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May 30, 2009

Old projects uploaded to Flickr

In honor of Maker Faire this weekend, I'm uploading some of the old photos from the various projects I've hacked around on over the years.  These used to be on several old sites and blogs that I let lapse:









The installation of the navigation system took place of the course of two days in the garage of my apartment building back in October of 2001.  One of my neighbors became very concerned when she saw me disassembling the interior of my car and alerted the building security.  Apparently she thought I was turning the car into some sort of terrorist weapon, go figure.  Most of this project was documented along with a lot of other interesting information on the now-defunct openbmw.org site and a Yahoo Group.  At the time, if you didn't purchase the car from the factory with the navigation system installed, BMW refusted to install it afterwords, claiming that it wasn't possible, and would refuse to provide information to people who wanted to install it themselves.  I found a CD-ROM database of part numbers and identified every part used by the navigation system and ordered them from the repair departments of three different dealerships over the course of several months.  Eventually, after a number of people printed out the instructions from my site and went to their local dealers asking them to perform the retrofit, BMW relented and packaged all the parts into an installation kit that could be installed by the repair centers.

The car computer project was primarily focused on building an interface board that would tap into the navigation system and allow an in-car PC to take over the display and interface with the dashboard knobs and buttons.  I designed the circuit boards and sent the files to China to be manufactured and assembled.  When I got the boards delivered back to me, I'd usually find at least one chip would be mounted incorrectly and I'd have to resolder it by hand, which would unfortunately often result in me ruining the board.  Once the interface board was installed, I used a trunk-mounted Linux PC running software that I'd written on top of Mozilla to provide a user interface for things like an MP3 jukebox and web access.  Maybe I'll turn it into an iPhone app at some point.

Navigation Installation Project - 2001
http://www.flickr.com/photos/edanuff/sets/72157618942758407/

Car Computer Project - 2004/2005
http://www.flickr.com/photos/edanuff/sets/72157619029279570/

Note: The Return of Sweet Caroline

The word from Citi Field is that Neil Diamond’s Sweet Caroline returned as a Sing-a-Along during today’s game during the fifth-inning break, while Meet the Mets will again play in the eighth inning.

Last night, Sweet Caroline was not played at all, which was received with cheers today by me, MetsGrrl.com, BrooklynMetFan.com, Evan Roberts on WFAN, and others.

Apparently, it isn’t totally dead just yet, though.

Question: A) Who within Mets management is in love with Neil Diamond, and/or ripping off the Red Sox, B) when did it become a requirement to have sing-a-longs at professional baseball games, and C) why do I care about this so much?

Canon Employees Are Forbidden to Sit Down, Walk at Normal Pace [Wtf]

You might think your job sucks, but at least your boss wasn't insane enough to remove all the chairs and install security so an alarm goes off if you don't walk fast enough.

The president of Canon Electronics, Hisashi Sakamaki, is also the author of a book proposing some of the same measures he takes with his own company. His theory is that forcing employees to stand not only saves money but increases productivity and enhances employee relationships.

In the hallway, if an employee walks slower than 5 meters every 3.6 seconds, an alarm and flashing lights are set off, reminding the poor startled worker that he's an inefficient waste of air. Even better (or worse), there's a sign on the floor in said hallways that reads, "Let's rush: If we don't, the company and world will perish." The big boss, as a reward for thinking up all this stuff, gets to lounge in a nice, relaxing chair. [Danny Choo, thanks Stupod!]



Yankees Hot Dogs and Finding The Best Peanuts in Baseball

yankeesHDI have not been to a game in so long I barely remember how it's played. Weeks. It's been so long I'm actually craving a hot dog.

Look how lovely is the dog in the picture. I made that, not the fancy container or the onions or the sauerkraut, but the mustard. Well, I applied the mustard.

The Rangers are in town next week. I was supposed to be going Tuesday and Thursday. Now it seems I'm going Thursday only. Day Game! I think we have 6 or 8 tickets between all of us. Maybe that's a good time for my next Peanut Competition (Here are the Results of a previous competition). Always good to have many hands and mouths when you're comparing salty snacks. I'm going to work on that.

George Bush and Bill Clinton Love Fest

What's the deal with this?: Bush-Clinton Policy Talk Strikes a Congenial Tone, by Jim Rutenberg, NY Times: Former President Bill Clinton really misses the presidency. ... Former President George W...

May 29, 2009

Cheese

Cheese

Last Monday, May 25th, the annual Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake was held near Gloucester, England. In a tradition that dates back at least 200 years, possibly much longer, groups of fearless competitors chase an 8 pound (3.5 kg) round of Double Gloucester Cheese down an extremely steep and uneven hill, with a 1:1 gradient in some parts.

This is fantastic. I feel that this is the sort of urgency that everyone should feel about cheese.

Farro

Suzanne Goin, my favorite chef in the whole world, is a big fan of farro, according to Sunday Suppers at Lucques. And it's from Lucques that I first tried a couple of farro recipes, and I was intrigued enough to want to try more.

Which led me to Heidi Swanson's 101 Cookbooks, and her Citrus Parmesan Farro Salad, variants of which are my current favorite ways to use farro: I've made that recipe verbatim, as well as a variant with roasted spring onions. I've also made a version with roasted beets and a balsamic/red-wine/shallot/lemon-juice vinaigrette, and that was also delicious.

Sweet Caroline dumped?

octoberspazbaby:

nymetsfans:

brooklynmutt:

The Mets debuted a new song in the eighth inning Friday night. Or, at least, an old one. Instead of “Sweet Caroline” they played the classic version of “Meet the Mets” played on the public-address system.

Surfing The Mets

could it be management is listening to mets fans?

LETTER TO THE METS: GET RID OF “SWEET CAROLINE”

people have the power!!!

Amos Elon 1926-2009

I had not heard that Amos Elon, the great Israeli writer and intellectual, had died. Bernie Avishai remembers him.

If you're not familiar with Elon you can pick a copy of this book to get some sense of the loss.



Photo



Note: Well, It’s about Time

According to fans at the game, the Mets played the original version of Meet the Mets tonight in Citi Field during the eighth inning, instead of Neil Diamond’s Sweet Caroline.

…i don’t care why, or how, etc., i’m just glad the team understands how much better this is… i mean, seriously, i would love to know who thought it made more sense to rip off the Red Sox than play what is essentially their own theme song… anyway, whatever, i’m just glad the correct song is being played… hopefully this continues

…good work, vitothanks

Summer of The Wire

Alan Sepinwall is watching season two of The Wire this summer and posting reviews. Here are his episode one reviews: one for newbies and another for veteran viewers. At the risk of sounding like a broken record, season two is underrated and if you didn't care for it the first time through, I'd give it another shot. (thx, david)

Tags: alansepinwall  thewire  tv

Wieters

Stolen from a tumblr.

Obama: I'm Sure Sotomayor Would 'Restate' Line From 2001 Speech

In an excerpt of a yet-to-air interview with NBC, President Barack Obama says his Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor probably should have chosen different words to convey the sentiment she was trying to convey in her now-famous 2001 speech.

Conservatives have latched on to this sentence--"I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life"--to suggest that Sotomayor is unfit to serve on the Court. Some have even gone so far as to call her a racist. Unsurprisingly, a fuller context of her remarks, which appear below the fold, tell a significantly different story.

Justice O'Connor has often been cited as saying that a wise old man and wise old woman will reach the same conclusion in deciding cases. I am not so sure Justice O'Connor is the author of that line since Professor Resnik attributes that line to Supreme Court Justice Coyle. I am also not so sure that I agree with the statement. First, as Professor Martha Minnow has noted, there can never be a universal definition of wise. Second, I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life.

Let us not forget that wise men like Oliver Wendell Holmes and Justice Cardozo voted on cases which upheld both sex and race discrimination in our society. Until 1972, no Supreme Court case ever upheld the claim of a woman in a gender discrimination case. I, like Professor Carter, believe that we should not be so myopic as to believe that others of different experiences or backgrounds are incapable of understanding the values and needs of people from a different group. Many are so capable. As Judge Cedarbaum pointed out to me, nine white men on the Supreme Court in the past have done so on many occasions and on many issues including Brown.

However, to understand takes time and effort, something that not all people are willing to give. For others, their experiences limit their ability to understand the experiences of others. Other simply do not care. Hence, one must accept the proposition that a difference there will be by the presence of women and people of color on the bench. Personal experiences affect the facts that judges choose to see. My hope is that I will take the good from my experiences and extrapolate them further into areas with which I am unfamiliar. I simply do not know exactly what that difference will be in my judging. But I accept there will be some based on my gender and my Latina heritage.



Is anyone planning on going to the Marlins vs. Mets game Sunday afternoon?

If you will be at Shea Taxpayer Field tomorrow Sunday to take in the Mets game please shoot me an e-mail tonight. I have a question for you.

Thanks.

EaterWire: H&H Reopens as Elite Cafe Goes Down, More!

To round out the week, another edition of EaterWire. Got news, scoop, gossip, dreams, fears, or threats to share with us? The tipline awaits your call. And as always, our thanks for your continued patronage of Eater.

2009_05_checkit.jpgUPPER WEST SIDE—Per a phone call to the establishment (and the confirm from Diner's Journal), H&H Bagels reopened for business this afternoon following its unceremonious shuttering at the hands of the taxman. Elsewhere in the nabe, though, others have not been so lucky; per a tipster, "Just walked by the Elite Cafe on Columbus, and it was shuttered due to non-payment of taxes. In combo with H&H, it looks like the taxman has been busy recently." (Calls to Elite were met with the dreaded endless ring this afternoon. YDHTST.) [EaterWire]

SOHO—Zoë, one of the first restaurants in the neighborhood to go umlaut, filed for bankruptcy protection this week. Down, maybe, but not out, per an Eater operative who emailed a few hours ago, "I'm standing in front of it and it's full of people totally open and the windows are open and everything." [Crains/EaterWire]

TRIBECA—And because we've gone at least three hours without fresh word from Locanda Verde, this, from The Feed: "The back room, located behind a set of glass doors by the kitchen, will soon be the site of a private dining room with a separate entrance on North Moore Street." [emphasis ours] Chef Carmellini: "I see something like $30 family-style meals and fried chicken dinners and pulled pork nights.” Moth. Er. [The Feed]

Alexa Chung

Alexa Chung: I queried an editor at a major magazine recently about whether they’d be interested in a profile of Alexa Chung. “Who’s that?” he wrote back. If you don’t know, you’re about to, whether you like it or not — MTV is hoping she’s the next big thing. Caroline has some of the details about how the show will integrate Facebook and Twitter. See also: Is Alexa Chung going to be your MTV friend?

Sky Burger for iPhone/iPod touch free for the day

Filed under: , , , ,

Hey, the weekend is coming, so how serious can we be? Sky Burger, [App Store] a pretty cute arcade game for the iPhone and iPod touch, is free today only.

The game involves tilting your iPhone to catch ingredients to make a sandwich with the required ingredients. There are 50 possible burger orders to try and get right. You cap it all of with a bun. It reminds a little bit of the theme of the 1982 game called Burger Time.

Sky Burger seems a bit silly but it can get pretty addictive as you try to build up points and tips. The game has good music and sound effects. Try it for free: even vegetarians will like it. Tomorrow the game goes back up to US$0.99. Even at that price, it's pretty good fun.

Thanks, Ian!

TUAWSky Burger for iPhone/iPod touch free for the day originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 29 May 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Music: God Bless America


Found this article on the excellent True/Slant. It's about Yankee Stadium security kicking a guy out for trying to go to the bathroom during God Bless America. First of all--they still sing that song? Second--seriously? Leave it to the Yankees. Sounds like the guy was drunk, but it also sounds like the security staff did, in fact, tell him to wait till the song was over. I've never really understood why they insist on playing this song every game. I mean, I've never really understood the point of singing the actual national anthem before a game involving two American teams either, but that's for another post.

This whole thing seems really creepy and resembles something that we Americans think only happens in some other country. And it's not just the security staff. I'm pretty sure that every single time I heard "God Bless America" at Shea, some sort of shouting match erupted in a section near me in which a Real American was yelling at some (usually) younger fans for not standing and/or removing their hat during the song. Bizarre. And wasn't there some issue when Delgado was acquired because the press thought that the fans might not accept him since he refused to stand for a song that isn't even our (let alone his) national anthem? I guess that whole problem never really materialized.

Anyway, the whole "God Bless America" thing is so weird to me...and it's not even a very good song. The article claims that the Yankees are the only team that still plays it. Is this true? Do the Mets still play it during the seventh inning stretch?

Salvatore of Soho: Great Pizza on ... Staten Island

From Slice

20090528-sos-beauty.jpg

Salvatore of Soho

1880 Hylan Boulevard, Staten Island NY (Grant City; at Slater Blvd.; map); 718-979-7499; salvatoreofsoho.com
Pizza Style: New York–Neapolitan/coal-oven
Oven Type: Gas-coal hyrid oven
The Skinny: Longtime pizzaman Salvatore Ganci is turning great, thin, chewy-crisp pizzas that stand shoulder to shoulder with the best coal-oven places in the city
Price: Small Margherita, $9; large, $18

Just a couple blocks down from Pasticceria Bruno of Greenwich Village you'll find Salvatore of Soho. Impossible, you say? Then you haven't been to Grant City, on the eastern shore of Staten Island, where this pizzeria has been cranking out coal-oven pies since late last year. That's Salvatore of Soho, mind you, not Salvatore's of Soho, located in The Bronx.

Oh, so now you're saying a coal-oven pizzeria on Staten Island is impossible? Well, you might be half right. Salvatore's of Soho uses a unique coal-gas hybrid oven with a rotating stone disk that turns out some great pizzas. A small, glowing coal chamber assists in heating the spinning surface above it and also imparts that smoky coal-oven flavor you've come to know and love at the legendary coalers in Coney Island (Totonno's), East Harlem (Patsy's), and, yes, Soho (Lomardi's).

Salvatore's of Soho

20090528-sos-upskirts.jpg

Top: The end crust autopsy, for a sense of oven spring and hole structure. Above, from left: Upskirts from our first and second visits. Below right: The coal box on Salvatore of Soho's gas-coal hybrid oven.

In fact, co-owner Salvatore Ganci, a lifelong pizza man, did time at Lombardi's, helping reopen the current location in 1994. What he learned there on Spring Street has served him well on Hylan Boulevard. Where Lombardi's pies can often be a bit too thick and chewy, Salvatore's pizzas are perfectly thin and chewy-crisp, with a respectable amount of oven spring and moderate hole structure. At times, however, the crust can exhibit a bit too much char. (Did you ever think you'd see me write those words?)

And that's all before you get to the sauce (vibrant, fresh, and tomatoey though applied a bit too sparingly) and cheese (creamy, house-made fresh mozzarella). On a Margherita pie, there's a nice balance of flavors—saucy sweetness mixed with the saltiness of pecorino Romano and a little bit of nuttiness from some additional Parmigianno-Regiano. And during growing season, Salvatore's uses fresh organic herbs—basil and the like—grown on a farm in Hudson County owned by Ganci's business partner, Ralph.

20090529-sos-white-pie.jpg

Top: A white pie from our first visit. Above, from left: The first half-sausage-and-onion pie with cheese below the sauce, the second with cheese above the sauce.

On two separate visits, we tried a Margherita (sauce, cheese, basil); a white pie (mozzarella and ricotta, no sauce); and a half-plain, half sausage-and-onion pie. Of these, my favorite was the sausage and onion, which we tried two ways—sauce on top of cheese and sauce below the cheese. (I preferred the cheese-on-top version.) The sausage is Italian fennel sausage applied in a loose crumble rather than in sliced rounds.

20090529-sos-oven-area.jpg

There are a number of nonpizza dishes on the menu that are quite good as well. We sampled a fried calamari appetizer; cheese ravioli; and penne with grilled chicken, garlic, and sautéed spinach. Each item was clearly more than an afterthought or a sop to non-pizza-eaters, and there were a number of people in the dining room (still packed with locals around 2:30 p.m.) eating various pasta dishes, including a couple orders of mussels marinara. For dessert, we had a quartet of gelati (coconut, fig, rasperry, and hazelnut with a bit of cookie mixed in; the fig was an unexpected runaway favorite).

Back to that packed dining room—there's a reason why people crowd the place at lunch and, reportedly, at dinner. Ganci and Ralph have put in a lot of effort to make the place feel welcoming and friendly—gleaming white subway tiles line the oven area, waitresses wear uniforms that invite '50s-era nostalgia, and many fixtures and decorations are antiques salvaged from around Staten Island.

Salvatore's definitely ranks up there with the best coal-oven pizzerias in the city. Many thanks to Max, who first hipped Slice to the joint, and to Famdoc and Paulie Gee for further intel.

Related

Dear Slice: The Best Staten Island Pizza Is at Salvatore's of SoHo
Dear Slice: There's Other Pizza on Staten Island, You Know
Review: Denino's
Joe & Pat's

Bonus Slideshow: All Salvatore of Soho Photos—with Outtakes

Gingrich Digs In On Sotomayor-Bashing

Newt Gingrich does not seem to be deterred by the new message of the Republican leadership, such as Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), that he and Rush Limbaugh should stop calling Sonia Sotomayor a racist.

Gingrich has now sent out a fundraising e-mail, asking for help to send blast faxes to every member of the Senate demanding that the Sotomayor nomination be defeated. He even says that she shouldn't even get a vote in the Senate, but should just have to withdraw.

Gingrich warns that all of American civilization is at stake here. "If Civil War, suffrage, and Civil Rights are to mean anything, we cannot accept that conclusion," he writes. "It is simply un-American. There is no room on the bench of the United States Supreme Court for this worldview."



Why (Regular) Releases Matter

If you read the Rakudo #17 release announcement carefully, you'll see a curious note:

Due to the continued rapid pace of Rakudo development and the frequent addition of new Perl 6 features and bugfixes, we continue to recommend that people wanting to use or work with Rakudo obtain the latest source directly from the main repository at github.

Though Rakudo produces monthly releases (as does Parrot), the pace of development is so fast that Rakudo #17 (released a week ago) doesn't represent Rakudo very well as it exists today. When someone like Jonathan can close ten bugs in an eight-hour day, or a simultaneous change to Parrot and Rakudo can make 1000 spectests suddenly pass for the first time, or a two-character change to Parrot provides a 6.5% runtime performance improvement, a month-old Rakudo release seems ancient in comparison.

Adam Kennedy asked a valid question, however. "Given the recommendation that interested parties track your repository, why bother making releases?"

There are several reasons.

Helping Users

Users benefit from regular releases.

If they want to use the software -- take advantage of new features or bugfixes -- they can do so without having to manage checkouts. Though the project may keep its trunk as stable as possible, it's not always perfect. Trunk represents a work in progress. A release is a stable point the developers believe will work well for regular users.

An official release is much easier for distributions and packagers. If users can get binary releases on a regular basis, they don't even have to know how to configure and build the software to take advantage of new features or bugfixes.

A well-managed official release is easier to upgrade to if the delta between releases is small. I recently helped migrate a server from an ancient Red Hat 7 installation to a modern Ubuntu version. We had to recreate almost everything; little besides user data copied over directly. Now we can keep the server up to date with two simple commands once a week. Sometimes the changes are greater than others, but for the most part, it's transparent and easy.

Helping Developers

A release gets wider distribution and testing than a snapshot or trunk (in the same way that trunk gets more testing than branches). Bug reports, IRC and mailing list traffic, and even commits increase in the days leading up to and following a release.

Regular releases provide an incentive to keep quality high. Packaging, testing on exotic platforms, and documentation tend to suffer first when there's too much to do. If your release process requires you to perform some routine work, you'll do it when the release is near. (Of course if you have irregular releases, this busywork can seem overwhelming -- which is why some projects slip their releases continually.)

Regular releases require you to keep your trunk stable and releasable. Not only does this help you produce the next release on time, but it prevents some of the madcap scrambling that can occur if you need to make an emergency release. Hopefully you never have to do this, but the confidence that comes from knowing that a dozen people could produce a release with an hour or two of notice is electrifying.

Regular releases also require you to work in small pieces. Large branch merges can destabilize the trunk for days or weeks. If you can't avoid them altogether, there's a natural time for them to merge: just after a release. Branches that haven't seen activity in a couple of release cycles seem old and crufty. (There's a reason they haven't merged.)

A regular release cycle produces a measurable cadence. You can graph the commit rate to various parts of Parrot on a calendar. Larger or deeper changes occur just after a release -- there's pent-up demand, and much of Parrot's major progress has occurred in this timeframe. Smaller features merge in the next couple of weeks. The test suite and documentation get reviewed a few days before a release.

Regular releases expose problems in the project. Perhaps your test server is inadequate and you can't get results when you need them. Perhaps one section of the code depends on the attention of someone who has no free time lately. Perhaps only one person has access to your web site to update the notice. You will discover these problems -- and have a chance to fix them before they're catastrophic.

Helping The Project

A project that never releases software looks dead. That may not be true, but perception is important.

Regular releases -- especially on a predictable schedule -- demonstrate that your project takes its reputation seriously. (Please don't assume that I'm implying the converse. You give your users the option to use the best code you have produced at regular intervals. They don't have to upgrade, but they have the option.

Regular releases demonstrate that you care about your project. (Again, please read a disclaimer about the converse here.)

Regular releases keep your project in the news. As boring as releases should be, they're still newsworthy. What's changed? What new feature is available? What's better?

Regular releases attract new users and developers. Our regular committer count has jumped since we started performing regular releases. Our development pace has quickened. We turned around a floundering project and injected new life into it.

People still have doubts that we can achieve our audacious goals, but every month that we release a new stable version of our software that's better than every previous month, we demonstrate that we know how to produce modern software.

More Official MoSo

We're getting more official with these Mobile Socials (MoSos) -- this is the cover of our sponsorship overview document.

Mobile Social Overview

MoSo Info

oriolesmagic: Happy Wieters Day everybody!



oriolesmagic:

Happy Wieters Day everybody!

Defining Anarchist Art

Realizing_Justseeds.jpgI wanted to draw attention to AK Press' blog Revolution by the Book
there is a post about Josh MacPhee & Erik Ruin's book Realizing the Impossible called
Defining Anarchist Art:Gleanings from a Roundtable on Realizing the Impossible. There's a handful of links leading to some interesting stuff, if you like art, or anarchism.

Aaron Hillegass on the Text System

Here's a good video of Aaron Hillegass recently talking about the Cocoa text system, for the Atlanta CocoaHeads group.

If the Cocoa text system is still a mystery to you, it would do you good to watch this.

Huge rooftop farm in Brooklyn

A pair of farmers are growing a huge garden on the top of a former bagel factory in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn.

But for some New Yorkers, a vegetable-filled rooftop is far more conceivable and practical than moving to the country. Novak agrees. "When these farmers go in and lecture these inner city kids about dairy farming in upstate New York, it's in one ear and out the other. But I can tell them, I have two farms in the city," and they can take the subway and come help on the weekends.

Tags: food  gardening  nyc

Google's new "Wave"; was the name actually inspired by Firefly?

http://wave.google.com/

Curious if the name of Google's new application called "Wave" might be Whedon-inspired, I watched the developer preview...

just a few minutes in to the video and I became certain of it. The presentation includes the lead programming engineers and project managers making multiple Firefly/Serenity references and even the "Wave" program itself prints the words, "Curse your sudden and inevitable betrayal!" at the bottom of the screen when it unexpectedly crashes (it's still in development). Kudos to Google's programmers for their good taste and for creating what looks to be a frikin' awesome new application!

Stats: Wright hitting when Trailing, Behind and Tied

This season, David Wright is batting .343 when the Mets are trailing or tied in the game, during which he has driven in a run 17 percent of his at bats.

However, he is batting .347 when the team is winning, while driving in a run also 17 percent of his at bats.

In other words, Wright is hitting roughly the same in games when the team needs him most, i.e., when they’re losing or tied, as compared to when they are winning.

Wright is batting .345 overall this season.

thanks to Mets Walkoffs for helping me with the data in this post

Tiff: I didn’t kill him. Damn it Brooklyn, the suburbs do not...



Tiff:

I didn’t kill him. Damn it Brooklyn, the suburbs do not have spiders like this.

Crazy spiders invade our bathroom window when I’m at work. (Update: Identified. Probably harmless, but probably not someone’s pet.)

Garbage Time!

Hey, look, here’s the deal: Choire left an hour ago for his special secret hideaway in Mohampton and I’m SO NOT FEELING THIS DAY. How about I feed you a bunch of quicklinks for the next couple hours or so and then we call it a week? Voice your approval in the comments section. [NOTE: Lack of comments will also be considered a yes vote.]

UPDATE: Choire told me to go drink! So I’m gonna! Talk amongst yourselves! And have a good weekend.

House Rules: From the Soho House newsletter: "At...

2009_05_houserules.jpgFrom the Soho House newsletter: "At Soho House, we’ve always believed that a relaxed atmosphere is a critical part of our identity. Taking that belief a step further, we’re asking members not to wear jackets and ties to the Roof this summer. We'd like to extend that mood to the 6th Floor, too. Obviously we recognize the style and allure of a well-tailored suit, but we've always wanted the House to feel like a home away from home rather than an extension of the office, so please do keep that in mind." [EaterWire]

2009 Topps Red Hot Rookie #1


2 days in the majors, 0-7 at the plate with 2 k’s for the Mets, and Fernando Martinez is your first Red Hot Rookie for 2009.

2009ToppsRHRFMart

There’s lots of debate on whether F-Mart is a legit prospect or if he’s just a product of New York market hype.  He still falls in the top 40 on most prospect lists I know, and Baseball America ranks him #1 in the Mets organization for 2009.  Here’s a quote from their book that highlights the debate:

Some scouts outside the organization see Martinez as a tweener, a left fielder who lacks impact power, while others see a gifted hitter with an improving approach who should develop average to plus power.

One important thing to remember as you watch him is that he’s only 20 years old. If he hadn’t signed with the Mets, he’d probably be in college right now studying for a business final and playing beer pong. I for one don’t think he’s ready now, but with better plate discipline and more consistency, he could be something big.

"actually, i was joking recently that i was never taken advantage of, sexually, in a partying atmosphere because i never got anywhere near passing out, because i'd be so coked out of my mind, and was hyper aware of everything. so, really, coke prevents da

hell of a drug.

Per Se's Kitchen, Still Well-Stocked and Watching the French Laundry on Flat-Screen TV

From Serious Eats: New York

20090529-persekitchen.jpg

Watching Per Se from the French Laundry's kitchen in California. Photograph from pellis on Flickr

Per Se may be feeling a 10 percent drop in reservations, as the New York Times reports, but you wouldn't know it by the 5,000-square-foot steel-and-tile kitchen. It's still stocked with "a box of fresh langoustines from Scotland and 20 whole rabbits from Vermont," and per tradition, "the stations move clockwise from canapé to entremetier." We cannot forget the video screen with a real-time glimpse at Per Se’s sister restaurant, the French Laundry, in California (which can also spy on them on their own synced-up screen).

Certain restaurants just won't feel the recession that bad. They still have a steady stream of clientele who call the concierge to slip them into the reservation books, and can afford the live video/audio feed from a three hour-removed time zone.

The Plywood Report: Mesa Cayoacan, Iron Horse, Acquedolci, and More!!

