (seriously, how can you hate the fryar) AND THIS IS BOTH!

The Topps Archives

If you like strange oddball Topps weirdness (and I loooooves it) this is the blog for you. Each post is a mini history lesson about an obscure set, or maybe the wrappers, or just something fun. We need more of this stuff on the 'net.

Card Buzz

Have I linked this one before? I'm not sure. What the hey, I'll do it again. This 'under the radar' blog from an Angels fan has been around since 2004 (!!!) so give one of the old-timers a look. Bonus: Phillie Phanatic!

Tastelikedirt

I know I've had this linked for months, but I don't think I've pimped it yet. Epic A's fan, brilliant artist and lots and lots of A's cards. You know I love the team collectors.

Sports Card Blog

Two posts in, epic rant. This is one to keep an eye on.

I think I've linked these guys before, they just wanted some love from the ol' pimp daddy. Give 'em lots of hits.

30-year Old Cardboard

Loves the Fergies, loves the Billys, loves the Andres. And, of course, 30-year old cardboard. Also did something that I've been thinking about doing for over a year, but never got around to: Ticket Stubs! This is a regular read for me.

garvey cey russell lopes

what more is there to say besides
garvey
cey
russell
lopes


oh, give him some dodgers cards, i can say that too

Need More Morneau

great reviews, great rants, NO RSS FEED! Dude, you're killing me. Get a feed so I can put you over on the sidebar and I'll give you some Morneau cards. You'll get more hits too.
Update: NOW WITH FEED! I can put it over on the side now.

West Virginia Cards

I'm not sure Billy even asked to be pimped, but I'm doing it anyway. Besides, Sta-Puft Mashmallow Man!!! Oops, I mean, Sta-Puft Marshmallow Man!!!

Stop the presses!!!

While I was typing out this post I got one last pimpin' request! From Steveisjewish! Here's his brand new blog!

The Easy Life

Six posts in and this blog has already reached the pinnacle of the blogging craft. Keep up the good work, buddy.

The view from Flickr

Flickr has enough geographically tagged photographs -- 90+ million -- that they are able to reverse engineer from them the shapes of continents, countries, cities, and neighborhoods.

(link)

Devel::NYTProf continues its march of awesomeness

The mighty Tim Bunce has added yet more cool features in 2.07. Brief summary:

  • Runs on Windows
  • You can now turn off statement-level profiling and just have subroutine-level profiling, for speed's sake
  • Tracks recursion more accurately
  • Subroutine calls made within string evals are now shown in reports.

Check the full change log for all the details.

Can we just all please buy Tim a beer for all his work on Devel::NYTProf, and Adam Kaplan for starting it? NYTProf is fantastic.

First Base: I want Teixeira, So Do Red Sox

In case you missed it, on Friday, the Mets picked up Carlos Delgado’s 2009 option, which will reportedly pay him $12 million.

however, as i wrote in early October, despite picking up his option, it sounds like delgado’s future with the Mets will depend on what other options exist in the market place, as he can still be traded to another team – most likely for a closer…

…of all the players the Mets could potentially acquire this off-season, Mark Teixeira is the one guy i am most interested in, assuming delgado could be moved for a closer…

However, in a recent report for SI.com, Heyman lists the O’s, Angels, Yankees, Mariners and Red Sox as teams likely to be interested in Teixeira, who Heyman believes will ultimately remain in Anaheim on an eight-year deal.

…he plays Gold Glove defense, is an unassuming guy, and he hits every day, regardless of the circumstance…

…to me, he’s exactly what the middle of this lineup needs…

…the thing is, he is represented by Scott Boras, is probably seeking a seven-year deal, like Carlos Beltran got, and the Mets would not be the only big-money team who would be interested in himplus, the Mets have so many other problems to solve, i just can’t see them sinking that much money in to one guy, to solve one position…

According to Ken Davidoff in Newsday, the Red Sox will aggressively pursue Teixeira.

November 2, 2008

Serious clouds [Flickr]

Stewart posted a photo:

Serious clouds

Who Says I Don't Love My Commenters?

For commenter Shelby, who requested a picture of me wearing boots, following this post. This is me in 2007 in Memphis during a book writing break. Actually, I was writing all the time that year, but I needed a Valley break. This is at one of my favorite dive bars, the Lamp Lighter, which has cheap beer, $.50 pool and a rad jukebox. William Eggleston used to hang out there before he was known bartering photos for drinks, and it was the set of Cat Power's "Lived in Bars" video. (Below) I usually go there on Christmas night with my best friend Meredith, but sadly, I'm not going to Memphis for the Holidays this year.

Photo was taken by the world famous photographer Mr. Lacy. He posted it on his old photo blog, not saying anything about it being his wife, and found it later on some suicide girl site!

Mem_lamplighter_72dpi

How Many of You Are There?

It's been a long time since we put out this kind of information. But with all the buzz about how much interest there is in this election and the interest in new media, I thought people might be interested in in the amount of traffic TPM had in October.

Absolute Unique Visitors: 3.12 million
Visits: 15.29 million
Page Views: 30.99 million.

