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March 21, 2009

Get paid for working on Perl projects in Google Summer of Code 2009

Each year, Google Summer of Code puts hundreds of students to work on open source projects, and pays them for it. The Perl Foundation is proud to announce that it has been accepted as a sponsoring organization this year.

Students propose projects that they'd like to have funded, and are assigned a mentor who will help guide the student and project to completion. For students, this is a great way to get experience working on real projects that you can put on a resume, and get paid for it. You'll be helping open source while helping yourself. For mentors, you'll also be helping open source, and helping a new programmer get his or her start.

Jonathan Leto's blog has links to find out more.

Measuring the Design Process

Theocacao: “Visual design is often the polar opposite of engineering: trading hard edges for subjective decisions based on gut feelings and personal experiences. It’s messy, unpredictable, and notoriously hard to measure.”

Call for Submissions: Mini-Golf Course Design Contest

MiniGolf
CITY OF DREAMS MINI-GOLF
Last Chance to Design a Golf Hole!

FIGMENT is looking for artists, architects, and sculptors to join our team to create one-of-a-kind mini-golf holes on Governors Island.  This is not your typical golf course, but rather the City of Dreams Mini-Golf Course, designed to free mini-golf from the windmill and dinosaur set and allow artists to release their creativity in a forum usually more associated with tourist traps.
 
Last summer, thousands of people from all over New York and the world got a chance to experience art through mini-golf, and 9 artists or groups of artists were able to showcase their work to a varied audience that might never have made it to a gallery or museum. Because the island is easily reached by public transportation, and both the ferry and mini-golf are free, visitors to the island and the City of Dreams represent a true cross section of New York.
 
This year's City of Dreams promises to be bigger and better, with the addition of a sculpture garden and even more mini-golf holes (we're hoping to have an 18-hole course this year!).  We are looking for artists, architects, professors, students, creatives, carpenters and artists to unleash their creativity and design holes that will wow and inspire visitors to Governors Island.

Go to http://www.FIGMENTnyc.org/minigolf to find out more information and submit your hole design!

Proposals are due March 31!

FIGMENT is a project of Action Arts League, and is produced by a coalition of volunteers in partnership with Pure Project. FIGMENT 2009 is made possible in part with public funds from the Fund for Creative Communities, supported by the New York State Council on the Arts, and the Manhattan Community Arts Fund, supported by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. Both funds are administered by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.

Hi-rez Tetris after two weeks


Anne sez, "I quickly got bored with the hi-res Tetris game profiled by BB here. So I left it running in a window and forgot about it, until the next morning, when the screen was only filled by a fraction. I've managed to leave it going for almost 2 weeks now, and my friend Dave made a tribute to it. He will continue to post images (and accompanying ungrammatical text in always-apropos Comic Sans) as the screen slowly fills."

Tetris HD (Thanks, Anne!)



Originally posted by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing, ReBlogged by xtine on Mar 21, 2009 at 01:41 PM

Untitled

Skullbot

(via

this isn’t happiness.

)

“He really was one of the great white magicians of the era.”

ziprin

From The New York Times - March 21, 2009:

Lionel Ziprin, Mystic of the Lower East Side, Dies at 84
By WILLIAM GRIMES

“We are not after all intended to be consumed.”

So begins Lionel Ziprin’s “Sentential Metaphrastic,” a “poem in progress” of more than a thousand pages. “I reduced it to 785 pages,” Mr. Ziprin told The Jewish Quarterly in 2006. “I call it the longest and most boring poem since Milton’s ‘Paradise Lost.’ ”

Many more poems by Mr. Ziprin remain to be discovered, inscribed on spiral-bound notebooks and stuffed into a closet in his apartment on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. And that is nowhere near the half of it. Also in the apartment are the Jewish liturgical chants intoned by Mr. Ziprin’s grandfather, untold hours of sacred music that Mr. Ziprin tried for more than half a century to bring to the wider world.

This legacy now passes to his family — whether to delight or puzzle posterity, no one knows. Mr. Ziprin, a brilliant, baffling, beguiling voice of the Lower East Side and the East Village in all its phases — Jewish, hipster and hippie — died last Sunday in Manhattan. He was 84. The cause was chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, his daughter Zia Ziprin said.

For decades, Mr. Ziprin, a self-created planet, exerted a powerful gravitational attraction for poets, artists, experimental filmmakers, would-be philosophers and spiritual seekers.

He ran his apartment, on Seventh Street in the East Village, as a bohemian salon, attracting a loose collective that included the ethnomusicologist Harry Smith, the photographer Robert Frank and the jazz musician Thelonious Monk, who would drop by for meals between sets at the Five Spot. Bob Dylan paid the occasional visit.

There the art of conversation took a backseat to the art of listening to Mr. Ziprin hold forth for hours at a stretch on magic, interplanetary rhythms, angels, apparitions and Jewish history.

“He was larger than life and so far beyond a certain kind of description that I am bamboozled,” said Ira Cohen, a longtime friend. “He was much larger than a poet, though that’s hard for me to say, as a poet. He was one of the big secret heroes of the time.”

Often categorized as a beatnik, he created an artistic circle that overlapped with the worlds of jazz and beat poetry but remained distinct and apart. A poet prey to visions and hallucinations, a philosopher, a Jewish mystic with a deep understanding of the kabbalah, an enthusiastic consumer of amphetamines (legal at the time) and peyote (also legal) — he was all of these, and something else besides.

“He combined Old World mysticism and New World craziness,” said the poet Janine Vega. “He really was one of the great white magicians of the era.”

Mr. Ziprin was born on the Lower East Side and, after his parents separated when he was a small child, lived with his mother and her parents. The decisive influence on his life was his maternal grandfather, the rabbi Naftali Zvi Margolies Abulafia, an immigrant from Galilee who founded the Home of the Sages of Israel, a yeshiva on the Lower East Side.

The home atmosphere was devout.

“I thought I was living in the Bible,” Mr. Ziprin said in a documentary produced by Jon Kalish for public radio in 2006. “ My grandparents were like biblical people. The only problem I had as a child, I looked outside, and there were automobiles. There’s a big contradiction.”

While undergoing a tonsillectomy, young Lionel — called Leibel or Leibele by his family — was badly overanesthetized. After emerging from a 10-day coma he developed St. Vitus’s Dance and epilepsy. He was seized by fits of uncontrollable laughter and experienced hallucinations. For the rest of his life, he saw visions and conversed with the spirit world.

Physically unfit for military duty, Mr. Ziprin began writing poetry after attending Brooklyn College and worked at an assortment of extremely odd jobs. He helped create a short-lived puppet show called “Kabbalah the Cook” for television. For $10 apiece, he wrote the text for a series of war comic books published by Dell.

In 1950 he married Joanna Eashe, a dancer who made a living as a hand and foot model. In the early 1950s the couple started a totally unsuccessful greeting card company, Ink Weed Arts. She died in 1994.

In addition to his daughter Zia, of Manhattan, he is survived by a brother, Jordan, of Phoenix; another daughter, Dana Ziprin of Richmond, Calif.; two sons, Leigh and Noah, both of Berkeley, Calif; and three grandchildren.

Mr. Ziprin’s poems, including “Math Glass” and “What This Abacus Was,” appeared here and there in magazines like Zero, but he barely bothered to pursue a career. A poet in the prophetic tradition, he did not so much write as open himself up to otherworldly voices.

“He would read the stuff we published and would have no idea that he’d written it,” said Judy Upjohn, who, with Sandy Rower, published a selection of Mr. Ziprin’s verse in “Almost All Lies Are Pocket Size” (Flockaphobic Press, 1990).

Clayton Patterson, who is writing a history of the Lower East Side, filmed Mr. Ziprin reading his “Book of Logic ” and organized a screening of 10 two-hour installments at Anthology Film Archives in 1989. “The first night there was a full house,” he said. “By the third night there were three people, besides Lionel and myself. That ended the series.”

Mr. Smith, the ethnomusicologist who produced the seminal Anthology of American Folk Music for Folkways Records, heard Mr. Ziprin’s grandfather chanting at a public celebration and became obsessed. Setting up sound equipment in the rabbi’s yeshiva, he spent two years recording hundreds of hours of Hebrew liturgical chants, along with Arabic songs and Yiddish stories, which were distilled into 15 long-playing records.

Shortly before his death in 1955, the rabbi begged his grandson to bring the records to a wider audience, inspiring a half-century quest whose end remains uncertain. Folkways released one album from the set, but for religious reasons, family members objected to further distribution of the material.

In the late 1960s Mr. Ziprin’s wife took the children and moved to Berkeley, Calif., plunging Mr. Ziprin into a spiritual crisis. It was resolved when, acting on instructions from his grandfather in a dream, he returned to the Judaism of his youth and to the Lower East Side, moving into his mother’s apartment on East Broadway to care for her until her death in the late 1980s.

From the mid-1970s until his death, Mr. Ziprin spent his days studying the Torah and other texts at what was once his grandfather’s yeshiva. He held court at his apartment. He scribbled thoughts on postcards and sent them to just about anyone.

He also searched for someone willing to produce his grandfather’s records. As the years went on, and some of the tapes were lost to fire, flood and theft, the mercurial and often cantankerous Mr. Ziprin often seemed to be sabotaging his own cause, eager to disseminate his grandfather’s legacy but reluctant to let it go.

Briefly it looked as if the composer John Zorn had secured the rights to release the records, but Mr. Ziprin could not let go. At his death, the Idelsohn Society for Musical Preservation had made a compilation CD from the material that seemed to please Mr. Ziprin, clearing the way for the production of a full boxed set.

A man of many words, he managed to write his self-portrait in just a few:

I have never been arrested. I

have never been institutionalized.

I have four children. I am in

receipt of social security benefits.

I am not an artist. I am not an

outsider. I am a citizen of the

republic and I have remained

anonymous all the time by choice.



Tom Otterness

Tom Otterness

A wonderful bronze playground by New York sculptor Tom Otterness. Private commission, edition of 6. Love the little hidden details and the feeling of climbing the giant.

Small video here. Prototype images of a different playground via google.

Tom Otterness

That's The Ticket

Spring has officially arrived and we're coming out of hibernation.

Here's a great note and memory from Paul aka vertigone:

As a reader of your fine blog, I thought you might be interested in seeing this.  I was looking through old ticket stubs last night and cross referencing with Retrosheet, to be reminded of some of the games and players I'd seen, (baseball season can't start soon enough obviously!) and found this one from a game I attended in Loge 13 in '83.  All was going well until the 9th, when Doug Risk...er, Sisk gave up 2 runs and the Mets lost 6-5. 
 
 
 
Enjoy, and keep up the good work.

Thanks alot Paul. Good game too. Strawberrry went 2-4 and Mookie stole his 48th base! Y'all can click on the ticket below to see it in all it's full size, sky-blue 1983 glory:

Shea Stadium Loge13 ticket from September 1983

The New York Times's 10 Rules For Blogging

This week, the New York Times standards editor Craig Whitney wrote a memo on style for bloggers.

It's cranky and pompous. But our main gripe is that it's just packaged wrong.

13 paragraphs? 4 pages?

Any decent blogger knows that a how-to memo has to be presented in bullet-pointed, listicle format. 

So, because we care, here are the New York Times's 10 rules for blogging (in a format people will actually read):

  • What should be avoided in all of them is any hint of racist, sexist or religious bias, or any suggestion of nasty, snide, sarcastic, or condescending tone — “snark.”
  • If something could easily fit in a satirical Web site for young adults, it probably shouldn’t go into the news pages of nytimes.com.
  • Contractions, colloquialisms and even slang are, generally speaking, more allowable in blogs than in print.
  • Obscenity and vulgarity are not.
  • Unverified assertions of fact, blind pejorative quotes, and other lapses in journalistic standards don’t ever belong in blogs. 
  • Writers and editors of blogs must also distinguish between personal tone and voice and unqualified personal opinion. 
  • A blog or news column has to give readers the arguments and factual information that led to the writer’s conclusion — enough argument and fact on both or all sides of the issue to enable the reader to decide whether to agree or disagree
  • That does not apply to editorials or Op-Ed columns, which “are not intended to give a balanced look at both sides of a debate,” as the Readers’ Guide says.
  • Headlines on analysis should try to capture the debate rather than taking sides in it.
  • If the comments contain vulgarity, obscenity, offensive personal attacks, say that somebody “sucks,” or are incoherent, moderators are advised just to chuck them out.

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:

March 20, 2009

My Final Four

Genius In one bracket, I've got Louisville, Memphis, 'Nova and NC going to the Final Four. But in Mental Floss' Tournament of Genius, I've got Einstein, Shakespeare, Thomas Jefferson and Freud (my Cinderella pick). Who's in your Final Four?

03/20/2009

Shared by Eve
YEAH

violet.blue posted a photo:

03/20/2009

at the Hat Factory right now, leavin' stickers...

Michelle Obama plants a White House vegetable garden

Yes, I am very excited about the new organic vegetable garden at the White House. If your kids want to plant a garden like the Obama's, here are 10 easy-to-grow vegetables for them to start with.

An interview with Rick Steves

An interesting and surprisingly wide-ranging interview with travel guru Rick Steves about the value of travel, the real story on Iran, marijuana, and the economic downturn.
A headline today said, "Americans lose 18 percent of their wealth." Well, no, it wasn't real wealth, it was a bubble. You're down 18 percent? You're not. It shouldn't have been up there in the first place. So get over it. Shut up. Go to work, produce stuff that has value. I really think the days are gone, I hope, when people can rearrange the furniture and get rich on it. You got to produce something.

Twins commit perfect crime

Twin brothers are suspected of stealing millions in jewelry and watches from KaDeWe in Berlin. DNA from the crime scene matches the brothers' DNA. But their DNA is too similar to match either brother individually so the police have to let them go.

German law stipulates that each criminal must be individually proven guilty. The problem in the case of the O. brothers is that their twin DNA is so similar that neither can be exclusively linked to the evidence using current methods of DNA analysis. So even though both have criminal records and may have committed the heist together, Hassan and Abbas O. have been set free.

How long before this shows up on CSI?

Tags: crime  genetics 

2009 Topps Allen and Ginter Preview


2009toppsagwrapper3

Mario has images of the cards, so I’ll just point you his way for now so as not to steal his thunder.  You can go ohh and ahh for a minute, and then come back and read more.

Looks nice, doesn’t it?  I’m a little worried that there’s no base card images there, but they should look like the minis only larger, right?  I was concerned I’d be bored with the look this year after the similar designs prior, but these look nice than the 2008’s.  I’m stoked.

Hobby boxes will have three hits this year, but I seem to remember a lot of box breaks from last year that included three, four, and sometime five hits anyway.  The three hits will be an assortment of relics (including famous DNA), autos (both cut and on card),  rip cards, and printing plates.

My first thought is that Topps may be cutting back on production this year, and rumor is 2008 was overproduced anyway.  I think that’s a good thing in the long run.

The set will be the usual:  350 cards, 50 of them shortprints.  Insert sets include a “Creatures of Legends” set (Loch Ness Monster, the other Bigfoot) and a “Hoaxes and Bamboozles” set which includes Bernie Madoff and Topps Mayo’s early checklist (zing!).   There will also be a National Prides set (players and their country of origin) as well as a National Heroes set (historical figures and their country of origin.

Also that rumor that there’s a new code for 2010? True.  So for those of you who failed last year, there’s still hope.  Although you’d only be the World’s Runner Up Code Breaker, right?

And while I was typing, the Junkie researched the history of this year’s design.  Good lord he’s quick.

Look for 2009 Allen and Ginter to release June 30th.  Then be delayed for a week or two, I’d guess.   Preliminary interest on splitting a case?

Regarding Marissa Mayer’s Personnel Decisions

From Laura M. Holson’s NYT profile of Marissa Mayer, Google’s VP of search products and user experience (this is the source Douglas Bowman pointed to regarding the story that Google solved a design dispute by user-testing 41 different shades of blue):

At a recent personnel meeting, she homes in on grade-point averages and SAT scores to narrow a list of candidates, many having graduated from Ivy League schools, whom she wanted to meet as part of a program to foster in-house talent. In essence, math is used to solve a human problem: How do you predict whether an employee has the potential for success?

A scrum of executives sit around a table, laptops in front of them, as they sort through résumés, college transcripts and quarterly reviews. The conversation is unemotional, at times a little brutal. One candidate got a C in macroeconomics. “That’s troubling to me,” Ms. Mayer says. “Good students are good at all things.”

I realize how hard it is to find good employees, and how hard it is to evaluate prospective employees from their résumés — that snap judgments from limited information must be made. But this makes it sound like Mayer still uses SAT scores and college grade-point averages to judge current Google employees being considered for promotion.

As for holding one bad grade — or even entire bad subject areas — against someone, I’m more suspicious of people who did get good grades in every subject. In my experience they tend to be rule-crazy conformists, obsessed with their grades rather than with particular subjects.

The fine art of Wolverine

Wolverine

Marvel celebrates Wolverine’s 35th birthday in style.

Seen here: Paolo Rivera, Jason Chan, and again Paolo.

(According to Paolo, he has an N.C. Weyth edition coming soon. wo0t.)

Design Is How It Works

Worth a re-link, in context of the aforelinked items regarding the role of design at Google, is this quote from Steve Jobs in 2003:

“Most people make the mistake of thinking design is what it looks like. People think it’s this veneer — that the designers are handed this box and told, ‘Make it look good!’ That’s not what we think design is. It’s not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.”

Small Moral Compromises

In his article on Madoff and Ivar Kreuger -- masterminds of the Ponzi schemes, Ron Chernow concludes:

...Ponzi enterprises come about not as sudden inspirations of criminal masterminds but as the gradual culmination of small moral compromises made by financiers who aren't quite as ingenious as they think. As Charles Baudelaire once said, we descend into hell by tiny steps.

Madoff apparently thought his fraud would be temporary, til things got better. But they didn't, and things got 65 billion dollars worse.

Legalize Beekeeping in New York City

kevinkrejci's flickr photostream (creative commons)

Beekeeping is currently illegal in New York City, but a growing number of bee keepers, environmentalists and honey enthusiasts are working to legalize the keeping of hives. New York City Health Code (Section 161.01 if you’re wondering) prohibits the possession, keeping, harboring and selling of “wild animals”, but unlike urban tigers, bees are relatively docile when properly tended and offer a variety of benefits to city dwellers.  For those of you who have been following the plight of the honey bee here on Take Part, you’ll know that bees are vital for pollinating our food supply, and with the looming threat of Colony Collapse Disorder, we could use all the bees we can get.  Local honey is not only delicious and distinct, but also considered the best remedy for people with allergies, as it builds their immunity to local allergens.

Other cities, including Atlanta, Chicago, Portland, Paris, San Francisco, Seattle, Toronto and Vancouver have legalized beekeeping, so what’s holding back the little progressive town of New York?  Many beekeepers continue unabated by the legal restrictions, but they shouldn’t have to keep the wonderful practice a secret.  There’s a whole lot of rooftop space that could be buzzing with as much productive activity as the streets below!
takepart by helping to make beekeeping legal in NYC by signing Just Food’s petition.

Apple Is a Design Company With Engineers; Google Is an Engineering Company With Designers

Buzz Andersen, regarding Douglas Bowman’s description of the role of design at Google:

But I think a useful way to think about the difference between the two companies is: how likely is an individual contributor from each category to be present in a meeting with the CEO? Based on my experience at Apple, I’d say the answer is: pretty unlikely for an engineer, far more likely for a designer. I don’t have any direct experience with Google, but I suspect just the opposite would be true there.

The two companies clearly have fundamentally different approaches to deciding how their products work.

Douglas Bowman Leaves Google

Refreshingly honest look at Google’s engineering-dominated culture, from their first lead visual designer:

Yes, it’s true that a team at Google couldn’t decide between two blues, so they’re testing 41 shades between each blue to see which one performs better. I had a recent debate over whether a border should be 3, 4 or 5 pixels wide, and was asked to prove my case. I can’t operate in an environment like that.

2009 Allen & Ginter Design Origins

The '09 Allen & Ginter preview has hit the interwebs. Here's an example of a Tim Lincecum card I borrowed from Wax Heaven.


Very nice... Topps added a border and it looks like they aren't afraid to fill it up. There were too many cards with a tiny picture and a bunch of white space on them the past couple of years. Good move to shake it up a bit. So, it is authentic? Did they take this design from an original A&G set or create a new one in the old timey style? It turns out they did a little of both. The box with the player name is taken from the N16 Natives in Costume set:

The Allen & Ginter ad on the bottom is in a different font than the original however. The '09 ad portion is actually from this set:

N22 Racing Colors of the World. The same ad is also found on set N7 Fans of the Period, but without the two little doodads on either side of "Allen & Ginter". That's a nifty looking font on the Allen & Ginter part and it looks like Topps jazzed it up a tiny bit. Good looking stuff from Topps this year, and there's still 30 more Allen & Ginter designs that Topps can swipe from for future sets.

Working with Test::Class Test Suites

In this series, I've explained how to use Test::Class in Perl, how to reuse Test::Class tests, and how to simplify Test::Class tests, and how to manage data dependencies and fixtures with Test::Class tests. If you've followed along -- and if you've written your own tests with Test::Class, you're on your way to becoming a testing expert. Now it's time to discuss some ancillary issues you may encounter.

Performance

With Test::Class::Load, you can run all of your test class tests in one process:

     use Test::Class::Load qw<path/to/tests>;

That loads the tests and all modules you're testing once. This can be a huge performance boost if you're loading "heavy" modules such as Catalyst or DBIx::Class. However, be aware that you're now loading all classes in a single process; there are potential drawbacks here. For example, if one of your classes alters a singleton or global variable that another class depends on, you may get unexpected results. Also, many classes load modules which globally alter Perl's behavior. Grep through your CPAN modules for UNIVERSAL:: or CORE::GLOBAL:: to see just how many classes do this.