1) Fidi: Our roving photog notices a new restaurant and bar space seems to be going in on Peck Slip. Evidence above. [PLYWOOD]

2) Williamsburg: The shuttered Pampa Grill space in Graham Avenue's Fishbowl Building will reopen soon as Mesa Cayoacan. There is a full menu in the window, and the space looks ready to go. [PLYWOOD]

3) Little Italy: Grub Street reports that Giuseppe Ferrara, a former owner of the Italian Food Center (known for great sandwiches) is set to open Acquedolci in the second week of June at the doomed Dom's/Dolce Vita space. [PLYWOOD]

4) FiDi: A spot called Iron Horse is moving into a spot on Cliff St. down near the Seaport. They were putting up this awning (above) on Saturday. The windows are still papered. That URL on the sign doesn't actually resolve to anything. [PLYWOOD]

5) East Village: EVGrieve provides an update on the former Zips Grocery space, "Well, according to a construction worker entering the storefront, the space will be...'an Italian restaurant.'" [PLYWOOD]

6) Chelsea: @danentin tweets on a new Chipotle outpost, "Chipotle's coming to Chelsea in the former Food Bar spot on 8th Ave - no coincidence Qdoba's a few blocks up." [PLYWOOD]

7) Midtown: Midtown Lunch is reporting that the failed Empanda Joe's on 8th Avenue is becoming Roma Pizza, "guessing this will be just another generic 8th Ave. New York City fast food pizza place (aka for the tourists.)" [PLYWOOD]

8) Park Slope: Gothamist brings word someone ele is riding NYC's current hot dog wave. Bark Hot Dogs, a "sustainable approach to fast food," will open next month: "...the restaurant will give some sort of nod to 'environmental initiatives' on the front-of-house side of things, and in a bid for food production transparency will detail ingredient sources on its website. Other early details: the hot dogs are a beef and pork mix, and chef Brandon Gillis, formerly of Franny’s, will join Sharkey in the kitchen." [PLYWOOD]

9) Inwood: A tipster drops a line about a new neighbor up north: "Coming soon to 4894 broadway (204th St): Elsa La Reina de Chicharron (Elsa Queen of the pig skins)." See photo above. [PLYWOOD]

10) Greenpoint: Our roving photog notes that the recently plywooded spot on Norman between Manhattan Ave and Lorimer is going to be called Cup and it hopes to open this coming weekend. [PLYWOOD]

Ricky Gervais on atheism

A quote attributed to Ricky Gervais about his atheism.

It annoys me that the burden of proof is on us. It should be: you came up with the idea. Why do you believe it?

(via cyn-c)

Tags: atheism  religion  rickygervais

2009 Topps Heritage Braves Team Set

If a card is on this page, that means I have it in my binder. If it's not on here, that means I'll gladly take it off your hands if you happen to have one lying around. These cards are too purdy not to share.

3 Casey Kotchman

13 Garret Anderson

37 Jeff Francoeur

70 Tom Glavine

100 Jair Jurrjens

107 Jo-Jo Reyes

129 James Parr

158 Gregor Blanco

170 Brian McCann

189 Mike Gonzalez

205 Yunel Escobar

215 Bobby Cox

246 Brandon Jones

335 Kelly Johnson

350 Javier Vazquez

374 Tim Hudson

381 Braves Team

417 Martin Prado


420 Chipper Jones

445 John Smoltz SP

464 Braves Coaches SP

475 Derek Lowe SP

486 Chipper Jones All Star SP


Inserts:

TME-CJ Chipper Jones Mayo Cut Plug

TN3 Minnie Minoso & Chipper Jones Then and Now
C56 Chipper Jones Chrome Refractor

Baseball Terms

Q: Did you yell in to the umpire?

Josh Beckett: Yeah, I mean, I said something. Like I said, it was uncharacteristic of me. And it (the ejections of Varitek and Francona) were all caused by me.

Q: What did you say?

JB: Just some baseball terms.

Q: Care to elaborate (on what you yelled)?

JB: Uh-uh. I mean, why? You can’t write it. [The TV camera] can’t hear it. So there’s no reason for me to elaborate.

40 Years of Sesame Steet : The Importance of Art

In continuing with my 40 days of Sesame Street, wherein I post awesome Sesame Street videos that showcase the issues we care about at TakePart, I took inspiration from the Obamas and some recent TakePart posts.

Yesterday Danny blogged about Barack and Michelle Obama selecting art for the White House and last week I highlighted Michelle Obama’s recent efforts to promote the arts and thus I give you Sesame Street and the importance of art.

Arts means collaboration!

______

Singing is always good, no matter what.

______

How could you not love the work of Salvador Dada?

______

Be creative, try new things!

______

Ernie the amazing portrait painter

Breaking BagelWire: H&H Bagels SEIZED by Tax Man

2009_05_handh.jpg
[photo credit]

Breaking news just in over the tipline: "Just came back from H&H Bagels, W. 80th & Broadway. At 10:15 am an official was posting a 'property seized for lack of payment of taxes' sign...bagels were piled high inside, employees inside, but store was closed by officials." A call to the main office confirms that not just one but both locations (the second is on West 46th St.) were shut down and they have "no idea" when they'll open again, but they're hoping to have it all smoothed out by this afternoon.
· EaterWire: Zuttos Seized [~E~]

A list of summer reading lists

Rebecca Blood kicks off her annual list of summer reading lists for 2009.

Tags: books  lists  rebeccablood

Serious Lunch Deals: Italian Edition

With so many eateries offering lunch deals, it can be hard to distinguish the good from the seriously good. Here are four favorites in the Italian genre.

Alto

2009-05-27-ItalianLunch-alto.jpg

Michael White and Chris Cannon's temple to Northern Italian food aims for the stars and reaches them. The cathedral-like room and the very serious cooking is priced accordingly but you can soften the blow on the wallet by going at lunch for the two-course prix fixe for $36. 11 E. 53rd Street (b/n 5th & Madison Avenue; map); 212-308-1099; altorestaurant.com; Monday through Friday from noon until 2:30 p.m.

Frankies 17

2009-05-27-ItalianLunch-F17.jpg

The rapidly expanding Frankies mini-chain of Italian eateries (they have two in Brooklyn, including a sister restaurant called Prime Meats) offers rustic food in a casual setting. The Clinton Street location offers sandwiches, soups, and salads during the day but the homemade gnocchi marinara with fresh ricotta ($15) available at both lunch and dinner is very easy to recommend. 17 Clinton Street (b/n Stanton and East Houston Street; map); 212-253-2303; frankiesspuntino.com; Daily between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Convivio

20090528-italianlunch.jpg

The dynamic White-and-Cannon duo also offer a $49 four-course lunch prix fixe at their ode to Southern Italian fare, Convivio. Full review here. 45 Tudor City Place (42nd Street, b/n 1st and 2nd Avenue); 212-599-5045; convivionyc.com; Monday through Friday from noon until 2:30 p.m.

Lanza

2009-05-27-ItalianLunch-lanza.jpg

The old Italian waiters might be long-gone, and the tough guys sitting at the bar are wannabe shadows of the real villains that probably used to hang here, but the century-old Lanza soldiers on, serving up heaping plates of red sauce on white linen tablecloths. The pasta isn't going to win any awards but it's solid, dependable, generously portioned, and at lunchtime, 20 to 30 percent below dinner prices.168 First Avenue (b/n 10th and 11th Streets; map); 212-674-7014; Daily between noon and 4 p.m.

Related: Serious Lunch Deals: Pan-Asian Edition

Photo



Local Laundry Prepares For Mother-In-Law Visit!

The Prestige II laundry, located at the corner of First Avenue and 18th Street, is closing early today! Do you know why? I do!

WTF

Yes. That is the sign in their window today.

According to the laundry owner’s kid, Chang, writing on Yelp: “my dad speaks English pretty well. My mom, not so much. So you should probably go when my dad’s around (anytime not around lunchtime - he likes long lunches).”

I find all this insanely delightful!

Read: Manny Acta, Jerry Manuel and Stats

In a fascinating post on Amazin Avenue, Eric Simon posts a series of quotes from Manny Acta and Jerry Manuel, without revealing who said what, in an effort to show how Acta utilizes statistical analysis, while Manuel does not.

the thing is, acta is managing what may be the worst baseball team i have ever seen in person, so we’ll never know how his brain and actions could work on a team with talent… i like jerry, and i like that the Mets are in first place, but i will not lie, i’d be curious to know how a guy like acta would influence a team like the Mets, who thought enough of him to make him a coach years ago… or, even better, a young team with the resources of the Mets…

Global Warming Allegedly Kills Poor People

Global warming is killing 300,000 people a year, says liberal conspiracy theorist Kofi Annan, who hates God’s gift of coal to America. But he can’t even point out who they are, because they are all people with difficult names in far-away places.

His mission is to visit all Starbucks shops in the world


An American man has decided that “his project in life was to drink a cup of coffee in every Starbucks in the World”.  He says he’s already been to over 9,000 across the globe, and plans to hit over 3,000 more.  His motivations are unclear, but the traveling sure sounds nice.  I wonder if he’s been to the one that got bombed here in NYC this week.

His mission is to visit all Starbucks shops in the world.

Posted in cafes, Other, People, travel Tagged: cafe, coffee, espresso, travel

Cameron’s Home


"The place is like a museum. It’s very beautiful and very cold, and you’re not allowed to touch anything."~ Ferris Bueller

The home that once served as the set for Ferris’ friend Cameron’s home, in the 1986 film Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, is for sale. You can refresh your memory by watching this scene.

The Ben Rose Home in Highland Park, Illinois, was designed by architects A. James Speyer and David Haid, and constructed in 1953. It is being listed by Sotheby’s for $2.3 million. More images are available here.

Link - via triblocal

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by Frau.

Quote of the Day: Jay Leno Says Goodbye

jaylenoquote.jpg

-Photo by Getty Images-

"Will I miss it? Yes, terribly. It's the most wonderful job ever in show business."

-- Jay Leno, in an interview about leaving The Tonight Show.

Jay will take his place behind the desk one more time tonight, after holding court there for 17 years. It was a good run, Jay!

Late Night with ...

Now that it seems fairly clear that Benjamin Cardozo has lost any claim on being the first Hispanic Supreme Court Justice, we can note that he was the first and one assumes the only Justice to look like Conan O'Brien ...

benj-conan-blog.jpg



Philadelphia strikes gold with t-shirts again

Only this time it seems they did it intentionally.

You all remember these, right? How could you forget?



Well, it appears the fine fans in Philadelphia are at it again to let the world know exactly what they think of one Manny Ramirez' recent antics. Behold!



That is just sexual. Well played, City of Brotherly Love.

The Wire, Season 2, Episode 1: "Ebb Tide" (Newbies edition)

Jimmy McNulty (Dominic West) in "The Wire" season two premiere.As we did last summer, it's time to revisit "The Wire," the greatest drama in TV history, this time moving on to season two. And, as I did last summer, I'm...

The Wire, Season 2, Episode 1: "Ebb Tide" (Veterans edition)

Jimmy McNulty (Dominic West) in "The Wire" season two premiere.As we did last summer, it's time to revisit "The Wire," the greatest drama in TV history, this time moving on to season two. And, as I did last summer, I'm...

So, just how big is Africa??


From the amazing blog of Ryan C. Briggs.



Posted on Scarlett Lion, June 2008.



Posted on Scarlett Lion, August 2008, hat tip Jillian C. York.

One Might Almost Say Shrill

"Some lawyers just don't like to be questioned by a woman. It was sexist, plain and simple." -- Judge Guido Calabresi, Judge Sotomayor's colleague on the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, on suggestions that her tough questioning from the bench suggests a problem with her 'temperament.'

This is from an article in the Times with the headline "Sotomayor's Sharp Tongue Raises Issue of Temperament." It's by Jo Becker and Adam Liptak, two of the best, though I'm personally more familiar with Becker's work since it's been in areas where I've done reporting too.

Read the article. It is, I think, an example where the headline is not quite borne out by the article itself and where -- choosing my words carefully -- the 'both-sides' imperative of conventional newspaper journalism made lead to placing two unequal arguments on equal terms. The piece itself reads like Sotomayor is tough and can be intellectually combative and that her gender leads some to describe those qualities in, shall we say, much less flattering terms. Compare to Scalia. Give it a read. I'd be curious to know what you think.



May 28, 2009

Digg Nabs Federated Media’s Chief Revenue Officer, Chas Edwards

High profile advertising network Federated Media’s Chief Revenue Officer Chas Edwards has resigned, we’ve confirmed, and will shortly be taking a job at Digg with the same title. Thomas Shin, who Digg stole from Yahoo earlier this year, will report to Edwards.

Mike Maser, currently Digg’s Chief Revenue and Strategy Officer, will change his title to Chief Strategy Officer. He controls Digg’s marketing, business development, corporate development and community management groups.

This is a big blow for Federated Media. Founder and CEO John Battelle recently announced that he’ll be looking for a replacement to run the company, although he’ll remain active with the business. And Edwards, I know from personal experience, is the kind of guy who can sell ice to eskimos and get a sincere “thanks” as he takes their money.

Federated Media raised a big round of financing last year that valued the company at $200 million. Oak Investment Partners, which led the round, must be wondering what exactly they invested in.

Many of Federated Media’s partners have left the network. Digg left in 2007, followed by GigaOm last year. TechCrunch parted ways with Federated Media earlier this month.

Edwards will have responsibility for all revenue streams at Digg, which include some revenue from Microsoft (although that deal is largely over) as well as direct sales. The company is making a push towards profitability, they’ve said in past months. That will likely require about twice the reported $8.5 million in revenue that Digg generated in 2008. Edwards will certainly help them get there.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Random Walk: The Visualization of Randomness

random_walk.jpg
Want to get a visual high today? The infographic masterpiece Random Walk [random-walk.com] ask the question "What does Randomness Look Like?" It attempts to give the answer(s) by showing the mysterious interactions of chaos and the order in randomness by simulating randomness in visualizations which are easy to understand.

The portfolio webpage contains a collection of zoomable illustrations, with detailed explanations plus summary captions in the yellow speech balloons on the right. Experimental visualized datasets include the constant number pi, the so-called Poisson distribution, the empirical results behind the normal distribution, the distribution of prime numbers, the first-digit law also called Benford's Law, the surface area calculation Monte Carlo Method, the Law of Large Numbers, an atom's or molecule's Brownian Motion, an atom's Half Life, the chaotic motion of a double pendulum, pseudo random number generation, and many more.

The project's author, Daniel A. Becker, adds this project to an already impressive portfolio, including the previously posted Barcode Plantage and the for-the-infosthetics-addict still unknown Visual DNA (discover!).

Based on these works, I think we certainly will see and hear more from him in the future. Do you agree?

Thnkx Daniel.

1984 Topps Wantlist

Now that I'm one stinking card away from my 1983 Topps set, it's time to move to '84. For the longest time this was one of those sets I hadn't really thought about completing because I didn't buy all that much back in 1984 and as a result I missed out on all of the big rookies. I finally realized three things last week:

1) I now have the Mattingly card that was the big reason why I thought the set was out of reach in the first place.
2) I actually have two of the Strawberry rookies, one of which I got out of a dime box.
3) None of the cards in the set are worth a damn anymore anyway.

The third revelation is the most important, because it means I can probably finish off my other 'impossible' '80s set next: 1985 Topps. The Clemens and Big Mac rookies are no longer selling for a Franklin each now that everyone hates them. Hooray for steroids! First things first though:

1984 Topps Wantlist

2 Rickey Henderson Highlight
9 Jim Gott
10 Robin Yount
42 Johnny Grubb
48 Julio Franco
60 Paul Molitor
61 Chris Codrioli
76 Alfredo Griffin
89 Mike Smithson
93 Bob Knepper
100 Reggie Jackson
150 Dale Murphy (pretty sure I have him in my team set)
151 Steve Trout
174 Juan Berenguer
200 Andre Dawson
202 Bobby Cox
208 Jose Oquendo
216 White Sox
240 Eddie Murray
265 Donnie Hill
278 Jorge Bell
279 Ivan DeJesus
293 Ed Lynch
308 tony Phillips
332 Kevin Gross
372 Gary Roenike
490 Cal Ripken Jr.
496 Tony Fernandez
512 Oscar Gamble
544 Cesar Geronimo
555 Greg Brock
563 Glenn Wilson
568 Pete Filson
594 Gene Richards
596 Ryne Sandberg
600 Rod Carew
618 Dickie Noles
666 Detroit Tigers
673 Mike Walters
720 Dwight Evans
740 Tom Seaver
749 Doug Flynn
780 Steve Carlton

Note: it will probably take me a while to get back on any offers, I'm still hunting down cards for Greg and Mr. Haverkamp from my last wave of wantlists. Also, if anyone needs cards from this set e-mail me, I've got a ton of doubles.

Have: 749/792 - 94.6%

Apple came through! Thanks, whoever had any part in making this...



Apple came through! Thanks, whoever had any part in making this happen.

So tonight I resubmitted the real 2.0, as 2.0, for real. I’ll modify my approval estimate to the morning of next Friday, June 5.

Every time I use 2.0 on my iPhone, I’m immensely happy with it. I originally made Instapaper to solve my own need, and it was a happy coincidence that I wasn’t the only one with that need. Now, with 2.0, I’ve taken this to the next level: it’s now an even better product, and it’s exactly where I want it to be right now. I’ve made a product that I love, and I hope you will, too. I’m sorry if this sounds arrogant, but that’s not my intent: I’m just very happy with this product, and immensely proud that I’ve finally finished it.

(Of course, I have more planned for the future, but this is a huge step forward — the biggest step in Instapaper’s history since offline reading.)

Top 20 21 Prince songs.

So today mental_floss is running the quiz that I suggested to them back in April, which led to the idea of a whole week of Klaw quizzes: Can you name the six #1 hits authored by Prince?

To celebrate this, here’s a countdown of my twenty favorite Prince songs, which I recommend you skip until you’ve tried the quiz. Prince completists out there will probably notice that all but one of these songs were released as singles; in part this is because I am generally a singles guy instead of a deep tracks guy, in part because I think deep tracks guys are usually pretentious boobs, and in part because my first introduction to early Prince came from The Hits which, if you ignore the third disc that is clearly for pretentious boobs, is rather awesome.

(EDIT: Why 21? Because somehow I deleted “Raspberry Beret” when reordering songs, didn’t notice it, and added a 20th song before posting. Of course, I wrote the whole thing two weeks ago, so I’m just guessing that that’s what I did.)

21. “Partyman.” Prince had a very long peak, but it wasn’t a steady one; the late ’80s were relatively fallow for him and he didn’t bounce back all the way until Diamonds and Pearls in 1991. The video for “Partyman” starred a relatively unknown Dutch sax player named Candy Dulfer, who then had a crossover pop hit called “Lily Was Here” a year later.

20. “Little Red Corvette.” I wonder what Prince song has actually received the most airplay over the years - it seems like “Corvette” is a staple of eighties stations the way that Visage’s “Fade to Grey” is de rigueur for ’80s new wave compilations. It’s a good enough song, with lyrics that walk the line between clever and all-right-we-get-it-everything-is-about-sex, which kind of sums up 64% of the songs Prince recorded, with the other 36% just about sex without any of the metaphors.

19. “Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad?” Prince was pretty big on the synth early in his career, before the New Wave crowd took it and played it directly into the ground. This was one of Prince’s catchier synth hooks; “When You Were Mine” has better lyrics (”You didn’t have the decency to change the sheets”), but he sounds like he recorded his vocals with a towel stuffed in his mouth.

18. “I Wanna Be Your Lover.” His first US top 40 pop hit, with 28 more to follow. I wonder how many programmers and listeners realized what exactly Prince was saying in the chorus.

17. “Black Sweat.” I think this is the only post-name-change song on the list; it sounds a lot like early Prince with better production values and a very catchy drum machine riff behind it. It’s less-is-more music.

16. “I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man.” Ten thirty-five on a lonely Friday night.

15. “Sign O’ the Times.” Hated this song when it came out, because it was so strange. Now I like it, because it’s so strange. Prince was never big on social commentary, at least not in songs he released as singles, but “Sign” is entirely about it, and one of the first mainstream songs to talk about AIDS.

14. “Thieves in the Temple.” Honestly, if it wasn’t for this song, I’m sure Prince could propose that we all forget that Graffiti Bridge ever happened and get a unanimous “amen” from the congregation.

13. “1999.” Might not have made my list at all on January 1, 2000, because I was so damn sick of it.

12. “Let’s Go Crazy.” Dearly beloved … Purple Rain was Prince’s breakthrough, and I’d like to think the main reason is that he veered so much farther into rock territory than he ever had before. He was already working his own wide-ranging style of fusion, and by assimilating a big chunk of not just rock but distorted guitar-driven rock, he created something pretty amazing that no one has been able to match since then. Oh, and this wasn’t even the best song on the album.

11. “Delirious.” Great song that sounds kind of dated now. It’s begging for a remake that replaces the little Casiotone synthesizer he used on the original track with some guitar.

10. “U Got the Look.” Prince invents text messaging, with the help of the hey-she-got-kinda-hot Sheena Easton.

9. “Alphabet St.” Perhaps better in the version released as a single, without the embarrassing rap from “Kat,” although for embarrassing it’s tough to top “Dead on It” from The Black Album. Also, getting “Alphabet St.” as a single meant that you didn’t have to buy Lovesexy and end up with one of the more ill-advised album covers in music history. (This was the most ill-advised cover in music history. I warned you, but you’re going to click anyway.)

8. “Pope.” I think this is the only B-side on the list - it was unreleased before The Hits came out. Very catchy, with humorous lyrics and that same less-is-more feel that a lot of Prince’s best songs have. It’s poppy by Prince standards.

7. “Raspberry Beret.” My wife was floored when I told her this wasn’t one of Prince’s #1 songs. I’ve often wondered if this song gave Ian Broudie the idea to call his side project the Lightning Seeds (a mondegreen from the line “thunder drowns out what the lightning sees”). And no, I don’t think the urban legend about “in through the out door” is true.

6. “Sexy MF.” Not one you’re going to hear on the radio any time soon. Sort of a funky NPG jam session with plenty of sexual innuendo and a syncopated beat that feels like an odd time signature or a record that keeps jumping ahead. I could argue for any song from here on for #1.

5. “When Doves Cry.” Hell of a guitar intro, brilliant lyrics, and no bass line whatsoever.

4. “Soft & Wet.” This was actually Prince’s first single, according to Wikipedia, but I’ve never heard it on the radio. The title gives you a fairly clear indication of what the song is about, and what almost every song Prince recorded in the first four or five years of his career was about. It’s dated with the heavy synth use - almost funk meets new wave - but the hook is sharp. Great first line, too, although that might be the reason I’ve never heard it on the radio.

3. “7.” No one seems to know to what seven people the song refers, but the mystical lyrics and catchy chorus made it kind of a surprise hit. Of course, in the U.S., it peaked at #7.

2. “Gett Off.” One of the best opening stanzas to any song, ever: “How can I put this in a way so as not to offend or unnerve/But there’s a rumor going around that you ain’t been gettin’ served/They say that you ain’t you know what in baby who knows how long/It’s hard for me to say what’s right when all I wanna do is wrong.” The song was sort of a return to Prince’s glory days of sex-driven funk, but despite serving as the first single off the Diamonds and Pearls album, it didn’t make a dent in the singles charts until the album’s second single, “Cream,” went to #1.

1. “Kiss.” Iconic? Anthemic? Timeless. There may be no better exemplar of less is more in music.

Letters & Ligatures Show at 222 Gallery in Philadelphia

The Most Beautiful Baked Good: Cookie Cake Pie

5-28-09-cakepiecookie.jpg

Photograph from CakeSpy

In perhaps the ultimate example of gilding the lily, Cakespy.com has posted a recipe for a Cookie Cake Pie. This concoction is exactly what it sounds like, a pie with a layer of cake and one of cookie dough. It's like a Turducken, but with lots of sugar. I am seriously counting down the seconds till I can make this. What's your favorite dessert mash-up?

Related
Baking is Cool Again
An "All in One" Thanksgiving Cake
Meat Cake

youngmanhattanite: Remember that time Spiers interviewed Drea De...



youngmanhattanite:

Remember that time Spiers interviewed Drea De Matteo for BlackBook in their Fall 2003 issue? TRUTH. U can haz Evanly Schindler.

Also in that issue: Bruno Maddox’s piece about the Underground Literary Association, which is probably one of the best things Black Book has ever done. (It’s reprinted here as “The Angriest Book Club in America.”)

Hulu Desktop app gives full-screen experience to Mac users

Filed under: , ,



NBC's online video site, Hulu, has launched a desktop app that allows Mac users to watch Hulu content without using a web browser, and with full Apple Remote support. After all of the boxee nastiness, I'm a bit surprised by the development. That doesn't mean this isn't still exciting.

For some background, Hulu has been involved in a back-and-forth battle with the social media center application, boxee, which allows users to access online content from their Mac or Apple TV and makes big-screen viewing a pleasure. The last big boxee update changed how boxee serves Hulu content, in an effort to make it more difficult for Hulu to pull the plug.

Hulu's justification (well, one of many justifications) for going after boxee was that the content is designed to be viewed from a web browser and not from the couch. Although the tagline for Hulu Desktop, "Lean-back viewing for your PC," keeps the sematic difference between a 24" LCD monitor and a 25" LCD TV in check, the execution, especially with extensive remote support, seems to say something else.

I don't know, maybe Hulu really believes that people won't be using this application with their TV-connected Macs or Windows Media PCs, but this app certainly feels like it was meant for big screens.

Regardless of the double-speak, how well does this application actually work? Well, based on my limited testing (I did want to get this post done), it is awesome. I totally want to figure out if the arbitrary system requirements can be bypassed so this can get running on the Apple TV.


The Interface

The interface is great. Although Hulu Desktop didn't take up the full-screen of my 22" external monitor when it was initially launched, a quick ⌘-F will take you full screen. I should also note that the size of the application window was larger than 1280x800 by default, so mobile users might get the "full screen" upon launch experience.

The Apple remote works flawlessly with the Hulu application. My only problem was with my screensaver -- unlike FrontRow, Hulu doesn't turn the screensaver off when playing back content. I also managed to crash the application, but that's to be expected.

All in all, finding programming to watch is easy and intutiive, not unlike the original Hulu implementation in boxee. Switching from playing a program to searching for others is easy (the Menu button) and fast-forwarding through content is a joy. As a long-time boxee user who hates trying to fast-forward or rewind Hulu playback (even before they switched serving mechanisms), this is nice. By default, my Internet connection played back everything at High Quality (you can adjust this in the settings), and the quality looked even better than in the browser.

Continue reading Hulu Desktop app gives full-screen experience to Mac users

TUAWHulu Desktop app gives full-screen experience to Mac users originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 28 May 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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On rebooting Star Trek

This post by Greg Hatcher contains two equally interesting parts:

1. A detailed examination of the Star Trek franchise which shows that the film by JJ Abrams is merely the latest in a long series of successful reboots.

2. A list of rules to follow to successfully reboot a franchise, whether it's Star Trek or Bond or Batman.

Don't abuse the audience goodwill. Remember, you sell the audience on your story based on certain expectations. Break that unspoken contract and you're in trouble. No one bought a ticket for Spider-Man 3 thinking they were going to get a romance with musical comedy interludes, yet that's what it felt like we got.

If you're doing a new version of a beloved old property, that means you need to figure out what it was people liked and make damn sure it's in there. That doesn't mean you have to do it the same way every time, you just have to do it. James Bond movies have been retooled a number of times, but we never lose the license to kill, the exquisite stunt work, the Bond theme music, or the cool cars and hot girls. There's about a million miles of difference between Moonraker and Casino Royale, but they're both recognizably Bond movies and they were both successful, because they met the baseline audience expectation of what a James Bond movie would give them.

(via rebecca blood)

Tags: greghatcher  howto  lists  movies  startrek

it's like when charlie rose asks his guests to explain every single little acronym

Google Wave: What Might Email Look Like If It Were Invented Today? - O'Reilly Radar. It's perhaps no accident that this project, carried out secretly at Google's Sydney office over the past two years, had the code name Walkabout. That's the Australian aboriginal tradition of going off for an extended period to retrace the songlines and learn the world anew.I'd love to see a venn diagram comparing O'Reilly Radar readers with Lost viewers, but something tells me that Tim's audience knows exactly what a walkabout is.

Top Ten Sesame Street Special Guests

We love Sesame Street here at TakePart, and Gina’s post celebrating 40 years of Sesame Street got me thinking about some of my favorite celebrity guest appearances on the show.  So, while there are so many great ones to choose from,  I’ve put together a list of my Top Ten special guest moments.  Let me know your favorite memory from the show in the comments section below!

