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August 29, 2009

beatles remasters

I had no idea that they were remastering The Beatles...though since it's timed with the release of The Beatles: Rock Band it makes perfect sense. Leave it to Bob Lefsetz for a couple of choice bits on the remasters. First, on "I Should Have Known Better":

This remaster is the anti propofol. It’s like Disney imagineers came up with a serum they could inject into corpses to bring people back to life.

And this one on "Tomorrow Never Knows":

This one track is a metaphor for the whole experience of listening to this boxed set. You’ve got to turn off your mind, relax and float downstream. So you can hear each and every instrument and effect in this track. They built this, the Beatles, George Martin, a host of string players and... There was a vision, which fit no contour in an executive’s brain.

Emphasis mine. Reminds me of the piece by Andrew Bird that I blogged about last year.

I feel like it is a deliberate creative process to hear a sound in my head and then rummage around for the object that makes that sound. Sometimes, as I’ve noted before, the object itself gets assigned a mystical value and must be on a song, though I know most listeners could not care less whether we use a Telefunken mic or a 30-year-old calf skin drum head.

Four Years On


Sandbar, Gulf Coast near Waveland MS

I have nothing new, or good, to report. Happy 4-year anniversary.

One Year Reunion

This site has been out of commission for a while - but I think there is good reason to recommission it for a special one-night-only event.

For anyone who was part of the Palin movement at the time, you should remember that exactly one year ago we achieved our goal - Sarah Palin was nominated by John McCain as the Republican candidate for Vice President in 2008. Of course, we got a half-million hits that day and received a lot of publicity - but the one thing most of us will probably remember is the marathon comment thread (about 900 comments total) that ran through the night as all of the commenters talked with a curious poster named "Drew" - who said he was helping set up the Dayton event and that we would be happy. We never actually found out who he was - but he was right, we were happy. A number of you also found ways to look up planes currently in the air - and you were the first to find a charter plane from Anchorage to Dayton, which ultimately was picked up by the media as the first sign that Gov. Palin would be nominated.

Some of you might even remember that I was not a part of that thread - I regret to say that I stupidly fell for McCain's disinformation campaign and went to bed, fully expecting to spend the next morning watching the genesis of the McCain-Pawlenty or McCain-Romney ticket. Thank goodness I was wrong.

So, while I think we in the Palin Movement still have much to do, I think we can take a little time for nostalgia. Hence, the old site is being temporarily rebooted to accommodate a reunion. I actually have an engagement tonight - so I again will miss the opening posts - but I should be around later in the evening for those interested in re-enacting the vigil.

Welcome back everybody.

let's go

AKR20090826168600005_01_i

Human Go board, using kids as stones. (swiped from / via)

Kennedy Funeral Underway

Family, friends and dignitaries are streaming into the Mission Church in Boston for the funeral of Ted Kennedy this morning. The burial itself will be at Arlington later in the day, not far from the burial sites of John and Robert Kennedy. We'll be bringing you updates, photographs and live video through the morning.

Watch live video here.

It's hardly surprising. But it is striking to watch an event with so many political dignitaries and luminaries from the history of the last half century assembled together in one place. It is difficult to imagine -- indeed, when you consider it, in many ways frightening to imagine -- any event that would bring together such a group again.

10:11 AM: I'm watching the attendees mill around and talk before Sen. Kennedy's funeral service gets underway. And I'm struck by the smiles. Death is always a sorrowful event, particularly for the close loved ones. But after a full life and when the passing has been presaged by a long illness, the sorrow is of a different character. This funeral in some ways closes the final chapter on the earlier funerals of John and Robert Kennedy. And there's something reassuring, calming about seeing a Kennedy brother's funeral that is sad, sorrowful, but not at all tragic.

10:24 AM: TPM Reader BL writes in: "Reading your post this morning on TK's funeral and the range of luminaries in attendance, I thought I ought to pass on a bit of related Canadiana. When ex PM Pierre Trudeau passed away nine years ago, Honorary pallbearers included Jimmy Carter, Leonard Cohen, Aga Khan and Fidel Castro. As you might suspect, there wasn't a lot of coverage in the US media." I would say that is another collection we shall not see again.



This Week's Tasty 10

According to our handy site-metering utility, the top 10 most delicious items across the Serious Eats family of sites this week were ...

20090829-tasty-10.jpg

1. My Pizza Oven: Mark Wilkie, Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn
The story of one man's pizza-oven construction project. "When we first started building the oven people thought we were building a bunker..."