Global state changes can introduce difficult-to-diagnose bugs. You will have to decide for yourself whether the benefits of Test::Class outweigh these drawbacks. My experience is that these bugs are usually very painful to resolve, but in finding them, I often find intermittant problems in my code bases that I could not have found any other way. For me, Test::Class offers many benefits, despite occasional frustrations.

People who prefer not to run all of their code in a single process often create separate "driver" tests:

     #!/usr/bin/env perl -T

     use Test::Person;
     Test::Class->runtests;

... and:

     #!/usr/bin/env perl -T

     use Test::Person::Employee;
     Test::Class->runtests;

Remember to omit the call to runtests if you've included this in your base class INIT.

Making Your Classes Behave Like xUnit Classes

In xUnit style tests, this is an entire test:

     sub first_name : Tests(tests => 3) {
         my $test   = shift;
         my $person = $test->class->new;

         can_ok $person, 'first_name';
         ok !defined $person->first_name,
           '... and first_name should start out undefined';

         $person->first_name('John');
         is $person->first_name, 'John', '... and setting its value should succeed';
     }

The TAP world considers this as three tests, but xUnit regards these three assertions as validations of a single feature, and thus one test. TAP-based tests have a long way to go before working for xUnit users, but there's one thing we can do. Suppose that you have a test with 30 asserts. The fourth assert fails. Many xUnit programmers argue that once an assert fails, the rest of the information in the test is unreliable. In that case, the test driver often halts. Regardless of whether you agree (I hate that JUnit requires the test method to stop), you can get this behavior with Test::Class. Use Test::Most instead of Test::More and put this in your test base class:

    BEGIN { $ENV{DIE_ON_FAIL} = 1 }

Because each test method in Test::Class is wrapped in an eval, that test method will stop running, the appropriate teardown method (if any) will execute and the tests will resume with the next test method.

I'm not a huge fan of this technique, but your mileage may vary.

Conclusion

While many projects work just fine using simple Test::More programs, larger projects can wind up with scalability problems. Test::Class gives you better opportunities for managing your tests, refactoring common code, and having your test code better mirror your production code.

Here's a quick summary of tips in this series:

  • Name your test classes consistently after the classes they're testing.
  • When possible, do the same for your test methods.
  • Don't use a constructor test named new.
  • Create your own Test::Class base class.
  • Abstract the the name of the class you're testing into a class method in your base class.
  • Name test control methods after their attribute.
  • Decide case-by-case whether to call a control method's parent method.
  • Don't put tests in your test control methods.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Adrian Howard for creating the Test::Class module and providing me with tips in making it easier to use. Also, David Wheeler provided some useful comments, but that was on a first draft written years ago. I wonder if he remembers?

Peace in the Valley of Twitter

This is almost too silly for words, but since others have been writing about it today, let me update you, too. I'm pretty new to the world of Twitter, so I was a bit surprised (but mostly amused) when ABC's Jake Tapper blocked me from following his Twitter feed after my post this morning knocking his reaction to the Obama Special Olympics gaffe. Others were blocked, too, although it's not clear to me exactly why. In any event, Tapper, in what I guess is a Twitter equivalent of a peace offering, started following my Twitter feed this afternoon, and I am now able to follow his again. He twittered: "tpm is unblocked. My bad"

Now back to the economy collapsing around us.



Google and design

How should a company like Google approach design? By the numbers?

A designer, Jamie Divine, had picked out a blue that everyone on his team liked. But a product manager tested a different color with users and found they were more likely to click on the toolbar if it was painted a greener shade.

As trivial as color choices might seem, clicks are a key part of Google's revenue stream, and anything that enhances clicks means more money. Mr. Divine's team resisted the greener hue, so Ms. Mayer split the difference by choosing a shade halfway between those of the two camps.

Her decision was diplomatic, but it also amounted to relying on her gut rather than research. Since then, she said, she has asked her team to test the 41 gradations between the competing blues to see which ones consumers might prefer.

Or in the hands of artist practitioners?

Without a person at (or near) the helm who thoroughly understands the principles and elements of Design, a company eventually runs out of reasons for design decisions. With every new design decision, critics cry foul. Without conviction, doubt creeps in. Instincts fail. "Is this the right move?" When a company is filled with engineers, it turns to engineering to solve problems. Reduce each decision to a simple logic problem. Remove all subjectivity and just look at the data. Data in your favor? Ok, launch it. Data shows negative effects? Back to the drawing board. And that data eventually becomes a crutch for every decision, paralyzing the company and preventing it from making any daring design decisions.

In many cases, I'd trust a good designer with 10 years of experience over The Numbers™. That 10 years represents an internalization of thousands of instances of The Numbers across a broad range of experience. At other times, the quantitative approach is useful. Part of being an effective designer (or an auto mechanic or an engineer or programmer etc.) is learning to recognize the right mixture of the two approaches.

Tags: design  dougbowman  google 

There is a lot big media can learn from the software industry

mokoyfman:

Fair enough on The Daily Beast, but that is more the exception than the rule.  We launched VSL for under $200K.  And did similar with other businesses.  The larger point here is that while these kind of experiments may bear fruit, they certainly won’t solve the massive problems created for media companies by the emergence of the open web.  That requires massive R&D, or more accurately lost profits, as the oil tanker shifts 180 degrees to avoid the storm.

PS — I know where you stand on this, but I still wish you had DISQUS on your blog so we could have it out in the comments :)

Yeah, I think you’ve told me that before. I actually had comments on my blog in 2001 (you know, centuries ago) and it was fine when I was blogging frequently enough to moderate it.  And if I didn’t moderate it, the trolls (and in a couple of cases, creepy pseudo-stalkers) inevitably took over.  Now I blog in binges and just don’t have the bandwidth to moderate on top of that.

I also think that people are more thoughtful and responsible when they’re responding on their own real estate instead of mine.  That’s been my experience, anyway.

I don’t expect, by the way, that R&D solves all of big media’s problems. But I think it helps.

Google's Very Hungry Caterpillar

The Very Hungry Caterpillar was one of my favorite books when I was a kid and I've loved reading it to Ollie over the past few months. So of course, Google's logo today is aces.

Google Hungry Caterpillar

Now do Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs!

Tags: books  design  google  logos  remix  theveryhungrycaterpillar 

There is a lot big media can learn from the software industry

mokoyfman:

spiers:

bijan:

Bijan’s post (linked for space efficiency).

Bijan isn’t really making this point, but the best thing old media could learn from tech is that tech companies routinely plow a decent percentage of retained earnings into R&D. Big media has zero R&D. Instead of launching multi-million dollar projects with little or no beforehand testing of demand (or research in general), they should be using a laboratory/incubator model: push smaller experimental projects out the door and see what gets traction. Instead of launching a $120 million biz mag, launch a $250K biz blog in the same category. (It amazes me that these companies don’t see the Internet as a cost-effective platform for market testing.) Then if it works, think about expansion and brand extensions.  Instead of throwing one expensive product-of-dubious value against the wall and hoping it sticks, throw 20 cheap ones.

Interesting in theory, but much less so in practice.  Having worked at a big company for a number of years, and one where we actually tried this exact approach to innovation, I can tell you with confidence that it is damn near impossible to innovate effectively from within.

The R&D you refer to at tech companies is often investment required to continue building product and refining business models core to the company’s business.  It is rarely used effectively to incubate entirely new businesses.

Media companies should have taken a lesson in this kind of R&D and invested in new business models (or gave up profits in existing ones, which is effectively the same thing) that would allow their core businesses to survive in the new world.

No matter how entrepreneurial they want to be, big companies are almost always bogged down by process, earnings pressures, etc. etc.  True innovation comes almost exclusively from the outside, from the proverbial ‘garage.’  And I expect it to stay that way.

I take your point, but you guys were still doing fairly large projects that in my opinion were more analogous to the bloated under-researched launches that traditional magazine companies do. (I mean, Tina Brown’s site isn’t operating on a budget of $250K, is it?) I don’t know what your budget was for VSL, and that might be an exception. But generally speaking, the way IAC does incubation is not really what I’m suggesting.

See: New Citi Field Aerials

Tom Kaminski’s Chopper 880 took pictures of the final remains of Shea Stadium which you can see at WCBS880.com.

For more construction photos and discussion on Citi Field, I highly recommend checking out the forum at Baseball-Fever.com.

Another ingenious piece of Sun Marketing

So a while ago I wrote about fun post about MySQL Scalability to 256 way….

Besides discussion on the thread itself I had a lot of private comments in my mail from Sun/MySQL employees which tended to agree with me on this being the a large stretch.

I would hope Sun/MySQL would tone it down and actually spend time on making things to scale inside MySQL rather than asking you to run tens of MySQL instances to get reasonable performance, but sure enough writing code is harder than writing marketing materials so this work now made it to the Sun blueprint making it recommended reference architecture.

It is also interesting to go back to my old post about T2000 performance with Sun comments about Sun not pushing this as scalable MySQL platform. Well this is T5440 now not T2000 but the outstanding gap in single thread CPU performance remains, which makes a lot of operations tasks very complicated.

Oh wait. I forgot there is solution - instead of 1TB database we should run 1000 instances with 1GB each which will allow us not to care about single thread performance for replication needs, ALTER TABLE or any long running queries.

Do not take it as me saying T5440 is never good for MySQL. It may work quite well for some cases, for example when a lot of small MySQL instances need to be run. It is just this blueprint offers very one side view speaking about benefits but no drawbacks.


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Emma Kunz

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Yep, It Was Really That Bad

TPM Reader MH makes the case that Lehman's collapse was really that bad and we can't let it happen again ...

The problem that the Lehman Brother's bankruptcy exposed is that, in these complex derivative investments, it's not always clear where the counterparty risk lies.  These transactions are non-traditional in structure and so its often not clear how bankruptcy rules will apply to them. There's very little relevant case law and these transactions just weren't designed with much thought toward this contingency (no one imaged that these large couterparties could ever fail).  Things don't fit neatly into statutory boxes, so it's not clear what the bankruptcy court will do and who will end up getting their money back.  So when Lehman went bankrupt, everyone had to try to assess the degree to which they were exposed to the potential bankruptcy of other major counterparties.  And that's really hard to do with any accuracy.  That's why everything froze up.  No one could get an accurate assessment of their own exposure.

The fear people have now--and justifiably so, I think--is that the only thing keeping the financial system functioning at all right now is the assumption that the major governments of the world will not allow any other major counterparties to default.  If even one of them is allowed to fail, that assumption immediately goes out the window and suddenly everyone will have to assume that any major counterparty could fail at any moment.  If that happens, everything will grind to a hault again.

  

In praise of boredom

In an excerpt from a Dartmouth College commencement address, Joseph Brodsky argues that boredom is a "natural condition of modern life" and should be embraced in order to realize your proper place in the world.

The other trouble with originality and inventiveness is that they literally pay off. Provided that you are capable of either, you will become well-off rather fast. Desirable as that may be, most of you know firthand that nobody is as bored as the rich, for money buys time, and time is repetitive. Assuming that you are not heading for poverty, one can expect your being hit by boredom as soon as the first tools of self-gratification become available to you. Thanks to modern technology, those tools are as numerous as boredom's symptoms. In light of their function -- to render you oblivious to the redundancy of time -- their abundance is revealing.

(thx, conley)

Tags: josephbrodsky 

There is a lot big media can learn from the software industry

ryanbrown:

tedroden:

spiers:

Big media has zero R&D.

While this is a true enough sentiment, my job title would disagree slightly.

zing.

Okay. I’ll concede that the Times has an R&D department (and that Ted is part of it.)  But they’re an exception.  Does (my sometime employer) Time Warner? No. Does Conde? No. Does Hearst? No.

Was this review helpful to you?

Jared Spool reveals that a simple yes/no question added to Amazon's site brought in an additional $2.7 billion in revenue.

Amazon had reviews from the very first day. It's always been a feature that customers love. (Many non-customers talk about how they check out the reviews on Amazon first, then buy the product someplace else.) Initially, the review system was purely chronological. The designers didn't account for users entering hundreds or thousands of reviews.

For small numbers, chronology works just fine. However, it quickly becomes unmanageable. (For example, anyone who discovers an established blog may feel they've come in at the middle of a conversation, since only the most recent topics are presented first. It seems as if the writer assumed the readers had read everything from the beginning.)

The reviews of reviews are really helpful when buying. Personally, I always check out four types of reviews on Amazon in roughly this order:

1) most helpful/highest rated, 2) most helpful/lowest rated, 3) least helpful/highest rated, 4) least helpful/lowest rated

Sometimes reading a really negative review which many people think is spectacularly wrong can help make a useful buying decision.

See also the $300 million button and Cynical-C's new series on one-star reviews of classic books, movies, and music: To Kill a Mockingbird and Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. (via designnotes)

Tags: amazon  design  jaredspool 

i experience this vista daily, but it’s not quite like...



i experience this vista daily, but it’s not quite like this

Goodbye Google

Doug Bowman, his eyes opened: "Yes, it's true that a team at Google couldn't decide between two blues, so they're testing 41 shades between each blue to see which one performs better. I had a recent debate over whether a border should be 3, 4 or 5 pixels wide, and was asked to prove my case. I can't operate in an environment like that. I've grown tired of debating such miniscule design decisions. There are more exciting design problems in this world to tackle."

Topspin

TechDirt

We were pleased to see some good pick up of this week’s announcement on TechDirt this week, but we were disappointed to see our position misconstrued as “Topspin can’t/won’t help the little guy”.

Those who know me know my personal tastes and anyone who reads this blog know we work with a lot of bands with smaller audiences because they’ve seen me ramble on about Imaad Wasif and White Denim. There are many more but I invite you to check out Les Blanks, Neal Casal, Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey, AI, Ben Taylor, The Old Ceremony, or Wendy and Lisa.

The honest truth is that who is using Topspin currently is a bit ad hoc, gated by how many hours we have in our day and how many people we think we can help be successful at the moment. As we mentioned this is ramping up, but still limited. Sorry about that. We appreciate your patience. We have even established a mailing list for *all* artists to come and share marketing ideas. Just mail us to get added. I assure you that our passion and interest lies in bands of all sizes. Compare that with solutions like Echo Music or even Sparkart, both of whom have a self-professed interest in “established” artists only. Our current limitations are practical ones, not philosophical ones. Be patient with us and we will get there. Our goal is to be a successful, long-term business.

Hearing Imaad Wasif and The Drones thank Topspin from the stage “for all your support” this week was refutation enough in my book but if you’d like a little more, check out this comment left on TechDirt by Joe Purdy’s manager:

Hello,

Nice article except that I think that possibly you may not know that Top Spin DOES work with smaller artists. Not just Byrne or Beasties.

Have you ever heard of Joe Purdy? HELL NO you haven’t or you would know he used Topspin to launch his 10th album this week. Ok and I manage him so this is also a shamess plug as well but the point is that we’ve been working within Topspin’s philosophy for a few years now. Selling direct to fans without a label. His catalog has sold over 800,000 tracks on Itunes in the US alone.

When I heard about Topspin I went over to the office and they showed me what they had built and I crapped my pants. The platform is everything I was doing but on steroids. It’s true that they aren’t picking up every single artist under the sun out there. That’s for companies who build ugly widgets. They are picking up artists who have a growing base or artists who can expand their already successful base. I think that will set them apart from companies that pop up every 3 months with a Ralph Kramden idea to save the music business.

Joe Purdy’s new album sold about 500 downloads in the first 24 hours via Topspin. I was able to release it 2 hours after Joe finished his cover art and approved the mastered audio. His fans knew that from the email that we sent to them and they felt special! They knew that they had it immediately and felt empowered. AWESOME! Word of mouth, instant back end info on who is buying and where, direct email thank you to the fan, viral player that spreads our store across the web, super distribution, more fans, I love it!!!

Check out what I’m talking about. Buy the new album, hell buy the other 9 albums direct from Joe Purdy Records. http://joepurdy.com/lastclockonthewall.html

Thank you for reading my ramble.

Brian Klein

Thanks again for your patience and support,
ian c rogers
Topspin

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anything for his art

I have a post brewing about how RSS readers, consuming the interweb and living amongst the links, and not to give the whole thing away, but there are a few sites that I rely on as filters to the web, and kottke.org is one of them. Part of it's the "liberal arts 2.0" editorial vision, which is right up my alley, but the other part of it is that Jason's just a really good blogger.

Case in point: in today's post about Michael Kontopolous' "Machines that fall over," Jason reports that...

I do this too, only I use chairs and my own body and frequently tip over and hurt myself. Anything for my art.

So good.

You Never Know What You Might Learn @ Serious Eats

Serious Efforts: Whole Deer Neck | Serious Eats : Talk

I am going to receive a whole deer neck via FedEx tomorrow. It has been skinned and frozen solid, but is otherwise pretty much intact. I would like some advice from anyone here experienced with taking deer apart. I would like to remove the muscles from each other and from the bone in as large and unmolested pieces as possible. . . I plan on consulting some books and websites on the matter, but was hoping I could get some pointers from the community. Thank you!

Peak Cherry Blossom Dates Revised

2009_0320_blossom.jpg
Photo by ctankcycles
This morning the National Park Service announced it has revised the peak bloom dates for D.C.'s famed cherry blossoms, to April 1-4. It's a shorter period than previously predicted, as well as being earlier. They've also added on an overall "Blooming Period," from March 28-April 11, which conveniently overlaps nearly perfectly with the dates of the National Cherry Blossom Festival (March 28-April 12).

Peak bloom prediction is hardly an exact science, so it's not unheard of for the Park Service's horticulturalists to issue updates as the bloom time gets closer. They've been asked to issue guesses earlier and earlier over the last decade, to help the city plan its tourist season, and as such, the first prediction has become less reliable.



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Happy Birthday Spike Lee!

A world without the films of Spike Lee is a world I don’t want to live in.  He is constantly pushing boundaries and challenging to think about the world we live in and how we live in it.  My favorites of his films include She’s Gotta Have It, 25th Hour, Crooklyn and of courseDo the Right Thing.

In honor of Spike, takepart Safe Horizon - a charity that is working to end childhood violence and that Spike is on the board of and also watch the amazing clip below that showcases the awesome outspoken nature of Spike Lee.

March 19, 2009

Bigger Than the Both of Us

There's no end of puffed up outrage and opportunistic posturing over the on-going revelation of the AIG bonus scandal. But some line has been crossed. And it's worth thinking really clearly about just what that line is.

What is so damaging about this isn't the money -- which is almost trivially small compared to the many hundreds of billions we've already committed. The problem is what appears to be the president's mortifying impotence in the face bankers and financiers who created the problem. The president speaks and acts for the federal government, which is to say, the American people, who have mobilized more than a trillion dollars and all powers of the state to repair the damage emerging out of the financial sector. And with all that, he's jacked up on a employment agreement between a company the government now owns and derivatives traders who sank the world economy and may quite likely be looking at criminal charges for their activities in the not too distant future?

Anyone can look at that and see that the equation of power and accountability is all screwed up.

I think the American people have demonstrated over the last six months that they're willing to expand vast sums of money and endure great economic hardship without holding the damage against their political leaders. Effectiveness, in the sense of how long it takes to turn the economy around, is something they seem willing to be flexible on. But not on who's in charge. And that's what's at stake here. As a matter of transparency and truth-telling, what Geithner knew about the bonuses may be significant. But it's really all fine print that is largely beside the point. From Geithner and Summers, and indirectly from Obama, we keeping hearing financial-legal versions of 'It's bigger than the both of us'. Like we're along for the ride, still taking dictates from the people who got us into the mess we're in.

There are various specific points you can drill down on. Atrios grabs this deliciously obnoxious passage from a piece in the Post today ...

"Nobody is going to give it back and then stay," said one of the firm's employees. "If they give back the money, then they will walk. And they will walk into the arms of AIG's counterparties."

So, give us our money or we'll go to the counter-parties and help them really suck you dry. Even though this ignores the fact that the counter-parties have no actual right to the money. They placed bets with a company that did not have the money to pay off the bets. There's a old-fashioned business solution to that kind of problem -- due diligence.

We're paying them off, either in full or in part, out of fear that pulling the plug on these contracts would so destabilize the global economy that paying it is a better solution than not. But we're doing it for us. Not them. They are, at best, collateral beneficiaries. So all the talk of whatever self-serving or legally dubious contracts they penned for themselves two or three years ago are beside the point.

Or at least that's the idea. Unless we're actually just chumps and Obama -- via Geithner and Summers -- have simply ceded the running of the whole thing to the people who caused all the problems in the first place. And we are just along for the ride even though we're paying the bill.

In this sense, this isn't a distraction. Yes, the dollar amounts are small. And pols across the spectrum are demagoguing the thing for all its worth. But the real issue of who's in control, and whose interests are being served, cuts through every dollar we've dedicated to this project. And when you look closely at the much bigger AIG counter-party issue, the same disconnect is there every bit as much as it is with the bonuses.

Whether Geithner and Summers are too close to the people on Wall Street, either through interest or affinity, is an interesting and possibly important question. But fundamentally Obama needs to start showing that he's in charge, that he's operating as the American people's advocate and that he has the power to do it -- which these stories of getting jacked up by some Gordon Gecko wannabes in London just terribly undermines. But to do that, to show that, it has to be true. And that might require some real changes in policy and possibly in personnel too.







kottke.org for the iPhone

I built a stripped down version of kottke.org for mobile devices. It's located at:

http://m.kottke.org

It's optimized for the iPhone but will work with Blackberrys, etc. as well. Here's the icon on the iPhone home screen and what it looks like in MobileSafari:

kottke.org mobile

The mobile site is just the front page for now (the last 30 posts or so). Should make reading the site fast and convenient when you're out and about.

Tags: iphone  kottkedotorg 

The Ruins of Detroit

Detroit Yves Marchand and Romaine Meffre have a stunning exhibit of photos of decaying Detroit on their website. (Click the 'greater than' symbol in the lower left to see the photos.)  As beautiful as the photos are, I feel like I've seen a lot of these kinds of images on the web.  Perhaps the next challenge is to photograph what's beautiful about Detroit? 

(Thanks to David for the link.)