Michelle Obama

The First Lady tells us all about the importance of healthy role models:

Tina Fey

Pirates who love to read?  Oh, you must mean the Bookaneers:

Feist

Rewriting the lyrics to one of the catchiest songs ever, Fiest helps us count to 4:

Johnny Cash

The Man in Black teaches us to count to 5 by singing 5 Feet High:

Neil Patrick Harris

This one’s a real showstopper:


Jack Black

Elmo helps Jack Black find his long lost octagon:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7jpz_55EdM

L.L. Cool J

Elmo gets to hang with all the coolest guests, here he goes on an Addition Expedition with Cool James:


Ray Charles

Ray made plenty of appearances on the show, but here’s a great one with Bert and Ernie


Paul Simon

I love the little girl who sings her own version of Me & Julio, and the dance moves can’t be beat:


R.E.M.

Furry Happy Monsters; even better than the original:

New Yorker iPhone Cover Boosts Sales for Brushes App

Jenna Wortham on Steve Sprang’s Brushes, the iPhone app used by artist Jorge Colombo to paint this week’s New Yorker cover:

The novelty and popularity of the cover has provided a healthy boost in sales for the 32-year-old who works shifts in a coffee shop when he’s not developing applications for the iPhone and Mac.

On Monday, Mr. Sprang said the application had its highest selling day since it was first released into Apple’s App Store in August, with 2,700 copies at $4.99 apiece flying off the virtual shelves.

Update: Via email, Steve Sprang tells me:

I just wanted to mention that the NYTimes article you’re linking to has many errors and misquotes. The primary one being that I don’t work in shifts at a coffee shop. I do occasionally take my laptop to the coffee shop to work (the source of the confusion), but I am not employed there.

Not that there’s anything wrong with serving coffee — I love coffee and the people who make it — but it did strike me as odd that someone who’s doing pretty well selling software would need a side job like that.

Increasing Ubiquity

The consequence of self-reproduction in life, as well as in the technium, is an inherent drive toward ubiquity. Given enough resources, duplication of one type will keep going until all its construction resources are consumed. All things being equal, dandelions, or raccoons, or asphalt will replicate till they cover the earth. Evolution equips a replicant with tricks to maximize its spread no matter the constraints. But because physical resources are limited, and competition relentless, no species can ever reach full ubiquity. Yet all life is biased in that direction. Technology, too, wants to be ubiquitous.

Humans are the reproductive organs of technology. We multiply manufactured artifacts and spread ideas and memes. Because humans are limited (only 6 billion alive at the moment) and there are tens of millions of species of technology or memes to spread, none can reach full 100% ubiquity, although several come close.

Nor do we really want all technology to be ubiquitous. It would be best for ourselves if remedial technology like artificial hearts never became very common. Preferably, we would engineer away the need for replacement hearts through genetics or drugs or diet. In the same way, the remedial technology of carbon sequestration (removing carbon from the atmosphere) would ideally never become ubiquitous. Best would be an energy system based photons (solar), fusion (nuclear), wind, or very least, burning hydrogen rather than burning carbon. The spread of fuels relying on zero carbon, or little carbon (wood, coal, oil and gas have a ascending percent of hydrogen per carbon in that order) would thus negate the spread of carbon sequestration technology. Thus rival technologies keep themselves in check.

Individual species of technology, like species of weeds, tend to multiply towards ubiquity to fill their available niche.  But a technium packed with remedial technologies does not have a long-term trajectory, just as an ecosystem composed only of weeds will not survive as long as one with less opportunistic components. Artificial hearts do not offer as many long-term options to a person, or society, as does a natural heart kept healthy by other technologies. Remedial atmospheric solutions do not offer as many future options as superior energy sources. The niche for replacement hearts, cataract surgery, pollution reducers, data recovery, and so on are in the long run – at civilization scale – narrow places for ubiquity. Once their niches are filled, they lead no where else. They are stop gap and self-limiting. Like a small pox vaccine. Ideally a vaccine has no future if it is universally successful.

Rather than self-limits the technium favors the type of ubiquity found in open-ended technologies, that is, those technologies that effectively increase the arrival of other effective open-ended technologies. This expansion unleashes cascades of other technologies that spread pervasively.

From a planetary biosphere perspective the most ubiquitous technology on Earth is agriculture. The steady surplus of high quality food from agriculture is vigorously open-ended in that this abundance enabled civilization and birthed its millions of technologies. The spread of agriculture is the largest-scale engineering project on the planet. Nearly half of Earth's land surface has been altered by the mind and hand of humans. Native plants have been displaced, soil moved, and domesticated crops planted in their stead. Great stretches of Earth's surface have been semi-domesticated into pasture land. The most drastic of these changes – such as uninterrupted tracts of giant farms -- are visible from space. Measured in number of square kilometers, the most ubiquitous technology on the planet are the five major domesticated crops of maize, wheat, rice, cane sugar and cows.

Other more subtle technological alterations are visible in the ecological history of a place. By many experts' account, there have not been any wilderness areas on this planet for perhaps five thousand years. Most of the areas we ordinarily consider wild (like the Amazon or the Congo, or the American West) are in fact the result of thousands of years of human intervention. By setting seasonal fires, by selectively hunting certain species, or by selectively harvesting certain plants, tribal people groom the landscape for food production over the centuries. No territory on the planet has completely escaped the inquisitive and disruptive impulses of the human mind to tame the environment. Hunter/gatherers now live or have lived everywhere (except for some Antarctic areas) and wherever people dwell, they use technology to modify the "natural" ecology and terraform their continent.

The third most ubiquitous planetary technology are roads. Simple clearings for the most part, dirt roads extend their root-like tentacles into most watersheds, criss-crossing valleys and winding their way up many mountains. The web of constructed roads forms a reticulated cloak around the continents of this planet. A string of buildings follow along the dendritic branches of roads. These nodes are made of cut tree fiber (wood, thatch, bamboo) or molded earth (adobe, brick, stone, concrete) and may be fourth commonest technology.

Roads

This map of the world shows travel time to major cities, closer is lighter, farther is darker. In essence it is a map of the global road network. (via New Scientist)

Not as visible, but perhaps more pervasive at the planetary level, are the technologies of fire. Controlled burning of carbon fuels, particularly mined coal and oil, has led to changes in the Earth's atmosphere. Reckoned in total mass and converge, these furnaces (which often travel along the roads as engines in automobiles) are dwarfed by roads. Though smaller in scale than the roads they ride on, or the homes and factories they burn in, these tiny deliberate fires are able to shift the composition of the globe's voluminous atmosphere. It is possible that this collective burning may be the largest-scale technological impact on the planet.

While magnificent stone and silica cities and their sprawl symbolize our technium, they are far from ubiquitous. Their footprint is small compared to agriculture, but megalopolis have rerouted the flow of materials so that much of the technium circulates through them. Rivers of food and raw materials flow in, and debris flow out. Every person living in a developed country in moves 20 tons of material annually.

Then there are the things we surround ourselves with. From the perspective of daily modern human life, the list of near-ubiquitous technologies include cotton cloth, iron blades, plastic bottles, paper, and radio signals. These five technological species are within reach of nearly every human alive today, both in the cities and in the most remote rural villages. Each of these technologies open up vast new territories of possibilities: paper -- cheap writing, printing, and money; metal blades -- art, craft, gardening, and butchering; plastic -- cooking, water, and medicines; radio –- connection, news, and community.  Fast on their tracks follow the nearly ubiquitous species of metal pots, matches, and cell phones.

Total ubiquity is the end point all technologies tend toward but never reach. But there is a practical ubiquity of near saturation, which is sufficient to flip the dynamic of a technology onto another level. In the developed world and urban places everywhere, the speed at which new technologies disperse to the point of saturation has been increasing.

Diffusionrates

Whereas it took electrification 45 years to reach 90% of US residents, it's taken only 20 years for cell phones to reach the same penetration. The rate of diffusion is accelerating. A straight line extrapolation would suggest that the rate of technological adoption should continue to accelerate until it occurs instantaneously. By the year 2100, a personal teleporter, say, should be adopted by everyone alive the year it is introduced. A new immersive VR suit the day after it is released. And a new wireless wearable communicator the hour after it is invented.

Consumption Rates Technology1
Rates of diffusion of consumer technology (via NYTimes)

However that scenario is unlikely to happen because technology specializes as fast as it becomes common, so most technology will not be adopted by most people. In fact the more complex the technology, the less likely it will reach near-ubiquity. The peak global penetration for the average technological innovation will drop over time. We can see a hint of that in the chart above. The level of peak penetration at which diffusion plateaus is falling over time. Any particular new species of communication device in the next century is unlikely to every reach the same ubiquity as machine-woven cotton cloth, or even the television.

But something strange happens with ubiquity. More is different. A few automobiles roaming along a few roads is fundamentally different than a few automobiles for every person. And not just because of the increased noise and pollution. A billion operating cars spawn an emergent system that creates its own dynamics. Ditto for most inventions. The first few cameras were a novelty. Their impact was primarily to put painters out of the job of recording the times. But as photography became easier to use, common cameras led to intense photojournalism, and eventually they hatched movies and Hollywood alternative realities.  The further diffusion of cameras cheap enough that every family had one in turn fed tourism, globalism and international travel. The further diffusion of cameras into cell phones and digital devices birthed a universal sharing of images, the acceptance that something was not real until it was captured in a camera, and a sense that there is no significance outside of the camera view. The further diffusion of cameras embedded into the built environment, peeking from every city corner and peering down from every room ceiling forces a transparency upon society. Eventually every surface of the built world will be covered with a screen and every screen will double as an eye. When the camera is fully ubiquitous everything is recorded for all time. We have a communal awareness and memory. That's a long way from simply displacing painting.

I met a fellow many years ago who spent ten years wearing a tiny camera in front of his left eye. This head-mounted camera captured everything that happened in his life and transmitted it back to his website. When Steve Mann started his experiment of recording and broadcasting his life as a grad student, he was a lone eccentric. While he was standing there talking to you, with one eye open and the other filming, his unconventional approach to documentation seemed like performance art. One could not really object to it, because, well, he was such an outlier.

In the course of his years of living ordinary life as a one-eyed camera, going shopping, to school, to events with his friends, Mann discovered that ironically the more surveillance cameras a particular store, plaza, or gathering place had, the more their guards objected to individuals like him recording their own view. The watchers hated to be watched. Mann calls his inverse surveillance, sousveillance, a word coined by replacing the French "sur" for above, with the French "sous" for below, as in watching from the bottom up.

After he graduated from MIT, Mann became a professor and his grad students used the next generation of smaller circuitry to craft their own miniature sousveillance gear. Some were tiny enough to fit unobtrusively into sunglasses. The students would record each other. In the meantime, cell phones sprouted hi-res cameras and video cams connected to the net, which performed the same sousviellance actions. Suddenly, there were millions of public eyes watching each other. Sousveillance had gone from a node of one to near ubiquity. A few years ago when all this sousveillance was new, a girl on a Korean subway let her dog crap on the floor without cleaning up the mess. Her transgression was captured by several sousveillance phonecams and eventually broadcasted on national TV. She was shamed into apology by a new ubiquity.

One thousand live cameras always-on make downtowns safe from pickpockets, nab stop-light speeders, and record police misbehavior. One billion live cameras always-on serve as a community monitor and memory; they give the job of eyewitness to amateurs; they restructure the notion of the self, and a billion cameras demote the authority of authorities.

One thousand automobiles opens up mobility, creates privacy, supplies adventure. One billion automobiles creates suburbia, eliminates adventure, erases parochial minds, triggers parking problems, births traffic jams, and removes the human scale of architecture.

One thousand teleportation stations rejuvenate vacation travel. One billion teleportation stations overturn commutes, enhance globalism, introduce tele-lag sickness, re-introduce the grand spectacle, kill the nation state, and end privacy.

One thousand human genetic sequences jump-start personalized medicine. One billion genetic sequences every hour enable real-time genetic damage monitoring, upend the chemical industry, redefine illness, make genealogies relevant, unravel the packaging industry and launches "ultra-clean" lifestyles that make organic look filthy.

One thousand screens the size of buildings keep Hollywood going. One billion screens everywhere become the new art, create a new advertising media, vitalize cities at night, accelerate locative computing, and rejuvenate the commons.

One thousand humanoid robots revamp the olympics, and give a boost to entertainment companies. One billion humanoid robots cause massive shifts in employment, reintroduces slavery and its opponents, and demolishes the status of established religions.

In the course of evolution every technology is put to the question of what happens when it becomes ubiquitous? What happens when everyone has one?

Usually it disappears. Electric motors, born large, rare and obvious, quickly became invisible and everywhere. Shortly after their invention in 1873 modern electric motors propagated throughout the manufacturing industry. Each factory stationed one very large expensive motor in the place where a steam engine formerly stood. That single engine turned a complex maze of axles and belts, which in turn spun hundreds of smaller machines scattered throughout the factory. The rotational energy twirled through the buildings from that single source.

Hounshell84232

Machinery for grinding crankshafts at the Ford Motor Company, 1915. (From Hounshell)

By the 1910s electric motors started their inevitable spread into homes. They had been domesticated. Unlike a steam engine, they did not smoke or belch or drool. Just a tidy steady whirr from a 5-pound hunk. As in factories, these single "home motors" were designed to drive all the machines in one home. The 1916 Hamilton Beach "Home Motor" had a 6-speed rheostat and ran on 110 volts. Designer Donald Norman points out a page from the 1918 Sears, Roebuck and Co. catalog advertising the Home Motor for $8.75 (which is equivalent to about $100 these days). This handy motor would spin your sewing machine. You could also plug it in to the Churn and Mixer Attachment ("for which you will find many uses"), and the Buffer and Grinder Attachments ("will be found very useful in many ways around the home"). The Fan Attachment "can be quickly attached to Home Motor", as well as Beater Attachment to whip cream and beat eggs.

Norman9850Part

One hundred years later the electric motor has seeped into ubiquity. There is no longer one home motor in a household, there are dozens of them, and each is nearly invisible. No longer stand-alone devices, motors are now integral parts of many appliances. They  actuate our gadgets, acting as the muscles for our artificial selves. They are everywhere. I made an informal census of all the embedded motors I could find in the room I am sitting in while I write:

5 spinning hard disks
3 analog tape recorders
3 cameras (move zoom lenses)
1 video camera
1 watch
1 clock
1 printer
1 scanner (moves scan head)
1 copier
1 fax (moves paper)
1 CD player
1 pump in radiant floor heat

That's 20 home motors in one room. A factory or office build would have thousands.  We don't think about motors. We are unconscious of them, even though we depend on their work. They rarely fail. We aren't aware of roads and electricity because they are ubiquitous and usually work. We don't think of paper and cotton clothing as technology because their reliable presences are everywhere.

In addition to a deep embeddedness, ubiquity also breeds certainty. The advantages of new unknown technology are always disruptive. The first version of an innovation is cumbersome and finicky. A new fangled type of plow, waterwheel, saddle, lamp, phone, or automobile can only offer uncertain advantages for certain trouble. Even after an invention has been perfected elsewhere, when it is first introduced into a new zone or culture it requires the re-education of old habits. The new type of waterwheel may require less water to run, but also require a different type of milling stone that is hard to find, or it may produce a different quality of flour. A new plow may speed tilling but demand planting seed later, thus disrupting ancient traditions. A new kind of automobile may have a longer range but less reliability, or greater efficiency but less range, altering driving and fueling patterns.  That is why only a few eager pioneers are inclined to adopt an innovation at first, because the new primarily promises uncertainty and the unknown. As an innovation is perfected, its benefits and education are sorted out and illuminated, it becomes less uncertain, and the technology spreads.  That diffusion is neither instantaneous nor even.

In every technology's lifespan then, there will be a period of "haves" and "have nots." Clear advantages may flow to the individuals or societies who first risk untried guns, or the alphabet, or electrification, or the internet, over those who do not. The distribution of these advantages may depend on wealth, privilege, or lucky geography as much as desire. This divide between the haves and the have-nots was most recently and most visibly played out at the turn of the last century when the internet blossomed.

The internet was invented in the 1970s and offered very few benefits at first. It was primarily used by its inventors, a very small clique of professionals fluent in programming languages, as a tool to improve itself. From birth the internet was constructed in order to make talking about the idea of an internet more efficient. Likewise, the first ham radio operators primarily broadcasted discussions about ham radio; the early world of CB radio was filled with talk about CB; the first blogs were about blogging; the first several years of twitterings concerned Twitter. By the early 1980s, early adopters who mastered the arcane commands of network protocols in order to find kindred spirits interested in discussing this tool, moved onto the embryonic internet and told their nerdy friends. But the internet was ignored by everyone else as a marginal, teenage male hobby. It was expensive to connect to; it required patience, the ability to type, and a willingness to deal with obscure technical languages; and very few other non-obsessive people were online. Its attraction was lost of most people.

But once the early adaptors modified and perfected the tool to give it pictures and a point and click interface (the web), its advantages became clearer and more desirable. As the great benefits of digital technology became apparent, the question of what to do about the have nots became a bothersome issue. The technology was still expensive, requiring a personal computer, a telephone line, and a monthly subscription fee – but those who adopted it acquired power through knowledge. Professionals and small businesses grasped its potential. The initial users of this empowering technology were – on the global scale – the same set of people who had so many other things: cars, peace, education, jobs, opportunities.

The more evident the power of the internet as an uplifting force became, the more evident the divide between the digital haves and have-nots. One sociological study concluded that there were "two Americas" birthing, as well as two worlds. The citizens of one were poor people who could not afford a computer, and of the other, wealthy individuals equipped with PCs who reaped all the benefits.  During the 1990s when technologists such as myself were promoting the advent of the internet, we were often asked what we were going to do about the digital divide? My answer was simple: nothing. We didn't have to do anything, because the natural history of a technology such as the internet was self-fulfilling.

The have-nots were a temporary imbalance that would be cured (and more so) by market forces. There was so much profit to be made connecting up the rest of the world, and the unconnected were so eager to join, that they were already paying more per minute of telecom connectivity when they could get it. Furthermore, the costs of both computers and connectivity were dropping by the month. At that time most poor in America owned televisions and had monthly cable bills. Owning a computer and internet access was no more expensive and would soon be cheaper than TV. In a decade the outlay would reach a $100 laptop. Within the lifetimes of all born in the last decade, computers of some sort (a connector really) would cost $5.

This was simply a case, as computer scientist Marvin Minsky once put it, of the "haves and have-laters."  The haves (the early adaptors) overpay for crummy early editions of technology that barely works. Their purchase of flaky version 1.0 of new goods finance cheaper and better versions for the have-laters, who will get it for dirt cheap not long afterwards. In essence the "haves" fund the evolution of technology for the have laters. Isn't that how it should be, that the rich fund the development of cheap technology for the poor?

We saw this "have-later" cycle play out all the more clearly with cell phones. The very first cell phones were larger than bricks, extremely costly, and not very good.  I remember an early-adopter techie friend who bought one of the first cell phones; he carried it around in its own dedicated briefcase. I was incredulous that anyone would pay that much for something that seemed more toy than tool. It seemed equally ludicrous at that time to expect that within two decades, the $2,000 devices would be so cheap as to be disposable, so tiny to fit in a shirt pocket, and so ubiquitous that even the street sweepers of India and the rickshaw drivers of China had one. While internet connection for sidewalk sleepers in Calcutta seemed impossible, the long-term trends inherent in technology aim it towards ubiquity. In fact, in many respects the cell coverage of these "later" countries overtook the quality of the older US system so that the cell phone became a case of the "haves" and "have-sooners," in that the later adopters got the ideal benefits of mobile phones sooner.

The fiercest critics of technology still focus on the ephemeral "have and have-not divide," but that flimsy border is a distraction. The significant threshold of technological development lies at the boundary between common place and ubiquity, between the have-laters and the "all-have." When critics asked us champions of the internet what we were going to do about the digital divide, and I said "nothing," I added a challenge: "If you want to worry about something, don't worry about the folks who are currently offline. They'll stampede on faster than you think. Instead you should worry about what we are going to do when everyone is online. When the internet has 6 billion people, and they are all emailing at once; when no one is disconnected and always on day and night, when everything is digital and nothing offline, when the internet is ubiquitous."

When a technology saturates, or even supersaturates, a culture, it unleashes patterns not seen in lone examples of it. A few isolated manifestations of a technology can reveal its first order effects. But it is not until technology fills a vast, thick interacting pervasion do the second and third order consequences erupt.  Don't worry about those who don't have a car; worry what happens when everyone has a car. Don't worry about those families who cannot afford genetic engineering; worry what happens when everyone is engineering. Don't worry about those who don't own a personal teleporter; worry what happens when everyone has one. Most of the unintended consequences that so scare us in technology usually arrive in ubiquity.

And most of the good things as well. The trend toward embedded ubiquity is most pronounced in technologies that are open-ended: Communications, computation, socialization, and digitization. And no technology is as open-ended as the mind. The mind is nearly the definition of open-endedness since its limits are imperceptible and unimaginable. We see no closure to the possibilities of an ever-diffusing intelligence. If a human mind can upfold a greater mind, ad infinitum, this upcreation represents the ultimate open-endedness.

The all-pervasiveness of open-ended technologies settle further and further into the matrix of infrastructure. We are busy right now infusing our shoes, clothes, household appliances, vehicles, sports equipment, handhelds, pets, landscape – everything that we touch and touches us – with communication, computation and intelligence. In this ubiquity they open up more new technology, and trigger new levels of consequence.

Because of their open-endedness, the amount of computation and communication that can be crowded into matter and materials, stuffed into the environment, and invested into everything we make seems infinite. Like the magician who keeps pouring water into the bottomless cup, we can keep pouring mind, intelligence, and information into the technium without limit. There is nothing we have invented to date that we've said, "it's smart enough." In this way the ubiquity of technology is insatiable. It will absorb all mindedness.

The ever-expanding base of our creations works like a vacuum sucking technology toward it. It is constantly stretching the technium towards a pervasive presence. Pulled by open possibilities and pushed by relentless duplication, technology wants ubiquity.

Eight Items or Less: Is Jay-Z Close to a Record Deal? And Will Twitter Start Charging Users?

jay-ztwitter
1. According to Billboard, Jay-Z is close to a deal with Epic Records because of his close relationship with Rick Rubin; but according to the Daily News, he is close to a deal with Warner Music because of his close relationship with Lyor Cohen. Who's closer? 2. The founder of Twitter, Evan Williams, told a new-media conference this week that they are about to start charging users. "We're working on it right now." 3. The cantilevered house used as a location in Ferris Bueller's Day Off is for sale. For $2.4 million you can wreck your own Ferrari. Here's the listing. 4. Artist Damon Ginandes installed a gigantic piece called "Ascendants" on an exterior wall of New York's Carlton Arms Hotel (160 E. 25th St.). Walk by and check it out. (via Wooster Collective) 5. Glow-in-the-dark monkeys 6. A big -- they claim it's the "largest in New York" -- street art exhibition opens tonight and runs through June 27 at 529 W. 35th St. in NYC. Banksy, Crash, Daze, Lee Quinones, Martha Cooper and tons more are included.

Shea No More

Forgot to mention that last night was the first time I saw no more Shea Stadium, not even the ashes. The parking lot memorial is complete:

shea_parkinglot_052109.jpg

More on Queens Crap. Thanks for the link, Yankee John. I forgot my camera last night.

Long live Shea. 



Errol Morris on art forgeries

Errol Morris posted the first part of a seven-part series of posts about Han van Meegeren, art forger extraordinaire.

To be sure, the Van Meegeren story raises many, many questions. Among them: what makes a work of art great? Is it the signature of (or attribution to) an acknowledged master? Is it just a name? Or is it a name implying a provenance? With a photograph we may be interested in the photographer but also in what the photograph is of. With a painting this is often turned around, we may be interested in what the painting is of, but we are primarily interested in the question: who made it? Who held a brush to canvas and painted it? Whether it is the work of an acclaimed master like Vermeer or a duplicitous forger like Van Meegeren -- we want to know more.

Morris ends the post with a cliffhanger that, if I didn't know any better, was written specifically for me: "The Uncanny Valley."

Tags: art  crime  errolmorris  hanvanmeegeren  uncannyvalley

How to rescue the Mars rover by Julian, age 7

julianspiritrover.jpg

Julian, age 7, heard that the Spirit Mars rover was stuck, and offered his idea to fix it. Turns out that's a pretty good idea and one that JPL folks are already considering.

The rover drivers were so pleased by Julian's suggestion that they're going to send him a reward.

Update: NASA is naming the next rover "Curiosity", a name offered by a sixth-grader.



My first 2009 Upper Deck Series 2 card


2009UDSafarte

I almost didn’t buy any series 2 Upper Deck cards.  After a horrible and damage filled experience with Series 1 (I just sent 3 packages off to Upper Deck – 120 cards – and I still have more to send), I figured I’d save myself some hassle and keep my sanity by just giving up.

But after reading the Upper Deck was trying to fix production issues (which I assume means trying to put out undamaged cards), I thought I’d give it one more try.  But I wasn’t going to blow a whole bunch of money on it, so I bought a rack pack box which should give me enough cards to fill my set.

Boy do I regret that decision.

“Hot boxes” aside, Dennis Sarfate is actually the perfect representation of Upper Deck for me.  After a solid 2008 that still had some issues, Sarfate appeared in 8 games this year, sports a hefty 6.39 ERA and is now on the disabled list for a numb hand.  A pretty big disappointment so far.  Upper Deck series 2 sports a heft 33% damage rate and has me numb with anger that I gave in and bought more of their cards.  It’s a perfect parallel.

Aside from the traditional printers line down the center of the card and the bent top corners with a visible crease on the back, the two packs I opened had cards with what appeared to be eraser marks, gouges, and more.  I should get my packages from Upper Deck from series 1 just in time to mail off these when I’m done.  Oh boy.

All of this makes me feel okay about saying  goodbye to Upper Deck’s baseball license if thier license is lost.  If they are going to put out crappy cards anyway, why keep them around?

Department of Foresight Planning

Seed_seal_2_o

Icon for the “Department of Foresight Planning” created by Always With Honor for Seed Magazine.

Pictures: Citi Field, Mic, Bats and Smurfs

Here are a few pictures that I took while wandering around Citi Field:

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The following is of a two-inch Smurf, on the telephone, which has been sitting on the ledge in the Mets dugout for two days by the stairs that lead to the clubhouse:

DSC_1105

Mike Pelfrey told me it is a good-luck charm, though he may have been joking with me.  In either case, several people said it belongs to the trainers, which, given the health of the team, may make this more of a voodoo doll if you ask me.

Roosevelt Island Bike Racks Cleared … So Cyclists Can Use Them

2009May_27_Space_Cleared.jpgPhoto: Roosevelt Island 360
The Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation, as promised, has begun confiscating bikes left overnight on public bike racks near the subway and tram stations. Roosevelt Island 360 reports that 17 bikes were removed as of Wednesday, while three others were tagged with warning fliers (RIOC needed a "special tool," not immediately available, to remove locks from the tagged bikes).

An email exchange between RI 360 and the RIOC reveals that, as of yesterday, one bike had been claimed "without incident" from the island's Department of Public Safety, where confiscated bikes are to be held 48 hours before being donated to a thrift store. Wrote public safety director Keith Guerra:

We are noticing that many residents have removed their bikes on their own and there is now plenty of room for those that wish to use the bike racks.

Gotta hand it to those Roosevelt Island bureaucrats: They sure have a way with words.

nymetsfans: you be the judge From 514, I didn’t think it...



nymetsfans:

you be the judge

From 514, I didn’t think it hit the sign. But my other half and the smart guy behind us thought it hit the Subway sign. When we were on the 7 going home, we talked to a guy who was sitting in the Pepsi Porch (and who talked to Kevin) and said they didn’t think it hit. And then we came home and watched Kevin describe how the people upstairs said “no” (and no one was doing the HR sign) and the people downstairs said “yes”.

I am astounded that these have all gone our way.