2. Taste Test: Greek Yogurt
"If you're really into that trademark sour Greek yogurt funk taste, go with Fage, whereas Chobani is best for intimidated beginners."

3. What Do You Eat for All-Nighters?
"This year I find myself doing some late nights to get my medical school applications finished up. Since I work full-time and have a long commute, all my work kinda gets packed into evening and night hours. I can't have much caffeine... two sips of coffee give me a headache. I try to avoid munching, but it does help me stay alert. Do you have any favorite snacks to keep you going through the wee hours?"

4. Mario Batali's Jarred Pasta Sauces
"Usually I'm skeptical of celebrity-launched lines of anything, be they measuring cups or leggings."

5. Serious Green: 6 Rules of a Good Farmers' Market
"Markets succeed and fail for specific reasons. If you're a loyal shopper, it's good to think about what goes into your local market and what it takes to keep it going. If you're working toward building a stronger community food system that supports local food and preserves farmland, you need to consider what will create a stable, financially viable market. Whether you're looking to start a farmers' market in your neighborhood or you want to improve the one you've already got, here are some important issues to think about."

6. Gluten-Free Tuesday: If It Doesn't Have Gluten in It, I'm Eating It
We've offered a small amount of gluten-free recipes on SE in the past but have never had a specific column devoted to the topic. That changed this week. This post marks the Serious Eats debut of Shauna James Ahern. You may already know her from her blog, Gluten-Free Girl (one of the most popular gluten-free cooking blogs out there), or her book of the same name. We're pleased to welcome her to the site.

7. Pressure Cooker Phobia?
"Am I the only one? Is there help? Are pressure cookers a kitchen essential for you? My grandfather and an aunt both used one religiously back when I was a kid, but I think the constant warnings to 'stand back' and 'do not touch' made me afraid to have one. Now I am 47 years old and wonder if I've been missing something. If you think I should have one, please make a recommendation and possibly suggest a support group for my nervous condition, if you know of one. And what should I begin with that will turn me into a devotee to this mysterious culinary contraption? I am no novice in kitchen but need help on this one."

8. Brooklyn Water Bagels in Delray Beach, Florida
"Was it true? Had Florida really brought the water down from Brooklyn to make the bagels?"

9. Compiling Recipes for a Family Cookbook: Advice?
"As a present for my brother when he graduates from college next year, I've decided to put together a family cookbook with all our favorite recipes, as well as a 'Basics' section to teach my brother some rudimentary techniques. I've already picked out the recipes I want to include, decided to organize it by season and want to have an index at the back. I would love some feedback from anyone out there who has undertaken a project like this. I'd like to print 4 copies—probably just spiral bound—and I'm going to be doing illustrations and including photos of some of the finished dishes. Is there a particular computer program or technique that I should employ or will Microsoft Word and a Kinko's location be my best bet? I don't really want to spend money on expensive software."

10. How to Make Pizza Bianca at Home
"After much deliberation, I came to my own conclusion that crust is the defining component of pizza. Fitting, then, that my next pizza culinary adventure would be making "Pizza Bianca." In its traditional form, this popular Roman flatbread has no toppings other than oil and salt—just six feet of crisp, chewy, flavorsome CRUST!"

August 28, 2009

Yankees Soup Bowl Night

soupbowlyankees.jpgAnd I'm going! Who will I take with me for this exciting promotion, and will we actually make it up there in time to get a beautiful soup bowl that I will cherish forever?

DJ AM Dead At 36

According to TMZ and NBC New York, Adam Goldstein, known as “DJ AM,” and described by NBC as a “celebrity disk-jockey,” was found dead in his New York City apartment. And now back to your regularly-scheduled summer of death.

RIP Oasis

Gallaghers Noel Gallagher has officially left Oasis.  Oasis' website has totally crashed, so I haven't been able to see his statement, but it sounds like Liam finally pushed him too far.  I'm a little sad, but I'm surprised he could stand it as long as he has.  I'm also happy for Noel, and looking forward to whatever he decides to do next.


UPDATE: From Oasisinet.com:

A STATEMENT FROM NOEL

28 August 2009

"It's with some sadness and great relief to tell you that I quit Oasis tonight. People will write and say what they like, but I simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer.

"Apologies to all the people who bought tickets for the shows in Paris, Konstanz and Milan."

in under a minute

TypePad asked me: What are things you can do today because of technology that you couldn't do five years ago? Here's a list of things that feel like magic, even though you may take them for granted.