Nalder named Hearst senior enterprise reporter

Shared by Eve
I like Eric! Yay.
Romenesko Misc.
Eric Nalder had been chief investigative reporter for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. His investigative journalism will now appear in all Hearst Newspapers' properties.

CJR slams the Chronicle

Shared by Eve
Tim Redmond is so much more webby than so many folks a quarter his age! "I don’t think a blog for CJR is any different than a story in the Times." RIGHT!? RIGHT.

By Tim Redmond

The Columbia Journalism Review trashed the Chronicle this week, in a harsh, pointed and entirely on-target piece by Pulitzer Prize winning reporter David Cay Johnston.

Johnston’s chief complaint: The Chronicle has done a miserable job of reporting on its own possible demise. In sharp contrast, he says, the Seattle P-I ran some well-reported stories about the papers’s closing that let readers know what was actually going on.

The blog post raises some interesting journalistic questions, though, that are going to be echoing through this entire debate about the future of newspapers.

The first thing I noticed when I read Johnston’s piece was that he singled out the Chron’s editor, Ward Bushee:

under editor Ward Bushee the Chronicle has provided little actual news reporting about its prospects for dissolution unless its unions agree to drastic job cuts and givebacks for those who remain on the payroll.* Mostly, Bushee gave Chronicle readers unsigned “staff reports”—actually rewritten Hearst press releases.

He later attacks Phil Bronstein, the former Chron editor who is still a top Hearst executive:

At least the careful reader found out that Phil Bronstein, the journalist who is now editor-at-large, has abandoned that role to become an unregistered lobbyist seeking political favors for his employers.

Johnston is a careful, weidely respected reporter who does his homework. And in this case, his analysis of the situation seems entirely accurate. The Chron hasn’t been giving us the real story of what’s going on -- and the stuff left off the news pages is really interesting.

But I was surprised that neither Bushee nor Bronstein were quoted in the piece; I’ve always thought that before you attack someone in print (or online) -- particularly when you call into question their professionalism or ethics -- you should call first to get that person’s response. It’s not only common courtesy and standard journalistic practice; it makes for a better story.

So I emailed both Bushee and Bronstein, and both confirmed that Johnston had never contacted them. Bushee:

I will not comment about the Chronicle's situation during the union negotiation period. I've told this to every reporter who has called to ask. I have never been asked for comment by the (sic) David Cay Johnson. I was called by him one evening several weeks ago to tell me to look up another story on CJR.com -- and then he promptly hung up. In his latest posting on CJR, he continues to get my name wrong (my father, who has been dead for seven years, was Ward Bushee Jr.). But that is only the start of his errors.

Bronstein:

I’m not going to debate someone who has no real information and hasn’t tried to get any. In general, we all ought to be talking about the value newsrooms and journalists bring to society – as Bruce Bruggman (sic) did very articulately the other night - to anyone who is willing to listen. As columnist J.R. Labbe wrote in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram about that paper, "This newspaper gave more ink to the campaign to save the Texas Ballet Theater than it has to making this case for its own future. Time for that to change."

Okay, fair enough. But here’s where it gets interesting.

I called Johnston to discuss all of this, and he was happy to talk to me. “This was a blog,” he said. “If I were writing a story for the New York Times, I would have absolutely called them.”

Why is a blog at CJR any different from a newspaper story? Johnston:

“I’m the definintion of a dinosaur, but I’m trying to embrace the idea that this is a new era. This is an experiment for me. I’m trying to see what happens when we embrace the values of the blog world. What if we just write what we see? I’ll take some slings and arrows, but I’m trying it out.”

He promised to correct the error on Bushee’s name, and did.

David Cay Johnston has done some phenomenal work He’s a perfect example of the value of a major newspaper -- the New York Times had the money to pay him to spend weeks and months digging into the federal tax code so he could tell the world how government policies were helping the rich screw the poor. We’d all be a lot less informed without him.

But I have to say, with all due respect to one of the great reporters of our time, I don’t think a blog for CJR is any different than a story in the Times. The world of journalism is changing, and in a few years, none of us will be putting stories on dead trees any more -- but the delivery vehicle isn’t the issue. There will be millions of bloggers who comment on things, which is a positive development and I love it, but there will also have to be real news institutions that pay staff people to report stories. And those reporters still have an obligation to call the objects of their attacks and scorn and get a response.

The future isn’t going to be about newspapers vs. online publications. It’s gong to be about journalists doing one kind of job, and others using the web to do something different. Not bad, not wrong -- just different.

Palin Rejecting Hundreds Of Millions In Stimulus Cash

We now have an illustrious addition to the ranks of Republican governors turning down stimulus money: Sarah Palin.

Palin has announced that she is rejecting $416 million, out of $930 million originally headed to her state. "We are not requesting funds intended to just grow government," Palin said in a statement. "We are not requesting more money for normal day-to-day operations of government as part of this economic stimulus package. In essence we say no to operating funds for more positions in government."

Freshman Democratic U.S. Senator Mark Begich has already called on the legislature to override Palin on this.

This is notable for two reasons. First, Palin is widely seen as a potential presidential candidate, and a move like this can help her build up credibility with conservatives. Second, this might actually be the first time that Alaska rejected federal dollars for anything.



Geithner Confirms Treasury Asked Dodd For Bonuses Loophole

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has confirmed that his department did press Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) to water down the executive-bonus limits included in last month's stimulus bill, delivering a boost to the beleaguered Dodd -- but at a greater potential cost to his own damaged credibility on Capitol Hill.

In an interview set to air later today on CNN, Geithner took "full responsibility for the situation" and said "calls for resignation are part of the job," according to an early report on the network's website.



Locavore 1.0: Find Local, in Season Food on Your iPhone

20090319locavoreapp.png

Just in time for spring, Locavore is a new iPhone application that uses built in GPS and location awareness to show you real-time information about the nearest farmers' markets, what's in season locally, and what's coming in season soon. What other food-related iPhone apps do you use regularly? [via Matt Haughey]

Buzz: Mets made an offer to Pedro

Jon Heyman of SI.com believes the Mets made free-agent RHP Pedro Martinez an offer that’s well below his $5 million minimum asking price.

“I can assure you, we are not paying him $5 million,” a Mets person told Heyman.

Heyman believes the Mets offered Martinez $1-2 million, plus incentives.

Last week, Heyman wrote that Martinez is seeking a guaranteed, one-year deal, worth between $5 million and $8 million.

Also in his report, Heyman lists 33 young players who might be worth watching, including Mets OF Daniel Murphy and RHP Bobby Parnell.

Sudoku Pizza

From Slice

20090319-sudoku-pizza.jpg

I won't pretend to understand sudoku. There's too many grids, columns, rows, and numbers to deal with. The point is to fill each of nine grids with the numbers 1 through 9 such that each column and row is filled with 1 through 9 with no repeats. See, confusing, right?

But reduce it to pizza toppings, and now you're speaking my language. The Sudoku Pizza, created by Colordoku, replaces numerals with olives, basil, potato, onion, garlic, Italian salami, zucchini, sausage, and spinach. All arranged in a sudoku pattern. [via Neatorama via Gordon]

RoastBot Comes in Peace

Anunu_RoastBot_Blog.jpg
RoastBot wants to take this opportunity to stand behind this thought: There are no stupid questions.

Blowfish on 24, Again

Three nights ago, my encryption algorithm Blowfish was mentioned on the Fox show 24. The clip is available here, or streaming on Hulu. This is the exchange:

Janis Gold: I isolated the data Renee uploaded to Bauer but I can't get past the filed header.

Ryan Burnett: What does that mean?

JG: She encrypted the name and address she used and I can't seem to crack it.

RB: Who can?

JG: She used her personal computer. This is very serious encryption. I mean, there are some high-level people who can do it.

RB: Like who?

JG: Chloe O'Brian, but from what you told me earlier she's too loyal to Bauer.

RB: Is her husband still here?

JG: Yes, he's waiting to see you.

RB: He's a level 6 analyst too.

...

JG: Mr. O'Brian, a short time ago one of our agents was in touch with Jack Bauer. She sent a name and address that we assume is his next destination. Unfortunately, it's encrypted with Blowfish 148 and no one here knows how to crack that. Therefore, we need your help, please.

...

Morris O'Brian: Show me the file.

MO: Where's your information. 16 or 32 bit wavelength?

JG: 32.

MO: Native or modified data points?

JG: Native.

MO: The designer of this algorithm built a backdoor into his code. Decryption's a piece of cake if you know the override codes.

RB: And you do?

MO: Yeah.

RB: Will this take long?

MO: Course not.

RB: Mr. O'Brian, can you tell me specifically when you'll have the file decrypted?

MO: Yes.

MO: Now.

O'Brien spends just over 30 seconds at the keyboard.

This is the second time Blowfish has appeared on the show. It was broken the first time, too.

Memories of Conversations

Brent Simmons remembers a few conversations with people at conferences and trade shows long ago. Maybe you can help track down who the people were.

I did the same thing with Jeffrey Zeldman at my first SXSW. I was so nervous I couldn't approach anyone. Eventually I tagged along with some folks and ended up at a party where Jeffrey was—and then I gushed like he had invented HTML, browsers, and erasable pens. Ugh. But he was really nice about it.

Anil, thankfully, approached me and began introducing me around as "That File Pile Guy". The rest is history.

A R A M I S


I meant to include this in last night's Heritage variations post, but I forgot. Mea culpa. The card you see above (Image lovingly swiped from Saints of the Cheap Seats) is NOT a short print. It is also NOT a variation and it is NOT rare at all and is NOT worth a car payment. Most likely it's some sort of shenanigans Topps thought would be cute but it's just a base card. How do I know? The Heritage King says so, and that's good enough for me. That guy knows what he's talking about, he's like the King of Cartoons, just with Heritage instead of short animated featurettes.

If that's not good enough for you here's some evidence. Here's an eBay search for 2009 heritage aramis 95. As of this posting, there were 9 results (including team sets!) and 12 results in buy-it-now eBay stores. There were about 1 or 2 copies of each of the super short prints on eBay when I checked last night. If that doesn't convince you that it's not rare, then go ahead buy this one for a buck.

The only 'corrected' version of this card is in the regular, refractor and black refractor chrome versions of the card. These have the full name on the bottom. I've also heard a rumor about an Andy Pettitte misspelling, but I don't have time to chase after any more phantoms right now. Trust the King.

Note: The Mysterious Number 4

A friend of Metsblog, Danielle, of The Wright Stuff, gives us the supposed answer as to why David Wright is wearing #4 in the World Baseball Classic.

Apparently, growing up, Wright wore the number four, as it was his favorite number. When he came up to the majors in 2004, third base coach, Matt Galante, wore the number.

As a result, David was given the number five.

…so does this mean he would rather be number 4 as a met…

…the world will never know…

Walking tour of NYC's indie book shops

The Millions has created a map for a walking tour of NYC's independent book stores. The good news is the walk won't take you too long. (This is also the bad news.)

Tags: books nyc maps

Jonah Peretti, HuffingtonPost.com & Time magazine. I'm proud of my hubby series!

a_whuffington_0330.jpg

There is flattery, there is shameless flattery, and there are conversations with Arianna Huffington. She'll talk to old men about their libido, beautiful women about their intelligence, the unemployed about their talent and the wealthy about their artistic depth. In her hands, a compliment is the social equivalent of a Tomahawk missile, launched in stealth at a heavily researched target and perilously difficult to defend against.

As recently as five years ago, this ability — plus a native braininess and a healthy dose of opportunism — had earned her a regular seat at soirées in the Washington–New York City–Los Angeles triad, as well as a modest media profile. She was once referred to as "the most upwardly mobile Greek since Icarus."

Today Icarus is in her shade. In February the Huffington Post, the website she started in 2005 with Ken Lerer and viral-marketing guru Jonah Peretti, became the 15th most popular news site, just below the Washington Post's and above the BBC's. It garnered 8.9 million unique users that month, according to Nielsen — more than double what it attracted a year ago. It gets a million-plus comments from readers a month. A business newswire recently valued the site at more than $90 million. Only one independently held online-content company (Nick Denton's Gawker properties) is worth more.

HuffPo, as it's known, has reached this level of prominence with 55 paid staffers, including Huffington. Twenty-eight of them are editorial, compared with more than 1,000 at the New York Times. Open the site on any given day and you will be greeted with copy from the Associated Press, contributions from unpaid writers, stories whose legwork was done by other news outlets and a smattering of entries from the site's five reporters. In terms of traditional newspaper content, that's about the level of a solid small-town daily.

But some people believe this model may fundamentally change the news business. When the Seattle Post-Intelligencer became the first large daily newspaper to stop printing and move entirely to the Web, on March 18, the new site was structured uncannily like HuffPo, its original content reduced and jostling for space with guest blogs, wire stories and links to other news sites.

The success of her site has allowed Huffington, 58, to reinvent herself again, from Bush-bashing pundit to media mogul and digital pioneer. But as the enterprise grows, even a pedigreed networker like Huffington may find that it's hard to keep friends in the media when she's killing their business.

Necessary Huffness
All the residents of Huffington's large romantic stone house in Brentwood, Calif., are female: Huffington, her sister Agapi and her two daughters Christina, 19, and Isabella, 17. The walls of the living room are adorned with paintings by Françoise Gilot, one of Picasso's lovers, and Kimberly Brooks, the wife of actor Albert Brooks. Isabella's room is covered with photographs by Annie Leibovitz. Most members of the house staff are women — Huffington even uses her housekeeper as chauffeur when necessary. "My mom's not good at driving," Isabella says. The matriarch is a deft hostess; there's always something to eat and, in the way of female gathering places, lots of conversation.

The Huffington Post was hatched at a party here not long after the 2004 presidential election. Former AOL executive Lerer, who professes to hate parties and to barely have known Huffington at the time, had already launched an anti-NRA site. He saw the need for a counterpoint to Matt Drudge's popular right-leaning website. "For about half an hour it was called the Huffington-Lerer Report," says Lerer. "But I'm shy." He and Huffington raised a million dollars, and Lerer brought in Peretti, his buddy from the anti-NRA website. The Huffington Post was to have three basic functions: blog, news aggregator with an attitude and place for premoderated comments.

Continue reading...

Gmail Tip: Selectively Auto-Reply with a Canned Response

Selective Canned Response
One of the lesser-known aspects of Gmail Labs’ useful Canned Responses feature is that it’s available as a filter action. This means you can auto-reply to messages that match criteria you set up with a canned response. For example, you can say that any message from Aunt Bertha with “Fwd” in the subject line should automatically get the response: “I love you Aunt Bertha, but please stop forwarding me chain letters.”

As for me, I’m using this to deal with certain particularly persistent public relations people who send press releases to my personal email address. I used to just automatically filter those messages to a label I never look at; now, I can automatically reply with the following using canned responses:

Hi–Looks like you’ve sent me a press release. Please remove my email address from your mailing list.

Then shuttle the message off to a label I never look at. Check out the setup in the screenshot above. In the second screen of the filter creation process, check off “Send canned response” and choose the one you’ve set up from the list.

For more on enabling Gmail Labs and its best features, see my picks for best Labs features (including Canned Responses).

will the real iPod for reading stand up now please?

OK, so first of all: this isn't an article about whether or not ebooks are a good thing. But I was thinking this morning about the now hackneyed idea that we're moments away from an 'iPod moment for ebooks', and trying once again to work out why I think this is so very wrong. I've concluded that it's because of the physical qualities of books. But not in the way you'd think.

No discussion of the future of the book is complete without someone saying, as if they'd thought of it first, 'But books are tactile and sensory as well as intellectual, what about the feel and smell?'. Yeah, I like to read in the bath, I like to scribble in the margins, etc. This discussion has been extensively rehearsed, by people much smarter than me, so let's sidestep this issue for a moment. But the physicality of books impacts on their contents, too, and it is this that makes the iPod a misleading comparison for the kind of content that might work on an e-reader.

Let's look at books for a moment. While in the early Wild West publishing days of the 18th-century print boom works were produced in a bewildering array of formats (elephant folio, pamphlet, poster, flyer, handout along with more familiar books) in today's mature publishing industry there is an inverse correlation between the size of the print run and the variation in the book's dimensions. In other words, the more mass-market a book, the more likely it will be to conform to the average book dimensions: 110-135mm wide, by 178-216mm high. This is the easiest size to produce inexpensively, and sell at a price point the market will bear.

Length is determined as well, by manufacturing constraints at the top end, and the fixed overheads of printing at the bottom. Bookshops are crammed with full-length books whose contents could just as well be communicated in a short essay, or even in the title alone: I'm thinking of Feel The Fear And Do It Anyway, but a glance at the self-help or business shelves of your local bookshop will show you plenty more. And yet to make economic sense they have to be padded out for publication in 'proper' book size. But to conclude from this (as many unwittingly do) that long-form books are necessarily the best, rather than just the most familiar, way of communicating ideas is mistaken; and to assume that this practice will transplant to e-readers, imagined as a kind of iPod for these long-form essays, is just wrong.

Look at the Web. The attention economy at its most feral. Whatever you're writing, there is always better, more engaging, more pornographic or immediately relevant content only a click away. If I make this article too long you won't finish it. In terms of print tradition, long-form writing is best; but online, brevity really is the soul of wit. Or, rather, the soul of not being ignored. Does this mean that - on the assumption that long-form is intrinsically good - the Web is ruining our ability to think deeply? Birkerts' recent Atlantic article 'Resisting the Kindle' (see Bob's post below) rehearses, after a fashion, some of these concerns; but a counter-perspective might argue simply that, without the physical constraints of print publishing, we are experimenting with new ways to communicate.

I read books, read blogs, I twitter compulsively. I use these different formats for different kinds of experience. I see no contradiction: what I'm getting at here is that the e-reader is being treated as though it is a viable vehicle for long-form writing, in a way that ignores the essential fact that long-form writing and reading is rooted in paper, and book manufacturing.

So, back to the 'iPod for reading' metaphor. Its proponents generally don't dig deeper than 'here is a small square device for storing and consuming lots of music'. The implication is that we can hop blithely from that to 'here is a small square device for storing and consuming lots of text'. Regardless of stirring promises of e-books containing audio, video, fancy schmancy links and so on, the common understanding - and, indeed, the hope of the publishing industry - remains that this is a digital device for reading long-form texts. But this ignores the effect that iPods - or, more generally, mp3s - are having on how music is distributed. Once sold as albums, whether on LPs or CDs, music is increasingly sold by the micro-unit - a single song. A unit of content typically around 3 or 4 minutes long rather than 60-75 minutes.

It makes economic sense to sell LPs or CDs at a runtime of 60-odd minutes. It makes economic sense to sell books of around 80,000 words. But music for iPods can be sold song by song. So, extrapolating from this to an iPod for reading, what is the written equivalent of a single song? In a word (or 300), belles lettres.

And the Web is full of belles lettres. Now and then in my wanderings around the Web, I come across something and think 'That's a really important essay'. And I worry about the ability of the Web to take care of it for me: link rot always sets in eventually, Wayback Machine or no. I can't print it all out. So how do I keep such articles? I would welcome a device designed for downloading and archiving essays I think are important, a virtual library device for the belles lettres of today.

Armed with such a device, creating playlists, mashups, collages of our favourite short works, we might become a generation of digital Montaignes, annotating and expanding our collective discourse. Blogging is already, in effect, the re-emergence of belles lettres; and while blog posts are typically written for the moment, a device that could earn the blogger a small sum (and the cachet of being considered worthy of archiving) for every essay downloaded might well inspire a renaissance in short work written for a longer lifespan.

As a device for consuming a kind of writing - long-form - developed within the constraints of physical print, e-readers are a niche product. Reading a long-form book on an e-reader is a bit like teleconferencing: it's OK as far as it goes, but the meeting format evolved from haptic, as much as informational, constraints and still works better that way. There may be people out there who listen to entire albums, from start to finish, one at a time, on their iPods; I'm willing to bet there will a few who will enjoy slogging through long-form writings, one at a time, on a digital device. I don't see it going mainstream. But a device for collating and archiving good, important, digital short writing? I want one.

So, please, can we forget about the handful of eccentrics who want to ruin their eyes wading through War and Peace on a tiny LCD screen. Instead, let's bring on the real iPod for reading: something that lets me download, archive, tag annotate, share, playlist and categorise short-form works that would otherwise disappear into the link-rot mulch of yesterday's Web. Let's figure out a business model, an iTunes for micro-articles. Let's take short-form digital writing seriously.

(Cross-posted from sebastianmary.com)

From Christopher Walken's Twitter: [Awesome]

"There's a kid on a Pogo stick in front if my house. It's nearly midnight so let's assume he's been drinking. This should end well for him." [Jossip, Christopher Walken's Twitter]



No, really

Uploaded by straup on 12 Mar 09, 1.49PM EDT.

0318090001.jpg

Shared by Eve
Clearly, Violet recently stayed in a hotel. This is the only explanation for these photos.

violet.blue posted a photo:

0318090001.jpg

transmission via helio ocean

Smoldering Actor Is NYC's New Subway Hero [Herogram]

Shared by Eve
"an actor"

NYC has a new subway hero—this time, an attractive young male actor. Let the starmaking machine commence! Chad Lindsey selflessly rescued a fellow rider; now we must all rescue him from Off-Broadway anonymity.

On Monday, in Penn Station, some dude fell on the tracks and totally knocked himself out. Chad Lindsey, proofreader and aspiring smoldering actor, jumped onto the tracks and hauled the man up, then jumped up himself before the train came. Instead of waiting around for a book deal, he just went ahead and got on the next train and left. Modest, selfless, and a sense of humor as well!

He looked back up at the people on the platform. "I yelled, ‘Contact the station agent and call the police!' which I think is hilarious because I don't think I ever said ‘station agent' before in my life. What am I, on ‘24'?"

You may be sooner than you think, my friend! Chad is 33, and sports a strong jaw and tousled hair. He's currently appearing in Kaspar Hauser off Broadway, but he's no neophyte—according to the internet, he's previously had roles on "How I Met Your Mother," MTV's "Undressed," and "Totally Sexy Loser." Among others!