Shop Talk: Rachel Kichler of Rag & Bone

5-28-09.kichler.jpg British design duo Marcus Wainwright and David Neville's smartly cut and reliably infallible tailoring was born in Kentucky in 2002 with the help of deftly skilled, olde-worlde craftsmen. In order to maintain such an unparalleled attention to detail and quality standard, the designers of Rag & Bone proceeded to focus all major manufacturing efforts in American factories that solely sustain themselves by sewing garments in the same manner that they have for over 50 years. Their native British Savile Row tailoring has patently been the linchpin of Rag & Bone's allure and template influence ever since the Spring 2004 launch of their men's line and ensuing fall 2005 women's collection. Just before their British rock 'n' roll-tinged Spring 2009 presentation, Marcus and David opened their first flagship on Christopher Street: now a striking 1,600 square foot women's store that echoes the line's innovative and vintage sensibilities with its authentic tin ceiling, mélange of mid-century and antiquarian furnishings and fixtures. Two doors down is an 1,800 square foot men's store boasting rugged wooden beams, bona fide slate floors, and exposed brick. The Rag & Bone flagship showcases the growing lifestyle brand's six annual men's, women's, and children's collections (Spring, Summer, Pre-Fall, Fall, Holiday and Pre-Spring) as well as exclusive collaborations including their renowned hand-tailored suits by Martin Greenfield Clothiers for Rag & Bone, namesake footwear in partnership with Tull Price (founder and president of Royal Elastics from 1997-2004) and handmade leather gloves co-created with Dents. Name: Rachel Kichler Age: 24 Location: West Village Chosen occupation: Sales associate at Rag & Bone since December 2008 Unchosen occupation: Film writer/director... I hope to choose it eventually! Side-gig: I run an online magazine called glasses glasses and blog. Work "uniform": Rag & Bone with a few vintage pieces slipped in here and there. How would you describe the shop's aesthetic and Marcus and David's design philosophy? Both the store and the line itself fuse Marcus and David's British upbringing with their present New York surroundings. As for their design philosophy, Marcus and David privilege quality above all else –- with wearability following in a close second. For additional inspiration, the designers look to the cinema, modeling their looks after those in their favorite films. For example, the fall line stems from a combination of Kurosawa's Seven Samuri and Star Wars. What is the typical customer that comes into the store like? Do you have a mostly uptown or downtown clientele? The clientele varies depending on the store (men's vs. women's). In general, the majority of our male customers live in the surrounding vicinity. The women, on the other hand, tend to be more a mixed crowd of both uptown and downtown. Of the Rag & Bone signatures -– angular Savile Row tailoring, perfect tees, tux shirts, "haraki" pants, supple cardigans, sleek denim, etc. –- what is the most sought-after by customers in store? In general, I think that people tend to come to us for our denim, tailored shirting, and Martin Greenfield's impeccable suiting.

Martin the Tailor from Ed David on Vimeo.

What is currently the most coveted pre-Fall item of the staff ? I think every girl who works in store now owns a Smith T-Shirt in one of its various iterations. ...and for you personally? I am in love with my Lacuna dress –- despite the fact that my grandfather was less-than-comfortable with its length during a recent visit. Of your Fall/Winter 2009 orders, what are you most looking forward to arriving in stock? I'm really looking forward to the Fall '09 shoes. The samples look amazing; if they're anywhere near as comfortable as our first batch from this spring, we'll have quite a winning product on our hands... or feet, rather. Rag & Bone's Fall '09 collaboration with Loro Piana has not only generated elegant waterproof wool coats, but a stellar press response from fashion editors and eager fans alike; if you could personally select any established or under-the-radar designer to join forces with next season, who would you choose? I would love to see an eyewear collaboration with someone like Moscot, as the brand has such an old New York kind of feel. What is your absolute personal favorite Rag & Bone jean style (fit and denim color)? Why? I most prefer our new denim leggings because they are the skinniest jeans we offer. I especially like the black ones because they have leather on them. What do you most enjoy most about working in the West Village? I live in Bushwick, which is more or less an industrial wasteland. It's nice to see things such as, I don't know, trees. Rag & Bone men’s store: 100 Christopher St., (212) 727-2999 Rag & Bone women’s and children’s store: 104 Christopher St., (212) 727-2990

Photo



Tim O'Reilly on the newly-announced Google Wave

real-time collaboration tool with an open protocol, blurring the line between email, IM, and personal publishing  

The History of Beer Cans

20090528-beercans.jpg

Photograph from Michigan Beer Buzz

Weburbanist rounds up photos of beer cans since the 1930s and shares the history behind beer can design. Although I'm a fan of this uber-generic design, there's an interesting reason behind the need to jazz up the cans:

After methods of packaging beer into durable cans were developed, the real treat for consumers and collectors were the colorful designs on the cans. Beer would still not taste great coming from a can for several decades. Manufacturers began releasing special edition and novelty cans with lively images and color schemes to attract consumers and compensate for the canned beer taste. Some of these early cans, if still in good condition, are now worth thousands of dollars to collectors.

Related
Best Destinations for Beer Lovers
An Evolution of Pabst Advertising
Beck's Canvas: Putting Beer and Art Together

Google Bike Parking

bike_racks.jpg

This is pretty neat: The Department of Transportation just released mapping data identifying the locations of more than 97 percent of the public bike racks in New York City. The data currently contains 5,968 of the 6,100 bike racks that have been installed as part of the DOT's CityRacks program. The data is in .kml format, which can be displayed on Google Earth and similar applications.

Very Interesting Article

We're watching very closely for news about this afternoon's meeting between President Obama and Palestinian Authority President Abbas at the White House. (I'm also curious why they're holding it so late in the afternoon; but that's another matter.) In the ether there's also this pretty direct back and forth today between Secretary Clinton and the Netanyahu government on the settlement issue.

But what just caught my attention was this article MJ Rosenberg just flagged in today's Yediot Ahronoth. It's an interview with former US Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk which is very blunt about Israeli intransigence on this issue. There's no English language version of the article but MJ has translated and flagged some key quotes.

I used to think of Indyk as on the mildly dovish but essentially mainstream, which is where I used to consider myself. But I didn't think of him as someone who'd say stuff like this or voice a very different view of the 2000 trainwreck than is generally accepted here in the US.



Way Shape Form: why teach for America


//See more splendid work from Matthew Boyd and River Jukes-Hudson by clicking on the image// Alumni of Art Center's literary arts magazine, Fishwrap, were invited to design titles for The New York Times Magazine's annual College Issue. Our assigned article weighed the pros and cons of a volunteer teaching program for ambitious college graduates.

Busta Rhymes On Leaving Aftermath, "I Had A Successful Career Run Before I Got Over There" [Video]

Former Aftermath artist Busta Rhymes recently detailed his reasons for leaving Dr. Dre's record label and how he turned elsewhere for his latest release.

[Visit SOHH.com for more information]

Jeff Veen announces Typekit, licensing and hosting for web font embedding

short on details, but glad someone clever's trying to bridge the gap between developers and foundries  

Social A’s: When Two Men Fall In Love….

Social A'sDear Lady of Answers,

Last summer, I met the love of my life. He is entrancing, gorgeous, hilarious, unusual, and has many other good qualities. All of my friends, to a wo/man, are thoroughly, 100% approving. Lest anyone be bitterly judging me, please know that I had been dating extensively (and apparently wrongly) for TWENTY-THREE FUCKING YEARS.

When two men fall in love and wish to merge their assets, or, should I say, in my case, their debts, a strange new world of options awaits them. For instance, my gay upstairs neighbor recently appeared with a ring on his finger. He is affianced! (That is a word that always reminds me of “refinanced” and I suppose it’s not too much different, don’t you think?) I was shocked. I suppose I am from another time, even though I am from the Generation X.

I have spent most of my life avoiding man-on-woman weddings, as I have been of the opinion that no one should marry until all could marry. But now it seems everyone can (offer void in 44 states). So, should I?

I was never told when and how and why to marry, because it was never going to be an option. I am old enough and experienced enough to judge character, and to know myself, and know when I’m in love. But I don’t have any idea, or any training, regarding how I should know that I should be married, or when, or why, or where, or with what flowers, or with what best wo/men…. Or should I even engage with the patriarchy at all? Why be boring for a blender, as the lesbians say. Oh, ACK, in the immortal words of Cathy!

Signed,

Formerly Always Never A Bridesmaid

Dear Formerly Always Never,

First of all congratulations. You have attained the summit of possible human achievement. (Really!) Now grab it with both hands and don’t let go!! (Not really.)

Not that I am going to actually try to dissuade you from being married, FANAB. I am as much of a sucker for the ceremony of the bells and lace as the next Joni Mitchell. And simply by being gay you have eliminated like 50% of my possible objections to the institution of marriage—the “to love, honor and obey” stuff that creeps in among the readings from J.G. Ballard and Cambodian translations of Cranberries songs at even the most alterna- of modern-day heterosexual weddings. Women who think they want to be married have to grapple with the historical role of marriage as a tool the patriarchy uses to subordinate women; you are not a woman so, head on over to the Tom Ford boutique, pick up one of those little registry stun-gun things and start zapping!

OK, but actually put the stun-gun down and let’s talk about a couple of practical details for a second.

You raise an interesting point when you mention the similarity of the words “affianced” and “refinanced.” Now, if you are planning to jointly own property or jointly raise some children, legally turning your relationship into a small business makes practical sense. But the logic that two people ought to mingle their bank accounts simply because they are in love—well, that has always seemed flawed, to me. Money, as Cyndi Lauper so astutely pointed out, changes everything. Think of the last time you had a relationship—not a romantic relationship, necessarily, but a roommate relationship or parent-child relationship—where you felt financially beholden to someone, or someone felt financially beholden to you. Did that dynamic subtly poison the relationship?

Without the cushion of cultural assumptions like “I’m the man and I’m the provider, it’s my job to take care of my family,” the merger aspect of marriage seems to me to be a recipe for inevitable conflict. But then again, so does having to keep track of who paid for what in a relationship where both parties maintain their fiscal independence, so this issue is not a dealbreaker so much as it is, like, something to keep in mind. There is actually a lot of boring, legal stuff to keep in mind. That’s the thing about marriage: on the one hand, it is this quasi-mystical union of souls, and on the other hand it is like a trip to the DMV.

Also, are you going to, you know, forsake all others? I know this is horribly old-fashioned and unrealistic of me, but I think you should. I guess open marriages work for some people, but let’s be honest about the fact that those people are, for the most part, crazy freaks. (Or: fans of subtle emotional torture and denial.) I mean, shit happens, but preplanned shit with rules happening constantly just seems like it defeats the purpose. And there is a purpose, right? Let’s quickly run down a list of bad reasons to get married:

1) Might as well.
2) To make your single friends have to spend a day with the thought “What if I never find this kind of love” in the back of their minds at all times.
3) For housewares.
4) To make your parents happy.
5) In order to have a big party where people have to treat you special while they seethe with tragic envy (see #2).
6) Possibility of appearing in Vows column.

So what are the good reasons? Well, I can really only think of one.

Recently a friend of mine went out for drinks with a mutual friend of ours who’s getting married soon. When my friend got back from the drinks I asked, “How is [Mutual Friend?]”

“He’s freaking out about the wedding.”

“Why?”

“I don’t know … maybe because it’s terrifying to imagine spending the rest of your life with the same person? I mean, don’t you think it’s terrifying to imagine spending the rest of your life with the same person?”

“It is totally terrifying to imagine spending the rest of your life with the same person,” I said, and I meant it.

It is terrifying! Of course it is terrifying. But I still felt disquieted by this conversation, and I only figured out why a few days later, when I realized that there is a corollary to what I’d said.

I don’t think it’s possible to love someone so much that the horror of “till death do us part” is eliminated. But maybe it’s possible—I want to believe that it’s possible—to love someone so much that this terror get superseded by a bigger fear. So if your terror of spending the rest of your life without this person outweighs your terror of spending the rest of your life with him—then, FANAB, you should marry him.

Oh, and I like this place, for flowers, if you’re doing it in New York.

Questions? Write to advice at theawl.com!

The Slow Inevitable Death of American Muscle

A metaphor for the current state of the American auto industry: two cars in an art gallery crashing into each other over a period of six days.

Slow Car Crash

(via today and tomorrow)

Update: This exhibit is currently on display at The Boiler in Brooklyn. (thx, jeff)

Tags: art  automobiles  jonathanschipper

“Tweet Tweet Tweet Tweet Tweet” (c) 2009, The Awl

Copyright THISSo: “I admit, I think a protectable Tweet exists in theory. I have read hundreds if not thousands of Tweets and have yet to read one I believe would be protectable, but the possibility exists. The question is not: Are Tweets Copyrightable. The question is: Is This Tweet Copyrightable. The copyrightability of Tweets is not dependent on the fact that they are Tweets. Rather, it’s dependent on the analysis of the Tweet in question. The all-encompassing response that all Tweets are either protected or not protected is misguided. The real response is that it depends. However, when you analyze most Tweets, they would never individually pass copyright muster.” [Via]

Tonight: Tell Transpo Planners Your Ideas for the Next Round of BRT Routes

offset_bus_lane.jpgNYCDOT photosim of an off-set bus lane. Physically-separated lanes are also being considered for some routes.

Preparations for the next phase of Bus Rapid Transit in New York City ramp up tonight with the first of seven public workshops to gather ideas for future routes. Tonight's workshop gets underway at 6:30, at the College of New Rochelle (it's in the Bronx -- 332 East 149th Street, between Morris and Courtlandt Avenues).

The city's first rapid bus corridor, on Fordham Road, has sped trip times by 20 percent and attracted 5,000 additional riders each day. Now New York City Transit and DOT are looking to collect "feedback on where new BRT routes should be established and how they should operate." In a recent report, "Introduction to BRT Phase 2" [PDF], the agencies identified more than 30 potential corridors for BRT service. These workshops will help winnow the field down to about 10 corridors.

As for how the routes operate, the Phase 2 report lays out all the options, from fare payment to station design. The most significant variable to weigh in on is probably lane treatments. Planners are considering an array of options, including off-set bus lanes, busways that run along the median, and -- for wide streets with lots of bus traffic -- physically separated lanes.

Head over to DOT's website for the full schedule of BRT workshops. The next one is scheduled for Tuesday in Jackson Heights.

Went Walkabout. Brought back Google Wave.

Back in early 2004, Google took an interest in a tiny mapping startup called Where 2 Tech, founded by my brother Jens and me. We were excited to join Google and help create what would become Google Maps. But we also started thinking about what might come next for us after maps.

As always, Jens came up with the answer: communication. He pointed out that two of the most spectacular successes in digital communication, email and instant messaging, were originally designed in the '60s to imitate analog formats — email mimicked snail mail, and IM mimicked phone calls. Since then, so many different forms of communication had been invented — blogs, wikis, collaborative documents, etc. — and computers and networks had dramatically improved. So Jens proposed a new communications model that presumed all these advances as a starting point, and I was immediately sold. (Jens insists it took him hours to convince me, but I like my version better.)

We had a blast the next couple years turning Where 2's prototype mapping site into Google Maps. But finally we decided it was time to leave the Maps team and turn Jens' new idea into a project, which we codenamed "Walkabout." We started with a set of tough questions:
  • Why do we have to live with divides between different types of communication — email versus chat, or conversations versus documents?
  • Could a single communications model span all or most of the systems in use on the web today, in one smooth continuum? How simple could we make it?
  • What if we tried designing a communications system that took advantage of computers' current abilities, rather than imitating non-electronic forms? 
After months holed up in a conference room in the Sydney office, our five-person "startup" team emerged with a prototype. And now, after more than two years of expanding our ideas, our team, and technology, we're very eager to return and see what the world might think. Today we're giving developers an early preview of Google Wave.

A "wave" is equal parts conversation and document, where people can communicate and work together with richly formatted text, photos, videos, maps, and more.


Here's how it works: In Google Wave you create a wave and add people to it. Everyone on your wave can use richly formatted text, photos, gadgets, and even feeds from other sources on the web. They can insert a reply or edit the wave directly. It's concurrent rich-text editing, where you see on your screen nearly instantly what your fellow collaborators are typing in your wave. That means Google Wave is just as well suited for quick messages as for persistent content — it allows for both collaboration and communication. You can also use "playback" to rewind the wave and see how it evolved.

As with Android, Google Chrome, and many other Google efforts, we plan to make the code open source as a way to encourage the developer community to get involved. Google Wave is very open and extensible, and we're inviting developers to add all kinds of cool stuff before our public launch. Google Wave has three layers: the product, the platform, and the protocol:
  • The Google Wave product (available as a developer preview) is the web application people will use to access and edit waves. It's an HTML 5 app, built on Google Web Toolkit. It includes a rich text editor and other functions like desktop drag-and-drop (which, for example, lets you drag a set of photos right into a wave). 
  • Google Wave can also be considered a platform with a rich set of open APIs that allow developers to embed waves in other web services, and to build new extensions that work inside waves.
  • The Google Wave protocol is the underlying format for storing and the means of sharing waves, and includes the "live" concurrency control, which allows edits to be reflected instantly across users and services. The protocol is designed for open federation, such that anyone's Wave services can interoperate with each other and with the Google Wave service. To encourage adoption of the protocol, we intend to open source the code behind Google Wave. 
So, this leaves one big question we need your help answering: What else can we do with this?

If you're a developer and you'd like to roll up your sleeves and start working on Google Wave with us, you can read more on the Google Wave Developer blog about the Google Wave APIs, and check out the Google Code blog to learn more about the Google Wave Federation Protocol

If you'd like to be notified when we launch Google Wave as a public product, you can sign up at http://wave.google.com/. We don't have a specific timeframe for public release, but we're planning to continue working on Google Wave for a number of months more as a developer preview. We're excited to see what feedback we get from our early tinkerers, and we'll undoubtedly make lots of changes to the Google Wave product, platform, and protocol as we go.

We look forward to seeing what you come up with!

Posted by Lars Rasmussen, Software Engineering Manager

Social Media Editor

Social Media Editor: I heard a rumor that NYT’s controversial new Social Media Editor, Jennifer Preston, had never heard of Twitter before she started her job. Maybe that’s a little hard to believe, but she…

Chrome Extensions

Slides from Aaron Boodman’s presentation on the upcoming Chrome extension API at the Google I/O conference. Looks very good, and very Google-y: Chrome extensions are simply signed bundles of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, taking advantage of HTML5 features for drawing and database storage.

Brooklyn Bowl Inches Closer to Opening

Williamsburg: Last week, the folks over at the massively delayed mega-venture Brooklyn Bowl sent over a few pics of their finished giant space. But it was only last night that we got to see the finished product in action. Rock music played over the speakers, a disco ball spun near the giant stage, and the flat screen TVs mounted by the ends of the lanes projected weirdly mesmerizing scenes of the ocean. Upstairs, the greenroom for bands is equipped with a full shower and soon, a private roof deck.

Our assessment: if this place isn't outrageously priced (no word yet on menu, show, or lane prices), it could be a fun hipster-fied, Dave and Busters-esque alternative to the Gutter and maybe even a go-to for the people that will supposedly move into The Edge and Northside Piers.

The certificate of occupancy finally came through yesterday, they're picking up their liquor license today, and they're going to fire up the grills (Blue Ribbon is in charge of the food) asap. It should open to the public in the next couple of weeks.
· Eater Inside: Brooklyn Bowl [~E~]

Flashback: Obama Once Led Push for ‘Complete Streets’

With Congress out of town on its Memorial Day break, the nation's capital is a quiet place to be -- but all of that will change next week, as the appearance of the House transportation bill is expected to kick off an intense battle to reshape federal policy on transit, bikes, roads and bridges.

obama_1.jpgBefore he was president, he was a fan of "complete streets." (Photo: whitehouse via Flickr)

Many urbanites remember the last congressional transportation bill as a disappointment that pushed a pro-highways approach while forcing transit projects to compete for a small slice of the federal funding pie. But that 2005 transportation clash brought us some instructive moments that escaped the mainstream media's focus at the time.

As a semi-regular feature on Streetsblog Capitol Hill, I'll be looking back at past transportation debates that have the potential to impact the upcoming re-write. For today's installment, let's look at the "complete streets" amendment that fell six votes short of passage in 2005 but had a pretty crucial sponsor: then-Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL).

The "complete streets" amendment submitted four years ago was similar to the legislation that was recently re-introduced in both the House and Senate. It would have required state DOTs to account for bike paths and pedestrian access wherever feasible and required metropolitan planning organizations that serve populations of 200,000 or more to appoint a coordinator for bike-and-ped programs.

Obama did not speak in favor of the amendment, but the future president's early endorsement of complete streets principles provides a powerful tool to livable streets advocates working on this year's transportation bill. Few arguments are as effective in Washington as a charge of flip-flopping -- to which the Obama administration risks exposing itself if it doesn't support a national "complete streets" policy in this year's bill.

What's more, if senators maintained their past positions, the Obama "complete streets" amendment would almost surely pass into law today. Since the proposal lost by six votes in 2005, 11 GOP Senate seats have flipped to the Democratic column (including party-switcher Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania).

Of course, "complete streets" may be included from day one in the Senate's next transportation bill, especially now that the House has added similar language to its climate change legislation. But that would open the door to a GOP amendment striking "complete streets" from the bill, and to the same tired and false rhetoric that Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO) used to kill the Obama amendment in 2005:

What this amendment says is: If you are planning a highway from Leftover Shoes to Podunk Junction in the middle of a state with nobody around, you would have to plan for a bike path. We have a lot of roads through our Ozark hills and farmland where the danger is inadequate two-lane highways. People are not going to ride bicycles along those highways. They need the lanes to drive their cars. Putting an additional planning burden on agencies that don't want or need bike paths is another unwarranted mandate.

"I'm Pregnant," And Other "Lies" Twitterers Say Women Tell

Need a healthy dose of gender stereotyping, with an added dash of creepy? Check out the newly-popular Twitter tag #liesgirlstell, where men and women list all the ways ladies are supposedly stretching the truth.

#liesgirlstell surfaced earlier today, perhaps as an offshoot of the also-popular and also-icky topics #3wordsaftersex and #3breakupwords. The "lies" seem to fall into three basic categories.

— Scary

It's not the lies themselves that are scary here, it's the mentality of someone who assumes — or behaves as though — these are lies. Like this one:

I_SEYMORE_CAKE #liesgirlstell i dont give head

Even if this is a lie, and she has, in fact, "given head" to other guys, aren't you obligated to take her at her word here? Call us bonerkillers, but we think a woman's statement of what she will and won't do in bed should be taken as gospel. After all, just because she's done something once doesn't mean she'll consent to do it again, or with every partner.

sabret00the RT @ThreeWaysIn: #liesgirlstell I don't want to try anal sex

Um, how did you find out this was a lie? By assuming no meant yes? Creepy.

— Insulting

The insulting category paints women as lying bitches who are out to trap men. To whit:

itsjay_yadigg #liesgirlstell im pregnant

Or, in longer form:

ShivFrost RT itsjay_yadigg #liesgirlstell I'm pregnant .... preach it jay...only suckers get fooled...i wanna see the test turn positive infront me

"I'm pregnant" isn't a liegirlstell — it's a liebadpeopletell. And trust us, ShivFrost, most women are as afraid of getting unintentionally pregnant as you apparently are of being lied to about it.

causticbob #liesgirlstell I'm on the pill

Don't believe her, causticbob? Use a condom!

— White

Many of the liesgirlstell on the list are white lies, meant to make guys feel better about their — usually sexual — deficiencies.

MicaDsGirl #liesgirlstell its not too small

First of all, women say this truthfully all the time. And second, is MicaDsGirl really advocating that women laugh uproariously every time we see a member that's not up to our standards? Or that men second-guess every compliment about their penises? What good does it do to add more insecurity to the world?

causticbob #liesgirlstell I love the way you taste

Again, quite possibly true. And even if not, why look a gift horse in the, um, mouth?

Nicki_Diamond #liesgirlstell "No! I don't think your mom is overbearing"

This is a classic white lie, one intended to keep the peace and avoid insulting a partner's loved one. Obviously honesty in relationships is important, but so is diplomacy. If women uttered every single uncharitable thought they were thinking, they wouldn't have any friends, let alone boyfriends. And the same, of course, is true of men. Probably the smartest tweet on #liesgirlstell is this one:

sarahinrainbows
#liesgirlstell - the same bloody lies that boys tell; this is the 21st century,! What's with all the misogyny, and girls joining in too!

While women may not tell exactly the same lies men tell (men can't say they're on the pill — yet!), the sad truth is that people of both genders lie to each other from time to time. We lie to make people feel better and we lie to cover up our bad behavior. Anyone who thinks lies are solely the province of women is not only a misogynist but a poor student of human nature. Current.com cites a twitterer who says, "the topics #liesguystell and #liesboystell exist but funnily enough neither are as popular as #liesgirlstell." We're not sure it's all that funny, and maybe the relative unpopularity of #liesguystell is just an example of men getting a pass while women get criticized, but one thing's for sure — both sexes tell lies, and no one Twitter tag could ever list them all.

#liesgirlstell [Twitter]
#liesguystell [Twitter]
#liesboystell [Twitter]
Twitter Outs All Lies Girls Tell [Current.com]

Google Wave: What Might Email Look Like If It Were Invented Today?

Yesterday's Google I/O keynote highlighted the power of HTML 5 to match functionality long experienced in desktop applications. This morning, Google plans to announce an HTML 5-based application - still very much in the early stages of development - that represents a profound advance in the state of the art.


Lars and Jens Rasmussen, the original creators of Google Maps, will take the stage to unveil their latest project, Google Wave. As Lars describes it, "We set out to answer the question: What would email look like if we set out to invent it today?"


That is exactly the right question, and one that every developer should be asking him or herself. The world of computing has changed, profoundly, yet so many of our applications bear the burden of decades of old thinking. We need to challenge our assumptions and re-imagine the tools we take for granted. It's perhaps no accident that this project, carried out secretly at Google's Sydney office over the past two years, had the code name Walkabout. That's the Australian aboriginal tradition of going off for an extended period to retrace the songlines and learn the world anew.


In answering the question, Jens, Lars, and team re-imagined email and instant-messaging in a connected world, a world in which messages no longer need to be sent from one place to another, but could become a conversation in the cloud. Effectively, a message (a wave) is a shared communications space with elements drawn from email, instant messaging, social networking, and even wikis.


It turns out that Jens had the idea back in 2004, when Google first acquired the company that became Google Maps. As Lars tells the story:


We were excited to join Google and help create what would become Google Maps. But we also started thinking about what might come next for us after maps.


As always, Jens came up with the answer: communication. He pointed out that two of the most spectacular successes in digital communication, email and instant messaging, were originally designed in the '60s to imitate analog formats — email mimicked snail mail, and IM mimicked phone calls. Since then, so many different forms of communication had been invented — blogs, wikis, collaborative documents, etc. — and computers and networks had dramatically improved. So Jens proposed a new communications model that presumed all these advances as a starting point....


We started with a set of tough questions:


  • Why do we have to live with divides between different types of communication — email versus chat, or conversations versus documents?
  • Could a single communications model span all or most of the systems in use on the web today, in one smooth continuum? How simple could we make it?
  • What if we tried designing a communications system that took advantage of computers' current abilities, rather than imitating non-electronic forms?



Responding in Context


Let's say I want to communicate with someone. I start a wave, just as I might start an email message. The recipient(s) see an incoming wave, just as they see an email today. Where the magic starts is with replies. In email, you have the choice of including no context, only a portion of the message you're replying to, or the whole thing. In the first case, you need to go back to the original message for context; in the second, you have wasted copies going back and forth. Come into the middle of a long thread and you may be replying to a discussion that has already moved on or covered the point you want to express. But what if there were only one message, shared in the cloud? Now, your comment on the second paragraph is attached directly to that point in the conversation. There are no redundant copies of portions of the message, as replies are seen in context.


As you can see in the screenshot below (click to enlarge), a Wave inbox looks much like an email inbox. But look to the right, and you can see how the replies are embedded right into the middle of the original message, so Stephanie's question about what camera Jens used for his photos appears right in context.


Google_Wave_snapshots_inbox.png


Now, you might ask how well this works for long, complex messages rather than the short one shown in the demo. I don't know the answer, but I suspect that Wave will be even stronger in that case. Our experience with collaborative editing of book manuscripts at O'Reilly suggests that the amount and quality of participation goes up radically when comments can be interleaved at a paragraph level.


Is it a particle or a wave? It's both.

First generation email/IM integration let you see when someone was online, and opt to instant message someone rather than send them an email. Wave simply erases the distinction.


If both people are online at the same time, a wave acts just like an instant message -- except that you see each character as it is typed, just like in subethaedit. "In our experience, a lot of time in IM is spent waiting for the other person to press 'Done'," says Lars. (However, it is possible to set Wave to hold your messages till you are done.)