  • Take a picture and have it on the web in under a minute
  • Have an idea share it with the world under a minute
  • Think of a joke and share it with my friends in under a minute
  • Send an update about where I am right now and have a friend show up in under a minute
  • Learn about a band and be listening to them in under a minute
  • Learn about a book and start reading it in under a minute
  • Have one of those frustrating "crap! what was that actor's name?" moments and then find out who it was in under a minute
  • Etc., etc.

Everything's amazing, you all should be happy, etc., etc.

Presented by Intel, Sponsors of Tomorrow.

3 Dangers of Conventional Budgeting

budget

If you really want to save more than you earn, the conventional wisdom says you’re gonna need to start a budget. It’s only by seeing where your money goes and figuring out where you can cut back that you’ll be able to get your financial act together. But conventional budgeting is fraught with danger. Here are the three main things you should avoid.

Budgeting Danger # 1: Relentless Focus on Minor Expenses

Bring your lunch to work. Cut back on your lattes. Don’t order dessert. Rent videos from your library.

All of those over-hyped strategies are sure to cut expenses, but will they make a big difference? Will such small dollar changes enable someone currently living paycheck-to-paycheck to move comfortably beyond? Usually, it will not.

Lattes, video rentals, and the like are all real expenses that indisputably leave you with less money for everything else. And, if you cut out $3 of spending every day of every week of every month of every year for several decades, yes indeed—your savings will add up to a ton of money. Such are the benefits of the miracle of compounding interest.

But do those minor expenses represent your biggest opportunities to save? Unlikely. Spending an extra few dollars on lunch a couple of times a week or meeting a friend at a café every so often is probably not what keeps you in a financial hole or prevents you from achieving your financial goals.

The more likely culprits: the size, timing, and frequency of big-ticket expenses like your car and home. Focus your energies there. Can you delay the purchase of a new car for another few months—or even longer? Can you buy a used car instead? Can you buy a house that costs less than the one you’ve been told you can “afford”? Are you willing to do your homework to ensure that when you buy or refinance your home you save a quarter or half of a point on the interest rate you might otherwise pay? Such one-time decisions can have a far greater impact on your financial fitness than nailing the latte choice every day for decades.

Budgeting Danger # 2: Reduced Spontaneity and Flexibility

Are today’s budgeting tools too powerful? You can slice and dice your personal data every which way to Sunday with minimal effort. You can categorize everything. You can create budgets based on your actual historic data and then update the numbers constantly.

But should you?

Certainly not the last part. Not only because constant updating may indicate some sort of obsession, but also because it’s utterly unnecessary. Worse, it could negatively affect your life. Like all tools, you have to use it properly. Use the budgeting tool to increase the value of the life you live, not to decrease the cost to get through it.

Say there’s a week left in the month and while you still have $50 left in your dining category, you’ve spent all of the money in your entertainment account. Then a friend calls and asks you to go to a movie that you really want to see. If you tell your friend, “Sorry, I can’t afford to go to the movies tonight but I can take you to dinner,” you’re missing the point of budgeting.

Don’t let budgeting overtake your life. Don’t micromanage. As with a few baseball statistics, just because something can be measured doesn’t make it meaningful. Understand what’s truly important and ignore the rest.

Budgeting Danger # 3: Easy to Miss the Big Picture

Instead of budgeting your spending, budget your savings.

Start with a goal like “I want to save $X per month,” or “I am going to increase the amount I contribute to my 401k plan by Y%.” Keep this goal top of mind as you undertake any budgeting process. By doing so, you establish your specific budget parameters with your eye on the prize: your savings rate.

Yogi Berra said, “You’ve got to be careful if you don’t know where you’re going because you might not get there.” You can create and live within the most detailed budget in the world—and still live paycheck to paycheck. That’s neither a happy life nor one likely to lead to financial security.

On the other hand, if you’re saving 15% of your income, who cares how you’re spending the other 85%? Don’t lose sight of the big picture.

Michael B. Rubin is the author of Beyond Paycheck to Paycheck and the blog of the same name. He is the President of Total Candor, a financial planning education company.

It's All Happening

katehudsoninalmostfamous.jpgYou know how there are movies that you have to watch through to the end every time you catch them while flipping the channels. Almost Famous definitely tops that list for me.

I would so have loved living on the road with Penny, William, the girls, and Stillwater. And, of course, I would have been there because of the music. But the clothes, also right up my alley. I've always been especially fond of Ms. Lane's jacket with the furry collar and the way it just envelops her in bohemia.