Chad is also a minor sex symbol to his IMDB fans ("Plot Keywords: Gay Interest | Gay Kiss | Fear Of Commitment | Gay Sex"), and, as one asserts, "Chad Lindsey Rocks. Rocks Hard."

He certainly does! Here's his highlight reel. Give him some work, why don't you?



[Email us, Chad!]

Secret Section in New Yankee Stadium

IMG_2569They're not listed on Yankees.com.
They're not even shown on the Seat Map.
But there's a Secret Section of seats at the new Yankee Stadium.

You can't get them as part of a ticket plan.
You may be able to get them for Single Games.
Or, they may make it a Party Section.

No one knows, no one can tell me how many there are (50-100 is the guess), and there's certainly no price.

I want these seats.
I want to trade them for my backless bleacher seats.
I'm going to make it happen and I'm going to let you know how. Or, you can write in and let me know how.

They're the seats above Mounument Park, below the new scoreboard/outfield cafe (not sure the name), or maybe they are part of that cafe. What I do know is you need a ticket to sit in one.

Speaking of Tickets, Pre Sale Yankees Tickets On Sale Now!

Nuclear power? Yes please!

Shared by alaina
The single issue that could turn my Dad, a nuclear power/radiation safety expert, into an Obama supporter.
companion photo for Nuclear power? Yes please! Nuclear power is safe, affordable, and the waste problems are much more manageable than the public realizes. That was the take-home message from this year's American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Chicago, where a group of experts from the US and EU participated in a session called "Keeping the Lights On: The Revival of Nuclear Energy for Our Future."

As you might have gathered from some of our prior AAAS coverage, climate change was a pretty central theme in many of the sessions and, although nuclear power won't be able to fulfill all our energy demands in a post-carbon world, it's hard to avoid thinking that the world will need to make full use of nuclear energy.

Click here to read the rest of this article

More on fraction of decisions going to starters

So this graph is very similar to yesterday’s:

The dashed line is exactly what was on yesterday’s graph, showing the fraction of decisions going to starters. Today’s graph has a little more data, breaking it out my wins and losses. So the red line shows fraction of wins by starters (versus the total number of wins going to both starters and relievers) and the blue line shows the same for losses. You can see that starters have historically picked up more of the losses than the victories, but that gap has closed to nothing in recent years. (This is the same conclusion drawn from my post two days ago where the starters’ historical win percentage has climbed from 48% to 50%.)

Check out the 3-year period of 1986-1988. Going from 1986 to 1987, starters picked up more losses and fewer victories. I think this was due to the increase in offense that saw more starters get blitzed in games without any significant change in bullpen usage by managers. In 1988, when the baseball returned to normal, the fraction of wins picked up by starters skyrocketed, as did their average innings per start (as you’ll see tomorrow.)

Photos Of Abandoned Newspaper Racks Tell The Industry's Story

These photos of disused newspaper racks in a San Francisco storage yard -- taken March 13, 2009 -- are pretty much all you need to know about the state of the industry. No one is buying, and it's time to throw the old technology for distributing news away.

Photos: AP/ Noah Berger

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:

Unused freight containers

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Unused freight containers near a residential area in northwest Hong Kong. (Full size.)

(via

The Big Picture

)

March 18, 2009

Hopefully there are some underemployed postdocs working the call center…

Randall Monroe (of xkcd fame) has taken on Verizon:

xkcd check

(via failblog)

ShareThis

misc notes on iphone 3.0

Long time readers won't be surprised to learn that I'm seriously considering installing the beta of iPhone v3 for one single feature alone -- landscape mode in Mail, Notes and SMS. Like many others, I can probably count on three fingers the number of times I've missed not having copy & paste, but every single day there are two fat thumbs that long to romp through the landscape.

Other misc notes on v3:

  • Matt Jones is right on the money -- the hardware integration stuff is big news, and an area that's wide open for crazy innovation in all sorts of verticals.

  • Mmmm, push notification services. I didn't see any news mentions of developer pricing for that, so I assume they didn't discuss it. This is something to watch: ESPN delivering sports scores is one thing (there are a limited number of sporting events in a year)...messaging apps are another. The use case of real-time messaging notifications (Twitter DMs, IM alerts, etc.) is going to be an interesting one from a pricing perspective, since the volume and timing of those are, by definition, out of the application developer's control.

  • In-app purchases are also going to be very interesting from a pricing and user behavior perspective. In their conversation at SxSW, Chris Anderson and Guy Kawaski touched on the psychology of charging even $0.01 v. giving things away for free, and the mental transaction cost involved in making the decision to pay more than zero for an item. The context for that conversation was "the web," so we'll see if the context of "the bright shiny phone" changes that at all.

  • I'm assuming that a developer could use the in app purchase mechanism to sell a subscription or bundle of push notification messages. App developers are going to have to get savvy about pricing and business models -- the guys at Pinch Media have to be loving all the things they heard yesterday.

  • I'm frankly surprised by the iPod library access APIs -- I'm imagining a whole new slew of UIs for browsing and playing and interacting with your own media. Paul Lamere showed some cool music library visualization stuff from Sun's Search Inside the Music project at SxSW -- I'd love to see some of that work / thinking end up on a pocket-sized multitouch display.

Until all that stuff surfaces, though, I'm gonna be happy with my landscaped keyboard. Because on my phone, I'm all thumbs.

Quick client-side searching with JavaScript

Flickr's developer blog has a pretty interesting post about how they built a fast client-side search that worked equally well for data sets of 10 people and 10000 people. Ajax with XML & JSON was too slow and using dynamic script tags was too insecure so they rolled their own format and used split to quickly parse it.

Tags: flickr javascript

The Big Bucks

Let's go joseph-cassano-blog.jpgback to Joe Cassano, former chieftain of AIG Financial Products.

As noted earlier, there is a good deal of evidence that Cassano was trying to keep his division's book off-limits to AIG's in-house and outside accountants and auditors going back at least several years. Here is our first draft run-down of evidence that points to a systematic effort to keep AIGFP's books under seal and provide misleading or false information about the Financial Products' division's health.


He was forcibly retired in March of 2008, but kept on a $1 million per month retainer and allowed to keep living in the AIG-paid for apartment in London. It was only in September 2008 that Rep. Henry Waxman flipped out when he heard that the guy who blew up AIG and put taxpayers on the line for tens or hundreds of billions of dollars was still getting a $1 million a month retainer. That's when they killed the retainer too.

But take a look at the 'retirement' agreement Cassano signed with AIG back in March of last year.



Concerning Kornheiser's Office

Staged photo. Those books weren't really there. (Photo by Matt Bonesteel) Well, as long as you offered.... Let's consider today's On the DL podcast, hosted by Dan Levy, featuring special guest Tony Kornheiser: Levy asked Kornheiser who's inherited his office, now that he no longer works at The Post, and now that we've added the half-dozen employees from WashingtonPost.com's sports staff into our midst. "I still have it," Tony said. "I still have it. I hope to keep that office. I hope, but I don't know. It's not up to me any more. But I was told when I left that I could keep the office and the phone number, and I want them. Who moved over there, how many people are we talking about? They don't deserve offices. They don't deserve offices, ok? Now the head of them may deserve [one]. Not everybody at the Washington Post has

A Well Done Look at Quebecois Eating

Food and cinema are always at the forefront of our minds here at TakePart.  Well it seems we are not alone and that folks in Quebec are thinking about the same things.  This Saturday, as a part of MOMA’s film series Canadian Front 2009, a Quebecois documentary entitled Well Done will screen.  The film “examines two famed Montreal restaurants, Toque and Au Pied de Cochon; the friendship between their chef owners, Norman Laprise and Martin Picard; and the extreme-sport attitude they take toward their profession.” It also looks at both men’s efforts to promote the local foods of Quebec.

We talk a lot about local foods on this site, but something we something we don’t discuss very often is “foodie” culture - which can often come into conflict with more sustainable and moral eating (think foie gras).  It is nice to see a film that focuses on it.

It looks a little like reality tv but I think if you are into cinema or food you’ll probably have a good time watching Well Done (it screens this Saturday March 21st @ 4:15).  Give a watch to the trailer below and be sure to takepart with another food movie, Food, Inc.

World of GOOP

Gwyneth Paltrow runs an online lifestyle site/newsletter called GOOP. It has both been widely panned by snarky news outlets and proved successful at attracting subscribers who would otherwise shy away from such things. (Hello, A & M!)

Anyway, the most recent GOOP newsletter shares DVD rental picks from some of Gwyneth's friends...you know, Sofia Coppola, Steven Spielberg, Wes Anderson. The inexplicable crush I have on Gwyneth was only strengthened by this bit of her introduction:

I'm not one of those film people who can tell you who the cinematographer was on On The Waterfront or who most influenced Truffaut. When it comes to knowledge of film history, I'm semi-rubbish (a friend of mine once left the dinner table when I admitted I had never seen one of the most famous and most well-regarded films of all time). I can do the whole rap at the end of The Revenge of the Nerds and all of Jeff Spicoli's dialogue, but sadly, my expertise ends there.

Like I said, inexplicable. If you could only see the fun time she and I are having in my head as we quote memorable Fast Times at Ridgemont High moments to each other. She loves my Spicoli impression!

Tags: gwynethpaltrow movies lists

Google Reader hacks

After using Newsfire for many years, I recently switched to Google Reader for reading RSS feeds. I'm not sold on Reader yet, but I'm going to give it a solid chance. After poking around online and leaning on my Twitter pals (thanks!), I've come up with a system that seems to work for me on OS X, at least for extensive testing purposes.

1. Download Fluid. Fluid creates standalone desktop apps out of web pages. After installing, paste in Google Reader's URL, name the app "Google Reader", and use a pretty icon (or two). Launch your new app...voila, Google Reader as a standalone app.

2. Install the Helvetireader theme for Google Reader. To do this, go to the Scripts menu in your Google Reader Fluid app (it's the scroll graphic to the left of the Window menu) and select "New UserScript". Name your script "helvetireader". At the prompt, select "Override" and then close that window. From the Script menu, select "Open Userscripts Folder"...this will open the ~/Library/Application Support/Fluid/SSB/Google Reader/Userscripts folder in the Finder. Download the Helvetireader UserScript from the web site and save it over the file of the same name in that Userscripts folder. Go back to the GR Fluid app and select "Reload All Userscripts" from the scripts menu. You should be seeing something that looks like this.

3. Make Google Reader your default RSS reader. In Safari, go to Preferences / RSS / Default RSS Reader, choose "Select..." and find the GR Fluid app in your Applications folder. In Firefox, go to Preferences / Applications, scroll down to Web Feed, choose "Use other..." and find the GR Fluid app in your Applications folder. Now clicking on RSS icons and feeds in these browsers will open an "add this feed" page in the GR Fluid app.

If you don't want to go the Fluid route, you can also use Reader Notifier to let you set Google Reader as your default RSS reader in Safari.

Tags: googlereader rss fluid newsfire helvetireader

Originally posted by jason@kottke.org from kottke.org, ReBlogged by xtine on Mar 18, 2009 at 12:18 PM

Modcult Swedish Faction Jamboree, 1888

3340948688_b502d86b9b_o

Two things:

  1. These guys make a good hat collection.
  2. I really hope this is Rydboholm Castle.

(via

flickr commons

)

Who’s Watching the Watchmen Crafts?

rorschach plushie Have you read Alan Moore’s Watchmen? Seen the movie? I’m a dabbler in the world of comic books and graphic novels. I tend to like ones that are dark and complicated. I’m currently obsessed with Walking Dead by Robert Kirkman. Watchmen was one of the first graphic novels I read and I swore I wouldn’t like it because I’m not really into the superhero genre but this book totally surprised me. It’s about nominally about superheroes but it’s more about the fact that they are both superheroes and totally flawed characters with extreme beliefs and personalities. I’m sure that others could describe it better than I. But suffice it to say, if you think you’re not a comic book person, you might find this book surprisingly refreshing.

One of my favorite things about Craftster are all the pop culture homages. No matter what you’re into, someone has likely immortalized in the some crafty form here on Craftster. Here are a bunch of kick-ass projects that Craftsters have made in homage to Watchmen.

Check out this adorable Rorschach plushie by Craftster member pinkninja. If you’re familiar with Watchmen, you’ll know how funny it is to apply the word “adorable” Rorschach. I love how all of his clothing is changeable. You can even see him nekkid!
rorschach plushie rorschach plushie rorschach plushie rorschach plushie

Rorschach cross-stitch by Craftster member nautilus.
rorschach cross-stitch

Can’t find just the right piece of pre-manufactured Watchmen garb? Make your own like Craftster r0ckwithme did for her boyfriend and his son.
watchmen hoodie watchmen hoodie

Everyone loves Perler beads these days! And how can you not? The pixelated look just so appealing. Here are some Watchmen characters done in perler beads by Craftster member StephanieGravatt.
watchmen perler beads

Rorschach sock monkey complete with the Comedian’s button in his hand by Craftster member missmoria.
rorschach sock monkey rorschach sock monkey

Rorschach and Nite Owl costumes by pinkninja and Silk Spectre costume by missmoria.
rorschach and nite owl costume silk spectre costume

Amazing stenciled shirt by Craftster member kathcummings which features a panel from a comic book that this one character is reading in the Watchmen book. Now that’s a hardcore Watchmen reference.
watchmen stencil watchmen stencil

This is a reproduction of an image of the Silk Spectre hand drawn on a t-shirt by Craftster member CraftyOctober. She used a combination of tracing paper, iron-on transfer marker, sharpies and fabric paint.
silk spectre shirt

Another great Rorschach plushie by Craftster member tamakins37.
rorschach plushie

And last but in no way least, Dr. Manhatten in sock monkey form. Dubbed Dr. Monkhatten by Craftster member AndiMo. Not only is this a hysterical homage to Dr. Manhatten but I love that she made it for her adult kids — one of which just happens to be kathcummings who made the amazing stenciled shirt above. I also love the picture of him duplicating himself.
dr. manhatten sock monkey dr. manhatten sock monkey dr. manhatten sock monkey

Untitled

Dinosauroid_reptoid

I was thinking today about how when Spitzer got Hank Greenberg booted from AIG, that basically turned out to be the best thing ever for Greenberg. Anyway, so I was reading his Wikipedia page (I forgot which Greenberg in finance he was so I accidently read the pages of Herb and Ace Greenberg first) today because I couldn’t remember the details or the M-McL connection or anything.

Here’s some out-of-context selections:

Greenberg was both a social friend and client of Henry Kissinger, utilising his consultancy, Kissinger Associates, for advice and operations in a number of countries, particularly in Asia. In 1987 he appointed Kissinger as chairman of AIG’s International Advisory Board.

Mr. Greenberg is Honorary Vice Chairman and Director of the Council on Foreign Relations and a member of David Rockefeller’s Trilateral Commission.

In the 1980s, his extensive foreign connections prompted the Reagan administration to offer him a job as Deputy Director of the CIA, which he declined.

How CRAZY CONSPIRACY THEORY/Illuminati/New World Order can you get? The rapid crisis-based System Change plays right in too.

All I’m saying is, I’m not so sure I’m going to joke about Reptilians too much any more…

The ruins of Detroit

The ruins of Detroit, a series of photos by Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre documenting vacant buildings in Detroit. Some of the photos are repeated with useful annotation in this Time photo gallery. (See also Brian Ulrich's Stores That Are No More.)

On the other hand, some are arguing that there is great opportunity in Detroit right now.

Detroit right now is just this vast, enormous canvas where anything imaginable can be accomplished.

Tags: detroit photography

Double elimination. Boy, I don’t know.

Are we all comfortable with this?

Puerto Rico beats the U.S. The U.S. beats Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico loses to Venezuela and doesn’t play the Netherlands. The U.S. beats the Netherlands and doesn’t play Venezuela. The U.S. advances.

If I’m the only one bugged by this, fine. I am bugged by it, however, and I at least want to put it out there.

The shift to a double-elimination format for the first two rounds of the World Baseball Classic just kind of happened, and honestly, we were a few days into the first round before I even realized it was being played under new rules. It affected the first round as well. Australia beat Mexico. Mexico beat Australia. Australia lost to Cuba and didn’t play South Africa. Mexico beat South Africa and didn’t play Cuba. Mexico advances.

(Note: in both of these cases, the matchup that went unplayed in elimination games was played or will be played for seeding. But it’s essentially irrelevant.)

The decision may have been to avoid advancing teams on tiebreakers, which happened a number of times in the first WBC. The U.S., in fact, was eliminated on tiebreakers in the second round of the first event. I understand the desire to play it out on the field, but a double-elimination format falls down when the quality of competition is as unequal as it is in these groups. There is a massive difference between playing Cuba and playing South Africa, the difference between a 30% chance of winning a game and a 99.9% chance. I would put the difference between playing Venezuela and the Netherlands and Venezuela at a smaller range, but still a big swing. Those differences are determining advancement. The order of splitting games with one opponent is determining advancement. That’s not right, and as great as last night’s game was, I’m left thinking, “They beat us, we beat them…this isn’t right.”

Let’s make it right next time. 

March 17, 2009

Answering to Customers

Early on, I made the decision to answer every request or suggested with a personal response and a detailed justification of our decisions. That is, if someone asked for a feature, I wouldn’t just say yes, no, or we’ll think about it, but rather, I’d offer some insight into whether it had crossed our minds yet, how we’ve thought about approaching it, or why we decided against it.

I told myself that if I can’t justify our decisions or philosophy in writing such that a customer can understand or respect our thinking if not agree with it, then we owe it to that person to reconsider our position. On the surface, this seems simple enough, but it takes time to respond to people. Writing is difficult. Defending or communicating your thoughts in writing can be even more challenging, and that’s a good thing.

It’s easy to tell someone “No”, “Just because”, “We’ll think about it”, or “It’s complicated”, but that doesn’t do much for either party. Taking the time to explain yourself is as much an investment in your own understanding as it is in their understanding. More importantly, it turns the whole encounter into an open-minded two-way conversation. That’s much more valuable because now you’ve got an extra mind that might just be determined to help out. Then everybody wins.

Of course, not all companies could do this because it would mean that the support team would have to have a pretty intimate understanding of the vision and implementation details for a product, but it has worked wonders for me. It might not be sustainable as we grow because it does require so much time to write detailed responses, but I don’t plan on letting go of this practice without a fight.

Topspin Upgrades Platform, Partners With BerkleeMusic.com

Hello from Austin, Texas, home of the one and only SXSW Everything Conference. As I’m typing this to you from my hotel room at The Hilton, pure madness fills the streets just below me. It’s the industries of “interactive technology” (whose conference ended today) and music (whose conference starts tomorrow) colliding in a drunken melee crossed between mardi gras and Little 500 with one important difference: everyone is here to experience the greatest pleasure in life, music.

We’re here all week demonstrating the latest version of our software for artists, managers, and labels. A popular question has been, “so Topspin has a lot of hype but, um, what do you do exactly?” I apologize to anyone who has come to this site in the past looking for something more “marketing-y”. In all honesty we’ve been putting our effort into building our platform and serving our artists rather than our Web site. We are still in invite-only mode and have been very fortunate to work with some of our very favorite artists and thankfully we haven’t had to do much in the way of marketing. I promise we’ll be updating the Web site soon with more details (now that we have a much better sense of what we’re doing and how we’re doing it) but in the meantime I’ll take this opportunity to give you an overview of the latest version of our software, some of the success we’ve had thus far, and tell you about our exciting (IMHO) partnership with BerkleeMusic.com.

Starting at the top: Topspin is a technology-driven direct-to-fan marketing, management and distribution platform. On a grand scale, we’re looking to do for music marketing what Pro Tools and other digital recording software did for music production — build a democratizing software application which changes how music is marketed. On a more tangible level, we’re simplifying workflow for digital marketing. We’ve been in private beta mode with relatively few (about 40) artists thus far and are opening this up to a wider range of artists, but we still plan to service only a few hundred bands this year. Eventually Topspin will be self-serve, but we are looking to refine the software and make sure the folks currently using the platform are successful before we open it up to so many bands we can’t give them all at least a modicum of personal attention.

As I mentioned in last week’s post, everyone in the company is focused on one of two things: either building the Topspin platform or serving our artists directly. The latest version of the software is based heavily on what we learned serving campaigns like David Byrne and Brian Eno’s Everything That Happens Will Happen Today, Arcade Fire’s Miroir Noir, Metric’s Fantasies, and Beastie Boys’ Paul’s Boutique (just to name a couple) and includes a new widget platform, email system, audience targeting, analytics dashboard (including a cool feature called Topspin Rank), and an improved purchase flow. Stop by our office and you can see a list of 32 features and fixes we plan to add to this mix before the middle of the year. Our engineering team has their heads down, bayonets engaged, and eyes on the prize. Look out.

Topspin is more about demand generation than demand fulfillment. We approach marketing on three fronts: direct (email and the like), viral (quality driving organic person-to-person marketing), and targeted (such as targeted paid placement).

We’ve had great success on the viral marketing front. Early on in the lifecycle of the Byrne/Eno campaign we were pleasantly surprised to find a purchases to streams ratio of 20%. Our quest then became getting as many people as possible to hear this great album via the streaming widget which drove sales directly on the artist’s site. To date we have seen hundreds of sites embed this widget and millions of impressions and streams. With the new Topspin platform it takes seconds to build one of these widgets and embed it anywhere on the Web, with support for audio, video, images, and even Flickr. What’s more, you can see what sites are moving the needle for your business with asset-level analytics and tracking.

spinnerette

It’s possible you’ve seen some of our progressive ads floating around out there on the Web. By intelligently targeting artist fan bases, using creative which easily allows fans to express interest in an artist for free, and using proprietary optimization techniques, we’ve had great luck increasing the size of an artist’s fan base.