A key point here is that Google's relentless focus on reducing the latency of online actions is bringing the online experience closer and closer to our real world experience of face-to-face communication. When you're talking with someone, you know what someone is saying before they finish their sentence. You can respond, or even finish their sentence for them. So too with Wave.


The real-time connectedness of Wave is truly impressive. Drop photos onto a wave and see the thumbnails appear on the other person's machine before the photos are even finished uploading.


Step by step playback draws a cheer


Let's say you are added to a conversation (a wave) that has been going on for a long time? You can be added at any relevant point, not just the end. But even cooler, you can do a playback of the entire evolution of the conversation.


But wait: there's more! Let's say you want to edit your message (or even a message that was written by another participant in the wave). Yes, you can. The original author is notified, but every participant can see that the message has been modified, and if they want, can replay the changes.


This leads to a change in behavior: conversations become shared documents.
The screenshot below shows a simple example, as Gregory and Casey collaborate to produce a good answer to Dan's question. As Stephanie Hannon, the product manager for Googe Wave, said to me, "In Wave, you don't have to make the choice between discussing and collaborating."


Google_Wave_concurrent_edit.png


As anyone who's used version control knows, a document with lots of discussion and edits can become pretty messy. No problem. You can export an edited wave as a new wave, and start over. "One of our design principles," says Lars, "is that the product of a wave can be as important as the original wave."


Nor do you need to include everyone in every part of a conversation. Essentially, Lars, says, "waves are tree-shaped sets of messages. You can shape a subtree, or a sub-conversation and limit the set of participants in any way you like."

Wave as a Platform

Wave is more than a product. As Lars explains:

The Google Wave product (available as a developer preview) is the web application people will use to access and edit waves. It's an HTML 5 app, built on Google Web Toolkit. It includes a rich text editor and other functions like desktop drag-and-drop (which, for example, lets you drag a set of photos right into a wave).

Google Wave can also be considered a platform with a rich set of open APIs that allow developers to embed waves in other web services, and to build new extensions that work inside waves.

The Google Wave protocol is the underlying format for storing and the means of sharing waves, and includes the "live" concurrency control, which allows edits to be reflected instantly across users and services. The protocol is designed for open federation, such that anyone's Wave services can interoperate with each other and with the Google Wave service. To encourage adoption of the protocol, we intend to open source the code behind Google Wave.

Anyone who's followed my writing knows that I'm a huge fan of simple systems with extensible architectures. So I was excited to see that the team didn't lard lots of features into the core product, but instead added new features via the Wave APIs, much as they hope third party developers will do.

One useful extension, Polly (Poll-y) lets you incorporate polls into a wave. In the wave shown below, participants are asked whether they can make it to a party. Responses appear immediately in the wave. That's the way these things ought to work! No jumping to a website to see the results of an Evite or a poll.

Google_Wave_map_yes_no_maybe.png

(I should note that the ever-prescient Jon Udell showed how to hack existing tools to similar effect in his 2001 book Practical Internet Groupware. It was one of the books I'm proudest of publishing, despite its commercial failure. It was just too far ahead of its time.)

The API has been used to build a bunch of cool extensions: Bloggy, a blog client, lets you make a blog post as a wave. When people comment, they join the conversation. Spelly is a spell-checker that uses the entire corpus of the web as its dictionary. Linky is a link-recognition engine that is clever enough to recognize that the link you just entered is a YouTube video, or a link to a photo, and give you the option to embed the target of the link into the wave. There's even a twitter client - you can tweet into and out of a wave! And of course, buggy, a bug-reporting tool that can also be a participant in a wave.

Wave can also be used as the base for interactive games. For example, here's a real-time interactive chess game in Wave:

Google_Wave_inbox_chess.png


Open Source, Open Protocol, and Federated Wave Clouds

Google wants other providers to adopt Wave - the protocol allows federation between independent Wave clouds. The team hopes that Wave will become as ubiquitous and interoperable as email and instant messaging, not just a Google product.

I support this vision. The Wave team has done a great job, but for Wave to really succeed, it needs to become a new fundamental service on the net. An open protocol means that anyone can build their own Wave services - everything from Wave servers to Wave extensions. But open source means that people can push the envelope in adapting the service to new environments, devices, and use cases.

I'm hopeful that the industry will take up the challenge, and build on what is being shown at Google I/O this morning. Eric Raymond noted that every open source project begins with a plausible promise. There's no question that the plausible promise is on stage this morning. I hope the folks in the audience at Google I/O, as well as those at Yahoo!, Microsoft, and elsewhere, get on the bandwagon as well. I'm eager to move from email and IM to Wave!

Aside: The fact that this application was built using GWT and HTML 5 really emphasizes Vic Gundotra's points from yesterday, that web applications can not only match, but can even beat the functionality of native apps. It's not just HTML 5, though. It's the commitment to the lightweight nature of the web, to real-time, to lightweight components connected by open protocols rather than to monolithic systems.

Make it New!

Ezra Pound once wrote: ""The artist is always beginning. Any work of art which is not a beginning, an invention, a discovery is of little worth." And elsewhere: "Make it new!"

Even more than the application itself, I love the way Wave doesn't just build on what went before but starts over. In demonstrating the power of the shared, real-time information space, Jens and Lars show a keen understanding of how the cloud changes applications.

When I saw Wave for the first time on Monday, I realized that we're at a kind of DOS/Windows divide in the era of cloud applications. Suddenly, familiar applications look as old-fashioned as DOS applications looked as the GUI era took flight. Now that the web is the platform, it's time to take another look at every application we use today, and ask the same question Lars and Jens asked themselves: "What would this look like if we invented it today instead of twenty-five years ago?"

For more information

The following links may not be live until the end of this morning's keynote at about 10:15 am Pacific time:

wave.google.com: the eventual home for Google Wave. For now a place to learn more and sign up to be notified when we launch

code.google.com/apis/wave: home for the API, documentation and sample code.

waveprotocol.org: home for the protocol specs (draft), whitepapers and a discussion forum about the open google wave protocol

Typekit: real fonts for the web

Typekit is an upcoming typeface hosting service which will provide vetted fonts that you can include in your site's stylesheet using the @font-face mechanism.

That's where Typekit comes in. We've been working with foundries to develop a consistent web-only font linking license. We've built a technology platform that lets us to host both free and commercial fonts in a way that is incredibly fast, smoothes out differences in how browsers handle type, and offers the level of protection that type designers need without resorting to annoying and ineffective DRM.

What a great idea. And web entrepreneurs pay attention, this is how to make a compelling online property: take an idea that everyone loves in theory but doesn't use in practice because it's a pain in the ass (in this case, embedding type on the web) and offer a hosting service to solve that problem. YouTube did this with videos, Blogger/Blogspot, TypePad, & Wordpress did this with blogs, Flickr did it with photos, etc. etc.

Tags: typekit  typography  webdev

Introducing Typekit

Jeffrey Veen announces Typekit:

That’s where Typekit comes in. We’ve been working with foundries to develop a consistent web-only font linking license. We’ve built a technology platform that lets us to host both free and commercial fonts in a way that is incredibly fast, smoothes out differences in how browsers handle type, and offers the level of protection that type designers need without resorting to annoying and ineffective DRM.

Launching this summer. If this is even half as good as it sounds, it’s going to be awesome. The one eyebrow-raiser for me, though, is that they’ve announced the project without naming a single participating foundry.

Gay marriage lies

TNR’s got a good summary by Jonathan Chait of how the arguments against same-sex marriage are all pretty much ridiculous bullshit. Here’s my favorite part:

The most striking thing about anti-gay-marriage arguments is that they dwell exclusively on how heterosexuals would be affected. Heather Mac Donald of the conservative Manhattan Institute writes, “I fear that it will be harder than usual to persuade black men of the obligation to marry the mother of their children if the inevitable media saturation coverage associates marriage with homosexuals.”

I suppose you could imagine, somewhere, a black man telling his friends he’s going to propose to his pregnant girlfriend, only to be taunted, “Marriage? That’s so gay,” and think better of it. I don’t find this very likely.

But read the whole thing, there’s plenty more to enjoy.

An Open Letter to Mayor Bloomberg

paulsmithgarbagebin.jpegDear Mayor Bloomberg,

See this rather large rabbit. He's actually a five foot tall trash receptacle designed by Paul Smith as part of London's Super Contemporary Commissions Show.

He, along with his bunny friends, will today become part of the Covent Garden and Holland Park neighborhoods. When you throw trash in him, his ears literally light up.

How cool is that? Don't you think that will make kids and adults alike more excited about throwing away their trash?

We know you love beautifying this fair city of ours. So how about enlisting Marc, DvF, Donna, Oscar and the crew to design some chic garbage bins of our very own? And let's not limit it to just Manhattan. Let's take this project to every borough.

We know times are tough and budgets are tight. But we bet the CFDA would get involved. And some environmental groups too.

If there can be lounge chairs in the middle of Times Square, there can be fashion-forward trash bins, right?

xo,

F




Related: London - Times Square - Michael Bloomberg - Covent Garden - Holland Park

"This game finally gave me something to get angry about. It dawned upon me: CitiField is dumb. The..."

“This game finally gave me something to get angry about. It dawned upon me: CitiField is dumb. The signs (and other stupid design flaws masquerading as “quirks”) make it difficult or impossible for the umpires to judge home runs. How stupid is that? The SNY broadcasters have an obstructed view seat. How foolish can you get?? The bull pen looks like a concentration camp. The few championship banners they have are hung somewhere in the bowels of the park. Some of these things can be changed I guess, but you have to wonder over the numb nuts that purposefully designed this.”

- It’s Mets For Me

Hugs! REALLY! Teenagers Hugging! SWEET MOTHER OF CHRIST!

hugz
Were I more professional, were there world enough and time, I would hold off on mentioning this front page New York Times expose that blows the lid off the whole teenagers hugging “phenomenon” until I had something illuminating to say about it. But it’s early, and I’m tired, and Jesus, what DO YOU EVEN DO ABOUT THIS?

Hugging appears to be a grass-roots phenomenon and not an imitation of a character or custom on TV or in movies. The prevalence of boys’ nonromantic hugging (especially of other boys) is most striking to adults. Experts say that over the last generation, boys have become more comfortable expressing emotion, as embodied by the MTV show “Bromance,” which is now a widely used term for affection between straight male friends.

I mean, I just… I… oh, FUCK IT. CANNOT DEAL. I need a hug.

Fortune: Palm Pre syncs flawlessly with iTunes

Filed under:

We've previously reported on the emerging showdown between Apple and Palm over Palm's latest phone, the Palm Pre. The phone, set to come out the weekend before Apple's Worldwide Developer's Conference, is already said to have several technological improvements over the iPhone.

But now, there's an additional incentive to those who may not want the original iPhone. Fortune magazine has discovered that if you plug a Palm Pre into a Mac, it will sync content from iTunes with no issues. According to the article, the iTunes Music Store will recognize the Palm Pre the same as it does an iPhone or an iPod. However, it will not load the DRM-protected music that the iTunes Music Store used to sell.

The article states that there is third party software that provides a bridge between non-Apple devices and iTunes. However, the Palm Pre has the code built right into the device -- a boon for those wanting an alternative to the iPhone, but possibly setting the teeth of Apple's legal team to gnashing. To date, there has been no response from Apple, but previous analysis has suggested that Apple just might have a case against Palm.

[Via CNNMoney.com/Fortune Magazine]

TUAWFortune: Palm Pre syncs flawlessly with iTunes originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 28 May 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TPMDC Morning Roundup

Obama held a big Hollywood fundraiser last night. Everyone knows that, but does everyone know (we refer to these in the office as Kleefeld-isms):

Fun fact: one of the celebrity attendees was actor Kiefer Sutherland, who is of course the star of the right-wing favorite TV show 24 -- and is also the grandson of the late left-wing Canadian politician Tommy Douglas, considered by many to have been the father of universal health care in his country.

That and the day's other political news in Eric Kleefeld's TPMDC Morning Roundup.



Happy Birthday Jean Pierre-Leaud!

What do François Truffaut, Jean-Luc GodardMing-liang Tsai, Olivier Assayas, Philippe Garrel, Aki Kaurismäki, Jacques Rivette, Jean Eustache, Bernardo Bertolucci, Catherine Breillat and Pier Paolo Pasolini have in common?  Well, beyond being amongst my most favorite film directors, it turns out they all cast Jean Pierre-Leaud in their films. Making him, in short, one of the most important actors of the past 50 years.

It is hard to imagine cinema without Jean Pierre-Leaud and the quirky, often selfish and childish characters he has played throughout his career.

He is also very much the guy lady cinephiles dream about while they sleep.

Look below for some classic JPL moments.

*photo by Jessica N. Diamond CC

Say My Name Say My Name

For about ten years, Slate has had an intermittent series of articles that explain how to pronounce names of people who are in the news. As someone whose (first) name is frequently mispronounced, I can appreciate the effort. (For the record: I pronounce it like the word "anneal", used in glassmaking.)

Amusingly, the column has been running for so long that they've had the opportunity to offer more than one way to say "Pinochet", with the Chilean dictator having eluded earlier attempts at pronunciation. Due to Slate's weird archives, earlier must-hear words don't show up in that archive, including frequently-used conversation starters like Qatar and Abu Ghraib, and a host of others piggybacking under the also-excellent Explainer feature that is one of my Slate faves.

Note: Daniel Murphy is 24 Years Old

In last night’s win, Daniel Murphy had a career-high five RBI, including a ‘home run,’ and a run-scoring single and a two-run double.

Murphy also made an error in with two outs in the ninth inning on a ground-ball from Christian Guzman, and had trouble picking up a low throw from Ramon Martinez in the first inning.

Following the game, Murphy told reporters that Jerry Manuel essentially banned him from taking extra batting practice in the indoor batting cages this week.

…man, he does love the cage… in spring training, he was in that sucker every time i walked by… and, in the few times i have walked by the cage in Citi Field, i’ve seen him in there or hanging around the cage a ton too

from what i understand, manuel believes muprhy’s slump could be the result of overworking in the cage, which is not all that uncommon for young players, who are used to a different workload and rhythm in the minor leagues

Murphy had just one hit in his previous 16 at bats, during which he’s batting average dropped roughly 10 points.

He’s now hitting .262 with 17 RBI on the season.

i am not sure why people forget he’s just 24 years old, and still has less than 300 at bats for his career… he’s learning, not just about major league pitching, but he’s learning the pace of the game, how to manage his body and stay strong over the course of a long season, complete with coastal flights and odd game times, etc… as a fan, i tend to take that stuff for granted, i just expect these guys to hit, period, end of story… but, the reality is, they’re kids, growing, learning, adjusting, etc., and doing it at a level of play they’re not entirely used to… it takes time… this is not t o say he should be allowed to strike out every at bat for three weeks, i mean, the team has to win too

Wieters Cometh


Via MLB.com:
The Orioles will call up prized prospect Matt Wieters on Friday, ending one of the most closely monitored holding patterns in recent memory. Wieters, perhaps the top offensive prospect in baseball, will be promoted from Triple-A Norfolk and will assume the starting catching job immediately upon his arrival.

Andy MacPhail, Baltimore's president of baseball operations, explained the timing on Tuesday.

"He's been on quite a streak the last 10 days, and today in Norfolk he's 4-for-4 with a couple RBIs," MacPhail said. "He's made the progress. The power's starting to come and he's over .300 as we speak. It's time. He's done what he needed to do at that level. We just wanted to make sure we didn't get into a circumstance where he had to go back. We're reasonably comfortable that this is a good time for him and we're going to give it a shot."
And more importantly, we'll be given the chance to see how another featured member of the Better Know a Prospect Series fares at the major league level! My jinxes explode with delight!

Nat Sweep In Citi Field's Unfriendly Confines

Mr. Met
We were in Citi Field Wednesday night for the Mets 7-4 win over the Nationals, completing a three-game sweep. A weird night overall, from Murphy's Subway home run to Fernando making his first rookie mistake (run, Fernando, run!) to Johan doing an Ollie imitation.

Plus Citi Field was a massive distraction last night, thanks to the new exclusivity rules in the bars and my first fight with a drunk at a Met game in a few decades. More on that later.

First the game: despite no Reyes, Church, Delgado and the rest of the injured parade, the Mets put up a good fight. Johan was erratic, striking out 10 but walking 6 along the way. With a 3-0 lead in the 4th, Johan came a bit undone, giving up a massive 2-run homer to Adam Dunn that almost hit the old Apple beyond the bridge. Later in the inning, Santana walked in the tying run. Ugh.

But the Mets did not let themselves get beat by a lesser team. Murphy redeemed himself for a missed catch at 1st in the first by crunching a 2-run homer in the 5th. At least it was a home run eventually. The ball hit the Subway sign on the Pepsi Porch, now known as Wilpon's Folly, as our owners' desire to create a quirky homage to dead old stadiums not named Shea resulted in this ground rules trivia question. The umps had to leave the field and review the tape. Meanwhile, 40,000 of us in our seats were not allowed to watch an instant reply on the two giant Citi Field screens. Eventually, the HR was acknowledged and the Mets kept the lead for good.

It should be noted that just below Wilpon's Folly, young Fernando Martinez made a great catch early in the game, crashing into the bullpen at one of its nooks (or is that a cranny?). A great catch all but forgotten when, during his next at-bat, Martinez watched as his meager pop-up in front of home plate fell out of the catcher's glove. By the time Fernando ran, it was too late - he was out at first and in the dog house of impatient Met fans. Welcome to the big leagues. It can only get better from here kid, unless you cut a rap record with Lastings Milledge.

But I'd say Citi Field had a worse night. The stadium itself is fine and I'm getting to like the sight lines. But last night's experience was the opposite of my Citi Field trip a few weeks back. Last game, O entered the Promenade Box bar and enjoyed the view while dining and drinking - very civilized. Last night, when my Dad and I tried to enter, we were stopped by two ushers who demanded our tickets, then informed us we didn't have access. But I was here last game, I reasoned. "We've changed our policy," I was told. So the Mets have gone back to excluding fans from even the most modest of bars. Never mind that the food and restaurants are touted as a selling point for the stadium. Never mind that the Promenade Box Bar was EMPTY. Never mind that I had cash in hand and was not afraid to spend. We walked out and pocketed the dough I would have gladly coughed up to the Mets. Foolish.

But this policy is nothing compared to the Ambulatory Rules of Citi Field. As previously mentioned, our seats are in the last row of our section, on the same level as the Promenade walkway. Folks are allowed to stand directly behind us. Most of the time, that's fine but occasionally people will stand there jabbering about anything but the game. Or a drunken lout or two will scream nonsense gibberish in the general direction of the field, their slobbering syllables passing first through my aching head.

Last night we asked the green jacketed director matron of our section to clear the area when folks were lingering too long. She said she can't - it's stadium policy to let people stand there. That policy was in full effect, when around the third inning, two drunk guys stood behind us to the side, talking on their cell phones and to two tourist ladies. They weren't directly annoying; most of the time they weren't even watching the game and were easily ignored. But when the ladies left, the guys finally noticed the game and began to randomly blurt out cheers. By the 6th inning, they were directly behind me. Finally, after one particularly loud random "Lets Go Mets," I politely asked the louder dude to move 10 feet in either direction. To which he replied, "I said lets go Mets, what the F#*& is your problem." This argument usually wins with me, at least it did 20 years ago. But not last night. Words were exchanged; Ron Hunt asked the dude where his seats were. he told us way up behind us.

And that's the galling part. Folks can buy inferior tickets, then move around the stadium as part of the "experience." Instead, they move to right behind us and set up beer camp and our "experience" is obliterated. A few minutes after our spirited debate subsided, I got up and talked with the drunk dude, explaining that when he cursed, he blew it. I don't care what you're chanting but don't curse me out in my seat. He apologized, we shook hands and he moved on. He was actually not a bad guy at all. The real problem here is the policy...and the "directors" whose job it is apparently is to stand around telling us about the policy. Our green jacket witnessed the whole affair and did nothing to intervene. Unacceptable.

Fred or Jeff, feel free to come sit with us one night and see if our experience matches what it used to be like in Ebbets Field.

Anyways, the Mets are in first with a day off to mend.

Apocalypse or Juan Pierre?

How discouraging must it be for National League teams to witness what the Dodgers are doing without Manny Ramirez in the lineup? You see a guy with Hall of Fame credentials sit for nearly two months, replaced by a speedy singles hitter and think maybe — just maybe — you’ve got a chance to gain some ground.

Then Juan Pierre goes out and forgets he’s not very good. No, he isn’t hitting like Ramirez — few people do — but he’s producing at a level (.404/.469/.544) that nobody could have anticipated. Granted, it’s a small sample, but Pierre has already covered more than one-third of Manny’s Surprise Vacation.

Even if he reverts to career norms tomorrow, Pierre has done enough damage to help keep opponents at bay. He is hitting like a legitimate big-league left fielder. That isn’t supposed to happen for any extended period of time, and when it does, it creates problems. What should be a weakness for the Dodgers isn’t.

One day you look up and realize that they are dominating with Pierre in the lineup. Then you remember that he’s just a temporary fix and that eventually Ramirez will return.

That can’t be a comfortable thought. I’m just sayin’.

Regular Expressions Cookbook

Detailed Solutions in Eight Programming Languages

May 27, 2009

Memorial Day

We reached Citi Field in time for the Mets batting practice, my first time witnessing this spectacle. The players were on right field, rolling on the grass, their arms and legs akimbo. Two stylish trainers would occasionally call out a drill and the guys would go into a different stretch, entirely out of synch. A flock of young women stood along the railing swooning as David Wright and Daniel Murphy twisted their hips. "I'm standing like twenty feet away," one woman said, talking into her cellphone. "Oh my god, he's looking at me!" another cried. Murphy and Wright looked back and laughed. Most of these players are younger than me, some quite a bit, a detail that really isn't relevant on the field. But in this particular crowd, the thought that any one of these players, with few exceptions, could be my younger brother was sobering. David and I moved quickly to get a better view of the pitchers, an area fraught with far less tension but where chances of coming way with a relic increase substantially. We ate Shake Shack burgers and and watched Stokes, Takahashi, Green and Parnell warm up. I was prepared to let go of our original idea: to ask Brian Stokes to sign my jersey, the one David, my husband, had custom ordered for my birthday last year, before Stokes was on the official roster.  I asked the person next to me if batting practice etiquette discouraged asking for a signature. "They sometimes toss up balls but they don't usually sign stuff," he said. "See, they don't sign stuff," I told David, admittedly, with some relief.  David kept reading his Mets program. "Just wait," he said.

Eventually, the guys started to wind down. Stokes sat down for a moment and looked around. "Do something!" I begged David, completely losing my nerve. He called out to Stokes, who turned in our direction and saw my jersey--Stokes 43--hanging over the rails.  He gave me a thumbs up. I gave him a thumbs up too. That seemed like a good story. 

A few moments later, Stokes got up and started signing some balls for fans further down the row. Most of the players walk past the balls scattered over the field, ignoring the entreaties of the fans. It's like feeding pigeons, David said. But Stokes was gracious and generous. I gathered my wits and waved my jersey in his direction. I insist that I called out to him but David is certain that I was mostly mute throughout this entire transaction. He came over and reached up for the jersey and our pen. "Where should I sign it?" he asked. "Anywhere!" I croaked. He signed his name in purple. "Over the heart!" I later exclaimed. "Or the boob," a friend noted. He tossed up the shirt and then reached down, grabbed a ball, and sent that up as well. I heard murmurs all around me. The purple Sharpie followed. A better story. 

The ball Stokes gave me is slightly worn, with grass stains along its red seams. It still has the scent of a new ball. I was prepared to turn my jersey into a relic, but the ball caught me by surprise.  I tossed it around yesterday as I contemplated new turns in my work. It has life in it yet.

Stokes jersey.jpg

Preserving the season

Bottling the magic of the bounty: It’s time to start thinking about how to preserve some of the bounty of spring and summer. A feature article by Julia Moskin in the New York Times has advice and opinion from several prominent practitioners, a brief overview of food safety issues, and more. Moskin points out two rather exciting projects. An upcoming project in San Francisco where over 80 participants are planning on processing 500 pounds of local apricots, and then each taking home a share of the preserves. And a group in Schoharie County, New York received a grant to open a new community canning facility. For those wanting to learn about preserving, the article mentions several books on the subject, includes links to websites, and has a step-by-step slide show. (New York Times)

Hg-Git Mercurial Plugin

We hear from a number of people who are using Mercurial for their projects but want to host them on GitHub because they want their project to benefit from the community here. Or perhaps they are in a group where some of the developers want to use Mercurial and others want to use Git and so they just stick with Subversion (ugh). We don’t want to live in a world where developers who are ready to switch to a DVCS end up staying with Subversion.

So, I’ve been working on a plugin for Mercurial that lets it communicate with a Git server as a native Git client. I give you hg-git!

This means that if you are a Mercurial developer you can install this plugin and then push and pull to and from Git servers, either GitHub or somewhere else. It is a lossless bi-directional bridge, meaning you can push to a Git server from one Hg user, then another Hg user can clone using this plugin and the node ids will all be identical. It can even handle things like tags, explicit renames, named branches, octopus merges and more.

The plugin is pretty far along at this point – I’ve been using it for all the hg-git development and I’ve heard from a number of others who are using it successfully even on relatively large projects. It is slow sometimes and may not handle some edge cases well, but the software is rapidly maturing. If you do use it, please let me know about any issues you run into, we want to make this rock solid.

There are no external dependencies – the library is entirely written in python and contains a pure python implementation of all the Git functionality it needs, so you don’t need to have Git installed locally at all. It has been known to work with Mercurial 1.1 and 1.2 – let me know if you try it with something else.

Usage

From Hg with the plugin installed, you can clone a Git repository like this:

$ hg clone git://github.com/schacon/munger.git

Or, if you have an existing Hg repository, you can run something like this:

$ cd myproject # (an Hg repository) $ hg gremote add origin git(at)github.com:schacon/myproject.git $ hg gpush

With those two commands you can basically import your Hg repository into a GitHub repository. Then people can fork and work on your code in Hg or in Git and push back up, then you can pull in any contributed work with something like this:

$ hg gremote add scott git://github.com/scott/project.git $ hg gfetch scott $ hg update

The basic commands the plugin adds to the Hg command library are ‘gclone’, ‘gremote’, ‘gpush’ and ‘gfetch’ – all roughly equivalent to their Git counterparts. Also, running a normal ‘hg clone’ with an identifiable Git protocol (git://, git+ssh://) will fire up ‘gclone’ automatically.

See the hg-git homepage for more information.

Note: Pedro to Fernando

1stfmartjerzMetsBlog reader Dykstraw sent in the following picture of a fan who used creative arts and crafts to turn his old Pedro Martinez jersey in to a new-and-improved Fernando Martinez jersey.

Nice work, buddy, whomever you are.

By the way, a person following me on Twitter suggested a home run from Martinez be referred to as an ‘F-Bomb,’ which I think is brilliant.

I hope this catches on, whenever he hits his first home run.

Plush Tauntaun Complete With Zipper Tummy And Removable Luke [Star Wars]

While it may not be as large as the tauntaun sleeping bag, this little disemboweled toy is still completely adorable and actually real.

Aw, look how cold Luke is. Hurry, zip open the tauntaun insides and shove him back in before he catches his death out here!

[Stitch Wars via Technabob]

Moby Responds!

moby
As you may recall, we recently held a contest -- ask Moby a question, and win tickets to see him play at the Natural History Museum tonight. Here are the two winning questions... and Moby's answers! "If disco lies does techno tell the truth?" Keith Lennington Moby says... "I guess it's tricky to expect too much truth from a genre that doesn't really have lyrics or vocals. but maybe that makes it more honest. Or, well, not." "When was the last time you rode a bicycle?" Alexander Ghali Moby says... "3 days ago I went to ride my bicycle only to find that the tires had become deflated over the winter. So I wish I could say it was 3 days ago, but it was actually last November." Photo by Jessica Dimmock

Chairs from The Incredibles

Jim Unwin collects virtual chairs, specifically the ones from the movie The Incredibles.