Sponsored Topics: AlmostFamous - Penny - Art - People - Stillwater

Who Benefits from the CPAN?

First: This is neither a complaint nor a criticism. I understand the intent of the CPAN and its goals. I believe it meets those goals effectively.

If you talk to Jarkko about the CPAN, he'll likely tell you that it's primarily a distribution service. It's a series of regularly updated mirrors containing some metadata and an archive of redistributable code. Many proposals for enhancements and replacements and reinventions in other languages have come and gone. Most of them have tried to add complexity to this simple base. That's one reason they haven't succeeded.

This half of the CPAN makes code available to users.

Another half of the CPAN is PAUSE, the service which allows CPAN developers to upload their code to the metadata analysis and code distribution service.

The third half of the CPAN consists of the tools used to find and install CPAN distributions with partial or full automation. It's an optional part of the CPAN experience, but it demonstrates that the CPAN ecosystem also includes tools which rely on the metadata and mirroring services which the CPAN makes available. Without this metadata, the CPAN would be much less useful.

It's also the metadata which allows services such as search.cpan.org (which many people consider the face of the CPAN), RT for CPAN, CPAN Testers, CPANTS, CPAN Ratings, CPAN Forums, and plenty of other services now and in the future.

That's what the CPAN is: a loose federation of sites and services built around a code and metadata mirroring system, with an upload service for registered developers.

Who's It For?

I believe the primary beneficiaries of the CPAN are active CPAN developers.

By uploading your code to the CPAN, you get worldwide mirroring and distribution. You get test results from a wide variety of platforms and versions. You get bug tracking, documentation hosting, reviews, and feedback on the quality and efficacy of your distribution.

You get to push your installation and dependency management to CPAN installers. Because CPAN tools are effective about gathering dependency information and publishing it in a form that other CPAN tools can understand, the easiest way to install distributions from the CPAN is with a CPAN shell such as CPAN.pm or CPANPLUS. Utilities exist for free software distributions such as Debian and Gentoo to wrap CPAN distributions into OS packages where the packaging system can manage them, but they're necessarily specific to individual platforms, where the CPAN shells can run on any operating system where Perl 5 runs.

One strong benefit of the existing CPAN shells is that they run distribution test suites before installation by default, refusing to install when test failures occur. This provides strong pressure to review, report, and fix test failures; the focus is on quality by default.

Active CPAN developers know when and how to report bugs, how to read CPAN Testers reports, and how to force installations. They may know how to use the BackPAN or to use an earlier version of a dependency.

This brings up a subtler feature of the CPAN which optimizes the experience for active CPAN developers: you always get the newest version of a distribution. While a PAUSE/CPAN shell hack allows developers to upload a development version which people cannot install accidentally, there's little ability to specify in dependencies that you want users to install a specific version of a dependency. One accidental upload in any of a dozen distributions could render half of the distributions on the CPAN uninstallable.

In some ways, this feature creates and exacerbates a problem. It can be difficult to bundle a distribution and all of its dependencies as the dependency graph can change during the bundling process.

A CPAN for Normal Users

What would a CPAN look like for normal users? ActiveState's PPM isn't a bad model in some ways, though it hews too closely to the CPAN itself in others. Binary repositories for Linux distributions have other advantages. I can think of several attributes of a CPAN enhancement for non-developers:

  • Binary distributions, or at least not requiring the presence of a C or C++ compiler and make utilities. This could be optional.
  • Run the tests on installation for verification and reporting purposes. This could also be optional, but I like the quality-by-default approach.
  • Bundling a distribution and all of its dependencies into a single, installable package.
  • Automatic relocation (perhaps through the use of local::lib or something similar) to allow multiple versions of a single distribution installed and usable.
  • Regular, tested updates to bundles and the contained dependency graphs.
  • Working with upstream.
  • Integration with OS packages.

The latter two I have no good ideas how to accomplish. Working with upstream can be difficult in the normal case; not everyone looks at CPAN Testers reports or the CPAN's RT or other CPAN extensions. Building OS packages seems like a lot of trouble and a lot of duplicate work.

Even so, the Perl 5 ecosystem already has most of the tools necessary to build such a thing. We can build a dependency graph for most CPAN distributions, and we can identify those without accurate graphs. We can calculate the likelihood of tests passing on various Perl 5 versions and platforms given that graph. It only takes a little bit of code to bundle most graphs into a dependency-first installable bundle, and a small loader module could set @INC paths appropriately.