Network

Fans really do love to hear from their favorite artists via email. In fact they expect their favorite artists to give them the inside scoop first if they’ve asked them to. So it’s no wonder we continue to see email marketing as a power-tool in an artist’s arsenal, with 30% of sales coming through this channel and click-through rates which demolish the industry average — consistently north of 50%. We’ve beefed up these tools significantly with improved fan segmenting and targeting by geography. Playing a show in Kansas City? Wouldn’t it be nice to mail just fans within 100 miles of KC? No problem.

There’s fantastic support for hi-res content such as HD video, FLAC, and Apple Lossless. On the Paul’s Boutique release 55% of all customers chose some form of lossless content! I have to admit, I’m completely blown away by that number. I can’t tell you how stoked I am to know our customers care about quality.

Dash

Our dashboard is the tool we hope artists, managers, and labels spend the first 20 minutes of their day with, a flash of data that at a glance shows what the blogs are saying, recent Flickr photos, and activity on a host of services such as MySpace, YouTube, Amazon, and many more. Also, we’ve allowed artists to compare themselves to other artists with a feature called Topspin Rank. Topspin Rank uses publicly available artist data to show relative popularity and gives you access to the data you need to improve relative to your peers or competitive set.

Most importantly, Topspin drives sales. Not only does Topspin give more to the artist on a percentage basis than iTunes, but Topspin’s revenue-per-sale CRUSHES iTunes at a current average of $22 per sale! Conversion is also far above the industry average at approximately 6%. As the t-shirts we’re wearing here at SXSW say: Topspin — It fucking works.

And of course literally hundreds of bugs have been fixed and entire portions of the code have been refactored in a never-ending quest for the perfect media marketing software. We have a long way to go, but we have zero intention of ceasing the quest.

As we offer Topspin’s software to more artists, it’s important to us artists, managers, and labels have top-notch support in using the software. In this spirit we are ecstatic to announce a partnership with Berklee College of Music’s online school, BerkleeMusic.com, to provide a course called “Marketing Your Music With Topspin”. This course takes an in-depth look at the new world of music marketing with a focus on Topspin’s software. Your final project will be bringing a band (your band?) to market. Course signup starts in July and the course will begin in September of 2009. We truly couldn’t be more proud to count Berklee as a partner and are very excited to see students start coming out of this course and launching campaigns for bands on our platform.

If you’re interested in reading about what we’re up to from others, Hypebot ran a much more succinct and very accurate piece this week, and Australia’s Nick Crocker ran a very flattering piece this evening. Thanks much to you both.

Thanks sincerely to everyone who has been following along as we grow. We truly appreciate your patience and support. As Ozzy likes to say, “I LOVE YOU ALL!”

ian c rogers
Topspin

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What I see is a Youkilis, a Yankee and a Philly trying to squash David Wright. I don't like it!

the Brett Myers diet: stop drinking beer

Not including Football Sundays, Brett Myers didn't drink beer this offseason which resulted in a loss of 35 pounds. I'm going to guess there were other dietary changes as well, but figured this pitcher's program was worth mentioning (after reading about it in, yes, ESPN Mag. can I hype them any more?).

Full Name: Brett Allen Myers
Born: 08/17/1980
Birthplace: Jacksonville, FL
Height: 6' 4"     Weight: 240-35?
Bats: Right
Throws: Right
College: N/A
MLB Debut: 07/24/2002

Pizza Mezzaluna: A New Under-the-Radar Pizzeria with Good Cheer

"There's no mythic, century-old pizza lore emanating from Pizza Mezzaluna. What you will find instead is fine pizza made in a wood-burning oven by an experienced pizzaiolo..."

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Photographs by Robyn Lee

Pizza Mezzaluna

146 West Houston Street, New York, NY 10012 (b/n MacDougal and Sullivan; map); 212-533-1242
Service: Warm, friendly, solicitous
Setting: The most cheerful pizzeria I've ever been in. There are clouds on the ceiling. 'Nuff said
Compare It To: Mezzaluna, La Pizza Fresca, Luzzo's, Celeste
Must-Haves: Pizzette if you're alone, tuna pizza, salad pollanca, calzone, tiramisu
Cost: $10 to $35 a person depending on the size and scope of your meal
Grade: B+

In the pizza-obsessed town that is New York, you think it would be news when an experienced New York pie man from southern Italy opens a tiny jewel box of a pizzeria in the old DeMarco's space right next to Raffetta's, especially when said pizzeria has a gorgeous wood-burning oven (with gas assist) and a resolutely cheerful look and feel (the ceiling is painted with a blue sky and many clouds), making it one of the few pizzerias in New York that has a sunny disposition.

But Francesco Vitale and his wife, Lili Chu, opened Pizza Mezzaluna three months ago, and the food press and bloggers have somehow let it slip under the pizza radar, which as we all know is insanely powerful in this burg. Maybe it's because Pizza Mezzaluna is associated with Mezzaluna, perhaps the seminal wood-oven restaurant in New York, making it old news. Or maybe because Vitale has never been an object of affection to pizza-loving sorts like me.

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But let it be said right now: Pizza Mezzaluna didn't slip past the Serious Eats crew. I discovered it wandering around Houston Street and Soho a couple of Saturdays ago and returned last week with Robyn in tow. On my initial solo visit I had tried a fine traditional Margherita pizza and a brilliant invention, a $5, seven-inch individual pizza, a pizzette, that Vitale makes to order (usually in less than five minutes) and sells in lieu of slices. It's a brilliant conceit worthy of MacArthur Genius Grant consideration.

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The 12-inch pies ($14 to $17) that come out of the oven are minimally puffy, light-crusted beauties with fine hole structure. (In my perfect pizza world the cornicione would be another inch higher, however.) In style, these pies fall smack dab in the middle of the wood-oven New York Neapolitan-style pizza tradition of Pizza Fresca, Luzzo's, and yes, Mezzaluna. If you do the crust-tearing thing here, you will find that the crust is cooked all the way through, from the outer lip to the center of the pie. Said crust also gets a properly blistered char, though bubble freaks might be disappointed at the lack of huge bubbles. Even the impossibly cute pizzette ($5) has a fine crust. All the crust needs to achieve crust greatness is some sea salt.

Vitale uses Grande fior di latte, an acceptable but curious choice given that Joe's Dairy is literally right around the corner. (Try the smoked mozzarella, Francesco. It's as good as smoked mozzarella gets in this town.)

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The funghi e salsiccia ($17), mushroom and sausage, is a fine example of my litmus test pie. It's helped immeasurably by the Salumeria Biellese sausage.

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The shocker is the tonno, or tuna pizza ($16). That's right—the tuna pizza. I wanted to hate it, but it was really tasty and even made sense once we started eating it. In this case, the whole pizza really does exceed the sum of its parts—Sicilian tuna, tomato, mozzarella, red onions, and capers. It must be said that I have always held the opinion that capers and canned tuna are a classic and seriously delicious combination.

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If you're really hungry, or if you and a friend want to cost-effectively split one item that will fill you up, have the calzone ($17). Draped by slices of prosciutto, it is mezzaluna (half-moon)-shaped and stuffed with mozzarella, ricotta, and tomato sauce.

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Vitale and his crew even make a salad worth eating at a pizzeria. The pollanca ($13) has chopped grilled chicken that manages to stay moist, frisée, radicchio, fennel, cherry tomatoes, celery, apples, raisins, and avocado. He confirmed that it originated at the uptown Mezzaluna as the ultimate "ladies who lunch" salad. Don't let that deter you from ordering the pollanca. In this case the ladies who lunch are on to something.

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The salad even comes with a basket of thin, baked-to-order focaccia ($5 if ordered separately) to help you shovel. The focaccia is seasoned with lots of fresh thyme and lots of sea salt.

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There are a half dozen pastas on the menu, but we only tried one: the black squid ink pasta with spicy tomato sauce studded with small shrimp ($14). The fresh pasta is made at the Uptown location, and though I wish it was served slightly more al dente, it's a fine bowl of pasta nonetheless.

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Vitale even makes a tiramisu ($6.50) worth ordering. It has plenty of strong coffee flavor and is surprisingly light, and Vitale substitutes Plasmon, a sort of Italian teething cracker, for the lady fingers. It sounds strange, I know, but it totally works. Trust me.

There's no mythic, century-old pizza lore emanating from Pizza Mezzaluna. What you will find instead is fine pizza made in a wood-burning oven by an experienced pizzaiolo who really knows his stuff served in uniquely cheerful environs—and no attitude. It's not the best pizza in Manhattan or New York or anywhere else, but it is really good food I would be happy to eat any time.

And Still More

In the post below, I referenced the statements of Joseph St. Denis, the former chief accountant at AIG Financial Products, who said that AIGFP President Joseph Cassano had barred him from efforts to value AIGFP's credit default swap portfolio because he feared St. Denis would "pollute the process." Remember, this is the accountant, who wants to review the books to see whether the accounting is right. And Cassano doesn't want him looking.

It turns out the statement comes from this letter (.pdf) St. Denis provided last year to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in lieu of a deposition. It's definitely worth your time to read the letter all the way through.

Some of the discussion you probably need to be an accountant to fully absorb. But the basic outlines are clear. In June 2006, St. Denis was brought in to provide AIG corporate with a clearer window into the accounting practices at AIGFP and make sure they were operating under industry standard accounting protocols.

All was going well into the first rumblings of the credit crisis began in in 2007. At this point the valuations and the risks associated with AIGFP CDS portfolio began to move to the fore. And that basically led to a rapid deterioration of St. Denis's relationship with Cassano.

There's a lot that's very suggestive in that letter about where this is likely going.



Official Where The Wild Thing Are Movie Poster

My beautiful co-worker Bernadette Matthews just pointed me in the direction of the brand new poster for the Where The Wild Things Are movie. All I can say is OMG WTF FTW YES! I’m so effin’ excited for this movie, and this poster is just further proof of how beautiful SPike Jonze’s vision is going to be.

Bobby

Snarky Farewell From Seattle PI Staffer [Print Is Dead]

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer today printed its last issue, but not before some wiseass staffer amended a Thomas Jefferson quote on an office wall. If this jester isn't blogging for SeattlePI.com, she should be!

Oh Really?


"Last week, protesters from PETA showed up at a Hempstead [Long Island, New York]elementary school, unannounced and uninvited, to try to convince youngsters leaving at day's end that circuses mistreat their animals. The protesters handed out coloring books with stickers that read, 'Circuses are no fun for animals.'"

Newsday
The best sauce in the world is hunger.

Best Practices

I've noted several times that some of AIG Financial Products' practices were not just deceptive and reckless but seem to meet traditional definitions of fraud. But it seems there's a track record too. Back in 2004 the DOJ criminally charged Joe Cassano's unit with helping another firm hide assets from its books. As part of the settlement they had to pay an $80 million fine.



Phagwah Parade

Holi
Sunday we headed out to Richmond Hill, Queens to check out the Phagwah Parade. It was my first time celebrating (playing?) Holi, the Hindu festival of colors welcoming spring. An auntie saw that we had not yet joined in the fun and was sweet enough to bring us into the fold with a generous smear of color on all our faces. Photos of some of the festivities in India over at The Big Picture.

Wired diamond heist piece optioned

So of course the diamond heist piece I linked to a few days ago is going to be made into a movie. Directed (maybe) by JJ Abrams, no less. The same author, Joshua Davis, also wrote High Tech Cowboys of the Deep Seas: The Race to Save the Cougar Ace, which has also been optioned for film.

Tags: movies joshuadavis crime

iPhone 3.0

Land sakes, with all the hustle and bustle around here lately, I plumb forgot that Apple had an event today to announce the newest version of the operating system for their interactiveTelePhone. Engadget has the details. The iPhone 3.0 highlights so far:

Embeddable Google Maps within applications.
Same apps of two phones can talk to each other (gaming!).
Turn-by-turn directions available.
Push notifications finally coming. (They retooled after hearing all sorts of feedback from App Store developers.)
Streaming audio and video.
CUT AND PASTE.
MMS support.
Better searching, like in email and calendars.

Tags: apple iphone telephony

Abandoned Taiwanese UFO Houses

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Craig Ferguson explores the abandoned resort outside the town of Sanzhi:

Accounts vary on the origins of this complex, and indeed, as to whether it was meant to be a hotel development or a housing development. Apparently, it was constructed in the 1960s and included/was to include a dam to protect it against sea surges, floors and stairs made of marble and a small amusement park. The site was commissioned by the government and local firms and there is no named architect. Local papers at the time reported that there were numerous accidents during construction which caused the death of some workers. As news of these accidents spread, no one wanted to go there, even to visit, and the project was subsequently abandoned. The ghosts of those who died in vain are said to still linger there, unremembered and unable to pass on. The complex was left in its unfinished state because no amount of redevelopment will bring people to the area due to superstitions about ghosts, and it can’t be demolished because destroying the homes of spirits and lost souls is taboo in Asian culture.

When I was there, I met 4 young university students who were passing by and stopped for a look. They didn’t want to get to close to the buildings for fear that the ghosts would take them. They told me there was “heavy evil” in the buildings.

Boing Boing Gadgets: Manufacturer confirms chip: iPod

Boing Boing Gadgets: Manufacturer confirms chip: iPod headphones now have the Apple Tax; Update: Apple confirms no DRM, authentication, just licensing. Anti-DRM activists: crying wolf since 2003.

Retroactive Retention!

Remember, one of the big reasons to give those retention bonuses to the executives at AIG Financial Products division was to keep them and their brain power and experience at the company. But it turns out that a bunch of them who just got the retention bonuses had already left the company.



The most shocking thing here... is that John Carney is working on St. Patrick's Day.

karenuhoh:

alexbalk:

Carney on AIG: “Burn this motherfucker to the ground.”

I am going to violate one of my own rules and reprint myself. Oh, fuck it. I don’t have any rules. From Sunday last, after I’d finished throwing a loaded coffee cup across the room upon reading the Times article on the “bonuses” (the Irish aren’t the only crazy people who throw things):

This blood-boiling article reduces to only one possible conclusion to a mind poached by legal training: these aren’t “bonuses.”

It says here five times ten ways that a bunch of suits earning $200K and north looked at AIG’s compensation pkgs and realized it had a contractual obligation to pay. To call such a “bonus” is disingenuous. A “bonus” is a reward for performance. It can’t be expected or promised and be gunshot near that ludicrous word.

So, since it’s not legal to argue that this insane result is just fucking wrong, let’s think instead about what would’ve occurred had the government not undertaken ownership of AIG (I know, it’s only 80%, but I’d say that gives you a voice, wouldn’t you? Well, if you answered “yes,” you’d be wrong).

These “bonuses” come due, but AIG has no money to pay. The employees sue for breach. But the defendant is judgment-proof.

Sure. I’ve heard it a million times: if AIG collapses, the world economic system backflips into the toilet.

I say wake up and smell the bullshit. The reason the world economic system is fucked, and continues to fuck us, is because the employers (that would be you and me, babe) can’t tell its employees what their “bonuses” can be. Sometimes, the Law being blind means it takes you by the hand and swandives into the bowl.

Frank: We Own AIG, Now Let's Act Like It

House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-MA) just finished a press conference on AIG, where he divulged a new wrinkle in the ongoing push to recoup the company's lavish bonuses.

The U.S. government apparently added "covenants" to its deal with AIG to cede some of its rights as the majority owner of the company, Frank said, adding in plain English: "It's time to act as the owner."

Frank declined to elaborate further on the nature of the limits that were set "restraining [the government's] influence" over AIG, but he said he'd be taking the issue up further with the Obama administration later today.

And he reminded reporters that Congress had no control over the AIG bailout, which was conducted via the Federal Reserve rather than the legislation that set up the TARP program late last year. "Remember, the legislative authority for this is essentially the 1932 statute" that set the Fed's lending rules, Frank said.

Asked about the idea picking up steam in the Senate as well as the Joint Economic Committee to tax AIG's bonuses as 100%, Frank demurred to Rep. Charles Rangel's (D-NY) Ways and Means Committee, which has broad jurisdiction over taxation.



To Eat: Minetta's Black Label Burger

Secrets of Minetta Tavern's Black Label Burger | A Hamburger Today:
The finished burger looks so simple, completely belying the rigorous preparation involved in bringing it to table. Although the bun might appear too large, it is so light and airy that as it compresses and conforms around the plump patty the beef-to-bun ratio is actually spot on. The acridity of the onions balances the subtle sweetness of the bun, allowing the flavor of the beef to be fully realized. The Black Label is simply ethereal—tender, succulent, and brimming with the flavor of dry aging: that musky, Roquefort-like tang that is so intoxicating.

I'm skeptical of any $20+ burger, but Nick's DVD extras-esque post about Minetta's $26 Black Label Burger has swayed me. *Added to To Eat List*

Stage Notes: Haggadah

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Dan Safer’s Witness Relocation dance/theater company is totally wild; unruly, uncivilized, whatever “wild on stage” means to you. Plus, they are very funny. They like to surprise the audience and make them laugh. Their recent The Blue Bird at CSV was like going to a party where everyone was crazy drunk and did what they wanted. Of course, it’s all thought-out and synchronized, and that’s the beauty of it. Obviously, a lot of the troupe’s zaniness and sense of humor comes from its leader. For Haggadah, Safer is re-creating a Passover seder, itself a re-creation of the Jews' exodus from Egypt. I spoke with Safer. Hi Dan. What exactly does “Haggadah” mean? Haggadah is the name of the book that they use during the Passover holiday. The whole story from The Ten Commandments, you know, the movie with Charlton Heston as Moses, the slaves escape from Egypt, the 10 plagues, Cecil B. DeMille’s epic. Parts of the book are read at the seder. Why did you decide to do a show about this? Whenever I’ve been at a seder, they’re incredibly boring; but the story is really amazing. So our play was to take this amazing story and present it in an exciting way. How are you going to do it? Well, we have the audience sitting at a 50-foot long table, and the show goes on on top of the table and around the audience. It has dance numbers and loud rock songs. Give me an example or two. It’s full of sex, violence, blood, avenging angels, slavery, plagues... How many are in it? There’s eight main players -- five men and three women. Tell me more. We’re doing stuff based on Biblical stories, but also we will be doing stuff based on a Diane von Furstenberg book, Book of Beauty, which is about how to become a more attractive, confident and sensual woman. We’re mixing that in with the Haggaddah. There’s a bunch of family scenes that happen at Diane’s house. What else? There’ll be a matzoh-eating contest. For the actors only. Dinner will not be served. How about the plagues? I remember that they were awful; locusts, frogs, the killing of the first-born... We’re trying to deal with them so as make them scary as opposed to a hokey re-telling. Like for the lice, we’re thinking of itching powder; not for the audience, but for one of the actors. We might kill off the oldest member of the cast. Your last show was like a party. There will be a party atmosphere, although something bad happens at the party. The whole holiday is about freedom, and so we’re looking at the whole piece as freedom from oppression from slavery. So it’s going to be a fun show that gets dark and oppressive at times, but the goal is freedom. La Mama, E.T.C., 74-A E. 4th St., (212) 475-7710. Mar. 19-29. Thurs.-Sat., 7:30 p.m.; Sun., 2:30 p.m. $25.

Tute Tuesday: How to make etched glass canisters

Etched glass canisters For this Tute Tuesday Onyxnox shares her absolutely ingenious method for etching glass using fabric paint to create a stencil. This method allows for amazing flexibility in creating a design either using a stencil or freehand. Thanks so much to Onyxnox for sharing her secrets, and this awesome unicorn canister set!

This method could be used for all sorts of glassware, not just canisters. You could make all sorts of glasses, vases, mirrors, you name it! This is such an adaptable technique, the possibilities are virtually limitless!

If you use this method to create your own etched glass project, let us know! We would love to see your results!

McClatchy N.C. Subsidiary to Cut 78 Positions

no03.17.09.pngThe News and Observer Publishing Co., owners of community papers in North Carolina, will cut 78 staffers — 27 from the newsroom — in an effort to remain solvent. Overall, 11 percent of the workforce will be let go.

In addition, remaining staffers making over $25,000 — so almost everyone — will face a 10 percent pay cut and take a week-long furlough without pay.

"We are making our way through difficult times by making difficult decisions," publisher Orage Quarles III said in a staff memo. "It is never easy to say goodbye to so many of our friends and colleagues, but we must make these additional cuts to sustain our company and adjust to new competitive and economic realities."

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media

Former Florent Space Vide

via NYMag:

R & L before its opening

R & L before its opening Photo: Daniel Maurer

Yesterday, a walk past R & L Restaurant found the onetime Florent space shuttered, with employees taking boxes of glassware out of the basement. We asked someone who looked like the boss whether the establishment would reopen, and he replied in an Eastern European accent, “in two or three months.” Unfortunately, he wasn’t entertaining questions about whether it would still bear the name R & L. In fact, his words were, “That’s it. No more. Good-bye.” Was he saying good-bye to R & L or good-bye to us? Certainly the latter, possibly both. We’ll wait and see what’s next.


2 Comments 

  • Ahhh. The days of Florent. I miss it.

    It will be interesting to see if in these economic times people will give the landlord what she wanted or if her space will remain vacant. Let's see how moves in in the next three months.

    By Brian Ormsbee (NY Mag) on 03/16/2009 at 3:07pm

  • I'm not surprised they closed; they had no idea what they were doing. People imagine they can run a restaurant simply because they have chairs, tables, and a cook in whites at the range. It takes so much more. I went in to check it out a few times, and never felt the place had that old feeling I experienced at Florent.

    I hope I'm wrong, but I believe the space will carry the curse of once being Florent for a long time.
By mymymichl on 03/16/2009 at 5:15pm

From Porch to Patio

From Porch to Patio, a 1975 piece by Richard Thomas, discusses the transition in American society from the semi-public gathering place in front of a house to the private space in the back.

When a family member was on the porch it was possible to invite the passerby to stop and come onto the porch for extended conversation. The person on the porch was very much in control of this interaction, as the porch was seen as an extension of the living quarters of the family. Often, a hedge or fence separated the porch from the street or board sidewalk, providing a physical barrier for privacy, yet low enough to permit conversation.