Chairs from The Incredibles

This is my dedication to the creative team behind Pixar's movie The Incredibles. I loved the depth of the world, the buildings, the gadgets and most of all I loved the chairs.

(via swissmiss)

Tags: furniture  movies  theincredibles

yes, let's.

from flickr via ffffound via @jenbee via 20x200 via email. you know how it goes.

Photo



First Drafts: Anthony Weiner’s Times Op-Ed

I may have made some of this upI WAS the kind of New York kid who played stickball in the street, made pocket change working at the local bagel store, kissed a nurse in Times Square when they announced the end of the war, and handed out leaflets on Election Day. I loved New York. I couldn’t imagine why people would live anywhere else, particularly someplace like Medford, Mass., which is right outside of Boston, home of the hated Red Sox. You ever hear people from Medford talk? That accent is insane. It just grates, right? I’m trying to think of someone you might know from Medford who talks like that, just for illustration purposes. I’ll keep thinking about it and get back to you.

I’ve spent a lot of time this year thinking about whether I should run for mayor. While that’s been the question on my mind, a lot of people I have talked to have asked a different question: “How can you win? Also, is working for Chuck Schumer as annoying as you expect it would be when you hear him at one of his innumerable press conferences?”

It’s easy to understand where they are coming from. (Especially on the second question, to which the answer is a resounding yes.) All you need to do is see the avalanche of television ads for Mayor Mike Bloomberg, whose huge war chest and incumbency can be daunting. Or as “daunting” as any 5-foot-6 man can be. (I’m a strapping 6 feet, by the way. Not that it matters. I’m just saying, I’m half a foot taller. I tower over him. He’d have to step on his huge pile of campaign money just to come up to my chin.) It’s also easy to understand the desire to focus on the horse race aspect of a campaign.

But for me, these have been side issues. What has animated me most during these past months is how much Washington has changed, and the potential for greater movement still. With a progressive sweep in all branches of the federal government, major economic reform, a new energy bill and an overhaul of health care ahead, this is a moment when ideas matter. And here’s the most important idea: There’s no fucking way I’m beating that dwarf. So why risk it?

The discussion of how to have a new kind of politics has taken on a special significance for me as I’ve contemplated running for mayor of New York City. About two months ago I announced that I would postpone deciding whether to run. I believed the issues we were confronting in Congress were important and decisions about campaigns could wait. I was also hoping the guy would realize that he’s one of the richest fucking people on the planet, does he really want to spend another four years frowning at firemen’s funerals? Mike, you’re a billionaire, give it a rest already. Three terms? Really? You must sit around meetings with allies and associates and wonder which one of them is gonna be your Donald Manes. This aggravation you need, with all your cash? Fugeddabout it!

But it’s also true that there is no escaping the reality that political campaigns have become longer and more negative, and often seem focused on style and non-issues instead of substance. “Managerial style,” for instance. Something you always hear about when it comes to this genius mayor of ours, what a great manager he is. Of course THEY NEVER BRING UP THE SEXUAL HARASSMENT he managed, DO THEY? It’s always, “Blah blah blah the mayor doesn’t even have an office! He sits in the center of the room!” Of course he does. SO HE CAN STARE AT EVERYONE’S TITS.

Anyway: The mayor is expected to spend $80 million of his own money in the race, more than 10 times what candidates who have not opted out of the city’s public campaign finance program, as Mr. Bloomberg has, can spend in a primary. With spending like that, regular debates about real issues will probably take a back seat to advertising. (I hope someone does a dancing Sharpton ad again, wasn’t that GREAT?)

As a native of Brooklyn, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t savor a good scrap. Because that’s what we do in Brooklyn: beat the shit out of everyone else. I remember coming up, my gang—we were called The Hooknoses, although no one was quite sure why—used to fight the Irish. The blacks mixed it up with the Italians. And everyone was down for a good rumble with the Puerto Ricans. I remember one time this Puerto Rican girl was dating a white guy and he wound up killing her brother after a climactic dance sequence. But back to the issue at hand: I’m disappointed because I’m increasingly convinced a substantive debate simply isn’t likely right now. Also, I have no fucking chance of winning.

The personal choice for me is whether to run for mayor this year. I’ve taken stock of my life, my work in Washington and decided that now is not the right time to run, particularly if I want to win. I believe I have a contribution to make in Congress fighting for New Yorkers. (I’d also like to build a family.) DID YOU KNOW THAT I AM DATING HILLARY HOTTIE HUMA ABEDIN? Oh, you did? Just thought I’d remind you. Huma’s half-Indian and half-Pakistani, by the way. Good demos.

I have respect for the leading Democratic candidate in the mayor’s race, City Comptroller Bill Thompson, a respect that only reinforces my conclusion that running in the primary against him in September would only drain the ability of the winner to compete in the general election. And, let’s be honest, neither one of us is beating Bloomberg anyway: Do I want to be the guy who primaried the black guy? That set Andy Cuomo back years. No thank you. I’ll sit around in Washington for another four years, making my ethnically diverse babies with Huma, and come back when a Democrat has a shot. I mean, it’s not like they’re gonna revise term limits, right? The City Council wouldn’t be so self-serving that they’d take a shot at that, even if Bloomberg promised to support their campaigns with his goodwill and massive stash of money? Nah, never happen. See you in 2013!

Oooh, you know what I just remembered? Mike Bloomberg? Massachusetts native. They used to call him “the midget from Medford.” Not that it matters. I’m just saying. Guy’s probably still a secret Red Sox fan. Anyway, bye!

Anthony Weiner is a member of the House of Representatives from Queens and Brooklyn who has no fucking chance of winning this year’s race for mayor.

The World's Worst Unicorn Tattoos

Unicorn_tattoos_1A

Wait, there's more!

Stadium Pizzeria, Bronx

Stadium Pizzeria, 113 E 157st, Bronx. My friends love this place. They're here after nearly every game they attend, which is nearly every game. Rice and beans on the menu, variety abounds. Best pizza in the city? No. Hike from new Yankee Stadium? Yes. Worth it? On occasion.stadiumpizza.jpg

Why Buy More Trains If You Can’t Afford to Run Them?

Down in balmy South Florida, D-Day is approaching for riders of the the popular Tri-Rail transit system. A looming $18 million shortfall has forced the Tri-Rail board to approve a budget that slices daily service and stops all trains by 2011 -- although ridership has doubled since 2005.

tri_rail.jpgTri-Rail trains like these could stop running by 2011. (Photo: National Corridors Initiative)

Tri-Rail's troubles are largely attributable to the bad economy, which has clipped the amount that the network's three participating counties can contribute to the transit system by an estimated $9 million. Making matters worse, the county aid must be matched dollar for dollar by the state DOT, doubling the size of that gap and forcing Tri-Rail to the brink.

As the Palm Beach Post noted yesterday, Tri-Rail's request that state legislators okay a $2 rental car tax to save transit service is hardly a politically extraordinary one. But the Post's editorial also reveals Washington's role in perversely perpetuating the funding crisis.

Here's the rub: Tri-Rail got $16 million for new trains in the recent stimulus bill, but none of that can cover the shortfall because federal money generally cannot be used to cover operating costs.

Making matters worse, the Federal Transit Administration has informed Tri-Rail that it risks losing a crucial $256 million grant if daily service dips below 48 trains. Meanwhile, members of Congress are requesting up to $400 million in earmarks to extend Tri-Rail service to the northern end of Palm Beach County. What's the use of money to lay new tracks if Tri-Rail can't afford to run any trains?

The simple fix for this conundrum would be allowing local transit agencies to spend money from Washington on operating costs, an idea welcomed by both Transportation Secretary LaHood and lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Yet the devil will be in the details, because expanding the potential uses for federal transit aid doesn't mean an automatic increase in the size of that pot of federal aid -- which is already illogically small. Saving transit systems such as Tri-Rail could mean a painful trade-off between building worthy new projects and making sure existing trains can run on time.

Focus on focusing

From The Real Time Web is a Beautiful Distraction:

The ability to pay attention, focus and strategically disconnect will be a winning discipline of the next generation of business leaders.

I'm not leading anyone anywhere, but this has certainly been a winning strategy for me.

Tags: attention

Emma and Sylvia Back in Stock!

After years of being out of stock, and people continually asking for them, I've started to reprint some of the older Celebrate People's History posters. I'm excited to announce that two of the most popular are now reprinted and available again, Ben Rubin's Emma Goldman poster, and John Gerken's Sylvia Ray Rivera!

02emmag_blog.jpg02sylviar_blog.jpg

My original hope was to reprint an old poster every other month for 2009, but two things have gotten in the way. On the downside, sales have dropped a little, so I don't have the cash flow to stick to that schedule. On the upside, I have been getting lots of great proposals for new posters, to the extent that for the first time ever I have a backlog of designs waiting to print. Given limited cash, and lots of new posters on the ready, I think I'll be focusing on getting the new ones out for the rest of the year. If there is an old People's History poster you would like to see back in stock, let me know, and I'll see about reprinting it in 2010. If you are an artist/designer and have an idea for a new poster, let me know as well!

The other drama

During the TV coverage of the NBA playoffs, the NBA is running commercials showing great moments in playoff history that have been edited to isolate the players from the crowd. There's Bird stealing the inbound pass, Dr. J's improbable behind-the-backboard reverse layup, and Kobe lobbing the ball to Shaq for a thunderous dunk.

The Kobe/Shaq clip is worth a closer look because although the NBA picked this clip because it represents a dramatic moment in the NBA playoffs involving two of the best players in history on a storied team, what it actually shows is how dysfunctional Shaq and Kobe's relationship was even then, in their first championship season.

Bryant creates 95% of the offense here by crossing Pippen over and throwing a perfect lob to O'Neal. O'Neal throws it down and the camera follows him as he heads down the court yelling in celebration, totally blowing right past Kobe, who has his hand out to high-five Shaq. Kobe half-heartedly grabs at O'Neal's forearm as he passes; Shaq doesn't even notice. From his celebration, you'd think Shaq had made an amazing play, but Kobe made that whole thing happen. And if you look at the box score for the game, it was clearly Bryant's game: he had 25 points, 11 rebounds, 7 assists, and 4 blocks to O'Neal's 18/9/5/1.

The unedited clip of the play1 shows an awkward ending to this awkward moment. After celebrating with the Laker bench, Shaq looks for Kobe and the two finally acknowledge the play together. But it's a brief moment; they slap hands and go their separate ways, foreshadowing Shaq's departure four years later.

[1] What's also striking about the clip is that it shows just how much Kobe has improved the mechanics of his game since then. Even though he makes a great play here, he's still got those jittery feet that characterized his early career, at times looking like a dog skittering around on freshly polished linoleum. Any stuttering footwork is now long gone, replaced by the silkiest and smoothest of movement.

Tags: basketball  kobebryant  nba  shaquilleoneal  sports  video

Why we're posting a Michelle Obama speech as today's TEDTalk

Today's TEDTalk is unusual. It wasn't recorded at a conference, but at a public event. And it features America's first lady, Michelle Obama, who's never been to a TED conference. What happened here?

Well, first of all, TED is strictly nonpartisan. In fact, we tend to stay away from politics altogether. But our mission is "ideas worth spreading" -- and this talk features an idea that absolutely belongs in that category. Michelle Obama visited a girls' school in London during her recent trip to the UK, and issued a passionate, personal plea for the students to take education seriously. It's hardly a new idea. But we felt that the way it was expressed was eloquent and inspiring -- and well worth a slot here at TED.com, especially considering that young adults are the fastest growing section of our audience.

So we informed the White House of our plans, contacted the BBC to obtain the footage, and created the edit posted here.

In the coming months we plan to feature a number of talks that we consider "best of the web." So long as they're short, powerful and contain an idea worth spreading, we're eager to feature them.

We'd love your feedback on this first one. Love it? hate it? Appropriate for TED? Please view, ponder, and comment!

Getting the right photo

Art Wolfe details the process he went through to get just the right photo of some Chinese fishermen. There were many false starts.

By the time I was ready for the next shot, the darkening evening sky balanced the light somewhat. A 16mm focal length endowed the image with the depth I wanted and, combined with an f16 aperture, ideal depth of field. Waning light necessitated a one to two second exposure. Although blurred moving birds ruined most of the shots, they blocked direct light from the lanterns. I was making progress.

Perhaps even more interesting that Wolfe's process is the fishing method employed by his subjects; they use birds, not nets or poles:

For centuries fishermen on the Li River of Southern China have partnered with cormorants to catch fish. Each fisherman has a complement of half a dozen or so trained birds. The light of a lantern attracts the fish, and the cormorants return to the boat, fish in beak. They can't swallow them because the fisherman fix a band around their necks, but they eventually get their share.

(via penmachine)

Tags: artwolfe  photography

Japanese Gamers Can Now Order Food on Wii Demae (Catering) Channel

From Slice

20090526-wii-catering-channel.jpg

Why do the Japanese always get all the cool stuff? Awesome vending machines, monkey waiters, and now the Nintendo Wii Demae (Catering) Channel, which allows gamers to order pizza and other food with a flick of the wrist.

According to the blog Destructoid, the channel works in tandem with an existing food-delivery service. You still have to pay cash money at the door—the Demae Channel doesn't take Nintendo Points.

Related
Top 10 Crazy Asian Pizzas
Mobile Street Food in Tokyo, Japan

Movin' on Up

Obama jokes about getting upgraded to the presidential suite at Caesar's Palace. Watch.



Sotomayor: The Case Against Confirmation

She roots for bombersAbsent massive scandal—and one would think that by now the White House has finally figured out this whole “vetting” thing—Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor is pretty much a guaranteed confirm. Never mind that the Dems already have 59 votes plus the Republican ladies from Maine on their side; the only Republicans who are going to vote against the first (blah blah blah or is she) Hispanic Justice are the total dead-enders from states where the Latino vote is irrelevant. And they probably should! Come 2010 it’s not going to make a difference what they’ve done or said; the only thing that’ll matter is how the economy’s doing and whether Obama gets the credit or blame for it. If you’re a Republican these days you’re pretty much resigned to sitting on the sidelines and hoping for total financial disaster. And with your fate out of your hands, why not go for broke and be as crazy right-wing racist as you can? I mean, if you somehow do make significant gains in the next election, don’t you want to say that it was your firm adherence to crazy right-wing racist policies that brought America back to your side? All of this is a long-winded way of me saying these guys should have one big crazy right-wing racist hoedown, just for the fun of it. Here’s a start: I want Jeff Sessions to stand up on the Senate floor next to a blown-up version of this picture of the judge and her nephews at a Yankees game and ask why the kids are throwing gang signs and does it signify Sotomayor’s soft-on-crime judicial philosophy? It’d be crazy right-wing racist, sure, but it would also be totally enjoyable. It’s not like they’ve got anything else going on in the Republican caucus; why not have some fun?

Automatic Dice Thrower

Impressive:

The Dice-O-Matic is 7 feet tall, 18 inches wide and 18 inches deep. It has an aluminum frame covered with Plexiglas panels. A 6x4 inch square Plexiglas tube runs vertically up the middle almost the entire height. Inside this tube a bucket elevator carries dice from a hopper at the bottom, past a camera, and tosses them onto a ramp at the top. The ramp spirals down between the tube and the outer walls. The camera and synchronizing disk are near the top, the computer, relay board, elevator motor and power supplies are at the bottom."

Click on the link and watch the short video.

As someone who has designed random number generators professionally, I find this to be an overly complex hardware solution to a relatively straightforward software problem. But the sheer beauty of the machine cannot be denied.

What I am curious about is what kind of statistical anomalies there are in the dice themselves. At 1,330,000 rolls a day, we can certainly learn something about the randomness of commercial dice.

Untitled

Birds

Postcard: Toscani, Casacuberta, Bettler, Studio Astrid Stavro

(via but does it float, making a powerplay for mc dominance now that thenonist is gone)

Fried Egg Light

20090527-friedegglight.jpg

When people ask you, "Why do you have a fried egg on your wall?" just press the yolk while saying, "Because it does this!" and wow them with your glowing plastic representation of a breakfast food. $9.90, from gadget4all.com [via Unique Daily]

Related:
Fried Egg T-Shirt
Fried Egg Furniture
Uses for Fried Eggs [SE Talk, 4/8/09]

Justice

Here’s a little news story of direct interest only to people in Vancouver, but it’s pleasant and uplifting; made me smile and might please others too. And it gives me a chance to gloat a little bit.

The History

What happened was, partly in preparation for the Olympics coming here next year, several layers of government got together and built a big subway line (the Canada Line because the Feds paid most) from downtown through the airport, much of it along Cambie Street, very near where I live.

As a side-effect, the merchants along Cambie street pretty well got raped. The subway, which had been pitched as a bore-from-underneath project, suddenly at the last minute turned into a “cut-and-cover” project. Here are a couple of pictures from August 2007 that illustrate what “cut and cover” means.

The Canada Line under cut-and-cover construction The Canada Line under cut-and-cover construction

You can just make out the awnings and signs of the businesses along either side. You can’t hear the continuous roar of heavy equipment or feel the endless grit and dust in your lungs and on your clothes. This state of affairs persisted for multiple years. As well you can imagine, business was not good. I wrote about it before in Going, Going, Gone.

The Court Case

It turns out that Susan Heyes, one of the victims, got mad enough, and was determined enough, to take three levels of government, the public-transit company, and the subway contractors, to court for damages. Today, she won.

Well, not entirely. She sued for misrepresentation, negligence, and nuisance, and only won on the nuisance count. Also, the various levels of government got off the hook, leaving the transit company and contractor holding the bag.

I actually spent an hour today reading the whole 72-page PDF of the decision, and I have to say that Judge Pittfield, he da man! It’s remarkably lucid and readable; I’d sure hate to have to file an appeal against it.

Why This Makes Me Happy

First, it’s an illustration that the workings of justice occasionally line up with what you and I would consider common sense. The judge’s arguments concerning why, although Ms Heyes was arguably misled, this did not consitute “misrepresentation”, and while the experience was nasty, this did not constitute “negligence”, are pretty compelling. And the argument about “nuisance” seems to suggest that the legal and everyday meanings of that word are remarkably similar. Yes, the construction was a big damn nuisance, and apparently the law says, straightforwardly enough, that one party may not wilfully inflict a damaging nuisance on another without incurring some responsibility for the consequences.

(OK, I admit that the judge’s reasoning as to why the Federal, Provincial, and City governments got off the hook went too far into legal technicalities for me to follow.)

The second pleasing thing about this is that I’m reminded that, to quote David Brin, “I am a member of a civilization.” And in this one we have a legal system which, however imperfect, can be used by a shopkeeper to take on three levels of government and a huge company and deliver what smells to me like real justice. There are lots of places in the world where this could never happen.

May 26, 2009

Public repo, Drizzle support, and call for Sourceforge voters

I was initially going to call this quick entry "All the small things" but then talked myself into keeping it informative anyway. Then again they seem small to me, but might be huge for someone else, eh?

First, we now have a public Subversion repository. It's a read-only mirror hosted at Google Code, the project name is sphinxsearch. Changes are currently svnsync'ed hourly. Likely to add a post-commit hook a bit later. Disclaimer: I did not know we could do it that easily, only learned about the possibility of syncing earlier today. (Thanks fly out to Alexey Vinogradov.)

Second, Eric Day made a patch that enables Sphinx support for Drizzle - thanks a lot! Chances are we're integrating this into 0.9.9-release, when time permits; the patch looks fine at a glance, but I still want to review and actually try it for myself before committing.

And third, last but not least, I just realized that Sourceforge Community Awards 2009 are not only in progress, but actually closing nominations phase on May 29th (if not by May 29th) ie. there's less than two days left. So if you feel that Sphinx is worth the Community pick, you can vote here right now. SysAdmins, Developers, and Enterprise all seem fitting categories to me. Curious if we can at least make it through nominations with almost no time left; according to CCA schedule, we'll all know that in a month. Thanks in advance to all voters!

Summer Reading 2009

As many of you know, due to my arm injury I was unable to maintain a list of Summer reading suggestions last year . However, my arm is much better this summer, and so I present you with the first installment of this year's list of lists.

Summer Reading for Adults:
Steven King: Seven Great Books for Summer
ALA: Best genre fiction titles named to 2009 Reading List
The Daily Beast: The 13 Hottest Summer Reads
NPR: Best Fiction For Every Kind Of Summer Day
NPR: On The Hunt For Fabulous Fiction
NPR: For Summer Sleuths: Best Mystery, Crime Novels
NPR: The 10 Best Summer Cookbooks Of 2009
Examiner: Summer reading blockbusters
Examiner: Summertime and the reading is easy: Top five summer reads
Examiner: Sustainable summer reading
Examiner: Summer reading list: Part 1
The Dallas Morning News: Summer Reading Suggestions
The Dallas Morning News: 4 thrillers for summer reading
Newsday: Ten books for summer reading
Central Florida Future: Staff Summer Reading List
STL Today: Summer reading list from SLU libraries
2009 CSAF Reading List (selected by the Air Force Chief of Staff for service personnel)
Bill O'Reilly's 2009 Summer Reading List
Jane Austen Today: My Top Ten Jane Austen Sequels
ID-ology: The books we love most right now (branding and business titles)
One-Read: 2009 List of Suggested Titles

Childrens and Young Adult Books:
List of Lists: Top 10 Summer Reading Lists For Kids and Teens: 2009

Bonus links:
10 Books to Read Before They Hit the Big Screen
15 Influential Early Works of Apocalyptic Fiction (ranging from 1805 - 1941)

Maybe We Just Want To Be Near Hooper's Store, Richard Florida

But [Sesame Street] was never just about improving test scores. Perhaps the most radical part of the Sesame DNA has always been its social activism. From the start, Sesame targeted lower-income, urban kids—the ones who lived on streets with garbage cans sitting in front of their rowhouse apartments.

Newsweek, on the 40th Anniversary of Sesame Street

I’d wager that the blind watchmakers of Sesame Street’s DNA did not foresee that the side effect of this strategy (working in symbiosis with The Cosby Show) was that a zillion middle-income kids from the suburbs grew to adulthood with a mysterious desire to move to a brownstone with a stoop. It’s like television toxoplasmosis.

You Want Blood You’ve Got It After participating in a...



You Want Blood You’ve Got It

After participating in a dozen tedious Memorial Day conversations, I was hoping someone would finally put the nail in the coffin (oh gawd) on this BloodCopy debacle, and I guess Gabriel sorta does that. Except it doesn’t answer the only question that mattered in this stupid thing the entire time: IS THE PARTY ON OR WHAT?

Sotomayor and the Republicans

Put on your seatbelts. Many Republicans have been itching for this fight. They figure if they can make Sonia Sotomayor appear "too liberal," "too activist," or "intemperate" -- and cause Obama to withdraw her nomination, or if they can defeat her outright -- they can slow the Obamomentum that's leading to universal health care, cap-and-trade, more spending on education, and higher taxes on the rich. This would also give them a crack at winning back a number of seats next November, which they know they can't win if their major issues are torture and taxes and if their major spokesmen are Dick Cheney and Rush Limbaugh.

But if they choose to vilify Sotomayor, Republicans take a huge gamble. They could lose even more women and Hispanic voters in 2010 and beyond. And they could alienate even more Independents already turned off by the Republican "just-say-no" approach to almost everything.

Besides, it will be hard for Republicans to pigeonhole Sotomayor. Although as an appellate judge she has sided with defendants, inmates, convicted felons, and environmentalists, she has also taken decidedly conservative stances. In 2002, she ruled against an abortion rights group that claimed the so-called "Mexico City Policy," prohibiting U.S. funding for foreign groups performing or supporting abortion services, violated their First Amendment rights. She reasoned that the government is "free to favor the anti-abortion position over the pro-choice position." In a 2004 case she ruled in favor of anti-abortion protesters who claimed a city had improperly trained police officers who allegedly used excessive force on them. And she has ruled against a number of minority plaintiffs in discrimination cases.

And she has an impeccable upward-through-education-and-hard-work pedigree: She grew up in public housing in the Bronx, the daughter of a factory worker, and got a law degree from Yale.

Still, never underestimate the Republicans' capacity for taking big political risks that turn out badly. Remember Sarah Palin? Republicans may figure that they're so badly decimated already, so marginalized and irrelevant, there's little to lose and possibly much to gain by going negative on Sotomayor and unleashing their terror-TV and rant-radio attack dogs. It's also possible that without much remaining of any moderate view inside their own ranks, Republicans may simply lack the wisdom -- dare I call it judiciousness? -- to opt for a more sensible strategy.

On Redesigning the Front Page of Talking Points Memo

Alexander Shaw on the redesign of Talking Points Memo, one of my favorite web sites.

15 Minutes

20090526-ak-skoal.jpg

My skål shot finally went up on the French Culinary Institute's blog Cooking Issues. It's part of Dave Arnold and Nils Norén's Skoal/Skål Project. I'm in good company. Cheers!

The News Is Its Delivery Vehicle

Sometimes Your Quark Goes CrazyAs a sort of appendix to thoughts about the New York Times and Carlos Slim, there are also these excellent thoughts about what makes a tabloid newspaper a news operation. A news product is, in many ways, made of its own delivery vehicle—and this is a point that’s obvious to a man who, for example, essentially gave away cellphones to millions of people to then charge them for cell phone service. Hello!

The basic circumstances that may make a story impossible to put on the cover of your newspaper on a given morning are not in the control of the editors: How is the paper distributed? When does it have to reach trucks/planes to get that distribution? When does printing have to start for the paper to reach the trucks?

Underground projects in NYC

The New York Transit Museum has developed an extensive online version of their The Future Beneath Us exhibit, featuring eight NYC-area underground projects that are currently under development. The exhibit is on display in two Midtown locations until July 5. (thx, michael)

Tags: exhibitions  museums  nyc  thenewyorktransitmuseum

Feministing’s Fifth Anniversary Party

I often refer to the fabulous site Feministing.com for blog news, so I must promote the upcoming Feministing fundraiser/party. On June 12th in New York City, Feministing is celebrating their five year anniversary and also raising money to support their site. The event is open to readers, friends and feminists alike to have some cocktails, enjoy some great entertainment, and help support the site and its growth. The ladies at Feministing have blogged for free during the first four years the site existed, and only in the last six months had begun to dip into ad revenue to pay themselves small stipends (as they should!) and to make the blog even better. So attend the anniversary party and help support this wonderful take action-oriented site.

World Economy Propped Up By Naked Carla Bruni Photos

Who DOESN'T have a nude picture of Carla Bruni at this point?Yet another topless photo of French first lady Carla Bruni is up for auction. This one was taken by photographer Pamela Hanson in 1994, and is titled “Carla Bruni in bed.” A source close to Nicolas Sarkozy says the French president “has no problem with this because he knows that the only images of his wife in existence are tasteful, and also wants to remind you that he is, in fact, all up in that on the regular.”

The ‘New Yorker’ On Carlos Slim And The ‘Times’

Carlos And Unidentified FriendI have emerged victorious from reading Lawrence Wright’s Carlos Slim profile in this week’s New Yorker. (The article is about the Mexican billionaire-mogul, in light of his financial entanglement with the New York Times.) Here are a few thoughts.

  • One incredibly irksome thing that writers keep doing, when writing on the situation of the Times, is describing the layoffs at the Times in this way: “[T]he Times had resisted making the sort of staff cuts that have decimated newsrooms all over America. But in April Times employees were informed of a five-per-cent pay cut. Soon afterward, a hundred employees were fired from the business side.”

    Well, actually, the Times company got rid of 750 people in the course of a single week not very many months ago! But no one actually cares about the physical laborers, and the drivers, and all the people who used to be involved in putting out a paper before the company’s profit-model crashed and burned. The sacred newsroom, though! All A-OK! Sort of, not really!

    But to have executive editor Bill Keller say that the “people you need to actually be the New York Times” are the “reporters, editors, photographers, graphic artists, and Web producers” is noble and maddening. The people you need, to be the Times, once were the pressmen and the delivery men. Now they are the online advertising sales people.