No mention of iVillage in the NYT Mag article about Lauren Zalaznick.

Unless I missed it iVillage wasn't mentioned once in the article. There was however an iVillage Tax Credit Analysis powerpoint on her very clean desk in the portrait. You can sort of see it in the online version of the photo.

VOTE OBAMA

Help end the 8-year fiasco with a resounding vote for Barack Obama.

While we don't know much about where the candidates stand on food issues, nicely pointed out here by Jeff Houck of the Tampa Tribune, we do know that Obama's stances on all important issues, including his not raising taxes on the vast majority of Americans, are indeed intended to reverse the appalling course set by the Bush administration.  Here is the NYTimes editorial page endorsement of Obama, or better, read Thomas Friedman's commentary today that endorses neither candidate but instead asks voters to consider the qualities we want in our president.

Virginia GOP Flyer Outside Church Hits Obama: "Vote Your Values"

The Virginia GOP is putting a flyer on cars outside churches in Virginia that compares the candidates' records on abortion and gay marriage and demands that voters "vote your values," a reader in Fairfax reports.

Click on the images to enlarge:

"Vote your values," the flyer commands -- and not your economic interests.

"We need a President who brings honor and integrity to the highest office in the land," it also reads, a line that puts the Virginia GOP at odds with McCain, who has conceded that Obama is "very honorable."

Grant Achatz and Nathan Myhrvold Talk Food and Technology

From Serious Eats: New York

Grant Achatz, Nathan Myhrvold.

On Wednesday night I attended a panel discussion that explored the ways that science and technology are transforming our notions of food and technology. The participants were Alinea's Grant Achatz, a newly minted author whose book we wrote about here) and former Microsoft chief technology officer Nathan Myhrvold, a food- and cooking-obsessed futurist. It was moderated by Wired senior editor Mark McClusky. It was a lively, informative, and, as you can imagine, extremely heady panel. There was even a fair amount of humor mixed in with the high-planed back and forth.

What do Achatz and Myhrvold think of molecular gastronomy as a name? Not much. What would they rather call it?

"Technoemotional cooking." Or maybe "modernist cuisine."

Technoemotional sounds like a band, doesn't it? Serious eaters, what would you rename the molecular gastronomy movement? We'll send the best name on to Grant Achatz and and Nathan Myrhvold and see what they think.

After the jump, the rest of the conversation's greatest hits.

Myhrvold says he is often criticized for his predilection for cooking with chemicals. His response: "I tell them chemicals are made with elements, too, aren't they?"

Achatz was asked about possible applications for the home cook of what he does. He said with a wry smile, "Aren't thermal circulators the new microwave? I have always thought so."

I asked them about where delicious intersects with technology. Achatz's response: "I tend to evaluate rather than enjoy." Fascinating response, isn't it?
Myhrvold said delicious is often not what he's going for. He's trying to provoke people to think about and to taste food in different way. The element of surprise kept coming up over and over again.

Fun Food Fact: Myhrvold said the inventor of Dippin' Dots is a scientist who normally works with frozen bull semen. Maybe that's why I never cared for Dippin' Dots.

Myrhvold said in talking about sous vide that botulism in general does not pose much of a real threat, unless, according to him, you eat beached whale. He did nonetheless say that it is important not to get botulism.

Too True

AP's write up on McCain's SNL ...

McCain, who is trailing Democrat Barack Obama in most battleground state polls, also appeared during the show's "Weekend Update" newscast to announce he would pursue a new campaign strategy in the closing days of the campaign.

"I thought I might try a strategy called the reverse maverick. That's where I'd do whatever anybody tells me," McCain said.

And if that didn't work, "I'd go to the double maverick. I'd just go totally berserk and freak everybody out," the Arizona senator quipped.

Couldn't have said it better myself.

Another look at the face of Leonardo da Vinci

1768-leonardo-da-vinci-s-true-face2.jpg
Earlier this year at TED2008 in Monterey, California, the artist Siegfried Woldhek unveiled what he believes is the true face of Leonardo da Vinci -- through an elegant piece of artistic detective work. Now Woldhek has produced this drawing at left, imagining Leonardo as a young, a middle-aged and an old man, in three-quarter view and in profile, framing a glorious color portrait of Leonardo.

The piece is based on Woldhek's years of research into the life and appearance of Leonardo, as expressed in his own work -- and clearly benefits from Woldhek's gift for making faces come alive.

You can see a larger version of this drawing on Woldhek's website (and vote it up or down). Watch his TEDTalk below and see if you agree with his conclusions about the face of Leonardo da Vinci:

Kiki's Delivery Service

Kiki_s_delivery_service_majo_no_takkyubin__book_cover_

Kiki’s Delivery Service (魔女の宅急便 Majo no Takkyūbin, lit. Witch’s Express Home Delivery) is a children’s fantasy novel written by Eiko Kadono and illustrated by Akiko Hayashi. It was first published by Fukuinkan Shoten on January 25, 1985. It is the basis of the Studio Ghibli anime film of the same title.

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