When people started moving out to new buildings in the suburbs, the patio emerged to provide the privacy for these urban refugees.

The patio was an extension of the house, but far less public than the porch. It was easy to greet a stranger from the porch but exceedingly difficult to do so from the backyard patio. While the porch was designed in an era of slow movement, the patio is part of a world which places a premium on speed and ease of access. The father of a nineteenth-century family might stop on the porch on his way into the house, but the suburban man wishes to enter the house as rapidly as possible to accept the shelter that the house provides from the mass of people he may deal with all day.

(via front porch republic)

Tags: architecture privacy

iPhone OS 3.0: Dreams really could come true

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In case you haven't checked iCal lately, the iPhone OS event is only hours away! What that means (aside from all of the tubes being clogged with rumors on what the new OS version will feature) is that it's time for another TUAW wishlist! Please know that while these are all going to be the best guesses on the whole wide web, they are still in fact just that, guesses.

Many of the staff are visiting SXSW and having the grandest of times; the rest of us are working from our satellite office (on the moon, actually). However, we thought it would be a great disservice to not begin the discussion on what you will definitely probably hopefully see in Apple's latest release of the iPhone OS.

Now, sit back and let the reality distortion field wash over you as we wax philosophically about today's press event. Don't forget to come back at 1pm ET/10am PT for our live chat during the preview session.

Continue reading iPhone OS 3.0: Dreams really could come true

TUAWiPhone OS 3.0: Dreams really could come true originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 17 Mar 2009 09:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boxed Water, Like Bottled Water But With Trees

20090316-boxedwater.jpgBoxed Water is Better is a boxed water company/art project/philanthropic project that developed from the idea of "creating a new bottled water brand that is kinder to the environment and gives back a bit." The containers are composed 90 percent of trees, and 20 percent of profits are donated to water and forestation organizations. Boxed Water is available in select stores in Michigan. [via BuzzFeed]

"I’m distrustful of anyone who uses the Internet a lot but can’t name five Pokemon."

“I’m distrustful of anyone who uses the Internet a lot but can’t name five Pokemon.”

- BoF

Listage

shackline.jpg
As Temperature Rises, Shake Shack Line Lengthens [Photo via AHT]

· NYC's Next Schmancey Steakhouse in a Strip Club Opens Tomorrow [Thrillist]
· Strong's Artisanal Take Down Draws Angry Ex-Workers Out of the Woodwork [Strongbuzz]
· Lamenting the Stupidity of Firing Whole Foods Worker Over Tuna Sandwich [City Room]
· Ninth Street Espresso Ditches Stumptown Coffee for Intelligentsia [NYT]
· Knicks Forward Charles Oakley Gets Own Cooking Show [Always Hungry NY]
· Country of Origin Labeling (COOL) Begins, With Many Exceptions [Consumerist]
· Non-Breaking: Hot Dogs Have Gone "Haute" at Joints Like Dogmatic and Crif Dogs [NYO]

New Subway Station Opens Downtown

Shared by triciawang
finaLLLLLY!

Starting today, the Number 1 train will come to a stop at a brand new station, as the long-awaited $530 million South Ferry station opens in Lower Manhattan.

Photos - Anatomy of a Triple Ristretto

A triple ristretto is the shot type of choice for our Leftist espresso. A "ristretto" refers to how we restrict the extraction range of the shot to maximize its flavor potential.

View the full gallery

GREENBACK

During WWII, with fears that Japan would overrun Hawaii, the US decided to issue the $1, $5, $10 and $20 Emergency Federal Reserve Notes with the word "HAWAII" overprinted on the front and back to make each note distinctive enough so that they would know if large amounts were being used to fund the enemy war effort. *[I love the contrast of type.] I'm off to jury duty -- wish me *LUCK*.

EmergencyReserveNotes

March 16, 2009

L!brary

20090316library.jpg

Digging this logo by Michael Beirut, done by Pentagram for the Library Initiative.

The Library Initiative "a range of talented architects would design the libraries; private companies would donate books and funds; and we would provide the graphic design, including signage, wayfinding, and a masterbrand that would tie all the sites together." It's a part of the Robin Hood Foundation, which is building new school libraries throughout NYC.

Mr. Pickle Kidnapped - SFist: San Francisco

Mr. Pickle Kidnapped - SFist: San Francisco

According to local sandwich blog breadxbread (which we came across at Mission Mission), somebody stole Mr. Pickle, the beloved Latino, mustard- and mayo-carrying pickle mascot over at Mr. Pickle's Sandwich Shop on 20th Street.

http://sfist.com/2009/03/16/mr_pickle_stolen.php

Read and post comments | Send to a friend

Che!

I was reading this very dispiriting article in the Times about how folks in the administration have known about the AIG bonuses for months, how the folks at AIG are now saying they'd never have done any of it without the go-ahead from the Treasury and -- best of all -- how the plan to gerry-pasciucco-blog.jpgget AIG to pay the bonus money back appears to involve giving AIG still more taxpayer money which they can then hand back to us as 'repayment', while the new bonused execs (bonees?) get to keep the money anyway.

But all was not lost. Because I found out a little more about AIG Financial Products, my new obsession.

We've already told you about Joseph Cassano, former head of AIGFP, the guy who ran the operation as they were busy making tons of money blowing up AIG and the global economy.

Inter alia, the Times article reports the division is now run by Gerry Pasciucco, a former vice chairman of Morgan Stanley. On the left, you can see a recent photograph of Mr. Pasciucco from a party in Belle Haven, sporting a Che Guevara t-shirt, blue blazer and handkerchief, with some sort of sporting drink I'm unable to identify (possibly a mojito?).

Given how AIGFP helped bring global capitalism to its knees, the choice of t-shirt might suggest a role for internal subversion few have yet considered. But it is important to note that AIG CEO Edward Liddy brought Pascuicco in last November, after the collapse, "with instructions to wind down the unit." So it seems that Pascuicco's role has been to sort through the rubble rather than build the bomb.

But I digress. There's an issue I've been meaning to raise with AIGFP that may be relevant to various of the questions we've been discussing today. First, it's located in London. What that means for what law governs the different questions about the bonuses? I'm not sure. Second, as the Times notes, this is a derivatives trading shop located in London. How many of the people working there are US citizens? Not that there's anything wrong with that. It's a global economy. It's a company (a division of AIG) operating in the UK. But I suspect it may play some role in the resistance to identifying who the bonees are.







Former Rocky staff to launch pay news website — could SFGate follow?

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No.

As the Seattle Post-Intelligencer prepared for its last run on paper, former staffers at Denver’s just-closed newspaper, the Rocky Mountain News, announced today their intention to start a new online news site for Denver and charge $4.99 for it. They’ll try to get 50,000 monthly subscribers. Could that be a way forward for the San Francisco Chronicle and its popular online presence, SFGate?

Some interesting data points: both Seattle and Denver already have surviving other papers, the Seattle Times and the Denver Post. So their (former?) competitors’ online sites still have to compete, not only with the other papers’ online sites but with their surviving (for now) print editions. But in San Francisco, neither the Chronicle nor SFGate has an equivalent competitor. So if the print Chronicle goes away and it survives as an online paper, it would be the only big-league journalistic operation of its size, influence and considerable reputation.

So would you pay $5 a month — or even more, considering everything’s more expensive in San Francisco — for SFGate?

I would.

Autodidact's review of The Reasoned Schemer:

"I guess this book is OK, but it could really be written in all of about 5 to 10 pages of text with half a page of implementation code - in Haskell.

Main idea: use (potentially) infinite lists to represent (potentially) infinite streams of solutions to a problem. Have 'goals' as procedures that work on (partial) solutions, producing new lists (empty/singleton/plural) of (more complete) solutions for each solution processed. Have a mechanism of combining these solutions streams. Now AND is just a sequential combinator and goal applicator; OR is a sequential combinator for parallel application; OR/i (for interleaving) combines its result streams in an interleaving fashion.

It suffices to have these combinators binary, because any type of COND is anyhow broken down to these binary combinations, as in a typical COND rewrite with IFs - and that's what the book itself does too, in a somewhat complex Scheme macro syntax. Expressed in Haskell, the intent is clear and the meaning is immediately obvious...

I wonder what this poor soul did before Amazon reviews.

Blogging is the New Closure

I used the iPhone's "Kindle" app to purchase and enjoy My Revolutions, the first fiction I've read in a long time. I read a lot of scripting manuals (but do very little real development) and I read about 3000 pages of baseball predictions and notes a year (sadly, this is not an exaggeration). The book was excellent!

Once I settled on a font size (that sounds ridiculous) the text was very easy to read, at home, on the subway, or before going to sleep. I did have some pretty severe Kindle envy on the B train tonight, but I regained my focus quickly.

I have one major complaint: I found the act of finishing the book unsatisfying; after flicking through 4393 "locations" (the Kindle doesn't entertain the conceit of page numbers) I missed the satisfaction of closing the volume one final time. The application resisted my impotent flicks, always returning to the final page.

Happy St. Patrick's Day from Loge13.com

We'll raise a glass to you, Billy Shea, and Casey and Joan tonight!!!


Garlic Fries at Yankee Stadium

it finally happened. the best thing about west coast baseball has made it to the Bronx. and if you can make it here... (I'm super showtunesy lately). what am I talking about? Garlic Fries at the new Yankee Stadium. Stay tuned for photos. Really really amazingly good photos

Cheap Eats: Table introduces $10-and-under small plates menu

Tabla offers an affordable small plates menu on Wednesday nights.

Founders of an Innovative Trading Program Visit Gimme from Colombia

mingas2.jpgGimme customers and staff were treated recently to a meet-and-greet with Alejandro Cadena and Giancarlo Ghiretti, founders of the Las Mingas Relationship Coffee Project, who work directly with the farmers that produce our beautiful Las Mingas beans.  Our special guests from Bogotá lectured one night in Ithaca, and the very next night in New York City.  That NYC lecture hadn't been scheduled until Jenni, our Manhattan manager, asked Giancarlo and Alejandro if they could do a repeat talk the next night before leaving the States.  Very gracious of them to oblige. mingas3.jpgWe learned a ton from Alejandro (shown) and Giancarlo, both of whom are trained as economists.  The lecture touched on agriculture, horticulture, economics, industry and politics.  Great questions from the audience, which included scientists and sociologists from Ithaca College and Cornell University, all part of the Gimme family.

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Thanks to everyone who came out and packed the place.  The evening was really educational and a delight for consumers eager to understand the people who fill their daily cup.

Special thanks to Giancarlo and Alejandro.  Til we meet again!

Dem Chairwoman: Let's Tax AIG Bonuses at 100%

Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), the chairwoman of the Joint Economic Committee, has a novel solution to the AIG bonuses flap: levy a 100% tax on the company's senior executives for every bonus payment that's not related to a commission.

Maloney is introducing legislation that would institute the tax, and apply it to any recipient of bailout money where the U.S. government has become the majority shareholder. After the jump, you can read her letter to fellow lawmakers urging them to sign on to her effort.

Dear Colleague:

Like many of you, I was outraged to learn over the weekend that AIG is paying out another $165 million in bonus compensation. For a company that has required $170 billion in U.S. taxpayer assistance and is 80% owned by the United States Government, this is clearly unacceptable. That is why I will be introducing legislation that will instruct the Secretary of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service to develop guidelines that tax at 100% any bonus compensation that is not directly related to a commission for any recipient of TARP funds where the United States government is the majority owner of the company. This will allow AIG to continue to meet their "contractual obligation" to pay these bonuses, but will ensure that the recipients are not allowed to keep this money.

If you would like to cosponsor this legislation or if you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me or Edward Mills in my office at (202) 225-7944 or edward.mills@mail.house.gov.

Sincerely,

CAROLYN B. MALONEY

Member of Congress




Field trip to Darwinism

Every year, a professor from Liberty University takes his Advanced Creation Studies biology class to the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History to check out the opposition.

"There's nothing balanced here. It's completely, 100 percent evolution-based," said DeWitt, a professor of biology. "We come every year, because I don't hold anything back from the students."

Creationists, who take their view of natural history straight from the book of Genesis, believe that scientific data can be interpreted to support their idea that God made the first human, Adam, in an essentially modern form 6,000 to 10,000 years ago.

A 2006 poll by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life found that 42 percent of Americans believe humans have always existed in their present form. At universities such as Liberty, founded by the late Jerry Falwell, those views inform the entire science curriculum.

(via clusterflock)

Tags: science biology religion creationism

Spring Cleaning

It's been a rough 2009 so far, at least for my health. Between the cold that wouldn't leave for nearly two months, some pretty severe sleep deprivation, and more stress than usual, I've turned to comfort foods and comfort wine a bit more than I probably should. Author-Sarah would hardly care about a few extra pounds. I am, after all, in my 30s and married. Isn't that when we're all allowed to get fat?

But on-camera Sarah has to care. About a week ago, I decided to go back to what's always helped me slim down and feel happier before: The South Beach Diet and a few hours a week sweating on the elliptical listening to loud rock music. But no sooner did I Twitter something about these plans, then a trove of friends all told me I should try a juice cleanse instead.

I had one initial objection: That just sounds way too California. I already do Pilates three times a week and eat more tofu than I do red meat. I have to keep true to some of my Memphis roots, or they may not let me back in for BBQ-fest.

As I did more research on BluePrint Cleanse-- the company that everyone from Julia Allison to Michael Arrington have gone to for cleansing needs-- there were a few other red flags.

For one thing, no coffee. Whoa. Really? How do you expect me to work an 18-hour day without coffee? And what am I supposed to do when I, um, go write at a coffee shop? With apologies to Kevin Rose, drinking tea in a coffee shop is also in that way-too-California bucket.

Second: Colonics. You're supposed to get them before, during and after the cleanse. Um, no. Not happening. I'm a curmudgeonly writer! We don't "do" colonics! In fact, my blogging software doesn't even recognize the concept-- the spell check keeps trying to change the word to "colonies."

Third: It's $85 a day for people outside of New York! We're in a depression if you hadn't noticed. I had to take another job just to justify buying a Kindle.

Slowly, each of those objections got settled. One: The recommended cleanse is only three days long. Surely, I can handle no coffee for three days, if I can handle no sugar for 14 days on the South Beach Diet. If nothing else, I can put green tea is an opaque mug with a lid so no one sees it.

Two: The BluePrint folks said colonics were optional. We opted for "Hells no!"

Three: They comped my first cleanse.

Four: Mr. Lacy agreed to do it with me. We start tomorrow.

I still did the South Beach Diet, Phase 1 for a week and a half, only cheating to drink some wine to toast a few very special events last week, but impressively ignoring the five boxes of Girl Scout Cookies in the kitchen and every stitch of bread or pasta that was put in front of me. And I haven't weighed myself, but my clothes are fitting way looser already. I've also spent the last few days weaning myself off of coffee (oh the horror!), meat, and anything processed, per the pre-cleanse instructions. (Dairy has been harder because I tend to drink gallons of fat free milk when I can't have wine or beer. Weird, I know.) I sent Mr. Lacy to work today with strict instructions not to drink any Cokes and to have a veggie burger with no cheese for lunch. I think we're as ready for this weird, hippy cleanse as we'll ever be.

As skeptical as I was, I've got pretty high expectations for the results after all this raving about how the cleanse would change my life. If I emerge healthier, with more energy and a flat tummy, I may indeed pony up $250 a month for it in the future. (Maybe. No colonics.)

Kanye West Reveals Blogging Secrets

Grammy-winning rapper Kanye West has revealed the secrets behind his popular daily blog, admitting he works with a paid staff to assist with the postings.

[Visit SOHH.com for more information]

Welcome Back A.G Bear!

I wrote this post in 2001 about a certain talking (mumbling) Teddy Bear who entered my life in 1985 and has travelled with me as I've moved thirteen different times. He always makes the cut. Even if he's stored in a box, he's been kept around.

As much as I appreciate the joy my stuffed animals bring me (he shares box real estate with an assorted group of teddy bears, puppets, dogs), I have always groaned when it was time to move or do spring cleaning. On one hand, we don't have enough space to keep untouched boxes in storage. On the other over-emotional hand, I could never give away my little friends.

While cleaning out a closet -- the first time I've cleaned it since Penelope was born -- I found the box of stuffed animals and I realized that the sentimental hoarding has paid off! I have now a box of stuffed animals to give to Penelope -- including my friend, A.G Bear. 
Agbear
This all goes to show that everything old is new again. 

I am reminded of this image I saw the other day. It's artwork from the genre of "emotionally manipulative and sappy pictures that you resent for making you cry."

Thefuture

Timebomb

I don't think this changes the larger issue. But I'd be very curious to hear more about this, from TPM Reader EC ...

You're missing the point on AIGFP's bonuses. The reason the government has no bargaining power is that failure to pay the bonuses -- which, like it or not, AIG is contractually obligated to pay -- would constitute a "cross-default" under AIG's derivative contracts. Cross-default is considered an "event of default" under the standard ISDA Master Agreement (see sec. (5)(a)(vi)), which means that failure to pay the bonuses would allow AIG's counterparties to terminate the CDS contracts and demand a full payout from AIG. With a derivatives portfolio of over $1.5 trillion, this is no small deal. Venting over AIGFP's bonuses is fine, but urging the government to take an action which would result in hundreds of billions in losses to AIG (and thus the taxpayer) just because it would make you feel better is bad policy. Don't let cheap populism become expensive populism.

If that's the case, I cannot think of a business rationale for having the whole thing wired to explode if the CDS seller doesn't get his bonus other than a time bomb set by the sellers.

Late Update: TPM Reader KJ, who's a knowledgeable player in the industry, ain't buying it ...

I'm by no means an expert on the ISDA Master Agreement, but I think EC overstates the risk. The cross-default provision is not about employment agreements or other non-material contracts, it's about derivative transactions and other funding arrangements. So if for example, AIG defaulted on repaying its loan under a credit agreement, that would likely trigger a cross-default under its ISDA Master Agreement. The idea that an alleged breach of its bonus plan or an employment agreement could trigger its default under its swap arrangements is, well, laughable. The link below gives a nice summary of the cross default features.

And TPM Reader BK, who has even more on-point industry expertise, is even more sure ...

This is simply not true. The bonuses are owed to AIG's employees, not its counterparties. AIG's employees are not parties to its ISDA agreements.

Furthermore conditions such as the payment of bonuses are not anywhere near what a "cross default" is. A "cross-default" would be if AIG failed to satisfy its obligations to Counterparty A, then Counterparty B could claim it was in default even if technically it wasn't.

The contractual obligations that AIG are under are employee contracts...not ISDAs.
There's no doomsday scenario here. The worst that can happen to AIG is that its
employees could sue it to obtain their promised bonuses.







and so the campaign begins... (Part I)

and so it begins ...

Over the weekend, I started a 4E campaign for Nolan and his friends. The plan is to take them through the entire Keep on the Shadowfell module, and then probably into Thunderspire Labyrinth, with possible detours into various level-appropriate Delves, or something from Monte Cook's awesome new project, Dungeon-a-Day, if it makes sense to incorporate it into the campaign. If my memories of running campaigns are any indication, they'll find some way to go storming into some tower or sewer or whatever that isn't in the actual module, and I figured I should have at least one Delve prepared, just in case.  

I haven't DMed anything in ages, and I haven't DMed 4E ever, so rather than start them out in Winterhaven with the events of H1, I started them out in Fallcrest, and planned to run them through a slightly-modified version of the first level Dungeon Delve. I thought this would be a good way for me to remember how to ride the bike, and a good way to introduce them to the new combat mechanics in 4E. And I'll be honest, here: I love a good dungeon crawl as much as anyone. Because I'm running this campaign for teenagers, I didn't think it was wise to dump them into serious roleplaying right away, and I'd use a play session that was primarily combat-based to get them comfortable with each other as players, and with me as a DM.

We had a lot of fun, and played for just under five hours. I had planned for about four hours, but I had to spend more time than I thought I would refreshing my memory in the DMG.

We sat around the table, and I began...

"You've known each other for some time, and train together at a small adventuring school founded by your friend and mentor, Douven Staul.

"For weeks, Spring has struggled to pull the Nentir Vale out of Winter's icy grip, and on this day, it just may have succeeded. The sky is cloudless and the Sun spreads warmth wherever there is not shadow.

"Douven Staul gathers you in his small office, and says, 'One month ago, my good friend Bekar Copperknight learned that a small nearby tower, abandoned for an age, had actually been built by his ancestors. Bekar, like all Dwarves, is proud, and he took a small party of prospectors with him to examine the ruins, before he reclaimed it for his family.'

"Douven pauses, and gives you all a very grave look. 'I have heard nothing from him or his party, and I fear that foul work is afoot. I am needed...' He looks uncomfortable for a moment '... elsewhere, so I have selected you, my brightest and best students, to discover his fate."

I looked up at the three of them while I spoke. One of Nolan's friends made notes as I talked, another grinned back at me. Nolan spun a d20 on the table as he listened. I kept a straight face, but inside I was bursting with joy.

"He gives you a map. On the banks of the Winter River, about a day's journey from Fallcrest, he's drawn a small building. 'The tower is here,' he says, 'you must leave immediately, for I am beginning to fear the worst.'"

"This is what you've been waiting for," I said. "You return to your rooms and gather your gear."

Continued in Part 2...

Making Tofu

There's nothing like fresh, handmade Japanese "silken" tofu (called kinugoshi in Japanese). Coaxed from just soybeans, water, and nigari, a coagulant derived from seawater, it's a quintessential expression of Japanese cuisine -- the idea of finessing something so sublime from a few simple elements. I first tasted the real deal at the workshop of a traditional tofu maker in Kyoto I visited one morning before sunrise. With a lovely custard-like texture, delicate natural sweetness and seductive fresh soybean flavor, their tofu had as much to do with the stuff sold in supermarkets as a beautiful farmstead ricotta does with a tub of Polly-O.

Here in New York, my friends at En Japanese Brasserie have made fresh tofu a centerpiece of their menu since the restaurant opened. It is absolutely wonderful tofu, and has gained a legion of devoted fans. Many customers have asked Chef Yasuhiro Honma how to make tofu, so now En runs occasional tofu-making demonstrations at the restaurant, which I help moderate. The latest one was yesterday.