    But I won’t take him too strongly to task, since at least he included web producers in his list of all things that are good. (Boy, the Times sure changed its attitude fast! How they used to sneer at blogs.)
  • It is epically hilarious, when the New Yorker is struggling financially, that this article is not online. They believe that this is a good financial choice.
  • The support expressed for Arthur Sulzberger, Jr. by the likes of Thomas Friedman and Frank Rich—at least, when they are speaking on the record!—is absurd. Rich: “Any change in ownership would be highly traumatic.” You know what’s going to be traumatic? Chapter 11. Friedman expressed his hope that any future partners with the Times would be “a junior partner to the Sulzberger family,” whatever that vague and strange construction means. In any event! This is not the actual story of the viewpoint inside the New York Times about Arthur Sulzberger, Jr. right now.
  • The New Yorker did itself a disservice with the question-mark sub-headline about Carlos Slim. “[W]hat does he want with the ‘Times’?” Answer: Read between the lines, if you must. There is a long accounting of the growth of his various companies, which were largely bought up during financial crisis and which operate as, essentially, monopolies. The comparison is fair! Yet there is no answer at all to the question. Time will tell! Maybe we will know while there is still a New Yorker to tell us about it.

This is a bad, bad idea.

ninety9:

spiers:

(**Yes, I realize that neuroscience is more complex than distressed debt valuation. But you need professional training for both. And thankfully there aren’t any neurosurgeons out there craven enough to write the “hello everyday citizen! Why sit back and watch everyone else make money off of brain surgery?  Why leave it to the rarified world of professionals? Do you know how much neurosurgeons get paid? A lot, that’s what! With the boom in brain surgery, why shouldn’t you get a piece of the action?” book.)

Pfft. Neuroscience and distressed debt valuations? Just guild society charlatans meeting in lodges with secret handshakes designed to keep the free man from cutting a swath through the thicket of unnecessary regulation! If only Adam Smith were alive today to protect us from those damned regulators of brain surgery.

It’s already de facto regulated, for the most part. (Most significant distressed debt is tied up in institutions like hedge funds. And you have to be an “accredited investor”—net worth of $1MM—to put money into a hedge fund.) But even if it were fully regulated, there’d be some jackass writing a book about how YOU, TOO, CAN PUT MONEY INTO DISTRESSED DEBT EVEN THOUGH YOU’RE TECHNICALLY NOT ALLOWED TO. And some other jackass who’d buy it. We’ve already seen that with hedge funds. And there’s a not-insignificant lobby of people who think the accreditation requirements should go away to “democratize” hedge fund investing.

It’s hard to save people from themselves when they don’t want to be saved.

Prop 8 Ruling

Prop 8 Upheld The website of the California Supreme Court went down about 20 minutes before the decision was put online. UH OH! The crowd is shouting “Shame on you!” Presumably that is the gays yelling at the anti-gays. Oh ho! No, that is the gays yelling at the court. “State Supreme Court upholds Prop. 8, 18,000 same-sex marriages,” says the L.A. Times. This means, in English, that: gay marriages conducted while gay marriage was temporarily legal will continue to exist. However, the Court decided with the voters of the state in not allowing equal rights for gay people to marry either before or after that odd window of actual Constitutional rights. And look out! There is going to be a big fucking riot in San Francisco. More: People are now actually reading the decision. Opines gay historian Gerard Koskovich: “The ruling says that the validation of Prop. 8 only removes the word ‘marriage’ from state-recognized same-sex relationships. In all other ways, California must grant absolutely the same rights and obligations to same-sex couples that are granted to married heterosexual couples.”

Sesame Street Water Sports

My new favorite Sesame Street video has my favorite title of all time: "Bert and Ernie Water Sports". And, while it's not as disturbing as you could possibly imagine, given the title, it's still really creepy!

I like the look on Bert's face when Ernie disrobes and jumps into the bath in front of his nephew.

This is a bad, bad idea.

Hi Elizabeth,

Expert Bill Bartmann, the leading authority on bad debt has launched his new book, Bailout Riches, a roadmap for how everyday citizen investors can purchase bad debt. In the book, Bartmann walks readers, step-by-step through the process of buying opportunities.

Background: Bartmann is the CEO of Bartmann Enterprises and author of the new book Bailout Riches (Wiley Publishing, May 2009). His expertise on the topic of toxic assets spans over 20 years. As the former CEO of Commercial Financial Services (CFS), his company was the first to purchase distressed assets during the last banking crisis, and was hired by the FDIC/RTC to help them manage and sell assets the agencies acquired from failed institutions (from Main Street to Wall Street). Bartmann became a self-made billionaire by investing in assets the government was liquidating, and CFS grew into a $3.5 billion business.

Bartmann is available to discuss Bailout Riches, as well as the Treasury’s upcoming plan to purchase the toxic assets off the banks balance sheets. Copies of the book are also available.

All the best,

(From my Fortune columnist spam folder.)  Most “everyday citizen investors” aren’t even equipped to pick individual stocks because they don’t understand basic securities analysis.  Writing a book that encourages them to invest in distressed debt (which is highly risky, and requires fairly specialized knowledge to value) is sort of like writing a book titled, YOU, TOO, CAN BE A NEUROSURGEON—IN 12 EASY STEPS!**

I mean, I’m all for letting people make their own stupid mistakes, especially when they really, really want to, but I can’t get behind facilitating it.  I understand that the intent here is to democratize investing, but all it does is bankrupt the idiots who don’t know what they’re doing. And that would probably be anyone who’d actually read this book and didn’t understand distressed assets before picking it up.

And that would be anyone who’d actually read this book.

(**Yes, I realize that neuroscience is more complex than distressed debt valuation. But you need professional training for both. And thankfully there aren’t any neurosurgeons out there craven enough to write the “hello everyday citizen! Why sit back and watch everyone else make money off of brain surgery?  Why leave it to the rarified world of professionals? Do you know how much neurosurgeons get paid? A lot, that’s what! With the boom in brain surgery, why shouldn’t you get a piece of the action?” book.)

Writing CSS Efficiently

For the last few projects we’ve done at Mule, I’ve been able to work closer with the clients’ implementation teams than I sometimes do. They were building the site (or application) as I coded, which meant I got nearly instant feedback about whether or not a particular technique was going to work in their environment and could go back and change things on the fly. As a result I had to be particularly organized about how I set up my code — so I could find things quickly — and really careful about how I used classes vs IDs and how tricky I got with my code. These are just a few little observations that I made and have changed or not changed my habits accordingly.

Note: This is about writing your CSS in a text editor, not a CSS-specific editor.

I’ve always opted for a minimum number of stylesheets, versus splitting things like fonts and colors into separate stylesheets, for a couple of reasons. First, I think for the most part the combination of today’s average Internet connection speed and the average person’s browser cache settings, one large HTTP request is better than several small ones. Secondly, I don’t like jumping from document to document. I’d rather have it all right there in front of me in one big chunk (with the exception of IE-specific style overrides).

The organization of that big chunk is something I still tweak on every project: For the most part I put styles for basic HTML tags (no classes or IDs) at the very top, then the big content sections (wrappers, banner, content, footer), then break it out into sections by the name or type of template. That’s mostly for my own cognitive convenience, and it’s worked really well for me for years.

However a couple months back I saw a tip on some site (that I’ve unfortunately forgotten now, so I can’t give credit) that made a huge difference in how I work, given how laughably obvious it is in hindsight:

Alphabetize your CSS properties within your selectors.

Duh, right? In the past, I would just tack properties on to the end as I went, although I would sometimes group things in a way that made some kind of internal sense like this.

a {
    color:#ff0;
    text-decoration:none;
    display:block;
    width:100px;
    height:15px;
    padding:2px;
}

Then when I went looking for something I’d always spend time digging through lists of properties that would be in whatever order made sense at the time that I wrote them.

Now I know exactly where “height” is going to show up not only in relation to “width”, but to “color”, “position”, and “z-index”. (If I use any of the -moz or -webkit properties, they go at the end of the list.)

I was amazed and chagrined at how much sense that one practice made, but there’s a secondary effect to using it:

Keep all your properties for a given selector on one line.

I can now easily keep all my properties on one line instead of having a line-break and a tab for each property, which makes the far left column of my stylesheet a breeze to scan.

a { color:#ff0;display:block;height:15px;padding:2px;text-decoration:none;width:100px; }

Indent descendent selectors beneath their ancestors for some visual grouping.

If I have a bunch of styles specific to the footer (for example), I’ll format them like this:

#footer { ...properties... }
    #footer ul { ...properties... }
    #footer p { ...properties... }

I only ever indent one level because more than that and the indenting starts to become less efficient. This isn’t something that’s going to have complicated nesting like HTML can; it’s just a way to chunk up the stylesheet for scanability.

Code for IE6 as you go.

I’m happy to say that as a team, we at Mule are pretty darn good at designing sites that look fantastic while maintaining cross-browser consistency without getting into a bunch of stupid hacks. Sure, I’d love to say we’ve just stopped supporting or at least coddling IE6, but the sites we build have audiences that still use that browser in large numbers. Plus, most of the things that I end up having to fix for IE6 are required for its almost-as-bad sibling, IE7. So between those two, yeah, I end up having a few things that go into stylesheets loaded with conditional comments.

On one of our recent projects I decided to take the approach of “Make it right, then make it work in IE”. While that absolutely sped up the “make it right” period, the “make it work in IE” period was kind of drag because we had to go back and change some HTML that the dev team had already incorporated into their CMS. In this case it was a fairly easy fix, and it was only in one place, but if I had followed my usual rule, we wouldn’t have had to do it all.

So keep your problem children handy and if you do something in your code that you’re not sure about, check them right away.

If you have separate stylesheets for Internet Explorer, keep your selectors in the same order as the main stylesheet.

As with the alphabetizing of properities, this might seem like a no-brainer, but my habit has been to just add selectors to the bottom of the IE stylesheet(s) as I go (at least in those cases where the cascade wasn’t important). And while these stylesheets are rarely more than 10 or 15 lines, it’s more about handing things off to someone else in a way that doesn’t look like I just dumped a bunch of stuff in a box at the last minute.

These probably won’t save hours on any given project, but they will allow to think about something besides “Where the hell is that rule?” and it will definitely be easier to hand things off to the client at the end of the project.

On Cheap Wine

A recent New Yorker had a story about Fred Franzia, the CEO/co-founder of Bronco Wine Company, the makers of the Charles Shaw wines you'll find at Trader Joe's and other places. To be honest, I'm not much a fan of the Charles Shaw wines; nor am I much a fan of Franzia, after reading the article.

Bota Box Cabernet SauvignonHowever, I'm all for cheap wine: over the past couple of months, I've been drinking boxed wine pretty much exclusively (the NY Times approves, for environmental reasons).

Of the boxed wines I've tried, I like Bandit and Bota Box. Bandit makes a 1-liter TetraPak wine (as well as kid-size packages that remind me of the juice packages that I used to drink after soccer games) in a couple of varieties; I like the Cabernet best. Bota Box makes a 3-liter box (equivalent to 4 standard 750ml bottles of wine), again in a couple of varieties. I've had the Cabernet and the Merlot, and I like both.

As the New Yorker article puts it (and I'm paraphrasing, because I'm lazy), there are Sunday wines, and there are Wednesday wines, and there's a need for both. I just happen to really like Wednesdays.

SCOTUS Sephardic Jew Trivia Edition

Everyone is hailing Sonia Sotomayor as (if confirmed) the first Hispanic on the US Supreme Court. But we've had a few emailers who point out that, at least by one definition, that's not true. They point to Benjamin Cardozo who had a relatively brief tenure as an Associate Justice on the court from 1932 until his death in 1938.

Cardozo held what was then informally known as one of the Jewish seats on the Court (he overlapped with Brandeis and was succeeded by Frankfurter.) But his ancestors were Portuguese Jews. That is, they were Sephardic Jews presumably expelled from Portugal in 1497 or who lived as conversos and then later reverted to Judaism after leaving at some later point.

This could of course suggest that a hidden Hispanic seat stood vacant on the Court for a full 71 years until today. But, be that as it may, there's your asterisk: Sotomayor is the first Hispanic Justice, unless you think that Cardozo was the first.

Late Update: Okay, a smackdown has broken out in the TPM inbox over the meaning of 'Hispanic'. Several say that 'Hispanic' applies only to Spain or former Spanish colonies where they speak Castillian Spanish and not Portugal. I'd always understood the term as applying to the Iberian peninsula in general. And Wikipedia suggests this is or rather was correct but that that meaning has been superseded by a narrower focus on Spain or even just the Spanish colonies. For my part though I'd like to try to make this slightly more complicated. It has been suggested that not a few Spanish Jewish expellees in Europe in the Early Modern Era chose to call themselves 'Portuguese Jews' because 'Spain' was the national enemy in many of the countries in which they resided -- such as England, the Netherlands and even France. Furthermore, some Spanish Jews were expelled from Spain and went to Portugal, only to be expelled from Portugal a few years later. So I'm not sure we should yet stop defending Cardozo's claim to the first Hispanic Justice title.

Late I Never Like the AP Update: From TPM Reader WM ...

According to the AP stylebook on my desk, Hispanic is "the preferred term for those whose ethnic origin is a Spanish-speaking country. ... Refer to people of Brazilian and Portuguese as such, not as Hispanic."

Cardozo, as you wrote, was of Portuguese descent.

But, remember, perhaps they were crypto-Spanish crypto-Jews (sort of converso scholarship inside joke ...)



Ferris Bueller House for Sale

Link: http://www.realtor.com/realestateandh...

Recession special! Cameron's house is for sale! For as little as $11,425/month you can own a piece of 80s nostalgia. I'd be a pretty pissed absent father if my kid drove a car through my $2,300,000 home. (via Tumblr Upcoming )

Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment »

Mr. Best Buy

A couple of weeks ago, I had some time to kill before taking my son to Webop! class at Jazz at Lincoln Center.  Ever the technophile, we dropped into Best Buy, found a few items we didn't really need, and were on our way to the checkout counter.

We were stopped by a innocent-enough looking woman, not clad in Best Buy attire.  She told us, "You better stick around for 10 minutes, something great is going to happen back there."  (She motioned towards the always awe-inspiring flat panel section in the back of the store.)  Ever the skeptic, I asked, "Will we receive a free flat panel TV?"  "I can't promise you that," she replied, "but trust me, you're going to like it."

We hung around for 10 minutes and proceeded to the back where we stumbled into another customer talking live to Oprah Winfrey via Skype.  We quickly deduced that Oprah was doing an entire show on Skype, and we were her unknowing, but very willing, participants.

The woman who approached us 10 minutes earlier ushered us into the camera view.  Fearing the stigma of being labeled "that guy" who stood behind a customer talking to Oprah in Best Buy, I attempted to exit the frame.  But the woman ushered me back, whispering, "Stick around," "She'll talk to you next," "She's coming back."

Oprah cut to London, and again at the woman's urging, we stuck around for another few minutes.  As predicted, Oprah cut back to me and my son idling around the TV and web cam:

Oprah: "Hi Mr. Best Buy."
Me: "Hi."
Oprah: "It's Oprah on TV."
Me (to my son): "Say Hi Oprah."
Son: "Hi Oprah!"
Oprah & Audience (collectively): "Awwww"

Oprah: "This is as fun as twittering.  This is a step above twitter twitter."

Watch video of Mr. Best Buy and son talking to Oprah.

After the airing, Oprah was blasted by numerous people about her flagrant promotion of Skype.

So, what's the point of sharing all of this?  First I thought I would write a blog entry defending Oprah for her promotion of Skype.  Then I thought maybe I would call @oprah out for saying "a step above twitter twitter."  Finally I realized I just wanted to write this blog post to show people that I was on the Oprah Winfrey show with my son.  Enjoy!

<blatant self promotion>

Watch video of Mr. Best Buy and son talking to Oprah.

</blatant self promotion>

Meme scenery

Andy Baio deleted the subjects from famous internet memes, leaving just the backgrounds. The results are hazy, ugly, and beautiful all at once, like last night's hookup after a night of hard drinking.

Tags: andybaio

Justice (Not David)

President Obama is expected to nominate federal appeals court Judge Sonia Sotomayor to be Justice David Souter's replacement on the Supreme Court.

So who cares? Why is there political stuff on a baseball card blog? Why did I take the time to MSPaint an Allen & Ginter card for a judge, when I still haven't posted a Bowman review? Why? Why am I doing this to my poor readers? WHYYYYYY?


BECAUSE SHE FRIGGIN
SAVED BASEBALL.


If it wasn't for her ruling, there might not have been a 1995 season.

Hmmmm, what happened in 1995?




Filiibuster that.

How we use iChat and SubEthaEdit to collaborate on a book despite being in different cities

How do you collaborate on a book when one author (DHH) is in San Francisco, one’s in Chicago (Jason), and one’s in NYC (me)? Last week, we did a joint writing session and pulled it off. Here’s how we did it:

We all log into iChat and start an audio chat. That way we can discuss what we’re doing.

Then we work on one essay from the book at a time and paste the current version into SubEthaEdit. While originally designed for coding together, its collaboration features work great for co-writing text too.

All you need to do is drag a person’s name from iChat into SubEthaEdit and then they’re collaborating on the document with you. Color coding lets you see who’s editing what. It works so well that you can have multiple people editing at the same time and it doesn’t get (too) confusing.

subethaedit

We even use this setup to collaborate on text when we’re all in the same room together. It’s a great way to let everyone take a crack at text without it leading to chaos.

The only downside is that tone can get a little inconsistent when different people are editing. After the session is wrapped, I go through the text again and make sure everything flows well and the tone is consistent.

subethaedit
A screenshot from the SubEthaEdit site.

DIY Espresso | Serious Eats

The Serious Eats blog recently posted a collection of DIY articles from Make Magazine regarding coffee.  Included in their post are these PDF instructions for the home enthusiast; DIY Coffee Roaster DIY Espresso Tamper DIY PID Temperature Control Also in the Serious Eats archives are instructions for cold-brewing your coffee at home. A full list every coffee related post by [...]

Tienanmen Anniversary Not Important to Chinese Youth

The 20th anniversary of  the student-led pro-democracy demonstrations in Tienanmen Square is not something the youth of China are thinking much about.   To them the historic demonstrations and the blood shed there are part of the past and not something they want to dwell on.  However, one can’t help but wonder if this supposed apathy for the history of their country is genuine or is the result of extreme censorship by the Chinese government.

All information on the 1989 events is being censored on the internet so even if young people wanted to research what happened they would have a hard time doing so.   One also has to wonder if all the suppression of information is also helping to create the strong sense of patriotism amongst young people.  Many of the young people who spoke up about their lack of feelings towards Tienanmen proclaimed a blind trust in their government.  They even said they supported the censorship.

This is a strange thing to hear but makes sense when you consider the threat the government could pose to many young people’s middle class lifestyles.  It remains to be seen how the recession will affect young people’s view of their country and government.  For now though it seems the Tienanmen anniversary will go on unnoticed.

*photo by d’n'c (CC)

On the Street......Shark Pants, Sydney


I saw this guy standing in a crowd of people after a fashion show. He looked perfectly normal until the crowd parted just enough to reveal his crazy shark pants. I always love an unexpected touch of humor.

Interview Magazine w/ an interview!

This is the cover of Interview Magazine out in the next few days.
what is special about it?

This: Cover by Inez & Vinoodh and M/M (Paris)
Interview by Mathias Augustyniak & Michael Amzalag

We need say no more.

Update: Part of the interview and photos are now available online.

Domestic Cats: 10,000 Years Old And Totally Mesopotamian

FUCK YOU, SCIENCE!House mice come from India; tame cats come from Iraq—about 10,000 years ago. And in case you were wondering why cats weren’t as overbred as dogs? Actual scientists claim it’s because cats “lack any inclination for performing most tasks that would be useful to humans.” Stupid scientists.

BOOM! Danny Meyer to Open 'The Bard' in Central Park

2009_05_thebard.jpg
[Photo via Google and WSJ]

Given his restaurants mostly lie beneath the park, we found it slightly curious that Danny Meyer's Union Square Hospitality Group is hosting a VIP Cafe at an upcoming Central Park tasting event, scheduled for next week. But now that we see this Craigslist posting, it all makes a little more sense. Meyer is planning on opening a summertime concession stand in the Delacourte Theater, home of "Shakespeare in the Park," to be named The Bard. And if you "smile easily" and "possess a winning attitude," you could interview to work there today!

In other Meyer news, WSJ has a great Q&A with the man about the trajectory of the restaurant industry in New York. On why he's still in fine dining when the moolah is in fast/casual:

"It makes me wonder what I’ve been doing with the past 24 years of my life. I will not be excited about opening a new fine-dining restaurant every year. On the other hand, we have a big backlog of talent in the company. I don’t want to lose them to somebody else..."
Hence...the Bard? Meanwhile, Metromix spreads new rumors of a Brooklyn Shake Shack.
· Now Hiring! Work for Danny Meyer in Central Park this Summer! (Upper West Side)
· A Future With Fewer Reservations [WSJ]

Shadowgate

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SCOTUS ANNOUNCEMENT

Obama set to announce his Supreme Court nominee at 10:15 ET, according to various news outlets.

Late Update: AP is reporting Sonia Sotomayor is the pick.

Later Update: NYT confirms it as well: Sotomayor.

Whisper Campaign Update: Check out Brian Beutler's reporting for us on the whisper campaign that it now appears failed to derail Sotomayor's nomination.



Defending Against Movie-Plot Threats with Movie Characters

Excellent:

Seeking to quell fears of terrorists somehow breaking out of America's top-security prisons and wreaking havoc on the defenseless heartland, President Barack Obama moved quickly to announce an Anti-Terrorist Strike Force headed by veteran counterterrorism agent Jack Bauer and mutant superhero Wolverine. Already dubbed a "dream team," their appointment is seen by experts as a crucial step in reducing the mounting incidents of national conservatives and congressional Democrats crapping their pants.

"I believe a fictional threat is best met with decisive fictional force," explained President Obama. "Jack Bauer and Wolverine are among the very best we have when in comes to combating fantasy foes." Mr. Bauer said, "We're quite certain that our prisons are secure. Osama bin Laden and his agents wouldn't dare attempt a break-out, and would fail miserably if they tried. But I love this country. And should Lex Luthor, Magneto or the Loch Ness Monster attack, we'll be there to stop them."

The Secret to Perfectly Poached Eggs

20090526-eggpoaching.jpg

Everyone has "the best" approach to poaching an egg, just like every region has the best barbecue sauce and every Jewish mother has the best matzoh ball soup recipe. There's a lot of conflicting information out there. Is a splash of vinegar necessary? Should you crack the eggs in a separate cup first?

The Kitchn seems to have found the truth to perfectly runny yolks and firm whites. The method comes from Delia Smith's Complete How to Cook. The UK food personality recommends pouring hot water from a kettle into a large, shallow pan and heating it until little bubbles start to form. Then break the eggs one by one into the water and let them barely simmer for exactly one minute. Remove the pan from the heat and allow the eggs to sit in the hot water for another ten minutes. Do you agree?

Related
How (Not To) Poach an Egg
Dinner Tonight: Paprika-Spiked Home Fries with Poached Egg
Roasted Asparaus with a Poached Egg [Photograzing]

May 25, 2009

The untold story of the world’s biggest diamond heist

The untold story of the world’s biggest diamond heist.

A better-than-fiction piece from Wired’s Joshua Davis. (J.J. Abrams is turning the story into a movie.)

Toothpaste for Dinner by - 26 May 2009

Horse Dogs


I make horse dogs with my mind.  It's kind of a secret.  I apologize for being so modest.

Card of the Week 05/25/09

This week's subject is Babe Freakin' Ruth.

Why Babe Ruth on Memorial Day? To memorialize the last home run Ruth ever hit on this day back in 1935. He hit three of 'em actually. Bopped them right out of Forbes Field in Pittsburgh. And he did it as a Brave! As anyone who has ever played 30 seasons in Front Page Sports Baseball '98 knows, the team a player is on when he retires is the team he goes into the Hall of Fame with. So chisel off that NY off his cap and put a script A on there instead. I know the Braves didn't move to Atlanta until over thirty years after the Babe retired. This is my twisted fantasy, I'll do what I want. Babe's a Brave! Look right here, there's proof:


See, Braves uniform. Move all those statues outta Yankee Stadium and put them in front of Turner Field where they belong. Then again the Braves promised to let him manage the team and they screwed him over so maybe we lost our Babe privileges. This card from 1962 Topps is probably the vintagiest Ruth card with a Braves logo on it that I'll ever get. Babe only lasted a couple of months with the Bravos and there are not a whole lot of contemporary memorabilia of Ruth with the Braves. Not that I could actually afford a vintage Ruth card from the '30s anyway. Here are some of the few pieces I could confirm that shows Babe as a Brave:

The 1935 Goudey 4-in-1 card is the best known. I would trade one of my kidneys for this card.

Less known, but the only other semi-mainstream card with Babe as a Brave is the 1935 4-in1 Exhibit postcard. I'm kind of shocked by the final price of that card. If I blew out some of my vintage basketball stuff I could actually maybe afford that. ?Asuuming my wife would ever let me spend the money on it. Forget the PSA-6, anyone got one in crummy condition I could buy?

These two are not actually cards, but they are the only other pieces I've ever seen from the '30s with Babe wearing a Braves cap. A 1935 Quaker Oats scorer promotion and a 1935 Quaker Oats pin. I'm not even going to say what the pin went for because it makes me sick. That could have been mine!

There are other issues from that period like the 1935 Clark's Bread Babe Ruth, but I can't find a picture of any of them to see if he's with Boston or New York. Ruth had no shortage of cards, but the year he was with the Braves wasn't a great one for collectibles. Depressions tend to mess up things like that. Thank goodness for Topps and their Ruth worship subset in 1962. The masses must remember that Ruth is a Brave!

Cooking at Takegami

For the past three weeks I've been working as a shugyo, a trainee, at Takegami, a traditional ryotei in Tokyo's Akasaka district. Kamiya-san, the chef-owner (the gentleman on the left) graciously invited me into his kitchen, where I worked under Chef Abe-san (on the right) along with a group of outstanding cooks.

Akasaka is an area famous for its traditional Japanese ryotei - in fact, if you take a walk there around 4pm any sunny afternoon, you'll see a bunch of ryotei cooks on break milling about, wearing their Japanese-style white chefs coats and seta, traditional sandals. Takegami is tucked into a tiny side street (directions at the end of this post), a restaurant known for its handmade toothsome soba -- served 14 different ways -- and kaiseki-style menus, seven to choose from.

I worked quite a bit on my knife techniques at Takegami, especially cleaning fish and cutting vegetables. Please see my post with video on how to clean fish, and on knife sharpening, which I also focused on.

Speaking of knives, one of the key things Chef Abe instilled in me was to use the entire blade of my knife. Japanese knives are specialized and very practical. The length of the blade is not arbitrary. For example, the chef demonstrated how to peel kamo nasu, a squat eggplant, by sliding the entire blade of an usuba in a twisting motion to create a spiral cut. So the simple act of peeling itself became artful and beautiful. (Except when I tried it. But I got better after a dozen eggplants...)

If you come to Tokyo, I hope you visit Takegami to experience a beautiful, seasonal Japanese meal, including their amazing soba. It's a place invisible to tourists, but it shouldn't be. They have an English-language menu, and some of the wonderful staff speaks a few words of English, so it's accessible. Here's how you find the restaurant:

Take the Chioda line to Akasaka station. Get out at Exit 1, which brings you in front of a modern office building called Akasaka Biz Tower. On the ground floor of said building you'll see a restaurant called Cote de Rouge. Right across the street you'll notice a narrow lane going downhill (there's a Docomo shop on the corner). Walk halfway down the lane and you'll see trees sprouting up behind a wall, and then a traditional Japanese entrance on the right. That's Takegami. Enter. Enjoy. (Phone 03-3497-0489)

Finally, on my last night at the Takegami, Chef Kamiya graciously invited me to dinner at one of his other restaurants, a small, super elegant ryotei, also in Akasaka, named Nogizaka Kamiya (03-3497-0489). The food was fabulous, and beautiful. I thought you'd enjoy some photos:

Thank you Chef Kamiya and Chef Abe!

Video: Sharpening Knives and Cleaning Fish

I love these guys. Ueno-san on the left, Nagase-san on the right, two exceptionally talented chefs at Takegami who run the restaurant's dining counter, and who taught me a ton about knives and knife work.