Given a list of dependencies, it's possible to analyze the potential graphs for solutions and identify potential points of conflict or failure. If solutions exist, the software could create an installable bundle. Source code is the easiest, but a binary is possible.

It's also possible to keep these graphs and bundles up to date, with a lag of a few hours to a couple of days. Though calculating the possible solutions from a graph may be expensive, most of the information is cacheable.

Would people use such a system? I don't know. Should it replace elements of the current CPAN system? Never; it addresses a different purpose. Is it worth building? The idea continues to tickle my mind.

“No one mixes metaphors better than Tony Robbins....



“No one mixes metaphors better than Tony Robbins. Especially when he’s quoting himself.” elizabeth spiers

(posted with tweetshots.com)

i chop it down with the edge of my hand

Forget all the Woodstock commentary, and the Ang Lee movie. Just go watch Jimi in HQ.

(Via Fake Steve, who says "I honor the place where your countercultural spirit and my gleaming, secretive corporate campus become one.")

Shared: The most courteous way to kill Christian mice

Le Sportsac's PAPER Magazine Bag!

via www.papermag.com

Buzz: Kazmir on Verge of going to Angels

The Angels are close to acquiring Scott Kazmir from the Rays, reports Lyle Spencer of MLB.com.

According to Spencer, the Angels are expected to send prospects Alexander Torres and Matthew Sweeney to Tampa in the deal.

Kazmir had been 25–17 with a 3.49 ERA in 358 innings, during which he struck out 405 batters.

However, this season, in which he has spent time on the disabled list, he is just 8-7 with a 5.92 ERA, while going 2-0 with 21 strike outs in his last three starts.

The 25–year-old Kazmir will earn $20 million through 2011, after which he could become a free agent.

For the latest updates, keep an eye on MLB Trade Rumors.

NYC parkour

Rocketboom recently profiled some parkour practitioners in NYC. Is 35 too late to take up a new sport?

Tags: NYC   parkour   sports   video

Man in a van interview

Jimmy Tarangelo lives in Manhattan in a van down by the river.

He doesn't like paying rent, but he does like living in Manhattan. So what does he do? He lives in a van down by the river, literally. I spent a few hours with Jimmy and let him speak his mind.

Tags: interviews   NYC   video

Acela Club Dessert Menu

Since I know people are flocking to Citi Field, I figured you'd want to know about the dessert menu in the Acela Club. Each one is $8:

-Tiramisu
-Eclair with Fresh Berries
-Passion Fruit & Coconut Napoleon
-Raspberry Creme Brulee Tart
-'Almondine' Chocolate Hazelnut Mousse Cake (contains nuts, which maybe is why Almondine is in single quotes? or maybe it's from that excellent bakery? have to find out)
-Selection of Haagen-Dazs Ice Cream & Sorbet ($6)

Encyclopædic type

The Week in Type

It’s been a little while since the last week in type. I have so many links, so many new releases, so much news to share, I wonder where I should begin. I know, let’s start with a great site based on a very simple idea — Typedia is an encyclopedia of fonts, or in the words of its creator, a mix between IMDb and Wikipedia, but just for type. It’s not that the information is not out there; it is, but where this site, the brainchild of Jason Santa Maria and co., succeeds is in putting that information all under one roof, so to speak. My favourite feature is the Good Deeds page, which makes it really easy to contribute.

typedia, the typeface encyclopedia


Type Daily is a new site from ILT. It’s simply a aggregation of type-related content on the Web:

type daily

I will be organising the feeds a little, and adding a number of personalisation features in due course.

New fonts

There have been so many releases since my last week in type, so here a just a few to whet your appetite. A sans to begin with:

Organic from Neil Summerour. I think this is one of my favourites to come from Neil’s hand:

Organic fonts from Neil Summerour of Positype. Sans Serif. Humanist Sans

There’s also a brief write-up about Organic on the MyFonts blog.

Always excited to see a new release from Mark Simonson. Here’s something inspired by Italian Art Deco posters of the 30s. Meet the wonderful Mostra Nuova:

Mostra Nuova, Art Deco inspired font from Mark Simonson Studios

Joining FF Unit and FF Unit Rounded is the new FF Unit Slab:

ff unit slab

There’s a great article on The Making of FF Unit Slab, on the FontFeed. Well worth reading. There’s also an exceptionally creative digital specimen on Issu. The PDF version is here.