You need soymilk and nigari to make silken tofu. You can produce soymilk from scratch, but a good ready made soymilk will work fine, too. Okay, so what's "good soymilk?" Soy milk is not the stuff you see in health food stores or supermarkets. Those products are watered down and loaded with (albeit natural) additives, flavors, salt and sometimes sweeteners. Even "unsweetened" commercial so-called soymilk doesn't cut it (read the label). You need real, fresh soymilk, made from two ingredients: soybeans and water. You can find said soymilk at Japanese and Asian food markets. Like cow's milk, it comes in half-gallon jugs and has an expiration date.

Nigari is magnesium chloride extracted from sea water (the salt is removed and water evaporated). It acts just like rennet does with animal milk in cheesemaking -- it coagulates the milk to produce curds and whey. You can also buy it in Japanese markets.

Now, there are two overall kinds of Japanese tofu: momen, a firmer tofu, and kinugoshi. Producing momen is a lot like making cheese -- the nigari breaks the soy milk down in to curds and whey, and you press the whey to form tofu blocks. With kinugoshi, though, you first thicken the soymilk by boiling off some of its water, then carefully add nigari in a such a way that it doesn't separate the soymilk. It you do this right, the soymilk remarkably coagulates into silken tofu. If you screw it up, it doesn't. You'll know right away.

You'll need: 2 quarts soy milk, 1 tablespoon liquid nigari, a wooden spatula and a square container (square is important -- Chef Honma calls for a 7 by 7 by 7 inch container).

Okay, here's how Chef Honma explained it:

Heat 2 quarts of soy milk over medium heat. Cook the soy milk until it's reduced by 80%. Now bring it to a temperature of 135 degrees Fahrenheit (use a kitchen thermometer).

Remove from heat and pour the soy milk into the square container. Now, pour the tablespoon of nigari into the soy milk all at once. Using the wooden spatula, stir with a back and forth motion a few times to mix well. Then stop the spatula upright in the center of the container and hold it there for a couple of seconds to halt the motion of the soy milk. Pull out the spatula, cover the container with plastic wrap and let it sit for 15 minutes.

The trick is in adding the nigari. If you stir too vigorously, you'll break the soy milk into whey and curds. You want the nigari to just combine with the soy milk, then halt the liquid from moving inside the container, which is why you stop the spatula in the center, which interrupts the movement. Also, a square container prevents the soy milk from swirling too much.

Okay, once you unwrap the container, if everything worked... you'll have tofu! Scoop out the tofu and eat it fresh and amazing, accented with a little soy sauce and ginger, or whatever you prefer. To can also cook with it -- just wrap the tofu in cheesecloth, place in a bamboo basket and store it for a few hours in the fridge so it releases water and firms up, just like in the photo above. Then go to town.

Let me know if you try making tofu -- how did it work out?

toby barlow on detroit

Toby Barlow, whose book Sharp Teeth I blogged about in early 2008, has a great piece in the Times about what's happening in Detroit -- the land of $1000 houses.

Detroit right now is just this vast, enormous canvas where anything imaginable can be accomplished. From Tyree Guyton’s Heidelberg Project (think of a neighborhood covered in shoes and stuffed animals and you’re close) to Matthew Barney’s “Ancient Evenings” project (think Egyptian gods reincarnated as Ford Mustangs and you’re kind of close), local and international artists are already leveraging Detroit’s complex textures and landscapes to their own surreal ends.

In a way, a strange, new American dream can be found here, amid the crumbling, semi-majestic ruins of a half-century’s industrial decline. The good news is that, almost magically, dreamers are already showing up.

The Blog Moves Up at Fashion Week

front row not bloggers.jpgThere was a mini-debate going on in the comments section of a Paris post.

One person decreed that blogs aren't press and therefore shouldn't sit in the press section of a show while another pointed out that we obviously aren't buyers which together puts us in a rather awkward category. Blogs are, according to most publicists, considered press, and our seating assignment is usually a testament to that classification.

However, this season we noticed a new seating trend pop up. For the first time, those reporting for blogs and magazines' online departments were often seated together which meant we had daily run-ins with reporters from Elle.com, Papermag.com, Glamour.com, Showstudio, DazedDigital, Fashionologie and more.

For example, at Marios Schwab, bloggers had their own Front Row section (alongside the Conde section, the ELLE section, etc), which created a real commune-style discussion of, "Well, I can't report this for my site, but you totally should use what I heard earlier!" Fun, and certainly effective for spilling your thoughts onto Twitter in mere minutes.

Which makes us wonder, are the days of acting like bloggers aren't real media members finally over? Because it looks like they are, at least in fashion. Especially now, when major editors from The Times are tweeting and Vogue editors like Filipa Fino are writing for Vogue Daily and WWD posts multiple times a day. We're just saying, the line is getting awfully blurry.



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Lindsay Lohan's Arrest Warrant Dismissed

lindsaylohansued.jpg
Over the weekend there was a warrant out for Lindsay Lohan's arrest because she had apparently missed some classes in her alcohol counseling program.

Well Lindsay's lawyer showed up in court today, and the judge dismissed the warrant. "The warrant is quashed and set aside," Judge Marsha Revel said. "I've seen additional proof ... that Lohan has been compliant with [her] program. There is no indication of dirty [drug] tests."

Lindsay apparently had "personality conflicts" with her old alcohol education program and will have to enroll in a new one. The judge ordered that Linds must show proof of that new enrollment by April 3.

Well, she's safe this time around. Wonder what Linds will do to end up in the headlines next time?

Follow Jacki on Twitter!

Creativity at Red Sox Spring Training

I can't deny the creativity of the staff at City of Palms Park. IMG_2480

if you can see past the shadow of my hand, and the words from the former beer sign, you will notice the $3 Freeze Shake, a onetime (?)  event (solution) at red sox spring training. before the game they noticed their ice cream was too soft. Someone said, it's sort of like a frosty. others agreed. they went for it.

one ice cream vendor told me she sold "about 100" at her stand alone. kudos to the ingenuity of the food concessions staff.
the Freeze Shake was basically a really thick shake, served in a plastic cup (like the beer). people ate it with a spoon. I do not have a picture. do you?

Josh: We Need Your Help

As I mentioned earlier, I need to ask you for your help. It's not money we're asking for. We just need a few minutes of your time. We're conducting a reader survey. And if you can give us a few minutes to fill it out, it will make a big difference in keeping TPM well-funded and expanding. If I've already convinced you, just click here.

If not, let me cover a few more details. We're not collecting any personally identifiable information about you. You're not going to go on any list or in any database. This is purely to assemble an accurate picture of our audience as a whole. You remain completely anonymous.

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Gwyneth Paltrow Thinks Joaquin Seems Odd

gwynethpaltrowjoaquinphoeni.jpg
-Photo by Getty Images-

By now most people have come to the conclusion that Joaquin Phoenix's foray into rapping is a giant hoax. At least Gwyneth Paltrow, Joaquin's costar in his new movie Two Lovers, hopes it is.

During a press junket for the movie, Gwyneth had this to say to MTV UK:

"I think that there might be some other explanation or something going on. I'm not quite sure what, but I can't believe that he's really going to quit forever to become a rapper. It seems odd."

As for the advice that Gwyneth would give to Joaquin, she said, ""Hmm ... maybe to go live in the projects for a few years to get some authenticity, maybe."

I just realized what's interesting about this whole Joaquin mess. If any other actor said they were quitting acting to become a rapper, we wouldn't believe it. Imagine if Brad Pitt, or even Gwyneth, said they were giving up their craft to start a career in hip hop? We'd laugh! But for some reason when Joaquin says it, we truly aren't sure if he's actually serious. Why is that?

Follow Jacki on Twitter!

Julia et Jim


With so many menus in the New York Public Library collection, it's not uncommon for me to stumble upon a gem I've never seen before. The menu featured here is one such example. Had a patron not requested this 1975 dinner menu honoring James Beard and Julia Child a few months ago, it would still be sitting in its box downstairs. But thankfully the request was made, and I was introduced to this charming item.

The dinner, which was sponsored by the Wine & Food Society of New York, was held on Halloween night at the Pierre Hotel. And in addition to a traditional menu of food offerings, the organizers wrote creative "recipes" for both Julia and Jim, wherein the ingredients and techniques that make up these two unique personalities are written out in a recognizable recipe format. The result is clever, sassy, and fun.





Did Reagan Try to Convert Gorbachev?

One of the many things on Ronald Reagan's mind during the height of the Cold War in the 1980s was the nature of Mikhail Gorbachev's religious beliefs. Some recently declassified notes taken during a summit meeting in Moscow in 1988 indicate that Reagan went so far as to attempt to convert Gorbachev to Christianity.

Gorbachev tried to switch the subject. Perhaps the United States and the Soviet Union might open the way for greater cooperation in space, he told the president. But the president wasn't to be diverted. According to the transcript, Reagan told Gorbachev that space was in the direction of heaven, but not as close to heaven as some other things that they had been discussing.

As the meeting ended, Reagan became even more direct and personal. He noted that his own son Ron did not believe in God either. "The President concluded that there was one thing he had long yearned to do for his atheist son. He wanted to serve his son the perfect gourmet dinner, to have him enjoy the meal, and then to ask him if he believed there was a cook."

Tags: mikhailgorbachev ronaldreagan coldwar religion politics

'72 All Star Patch and call to creditors


Ain't it purdy? I was bummed that there are no Braves in Topps' legends package but I'll settle for a Braves All-Star game patch. Yaz is pretty cool too. Did you know he was 6th all time in total hits? He's got that card with the big sideburns too. Got this from Thorzul in exchange for a Sidney Moncrief card that I'm still trying to figure out where the heck I put it. Which leads me to another question:

Who do I owe stuff to?

I owe Thorzul the Moncrief, I owe Stats on the Back a single Met card, I owe Canuck some Braves and the last cards he needs for his '90 Donruss set, among others that I know about. What I'm saying, is that in the past two weeks all baseball card stuff has been purged from my head in a panic and I'm semi-clueless at the moment. So, if I owe you cards please let me know. I can probably figure out who I owe stuff to on my own (Adam E gets some Sox, The Writer's Jounrey gets some Reds, I have a few packages here and there from people that I need to send stuff to...) any little nudge to get me moving would be helpful. I'll probably steal Mario's Trade Queue as well and post it somewhere as well. If you just want to make something up and get free cards, you could probably get away with it. Not going to promise that they will be mailed anytime soon though.

North Korea's Kim Jong-il Finally Gets His Pizzeria

20090316-kim.jpg

North Korea now has its first-ever pizzeria. The Guardian reports:

An obsession with pizza stretching back at least 10 years prompted the isolated nation's dictator, Kim Jong-il, to authorise North Korea's first Italian restaurant, which opened in December, according to a pro-Pyongyang newspaper published in Japan. "General Kim Jong-il said that the people should also be allowed access to the world's famous dishes," the restaurant's manager, Kim Sang-Soon, was quoted as saying in Choson Sinbo, a Tokyo-based newspaper seen as a mouthpiece for the regime.

In a lengthy three-part series for Asia Times in 2001 (1, 2, 3), Italian pizzaiolo Ermanno Furlanis writes about his experience being brought to North Korea to train Kim Jong-il's chefs how to make pizza, with students at one point measuring the distance between olives Furlanis placed on his pizzas.

The training seems not to have met Kim's expectations. According to Choson Sinbo, subsequent efforts to reproduce Italian pizza in North Korea were a process of "repeated trial and error", and last year the dictator sent chefs to Naples and Rome to learn more. Finally satisifed, he authorised the restaurant.

I really do urge you to read that three-part series by Furlanis (or read excerpts here on Slice). You know how crazy Matt Stone and Trey Parker make Kim look in Team America? The Furlanis story makes him seem even crazier. [Hat tip to Monte M.]

AT&T Adding Capacity at SXSW to Deal With iPhone Crush

Dan Frommer:

AT&T tells us it’s adding wireless capacity in downtown Austin to deal with “unprecedented” demand (that’s resulted in service that’s flaky at best). This, of course, was a result of thousands (tens of thousands?) of South by Southwest attendees bringing 3G iPhones into this part of Austin for the first time.

Indeed, last night was the first time all weekend my iPhone could get a reasonable network connection.

Nice Swallows, Have You Seen My Backpiece?

Haeckel_trochilidae

I know I’ve posted more than my fair share of Haeckelography but how sweet is this Hummingbird plate?

North Korea's Kim Jong-il Finally Gets His Pizzeria

From Slice

20090316-kim.jpg

North Korea now has its first-ever pizzeria. The Guardian reports:

An obsession with pizza stretching back at least 10 years prompted the isolated nation's dictator, Kim Jong-il, to authorise North Korea's first Italian restaurant, which opened in December, according to a pro-Pyongyang newspaper published in Japan. "General Kim Jong-il said that the people should also be allowed access to the world's famous dishes," the restaurant's manager, Kim Sang-Soon, was quoted as saying in Choson Sinbo, a Tokyo-based newspaper seen as a mouthpiece for the regime.

In a lengthy three-part series for Asia Times in 2001 (1, 2, 3), Italian pizzaiolo Ermanno Furlanis writes about his experience being brought to North Korea to train Kim Jong-il's chefs how to make pizza, with students at one point measuring the distance between olives Furlanis placed on his pizzas.

The training seems not to have met Kim's expectations. According to Choson Sinbo, subsequent efforts to reproduce Italian pizza in North Korea were a process of "repeated trial and error", and last year the dictator sent chefs to Naples and Rome to learn more. Finally satisifed, he authorised the restaurant.

I really do urge you to read that three-part series by Furlanis (or read excerpts here on Slice). You know how crazy Matt Stone and Trey Parker make Kim look in Team America? The Furlanis story makes him seem even crazier. [Hat tip to Monte M.]

iPhone Experiments


Game, originally uploaded by Ed Anuff.

iPhone programming isn't that hard once you get the hang of it.

Brother Jimmy's at Yankee Stadium

IMG_2567 You heard it here first. And if you didn't I'd love to know where you did.

Brother Jimmy's, everyone's favorite ACC bar, is showing some Yankee pride by setting up an outpost in the Bronx at the new Yankee Stadium. And nothing goes together better than a bunch of Yankees and southerners. The stand is left field, field level.

Thinking about Brother Jimmy's makes me feel old. Remember when 1644 Third Avenue was a Bills Bar? More details when I know em.

And, speaking of Brother Jimmy's, here's their NCAA Men's Basketball tourney bracket. Go UConn!

Pirates of Somalia

Somali pirates continue their attacks against international ships in and around the Gulf of Aden, despite the deterrent of stepped-up international naval escorts and patrols - and the increased failure rate of their attacks. Under agreements with Somalia, the U.N, and each other, ships belonging to fifteen countries now patrol the area. Somali pirates - who have won themselves nearly $200 million in ransom since early 2008 - are being captured more frequently now, and handed over to authorities in Kenya, Yemen and Somalia for trial. Collected here are some recent photos of piracy off the coast of Somalia, and the international efforts to rein it in. (30 photos total)

Pirates flee from the German navy as the frigate Rheinland-Pfalz intercepted them in the Gulf of Aden off Somalia's coast on March 3, 2009. The German navy detained nine people on March 3, 2009 after they tried to attack a German merchant ship, German media reported. (REUTERS/Bundeswehr)

Pokémon Platinum to hit stores on March 22, 2009

Pokémon Platinum

REDMOND, Wash., March 16, 2009 – The March 22 launch of the Pokémon™ Platinum Version video game for the Nintendo DS™ system is almost upon us, and Pokémon fans are already buzzing with anticipation. This new game in the storied franchise brings a host of new features, including the mysterious new Distortion world, never-seen-before forms of powerful Pokémon, exciting online games in the new Wi-Fi Plaza and strategic battles that are the hallmark of the main Pokémon game series.

“The Pokémon franchise has been a force since it came to the United States more than 10 years ago,” said Cammie Dunaway, Nintendo of America’s executive vice president of Sales & Marketing. “To date, our two most recent games in the core Pokémon series, Pokémon Diamond and Pokémon Pearl, have sold more than 5.3 million in the United States alone. Pokémon Platinum Version brings fans a set of new challenges, fun and entertainment.”

Pokémon Platinum

On March 21, Nintendo will host a blowout launch celebration for the game at the Nintendo World store in New York. Pokémon fans will be able to demo and purchase the game a day before it’s available in other retail stores. Rockefeller Plaza will become a Pokémon fan’s paradise with a myriad of Pokémon activities, including game-play kiosks showing off the game and its online capabilities, the “Pokémon Platinum Plunge,” where Pokémon fans will get a chance to win a copy of the Pokémon Platinum Version video game, and opportunities to take photos with their favorite Pokémon characters.

Consumers enjoy Pokémon games, in part, for both their social aspect and their re-playability. For instance, in the new Wi-Fi Plaza, up to 20 players with wireless broadband access from around the world can connect together to experience mini-games, take part in parades and even see a fireworks show. And players who visit the Global Terminal can post their Pokémon for trade to other players around the world. This allows for a greater variety of Pokémon that a player can collect, and also allows players to get Pokémon from other countries, which have become sought-after by many fans. Also the new Global Terminal allows players to use a new item, the Vs. Recorder, to save and post “videos” of their best battles online for everyone to see.

KEY INFORMATION

Pokémon Platinum
  • A new world has appeared in the Sinnoh region: the mysterious new Distortion World, where the normal rules of Time and Space don’t apply.
  • Discover never-before-seen forms of powerful Pokémon. Beyond Time and Space lies a Pokémon unlike any other: Giratina™ Origin Forme. Players can witness an epic encounter between Legendary Pokémon.
  • Travel across the Sinnoh region catching, training and battling with Pokémon.
  • Players who have wireless broadband access can explore the new Wi-Fi Plaza, a virtual Pokémon amusement park filled with activities, including three new mini-games where up to four players can compete at once. Up to 20 players from around the world can connect together in the Wi-Fi Plaza to experience games, take part in parades and even see a fireworks show.
  • The Global Terminal is where online players from all around the world can come to post their Pokémon for trade to other players without ever meeting or talking to them. This allows for a greater variety of Pokémon a player can collect, and also allows them to get Pokémon from other countries. Players can also use the new Vs. Recorder, which allows them to save and post “videos” of their most exciting battles online for everyone to see.

Enhanced Storyline: New characters add to the story, including Looker, a member of the International Police who is in pursuit of Team Galactic. Looker helps players throughout their adventure. Team Galactic has a nefarious scheme: They turn their sights on the Legendary Pokémon of Sinnoh - Dialga™ and Palkia™ - when the powerful Giratina also enters the picture (all three Pokémon appear together in this game for the first time).

Pokémon Platinum

How to progress through the game: Travel across the Sinnoh region catching, training and battling with Pokémon. Players must stop the evil plans of Team Galactic on their journey to become a Pokémon Master.

Additional Features: Battle and trade Pokémon via Nintendo® Wi-Fi Connection. Players can connect with Pokémon Diamond Version and Pokémon Pearl Version (each sold separately) or import Pokémon from the Game Boy™ Advance games (Pokémon Ruby Version, Pokémon Sapphire Version, Pokémon FireRed Version, Pokémon LeafGreen Version and Pokémon Emerald Version) to complete their Pokédex.

Characters: Giratina, Turtwig, Chimchar, Piplup and hundreds of other Pokémon.

New Pokémon Formes:

  • Giratina Origin Forme: In the Distortion World, Giratina appears in its new Origin Forme, exclusive to Pokémon Platinum Version. The Origin Forme features different attributes than those the character had in Pokémon Diamond Version and Pokémon Pearl Version, including the Ability Levitate, which makes Giratina immune to Ground-type attacks. Giratina will revert to its Altered Forme (seen in Pokémon Diamond Version and Pokémon Pearl Version) once a player encounters and catches it in Pokémon Platinum Version, but players may transform Giratina back into its Origin Forme by having it hold a special item found in the game.
  • Shaymin’s Sky Forme: Shaymin™, a secret character introduced in the latest Pokémon movie, will also have a new Forme exclusive to Pokémon Platinum Version. Shaymin was made available to Pokémon Diamond Version and Pokémon Pearl Version fans at a distribution event at Toys ‘R’ Us stores in the United States. In Pokémon Diamond Version and Pokémon Pearl Version, Shaymin can only appear in its Land Forme. Once Pokémon Platinum Version is released, players may trade Shaymin from their Pokémon Diamond Version or Pokémon Pearl Version game and use a special item to transform it into its exclusive Pokémon Platinum Version Sky Forme. Shaymin’s Sky Forme is both a Grass and Flying type, while its Land Forme is only a Grass-type.

Global Terminal: The Wi-Fi Global Trade Station (GTS) has been expanded in Pokémon Platinum Version, and is now called the Global Terminal. Players post Pokémon they want to trade on a board, and can browse through Pokémon other players have posted. If two people agree to trade the Pokémon they want for the one they posted, the trade will be complete, and players will be notified the next time they log on to the Global Terminal in the game. There are also a number of upgrades included with the Global Terminal in Pokémon Platinum Version, including the new Vs. Recorder, which allows players to save and post “videos” of their most exciting battles online for everyone to see.

New Locations:
Distortion World - As the story unfolds, players will encounter the mysterious new Distortion World, an area unlike any seen in a Pokémon game before. The normal rules of Time and Space don’t apply to this world. Players leap from pieces of land suspended in midair, walk sideways and even upside-down. The Distortion World, where the powerful Giratina Origin Forme resides, is somehow connected to the regular Pokémon world.

Pokémon Platinum

The Battle Frontier - A new, improved Battle Frontier has been added to Sinnoh. It contains four new battle facilities in addition to Battle Tower for Trainers to challenge, each with its own special rules. The new battle formats in each new facility allow players to challenge themselves in new ways.