Let's talk a little bit about sharpening, then check out the video. Ueno-san spent literally hours instructing me and watching me sharpen (thank you so much for your kindness, Ueno-san). When I worked on my knife and thought it was already razor sharp, Ueno-san would invariably run the blade across the top of a fingernail, look at me and announce, "mada, neh?" - in other words, keep sharpening! Finally, he would check my knife and give it the thumbs up. Then I'd lightly slide it across the stone to polish and it would be ready for the next day.

Some observations on sharpening:

  • "Light touch," as Ueno-san liked to say. In other words, don't press to the blade too hard against the sharpening stone.
  • Follow the center line of the stone, which you'll see Ueno-san do in the video below.
  • Use three fingers on the blade and rest them on the top of the blade edge.
  • If you're a righty (do the opposite if you're lefty like me): Your right hand holds the blade against the stone and creates the angle (if you're sharpening a gyuto, like in the video). Your left hand's three fingers rest on the blade edge and slide down as you sharpen.
  • This is important: As you'll see in the video, the right hand moves the blade up and down in quick, even strokes, while the left hand's fingers slide slowly down the blade. You'll develop a rhythm to accomplish this as you practice. (I did.)
  • You'll also notice that Ueno-san's right thumb or index finger, depending on which side of the blade he's sharpening, does not move. It stays firmly planted on the heel of the blade to control the angle and position of the knife.
  • Add a few drops of water if the stone gets dry, but don't wash off the muddy stuff on the top, which has metal shavings that help sharpen the knife (there's a name for this stuff, but I can't remember right now).
  • Finally, use a coarser grit stone at regular intervals to flatten the stone you're sharpening with. An uneven surface inhibits sharpening.

Okay, here's video of Ueno-san in action, shaping his knife:

Now, on to cleaning fish.

Ueno-san and Nagase-san both taught me a lot about cleaning fish during my training. What they impressed on me is, no wasted motions. Every move is deliberate and efficient. Put both the heel and tip of your deba knife to work as you clean. And hold the knife at the back of the handle so you don't cut yourself on any sharp spines (like I did, more than once). Here's the video:

Finally, as an added bonus, I took video of Ueno-san cleaning an Aori ika, a huge squid. Enjoy:

Thank you Ueno-san and Nagase-san!

Freestyle Lehrer

Edge has an excellent interview with science writer Jonah Lehrer who riffs on consciousness, the joy of discovery, the importance of the marshmallows in psychology and how he fell in love with science.

It's interesting because rarely do science writers get the opportunity to give their own opinions on the big questions in neuroscience, despite the fact that, as Lehrer mentions, they have a distinct way of looking at the field as a whole.

Writers have a massive influence on politics, economics, business and the arts, to the point where they are actively courted and coerced by those wanting to control the agenda, but there is much less of a tradition of writers influencing science outside the political sphere.

In fact, it'd be interesting to directly ask science writers for their own theories one day, but in the mean time here's a rare opportunity to see one 'in action' on the big issues.

The questions I'm asking myself right now are on a couple different levels. For a long time there's been this necessary drive towards reductionism; towards looking at the brain, these three pounds of gelatinous flesh, as nothing but a loop of kinase enzymes. You're a trillion synaptic connections. Of course, that’s a necessary foundation for trying to understand the mind and the brain, simply trying to decode the wet stuff.

And that's essential, and we've made astonishing progress thanks to the work of people like Eric Kandel, who has helped outline the chemistry behind memory and all these other fundamental mental processes. Yet now we're beginning to know enough about the wet stuff, about these three pounds, to see that that's at best only a partial glance, a glimpse of human nature; that we're not just these brains in a vat, but these brains that interact with other brains and we are starting to realize that the fundamental approach we've taken to the mind and the brain, looking at it as this system of ingredients, chemical ingredients, enzymatic pathways, is actually profoundly limited.

The question now is, how do you then extrapolate it upwards? How do you take this organ, this piece of meat that runs on 10 watts of electricity, and how do you study it in its actual context, which is that it's not a brain in a vat. It's a brain interacting with other brains. How do you study things like social networks and human interactions?


Link to Jonah Lehrer interview on Edge.

Jonah, Art & Yoshi: What my boys do all day long. Slackers. May 25, 2009

JonahArtandYoshiMay252009.jpg

People try to put us down just because we get around

Sometime in the next couple of days I have to sit down and write two paragraphs about my generation of women in preparation for a panel at the 92nd Street Y on June 8.  The other people on the panel (Patricia Bosworth, Judith Warner, Sheila Weller, and Joanna Smith Rakoff) are also writing two paragraphs about their respective generations of women, to be shared at the outset of the panel.  What is my generation of women all about? I’m sure plenty of people will agree with me that I’m not qualified to say.  But I have been thinking a lot, lately, about women.  Specifically I have been thinking about the ways that women publicly and privately police other women’s speech and actions in the supposed service of the greater good, or something they call “feminism.”

A manufactured mini-scandal arose recently because Slate needed to attract attention to the launch of their new women’s-interest blog.  So they published a linkbait blog post by author Linda Hirshman, who had axes to grind against various past and present editors of the Gawker Media women’s-interest blog, Jezebel.  Hirshman’s tone was provocatively dismissive and snide — I think the old folk call it “snarky”?* — and she pushed a major button when she accused some Jezebel writers of “incoherence” because they decried sexism but did not report being sexually assaulted as teenagers.  She misrepresented and glossed over basic facts to try to prove that Jezebel and ‘Jezebel feminism’ have led “women” astray.

The blog’s editors’ plan worked, of course: many blogs and even one British newspaper weighed in on the manufactured controversy.  I read some of these responses — Tracie Egan’s response, Anna Holmes’ response, the Feministe response — with a mingled sense of satisfaction — yes! they’re right! — and frustration.   I was frustrated because I knew that the whole thing was only a stunt to boost a fledgling site’s pageviews.  I was frustrated because I knew that the whole thing, while only a stunt, had almost accidentally scratched the surface of issues that are vitally important to every woman - not to every pundit, not to every female writer, not to the relatively rarified group of women who are able to avail themselves of the luxury of paying attention to blog squabbles — but to every woman.   And also I was frustrated because I knew that, to anyone not tangentially involved in the invented squabble**, the whole thing would be dismissed as a “catfight.” “This is what a smackdown looks like,” noted women’s rights proponent Nick Denton wrote, on his Twitter.  Everyone had missed the point, again, entirely.  This kind of thing keeps happening, and all of us keep missing the point.

When a woman presents herself to the public eye as a multi-dimensional being — like my friend Moe Tkacik, who is capable of writing incisive and compulsively readable dispatches both from the frontlines of both a political campaign and from her own bedroom — she will often be accused by other women of exploiting herself.   If she is attractive — if she even betrays any sign of wanting to be perceived as attractive — the criticism multiplies.  You cannot be pretty and be taken seriously, still.  You cannot be honest about your own experiences and be taken seriously, even if your own experiences are the best examples at your disposal of social and cultural phenomena that affect us all, even if your experiences are ones that you know or suspect that hundreds and thousands of other women share.  Other women’s voices aren’t being heard, you’re told, because you are hogging the spotlight  with your salacious sexual stories.  You are only getting attention because you’re pretty, or slutty, and how dare you steal that attention from someone who deserves it more, because there is only room in everyone’s minds for one iconic thing called Woman.  Maybe I should just let Rebecca Traister say it in her own words: “In a media landscape in which there are a severely limited number of spaces for women’s writing voices, the ones that get tapped become necessarily, and deeply inaccurately, emblematic — of their gender, their generation, their profession. More annoying — and twisted — is that those meager spots for women are consistently filled by those willing to expose themselves, visually and emotionally.”

While it’s true that the mastheads and bylines of the magazines that used to represent this country’s cultural elite are still predominantly male, I have never thought of there being a “severely limited number of spaces for women’s writing voices.”  When I was younger and found I had no outlet for my “writing voice,” I spent ten bucks on a domain name and fifteen bucks on hosting and then, bingo, I had one.   And as for voices that “get tapped”  being “innacurately emblematic of their gender,”  I feel like Rebecca Traister and Linda Hirshman and their ilk imagine a hypothetical audience member — male, I guess, so let’s call him Bob — who is constantly trying to make his mind up, about Women.  Bob is on the fence, and everything he hears and reads might sway him.  Should women be paid as much as men, should women have the same opportunities as men, can they be trusted to run our corporations, our media, our country?  Should they be raped, or not?    Rebecca and Linda don’t give Bob much credit for being able to parse ambiguities.  They would like everyone’s message to be as crystal clear as possible, so that Bob doesn’t get confused and start raping people.  “No, no!” they keep trying to tell him.  “Those aren’t women, we are!  And we don’t like those women!”

Sometimes these women say they feel “sorry” for the women they are writing against.  They feel “sorry” for women like Meghan McCain who, they say, undermine themselves and whatever socially and politically relevant messages they might have — simply by confessing that they are human beings.   The apologetic women aren’t really sorry, though — they are angry.  These stupid little bitches are fucking it up for all of us, they seem to be saying, and they should be punished.  Bob won’t do it — he does not, after all, exist — so they are going to have to do it for him.

The most upbeat thing I can think to say about all this is that I am genuinely, wholeheartedly shocked (though progressively less so) every time this kind of internecine ugliness among women bubbles to the surface.  And I think that shock speaks to something interesting about, you know, My Generation.   I was lucky to be raised by a mother who worked and whose work was important to her, and who always made sure I knew that I could grow up to be anything I wanted to be.  She and her generation paved the way for me and my generation to take so many fundamental freedoms for granted!   We slip up, though, when we imagine that we have transcended the old cultural interdictions against being honest and outspoken.   All we have transcended, it seems, is the idea that the patriarchy is the authority that enforces these interdictions.

In the face of these attacks,  the women of my generation — who have more outlets than ever for making their voices heard– need to make sure that we are judging our words carefully, that we aren’t saying anything we don’t actually believe, and that we are accurately representing ourselves.   This is what I am trying, and sometimes failing, to do.  This is all we can do.  It’s not anyone’s individual job to represent femininity as a whole — not Linda Hirshman’s, not Meghan McCain’s, not Rebecca Traister’s, and certainly not mine.

*ha ha.

** like I was. Linda Hirshman lumped me in with the Jezebels — an unearned honor, since I wrote a scant handful of posts for them about a year ago.  Per Linda, “Emily Gould published a story in the New York Times Magazine about chronicling her  relationships and sex life online for a year; the cover photo was a shot of her in her bed.”  The blog had to post a correction that eliminated the phrase “for a year.”  I think Linda’s inclusion of that phrase revealed that she had not actually read the article, but had assimilated all she thought she needed to know from the pictures. 

Detecting whether your code is running on App Engine servers, or in development

For one of my projects running on Google App Engine, I’m using Google Analytics to track traffic, but I didn’t want the tracking code showing up in my local development environment. Fortunately, detecting where your code is running is easy.

Take a look at this sample:


import os

try:
  is_dev = os.environ['SERVER_SOFTWARE'].startswith('Dev')
except:
  is_dev = False

is_prod = not(is_dev)

If the is_dev and is_prod variables are exposed to your templates, you can do something like this:


{% if is_prod %}
 {% include "analytics.html" %}
{% endif %}

Hope this helps!

Gorgeous graphic notes from TED2009

3342423552_cffca3c67a.jpg
YouTube's Margaret Stewart shares her sketchbook notes from the TED2009 sessions -- a lively, personal way to see TED through one creative person's eyes. Click the image above to view the full set of sketchbook pages.

We're always interested in creative ways to take notes on TED and TEDTalks (check out Autodesk's BigViz sketchbook, and everythink's stream-of-consciousness sketches, from TED2008). If you've got some TED notes to share, email contact@ted.com or make a comment below.

Memorial Day, 2009

Today is observed as Memorial Day in the United States, a day for remembering the men and women of our armed services who died while at war. Memorial Day weekend has also become the unofficial kickoff to Summer, complete with backyard barbecues, parades and family getaways. Collected here are a handful of photographs for remembrance, acknowledging some of the men and women who have passed in conflicts from the U.S. Civil War through Iraq and Afghanistan today. (22 photos total)

Soliders from the U.S. Army Old Guard place flags at grave stones at Arlington National Cemetery May 21, 2009 in Arlington, Virginia. It took 1,300 soldiers, sailors and Marines about three hours to place a flag at each of the more than 300,000 gravestones at Arlington ahead of the Memorial Day weekend. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Definition of a Small Victory

Smörgåsboard: Meatball Pie; Fugu, Baby Suckling Pig

smorgasboard20090525.jpg

Meatball Pie. Photograph from wEnDaLicious on Flickr.

  • Super-thin crust meatball pie at Spunto Pizzeria [SE Flickr Pool]
  • The best dish at La Barra? The gazpacho, "pink with fresh tomatoes and heavily inflected with raw garlic, and served properly chilled." [Fork in the Road]
  • Domestic fugu at Sushi Yasuda [FoodMayhem]
  • The egg crepe stuffed with crab and ramps from Gramercy Tavern's tavern room. [Orderinny]
  • NY Noodletown's Suckling Baby Pig delivers with "tender fatty meat with crispy crackling skin." [Me So Hungry]
  • The the Jamon Bocadillo at Bar Carrera is totally "craveworthy" [Memoirs of an Ubereater]

My book is now available at no cost as an e-book download

Since my book The Official Dictionary of Unofficial English is now available on the bootleg e-book sites ("pirate" is the wrong term, I think), I've decided to make it available for download at no cost. This is not a big deal. The book never sold more than a few thousand copies, the copyright is mine (even though the publisher, McGraw-Hill, incorrectly printed the copyright as theirs), the book is being remaindered, and all the rights are now reverting to me.

But the main point here is that I'd like to draw people to my site for the free download, not to some shady place on the Internet. So:

Download the The Official Dictionary of Unofficial English at no charge. (PDF 2.7MB)

No fees, registrations, logins, passwords, ad-clicking, or hoop-jumping required.

By the way, the way these books get out there is usually simple. Sometimes the files leak from publishers, sometimes from authors, sometimes they're scanned from paper to pixels, etc., etc., Sometimes people pretend to be blind and contact the publisher to ask for a digital copy of a book so they can use it with their screen readers that translate the digital pages into something they can understand. The publisher sends a digital copy and in a few days it's all over the Internet.

Make no mistake: I'm not angry. Just resigned. I knew it would happen.

May 24, 2009

School newspaper archives go online, embarrassing student writing and shenanigans become permanent record

Shared by Eve
I wish someone would archive my 8th grade paper. My best work!
Here's the latest privacy rupture: old school newspaper archives are showing up online, getting indexed, and becoming part of the permanent googlable record for the people who wrote for them and the people who appeared in them. This is the latest installment in an ongoing story -- for example, when DejaNews (now Google Groups) put Usenet's archives online, the material we thought we'd written in a no-archive medium became part of our googlable past. Soon, face-recognition will put names on every photo on the web, and then, look out!
As the papers have begun digitizing their back issues, their Web sites have become the latest front in the battle over online identities. Youthful activities that once would have disappeared into the recesses of a campus library are now preserved on the public record, to be viewed with skeptical eyes by an adult world of colleagues and potential employers. Alumni now in that world are contacting newspapers with requests for redaction. For unlike Facebook profiles -- that other notable source of young-adult embarrassment -- the ability to remove or edit questionable content in these cases is out of the author's hands.

When Terrence J. Casey, then the Collegian's editor, got Ms. Dobo's request, he referred to a policy put in place by previous editors: The Daily Collegian does not remove any editorial content from its Web site. However, if there is a factual inaccuracy in a story, the editors will run a correction or an update as needed.

Lyle, a graduate of Emory University who asked that his last name be withheld because he is in the military, got pretty much the same response from The Emory Wheel, where he served as opinion editor for three years before graduating in 2005 and joining the Marine Corps. Lyle had sounded off on domestic politics, the wars, and economic policy in a column that is preserved in the paper's Web archives. "If any of my Marines were to end up Googling me, I'd feel uncomfortable with them knowing my own politics," he said. "As a rule, politics and the military don't mix."

Alumni Try to Rewrite History on College-Newspaper Web Sites (via /.)

Car-Free Space is an Instant Hit on Broadway

Bway_at_45th_Day_1.jpg

Here's the view from 45th Street looking north at about 1 pm today, about 30 minutes after the city Dept. of Transportation closed Broadway to motor vehicle traffic in Midtown. It's obviously way too soon to judge how this remarkable experiment is working but today, at least, car-free Broadway appears to be a huge hit. 

If you have any photos of your own, we'd love to see them. E-mail them to tips at streetsblog dot org or tag them "streetsblog" in Flickr.

Eucalyptus for iPhone gets a new lease on life

Filed under: , , ,

Eucalyptus [App Store] has been finally allowed to appear in the App Store after being rejected by Apple. The e-book reader for the iPhone and iPod touch was rejected because a person could get sexually oriented books like the Kama Sutra, even though the book is in the public domain and freely available on the web.

The program author let us know the US$9.99 app was approved late last night. He said, "Earlier today I received a phone call from an Apple representative. He was very complimentary about Eucalyptus. We talked about the confusion surrounding its App Store rejections, which I am happy to say is now fully resolved. He invited me to re-build and submit a version of Eucalyptus with no filters for immediate approval, and that full version is now available on the iPhone App Store."

"Since my previous post, I've been so pleased with the overwhelmingly positive articles, blog posts, comments and tweets - and also the emails from those of you who felt so strongly about the issue you wanted to contact me directly. They were all much appreciated. Thanks for all the support. It's been a roller coaster of a weekend!"

The controversy over this app once again points out how crazy the Apple standards for applications are. Dozens of fart apps are fine (not to mention apps that thoroughly infringe other companies' IP or steal their graphics) but an e-book reader that simply loads public domain books was verboten. It doesn't make any sense, and further, the situation doesn't seem to be improving. Developers are left to try and get publicity to embarrass Apple into being a bit more sensible.

TUAWEucalyptus for iPhone gets a new lease on life originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 24 May 2009 13:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How Jim Collins Tracks His Workday (and Pillow Time)

Jim Collins' time chart I’ve got my own pie chart of how I want to spend my time, so it was fun to hear that Jim Collins, author of bestselling book Good to Great, also has a similar breakdown, pictured right. The New York Times reports:

That, he explains, is a running tally of how he’s spending his time, and whether he’s sticking to a big goal he set for himself years ago: to spend 50 percent of his workdays on creative pursuits like research and writing books, 30 percent on teaching-related activities, and 20 percent on all the other things he has to do.

Collins is a whole lot more diligent about tracking his progress than I’ve ever been, though.

These aren’t ballpark guesstimates. Mr. Collins, who is 51, keeps a stopwatch with three separate timers in his pocket at all times, stopping and starting them as he switches activities. Then he regularly logs the times into a spreadsheet.

Collins also logs how many hours he spends sleeping, at night and during naps, and logs a rolling average which he compares to the amount of sleep he needs over 10 days (70 hours).

Collins is also laser-focused on being a ruthless editor, and saying no to taking on too many speaking engagements or consulting gigs (at a hefty $60-65k a pop), book tours, or staff members.

This orientation — a willingness to say no and focus on what not to do as much as what to do — stems from a conversation that Mr. Collins had with one of his mentors, the late Peter F. Drucker, the pioneer in social and management theories.

“Do you want to build ideas first and foremost?” he recalls Mr. Drucker asking him, trying to capture his mentor’s Austrian accent. “Zen you must not build a big organization, because zen you will end up managing zat organization.”

Usually I’m distrustful of anyone who gets called a “guru” (note that people have called me that, much to my dismay), but I really enjoyed Good to Great. Collins’ painstaking workflow ranked him even higher in my book. Check out the whole NYT profile: For This Guru, No Question Is Too Big.

In space, no one can hear you kern

The Week in Type

I will soon announce ILT’s gargantuan give-away. There are 40 prizes, from vouchers to buy type, and books, to posters and Helvetica Moleskines. As soon as ILT hits 40,000 RSS subscribers, I’ll run the competition. Basically, I’ll do it like this: 20 prizes for the best-submitted type tips; the remaining 20 prizes will be distributed randomly to those who follow me on Twitter. If you haven’t already subscribed, then all it takes is a mere click.

Let’s get started with something free — a free font. A product of the inspired FontStruct, Sessions, by John Skelton, is a free modular display typeface that really is quite special. The specimens are particularly creative, and demonstrate how this face might be used:

sessions


You can download the font from FontStruct. There are more samples on Behance.

I’d like to see it released as an OpenType font with features like those available in Linotype’s Madame.

I’m feeling left out. These were sent out by Brazilian design studio, ps.2 arquitetura + design as gifts. Perhaps they’ll send a set to me (not-so-subtle hint):

ps2_game2

Via Iain Claridge.

Something for the body. New from the Typography Shop, the sans and serif tees:

typography-shop-sans-serif-t-shirts

Never quite sure how to crop these.

And new from ISO50, is Vuela:

vuela t-shirt from ISO50

In the very unlikely event that you haven’t seen Scott Hansen’s posters, then do take a look, I recently bought Svenska.

Love this little book from Brighten the Corners. Meet Stanley & Marvin:

1-9-3_5

If you like this, then you’ll also like The Serif Fairy.

Lots of good work from A2/SW/HK. I particularly like this custom type for Foreground:

a2

I like this work by Portuguese ps.2 arquitetura + design, and for the Museum of Image and Sound:

ps2

I also like some of the spreads, and the internal repetition of the cyan from the cover. The typeface set on the cover is the monospaced Simple by Norm, that was later developed as a set of proportional fonts for the Köln-Bonn airport in Germany.

simple typeface by norm

And, talking of monospaced types and Lineto, their typewriter typeface, Valentine (a faithful digital reproduction of the type designed for the Olivetti Valentine) is worth taking a look at:

valentine by lineto

This is one of many decorated initial caps from illuminated manuscripts, photographed by Eben Sorkin. Absolutely beautiful, isn’t it:

eben sorkin decorated initial cap from illuminated manuscript

What’s more, be sure to take a look at Eben’s Letters in old books collection. Here’s a little Jenson to whet your typographic appetite:

eben sorkin jenson

From decorated type to wood type. The online museum of wood types. Thought I’d mentioned it here before, but discovered I’d only tweeted about it:

hamilton

Thanks to Antonio for the reminder.

For those seeking a fine start to the blissful[?] institution that is marriage (I’m tempted… but will say no more), look no further than 100 Layer Cake. This piece by Hammerpress:

hammerpress for 100 layer cake

What do 18,000 nails and the word enjoy have in common. This, by Juan Camilo Rojas:

enjoy nails: rom: juan camilo rojas

On a lighter note

Kern in Space is fun game from Veer Ideas. It’s also from whence I borrowed stole this article’s title:

kern in space, from Veer Ideas

Type links

Oh No! Not More Web Fonts!
Typography tools for Linux
E-book design, and typography
Congress on type via.
42 typography resources — via Peter van Impelen.
Mayflower Smooth Pro — P22
FontShop welcomes three new foundries
An interview with Ray Larabie
Helvetica & Univers
Printing terminology
Web font embedding, points missing
Web fonts now (how we’re doing with that)

I really want to like these new covers from Faber & Faber, but I just find them incredibly dull. I want to like them because they are an attempt at a purely typographic design; I don’t like them because I can’t see the design; I’m just seeing text slapped on a cover. Perhaps you see something else:

faber 80

Or perhaps my judgement is prejudiced by my antipathy for Beckett. Of these covers I’m reminded of the words of Vivian Mercier who wrote that Beckett (semi-coincidentally the author of the above books),

has achieved a theoretical impossibility — a play in which nothing happens, that yet keeps audiences glued to their seats. What’s more, since the second act is a subtly different reprise of the first, he has written a play in which nothing happens, twice. — Irish Times, 18 February 1956, p. 6.

Sidetracked there for a moment. What next? Ah, yes…

Another free display font. Cube from Font Fabric:

cube font from font fabric

This does not come as a font file, but rather as vectors in an eps.

Read about the Dollar Redesign Project on the exceptional Ministry of Type:

dollar-redesign

Video

An epic battle. Helvetica vs Arial. Doesn’t do anything for me, but it might for you:
 

Click here to view the embedded video.

By contrast, this one made me chortle. Partly because, to my surprise, I make a brief (2:01), subtitled appearance in it:
 

Click here to view the embedded video.

Some very pretty animated type from Madrid-based Cocoe:

Click here to view the embedded video.

New releases

Whereas the relatively recent slab serif Archer, is the product of numerous historical sources, Sentinel takes the Clarendon, dusts it off, refines it, and makes it so much more useable (twelve weights & their italics). What most surprised me is that no-one else had really attempted to fill the Clarendon gap.

Sentinel

I’ve always found Clarendon to be a little claustrophobic for my taste; just a little clumsy too; and I always imagined that it had something to do with those small apertures. Guess I was wrong. I haven’t spent enough time with Sentinel to quite figure out why it works so well. I suspect some kind of magic. I picture Jonathan taking the fonts out of the oven; a solemn nod in Tobias’ direction, and he dusts the freshly-baked glyphs with something that resembles star dust. Anyway, the great thing about Sentinel is (whether or not you’re a fan of the Clarendon) is that H&FJ has reinvigorated or even resurrected the ‘genre’. I really think that Sentinel will come to be the go-to Clarendon.

Neutraface Slab from House Indistries, accompanied by the quality type-related merchandise that we’ve come to expect from them:

neutraface slab

New from Linotype is Libelle, a Copperplate Script by Jovica Veljovic.

libelle fonts from linotype

Comes replete with all the OpenType features that one expects to find in a good script — contextual alternates, discretionary ligatures, initial & final forms, etc.

We love typography

If I were to list all my favourite picks from WLT, I’d be forced to start another post. So, I’ll just feature this drawing by artist Jason Manley:

jason manley

You can see more of Jason’s work on jasonmanley.com.

And this spread from the Rare Book Room:

copyright, rare book room

And a third from Gig Posters, and designed by Salvador López:

Salvador López. gig-posters

ILT shop

All of Seb Lester’s Flames prints are gone, but I do have the last remaining Mightier prints. These are the last available anywhere, so if you want one, hurry. Moreover, I’ll be printing a couple of my own posters; and I’ve invited several designers to design new and exclusive posters for ILT. Ideally I like to offer two versions of everything: not everyone can afford a limited edition poster or letterpress print, so I’m hoping to offer a standard, less expensive, offset version for all designs. I’m discussing the details with my printer, and will let you know more soon. If you’re a type designer, and would like to design a poster for ILT, then let know. Stefan Hattenbach is designing the first in the series of posters by type designers.

And, finally…

It’s no exaggeration to say that ILT wouldn’t exist but for the support of The Deck. They’re running a little survey, so if you have a couple of minutes, then please let them know what you think. It’s the most fun you’ll ever have with a survey, I promise. Though question #21 is something of a challenge.

I hope you enjoyed this week’s roundup of all things type. Have a brilliant weekend.

How HBO And Gawker Tricked Us Into Reporting An Ad Campaign As News

Yesterday morning, we reported that Gawker Media had acquired a blog called BloodCopy. This "news" turned out to be false, part of a viral ad campaign for an HBO show called "True Blood."

We apologize for the error.  We'd also like to explain how it happened, because we imagine others came to the same conclusion we did.  We also think that HBO, Gawker, and the marketing agency crossed a line, and we're not surprised that they are now withdrawing parts of the campaign.

First, we received an email from a marketing firm announcing that "BloodCopy has joined the Gawker Media Network."  The email was an invitation to a party to celebrate this event.  The email didn't say that what Gawker was actually doing was throwing a party for a sponsor, not adding a new blog (assuming th

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Note: Great Day in NY Baseball

Yesterday was an amazing day in New York baseball.

Mets and Yankees fans were each treated to a dramatic, come-from-behind win, while sharing the same rooting interest: to see one another win, which is something that never happens, as the Yankees defeated the Phillies, and the Mets defeated the Red Sox.

The best part, my wife, in her Yankees hat, and I, in my Mets shirt, high-fived at the end of the day, saying, ‘Nice work.’

Monday, we will return to ignoring one another’s baseball goals, and in some cases rooting against eachother, but for today, it’s nice to be in the same corner.

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