Wi-Fi Plaza - When players first arrive at the Wi-Fi Plaza, they will be loaned a Tap Toy for use in the Plaza. To play with the Tap Toy, players touch a button on the touch screen to make different light and sound effects. Players can trade Tap Toys with other players in the Plaza. Also, players can get upgrades to their Tap Toys by doing well in Plaza Games. The Plaza Games consist of three mini-games that can be played by up to four players at a time. As closing time draws near, exciting things happen in the Plaza, including a fireworks show and Pokémon float parade.

USA + WBC = 6-5

With Sunday night’s 9-3 win over an overmatched Netherlands team that was a better story than a baseball squad, the United States avoided being swept out of the second round of the event, and now awaits its elimination-game opponent. The U.S. will take on the loser of tonight’s Venezuela/Puerto Rico game, with the loser of that game done for the Classic. It will be the second time the U.S. has faced elimination in the WBC. The first time, in the second round in 2006, they lost a tight game to Mexico, 2-1, and were knocked out.

In two Classics, the U.S. has a 6-5 overall record, just 5-5 against real teams. Its run differential, outside of a 17-0 win over South Africa back in ‘06, is -2. The U.S. have lost at least one game at every level of pool play. In short, for a team that is the only one comprised exclusively of major-league players, they’ve been somewhat unimpressive. Given the yawning talent gap between the U.S. and the field, and conceding the small sample size involved, I think it’s safe to conclude that while the U.S. has the most depth among high-level baseball players of any nation on Earth, the true talent level of those players in early March levels the field considerably.

While I have no doubt that the players want to win and believe they are taking it seriously, the fact is that the players are also preparing for the MLB season. This is evident in usage patterns, roster construction, playing time and, frankly, in Jake Peavy’s boxscore line from Saturday night. It’s spring training, and there’s no way around it. I can’t blame the U.S, or for that matter the D.R., for their performance when the players are trying to achieve multiple, somewhat conflicting goals. Preparing and competing are simply different things.

There is a real chance that for the second time, the World Baseball Classic will have a final four without either the U.S. or Dominican Republic. Understand that not having those two teams match up in 2006 led to their being fed into the same second-round pool in 2009, but the Dominican team’s inability to score against the Netherlands scotched those plans. The 2009 Classic was designed to funnel the U.S. and D.R. into the semifinals, and it did so by sticking three of the 2006 semifinalists in the same second-round pool, ensuring that just two of the low-profile trio (Japan, South Korea, Cuba) would advance to the semis, and just one to the final. Fair, don’t you think?

Make no mistake about it: this format has been designed to maximize the chance of a final featuring MLB players, especially U.S. players. It would be justice for that to not occur because the Netherlands and Puerto Rico got in the way.

All of this brings me back to scheduling. Reduce the WBC to 12 viable contenders and have them play two five-game round-robins. You’ll trade off a bunch of bad games for good ones, and you won’t have to rig the format against low-profile, high-quality teams to ensure that you get attractive TV matchups. You’ll have enough of them. A more compact WBC can be scheduled later, and will attract more of the very best players playing at closer to season-readiness.

If the U.S. loses tomorrow night, the howls will stretch from Miami throughout the baseball world. In reality, though, the reactions should be muted. That the U.S is 5-5, -2 against real teams isn’t an indication that the world is catching up to us. It’s an indication that these guys are having to care about winning at a time when they need to be caring about preparation, and that the conflict isn’t working out in their favor.

links for 2009-3-16

  • Clay Shirky in a must-read post on newspapers and change as well. "That is what real revolutions are like. The old stuff gets broken faster than the new stuff is put in its place. The importance of any given experiment isn’t apparent at the moment it appears; big changes stall, small changes spread. Even the revolutionaries can’t predict what will happen." looking at the world of the 1500's after Gutenberg. Read with S. Johnson's.
  • the text of a speech given at SXSW on the future of the news ecosystem by Steven Johnson. "...I think that steady transformation from desert to jungle may be the single most important trend we should be looking at when we talk about the future of news. Not the future of the news industry, or the print newspaper business: the future of news itself." Much as I am ambivalent about him on a personal level, given my experience at outside.in. He is doing what he does best here. Synthesizing memes and thoughts, going meta, making them personal, and explaining them very eloquently. I like the part where he describes the fact that we think we are in a jungle when in fact it is a desert. One thing he leaves out is the effect search has on all of these voices. It is one off the lynchpins to finding out what is happening around us. kosmix.com, google, daylife as early examples.
  • A detailed guide to the different plates and identifications of the Penny Black, the world's first adhesive stamp put out in Gt. Britain in 1840. I bought one of these when I was a kid on the 6th floor of the Gimble's Department Store on 86th and Lexington avenue. I was looking into selling it.
    (tags: stamps history)
  • Dan Gillmor guest blogging on Boing-Boing. Great stuff
    (tags: politics)

NYT's Sulzberger Still Doesn't Get It

arthur sulzberger jr.jpgNew York Times Co (NYT) publisher Arthur Sulzberger still doesn't get it.  Specifically, he still doesn't understand that his challenge is not to "save journalism"--which doesn't need saving--but to save the New York Times (which does).

We don't mean to continue needling Arthur, but we're getting sick of hearing that "journalism" is synonymous with "the 2007-sized newsroom at the New York Times."

In fact, the idea that, for society's sake, we have to figure out a way to "save journalism" is just self-serving nonsense.  Journalism is doing just fine.

For example, here are some news organizations Arthur might want to consider when making the case that journalism is on life support (as he did last week at Stony Brook):

  • Bloomberg
  • Reuters
  • Dow Jones Newswires
  • AP
  • Wall Street Journal
  • FOX News
  • CNN
  • 60 Minutes
  • Vanity Fair
  • Politico
  • CNBC
  • Gawker Media
  • Huffington Post
  • The blogosphere
  • Calculated Risk
  • All Things D
  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Drudge Report
  • The Smoking Gun

Arthur will no doubt dismiss the last bunch as amateurs in pajamas and then terrify everyone with the next great scandal that won't be uncovered if he can't find some way to keep every last one of the 1,300 editorial jobs at the New York Times.

As if, in the event of the NYT's untimely death, this year's Deep Throat wouldn't just send his stuff to Drudge, or the Smoking Gun, or Bloomberg (which, incidentally, also has a massive, highly talented newsroom that is in no danger of going bankrupt).

Arthur, you have a tough enough challenge on your plate, so stop worrying about society!  Society's doing just fine!*


*Or, more accurately, society may indeed have a million pressing problems to solve, but one of them is NOT the death of the New York Times.

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:

Better Bladder Control While Running

Dear Coach Jenny, I am 36 years old and have had three natural child births. I have never been a runner nor have I ever enjoyed it. However, I started a “running plan” last week and am into my...

ASK COACH JENNY! Coach Jenny Hadfield is the co-author of the best selling Marathoning for Mortals and the newly released Running for Mortals. She is a nationally recognized speaker, writer and co-owner of Chicago Endurance Sports, Chicago?s largest multi-sport training company.

A’s to Oakland: Drop Dead

During my chat a couple of weeks back, I wrote of the Oakland A’s future now that their Fremont stadium plans are dead:

I still say the most likely scenario is [owner Lew] Wolff stays put in Oakland for the next few years, and hopes either the housing market recovers or a couple of million people unexpectedly move to Fresno in the interim.

That’s certainly the scenario that made the most sense, but apparently Wolff had other ideas. On Friday, after Oakland city officials expressed interest in opening stadium talks, the A’s owner shot them down with a letter stating that “we have fully exhausted our time and resources over the years with the City of Oakland,” and dissing the city for poor corporate and fan support. Wolff concluded: “Our goal and desire for the organization is to determine a way to keep the team in Northern California.”

This, needless to say, is pretty much unprecedented: It’s standard operating procedure for sports team owners to keep as many stadium offers in the air as possible, to create leverage for a better deal in their preferred location if nothing else. (It’s why, for instance, MLB kept on making pleasant noises about Norfolk, Virginia’s bid for the Expos a few years back, even after its backers turned out to have falsified their resumes.) And it’s doubly odd that when San Jose officials began organizing to lobby MLB for an A’s relocation, Wolff told them to can it as well — though he didn’t complain when San Jose later announced a more low-key baseball campaign.

This is getting into serious tea-leaf reading here, but one possible reason could be that Wolff is preparing for an all-out push to move to San Jose, where he has business interests and which has the largest untapped population center of anywhere in the region — but which, you’ll recall, is also officially San Francisco Giants territory, giving them veto power over any other team moving in. Given that Bud Selig has never violated that line in his time as commissioner (the Orioles never had territorial rights to D.C., only weaker TV rights), it may make sense for Wolff to try to keep everything hush-hush, while simultaneously salting the earth in Oakland so he can say to Selig, “It’s San Jose or the highway.”

Even if Wolff pulls off this behind-the-scenes maneuvering, he’d still be facing an uphill battle in San Jose, where opposition to sports subsidies runs deep, and which requires a voter referendum for him to even get so much as discounted land — meaning he’d be looking at the daunting task of funding the bulk of a stadium and paying off the Giants for his territorial incursion. Still, this could be the beginnings of only the second MLB relocation in 37 years — unless, of course, the Marlins stadium deal blows up this Thursday and they start ringing up San Antonio again.

Make the favorite part of a song your ringtone

howtocreatemspot.gif

Mobile music and entertainment company mSpot introduces mspot.com, the mobile music site that lets users personalize their phones by turning their favorite part of any song, up to 30 seconds long, into a ringtone. SOAWorld Magazine explains how it works.

quotemarksright.jpgUsers pick a song from mSpot's catalog of over 400,000 titles, and use the site's simple editing tool to drag the start and end points to capture up to 30 seconds of their favorite part, even adding an optional fade in and out feature at each end if they like. Once the highlighted piece is finalized and previewed, users save and download the cut as a ringtone for $2.99 a pop. Takes about one minute, start to finish, and users don't need to download software or subscribe to a service.quotesmarksleft.jpg

this is only a test

this is only a test: go blue

Happy Birthday Barbie!

Last week Barbie celebrated her 50th bday at a star-studded party held at a life-sized version of her Malibu Dream House in California. The ageless icon was first introduced to the world in 1959 at the New York Toy Fair, selling for three dollars, with outfits at between one and five dollars. Since then she has been outfitted for 108 careers, modelled for more than 70 real life couturiers.

Barbie has also caused her fair share of controversy for being, what some feel, a bad influence on girls self-esteem. Just last week West Virginia state lawmaker Jeff Eldridge proposed a bill to legally ban Barbie (and other dolls that promote beauty) from the sales shelves across the state because he thinks Barbie sends young children the damaging message that looks are everything. While Barbie makers certainly disagrees with such claims, the recently released new Barbie does fall victim to current beauty standards as explained by Mattel as having “a thinner jaw line, more almond-shaped eyes, fuller lips.”

Check out the great video of Kristen Wigg as Barbie on SNL from this weekend:

Whether you love or hate Barbie, takepart and check out Adios Barbie, it’s a great site promoting healthy body image and self-image for people of all cultures and sizes

More Manhattan

Five ways to add real estate to Manhattan without tearing down existing buildings.

5. Fill in the Harlem River, which separates Manhattan and the Bronx. The Harlem River did not become a navigable waterway until 1895, when the Army Corps of Engineers dredged a shipping canal that provided direct passage for vessels from the East River to the Hudson. Nineteen years later, the creek that had served as the northern boundary of Manhattan was filled in, leaving the neighborhood of Marble Hill, still technically part of Manhattan, physically attached to the Bronx.

Tags: nyc

Rest in Peace Ron Silver

Ron Silver, the actor best known as playing a political consultant on The West Wing, has passed away. Mr. Silver was 62 years old and the cause of his death was esophageal cancer.  Beyond his work on the screen, Silver was known for being an active and independent political voice - supporting the likes of Bill Clinton, Rudy Giuliani and George W. Bush.  He also served on the Council for Foreign Relations and supposedly in the end this election (despite his original support of Giuliani) he voted for Barack Obama.

Other notable roles of Silver’s include his Tony winning turn in David Mamet’s “Speed-the-Plow”, playing a lawyer in Barbet Schroeder’s Reversal of Fortune and more recently playing Muhammad Ali’s corner man in Michael Mann’s Ali.

Please takepart to help stand up to cancer and enjoy the clip below from Silver’s time on The West Wing:

NYT: New ‘Resident Evil’ Game Not Racist

Gamers can breathe deeply: the New York Times says the newest Resident Evil game is not racist.  The latest edition of the videogame which kicked off in 1996, and can be credited for keeping Milla Jovovich’s acting career going,is set in Africa, which had gaming journalists a little nervous.

Worry not, says Seth Schiesel:

Resident Evil 5 exposes the perhaps uncomfortable truth that blacks and Arabs can become zombies too, just like anyone else. Blacks and Arabs do not have a secret anti-zombie gene. And just like all the thousands of white, Asian and Hispanic zombies that have been dispatched in innumerable other games before them, the African zombies must also be destroyed, or at least neutralized.

This supposed controversy is why no one should ever try to come to a serious judgment about a game — which by its nature is interactive — based on a noninteractive snippet like a trailer.

And as for the quality of the game:

Now what about Resident Evil 5 as a game? It is very good but falls short of excellence because of its interminable confusion about just what sort of game it wants to be. See, there is a difference between horror-terror and all-out action. The Resident Evil series basically invented the survival horror genre, which means sneaking around as you wonder just when the next ravenous flesh-eater is going to pop out at you. But Resident Evil 5 feels at times as if it’s trying to be Gears of War, where you are blasting away all the time.

Personally, I like my Zombies to be more Zen, more mellow. Zombie yoga, anyone?:

You can takepart by checking out the Child’s Play charity, which sets up toys and gaming system for children in hospitals… without the serious violence and dead zombies, I think.

Untitled

800px-orion_capsule_at_ksc

America: Why are we building this joker spaceship? Seriously? What is this, 1958? I want to see some proper spaceships for my tax dollar, not this Eisenhower crap. (This piecer isn’t even supposed to fly till 2016.)

The future news ecosystem

Steven Johnson takes on the future of journalism and newspapers using the ecosystem metaphor that he successfully deployed in The Invention of Air. Johnson argues that journalism in the future will look a lot like how technology and politics are covered now because those two topics are the "old growth forests of the web", i.e. they've been covered long enough on the web that old media has had time to adjust, react, and in many cases, go out of business in the face of that coverage.

The funny thing about newspapers today is that their audience is growing at a remarkable clip. Their underlying business model is being attacked by multiple forces, but their online audience is growing faster than their print audience is shrinking. As of January, print circulation had declined from 62 million to 49 million since my days at the College Hill Bookstore. But their online audience has grown from zero to 75 million over that period. Measured by pure audience interest, newspapers have never been more relevant. If they embrace this role as an authoritative guide to the entire ecosystem of news, if they stop paying for content that the web is already generating on its own, I suspect in the long run they will be as sustainable and as vital as they have ever been. The implied motto of every paper in the country should be: all the news that's fit to link.

You may also enjoy Clay Shirky's take on the same subject.

Tags: stevenjohnson clayshirky journalism

March 15, 2009

Seen On The Steets Of Paris

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How Celebrities Are Bringing Twitter to the Normal People (Guest Post from Paisano)

Twitter founder Evan Williams predicted on Charlie Rose that his service would be popular with "Normal People" in five years, but it's beginning to look like he was way off. It appears as if incredible amounts of common every day non-tech types are starting to join Twitter and the reason for this massive increase in adoption is ironic. Apparently, celebrities using Twitter has generated a great deal of interest by their fans and viewers of TV shows.

It's becoming clear that the more that celebrities talk about using Twitter, the more people become curious about this oddly named service and actually join to check it out. Some of the most well-known celebs on TV that are sharing their addiction to Twitter are Kelly Ripa, Ellen Deneres, Jimmy Fallon and American Idol host, Ryan Seacrest. By the way, Jon Stewart from The Daily Show recently went on a hilarious rank on this whole Twitter phenomenon.


The problem with all of this is the fact that Twitter is the least user-friendly service when it comes to new members. I've heard countless new members grumble and complain about the confusion they experience when they join and see nothing there. Most don't realize that they need to start adding people to follow, including their beloved celebrities.

Thankfully, Twitter has an improved search tool and a Find People area that can help a little bit. Also, their new Recommended Users tool can help newcomers find people to follow. While these certainly help to come degree, it still isn't enough to fully enhance the Twitter experience.
Rec_users 

Anyway, one of these new members is my wife. She's not interested in blogging or Sillicon Valley and merely wants to follow some of her favorite celebrities on Twitter and wasn't having much luck with Twitter's built-in tools. So I went on a quest to find some cool third party tools to help her and other fans find real celebrities that use Twitter.

Twellow has been around the longest in this roundup. It's basically a yellow pages for Twitter members and includes sections for all kinds of categories much like the phone book.

WeFollow  is a new service from Kevin Rose and the folks at Digg. It looks and smells like a Twitter directory powered by hashtag categories for the type of people you want to find to follow. This includes celebrities.
Wefollow

Twitterists is a little different because it's not just trying to be an all-inclusive directory of all types of Twitter members but instead focuses on the famous folk that use Twitter. It allows members to add new famous twitter users much like Mahalo counts on its members for content. The service doesn't have much data at this point and the user interface can be much better.

Valebrity is the best service that I found when it comes to finding actual celebrities that use Twitter. Ok, I must confess that I did not find this service. It was my Twitter newbie wife that discovered this excellent service! Talk about humbling, here I was the big time blogger of all things new and my rookie spouse finds a service that was much better than any I could find.

Valebrity 

Anyway, the reason why Valebrity is better than the others is because of the way that it validates each and every celebrity account on Twitter and other social networks.

There's also a handy list of "confirmed fakes" which can save you lots of time by not bothering to follow accounts that pretend to be the real deal. The list is updated all the time which makes it a useful resource to check on a regular basis.For example, Valebrity has confirmed that the Tina Fey twitter account is indeed a fake despite the fact that most people seem to believe it's really her. Tina actually commented on this by saying I don't know who it is but they're very funny.

Members can also contribute to the listings through the Contribute section. Also, celebs or their people can add them thru the Get Added section. At the bottom of every entry there's a "How we validated" link that will show you how Valebrity validated the account or confirmed that it was a fake.

Final Thoughts
Twitter is getting a ton of love these days so it doesn't really matter how people find it anymore. Whether it's for marketing your business or personal brand or simply just to follow the tweets of your favorite celebrity, the end result is that the Twitter network is growing which is only a good thing. The fact that there are already services in place like Valebrity that go to the trouble of validating the identities of certain accounts is another valuable tool for all members.

Please share some other services you like to use that help identify whom to follow on Twitter, celebrity or otherwise.

Doriano "Paisano" Carta is a writer for several blogs including ThePaisano.com and Chris Brogan's Dadomatic.com where he is also Editor-in-Chief with a staff of over 70 daddy-bloggers. He's also an I.T. Professional that is very interested in social media and Enterprise 2.0. He's a devoted husband and proud father of three wonderful children.  

What's the future of map design?

Guardian's Jemima Kiss covers our SXSW panel: "Are online maps getting a little boring, and too dominated by Google? This session laid out a few great examples of more imaginative map design, or 'neocartography', as they call it. This is an evolution of hundreds of years of map design."

Just Seeds Co-op

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Check out the radical graphics at Just Seeds, a co-operative of about 20 socially-minded artists. Their blog is a pretty good read too. Shown here: Ben Rubin’s image of American anarchist Emma Goldman.

Grammatical Errors in Buffalo

BbmetsHow have I let this go for so long? Bisonsis not a word. How did I not notice that when TFMJ and I were up there last year? I am dumb, or slow. I made an ass out of u and me by referring to the triple-A team as Bison in previous posts. How did the Mets not correct that mega mistake? Maybe we expect that sort of thing from the Mistake on the Lake but not from the good people of Queens. How did MiLB not correct that mega mistake? Sorry, folks, but you're going to have to change the signs and uniforms again.

2009 Spring Schedule

Date
Opponent
Location

March 18
vs. New Orleans Port St. Lucie, FL

March 20
vs. Memphis Port St. Lucie, FL

March 21
at New Orleans Jupiter, FL

March 22
at Memphis Jupiter, FL

March 24
at New Orleans Jupiter, FL

March 26
at Memphis Jupiter, FL  
March 27
vs. New Orleans Port St. Lucie, FL

March 29
vs. Memphis Port St. Lucie, FL

March 31
at New Orleans Jupiter, FL

April 1
at Memphis Jupiter, FL

April 2
vs. Memphis Port St. Lucie, FL

Answer: They've been the BisonS since 1877! and they ain't changing it for anyone, not even the 1 or 2 people each season who call to mention it. Since when is this such a freaking Mets blog?

Totonno's Fire: They Will Rebuild

From Slice

I called Totonno's owner Lawrence Ciminieri to find out more about the fire damage horrified Slice reader Rob S. discovered when he went to the original Coney Island location yesterday.

Ciminieri says, "Everything is going to be fine. The fire broke out in the coal storage area when we were closed. It must have been ignited by something backed up in the oven. The back two rooms are gone. The dining room is fine. The oven will have to be re-bricked, but that is something we do every few years anyway. I think we'll be back open in a month. Tell everybody thanks for me, Ed. Everyone's been so supportive."

All serious eaters who love good pizza know how important the original Totonno's is. It is our church of pizza. We need it restored to its former glory, and from what Lawrence says, it sounds like we are going to get what we need.

AT&T drops the ball on iPhone service at SXSW

Shared by Eve
And yet, I find this amusing.
For the thousands of attendees of the SXSWi conference with iPhones, the poor service has been a source of frustration.

Grow Tall

Josh MacPhee Grow Tall $10 I originally created this piece for Tom Civil's great Breakdown Poster Series. I like it so much I want it to circulate more, so I decided to do this offset print run. I'm working with issues of environmental destruction, rebirth, solidarity, labor and social organization, but I suppose you can read into it any number of ideas. Full color offset print 18"x24" signed & stamped on back/unnumbered edition of 500 04growtall_400.jpg

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