Inspiration

Absolutely love this piece by Joseph Newton of Veer. The type is P22 Kilkenny by Paul D Hunt. Two great talents, and a wondrous result:

Type: Horsehair by Paul D Hunt. Typography: Joseph Newton

Not a fan of the blurb — Merging the concept of typographic narrative with the dimensionality of paper,… — but like the concept, and love this piece from Ryan Riegner:

RYAN RIEGNER erode

Via @elliotjaystocks

Some good work from JHQ. Like this ad they did for Veer:

JHQ

Name the typeface!

I love to ‘paint’, so this scene is heaven, but wish I could produce something like this:

ABCNT

More here.

Came across the work of Tania Alvarez, via Ministry of Type. Fabric Type:

Tania Alvarez

Like the Letter Playground from Nate Williams:

letter playground

Nate has plans to open the site up for submissions.

I have a hard time keeping up with the posts on we love typography. Here’s just one of my recent favourites: Suitcase’s Tabac carved in stone:

tabac

Video

Fans of Helvetica, reach for the Kleenex, and watch Helvetica Destroyed:

Click here to view the embedded video.


Fontplore, an interactive application designed for searching and exploring font databases. They should team up with Typedia.

Click here to view the embedded video.


Marionettype. Actually Marionetten from Fabian Wolf. Very clever:

Click here to view the embedded video.

And in honour of the brilliant Ed Rondthaler, who died last week at the age of 104. Here he is poking fun at English spelling:

Click here to view the embedded video.


Lovely article on Ed, over at The FontFeed.

Type links

Type Online — Ministry of Type
Jan Tschichold — Master Typographer (book review)
A lost Caslon type: Long Primer No 1
The different faces of type
What is Typekit? — Typophile
Type Online
Collection of apothecary inspiration
Jack Pierson — neon signs
The making of Phaeton
CSS text rotation
Beautiful fonts with @font-face
Granshan 09 Type Design Competition
‘Punctuation hero’ branded a vandal
Blanka: Müller-Brockmann
Focus on FontStructors – Paul D. Hunt
More reasons to get excited about Typekit
Automatic page numbering
Typekit pricing
T Magazine
Typemytype.com font creation tools — via
IKEA opts for Verdana
New fonts & typographic features in Snow Leopard

Study terms and type anatomy while drinking your coffee from this Font me typography mug:

typography mug

New foundries

Typejockeys, a new foundry from Austria. Setup by Anna Fahrmaier, Thomas Gabriel, and Michael Hochleitner. Beautiful looking Web site, and some lovely types too:

typejockeys type foundry from Austria

Be sure to read the article about them on TypeOff.

The second is BAT, a new French foundry set to launch very soon. BAT (The Bureau des Affaires Typographiques) is Jean-Baptiste Levee, Bruno Bernard, Patrick Paleta, and Stéphane Buellet. Leave your email and they’ll shout the second they’re open for business. And, of course, they’re on twitter too.

Letterpress

I recently commissioned Paperedtogether to print my ‘business’ cards. Printed on 300gsm Lettra, set in Skolar regular and italic:

paperedtogether letterpress

And Justin at Typoretum in the UK, has letterpress-printed a limited edition of my Typographic Restraint piece:

typoretum

typoretum-for-ILT

I must say that credit should go to the designers of Restraint, namely Ross Mills and Marian Bantjes. I simply set the type. And that’s one of the wonderful things about this typeface — it’s such a joy to set and to play with. It should be in everyone’s type library. It’s available through Tiro Typeworks (brief review of this TDC 2008 winner over at Typographica). The print is now available from the ILT shop. Use the code “twitter” for a 10% discount (available for the first few days). And, if you’re looking for great people to work with on your letterpress projects, then I recommend both Krista of Paperedtogether and Justin of Typoretum — they both have ink in their veins.

Fontgame app

The Fontgame has proven hugely popular, so it’s about time we gave it a complete overhaul and release it as an app for the iPhone and iPod Touch. The app should launch next month. 700 type samples, three levels of difficulty — from somewhat difficult through exceedingly difficult —, plus many other features. And, we’re already thinking of new stuff for version two.

fontgame app

My co-conspirators (the guys who do all the hard work) are Kari (creator of the original fontgame, and co-creator of WLT) and Justin of the iPhone Typography app.

And finally…

The above is just a fraction of the links I collect, so I’m going to try to incorporate a sidenotes feature on the home page. Not sure where it will go; will probably end up redesigning ILT completely. Anyway, thanks for reading and thanks for sending in links. Enjoy type, and enjoy your week.




Encyclopædic type

Pre-school!

nihonmachi.jpg

Tesla went to preschool yesterday. It's still the transition stage so I joined her the whole time, and we stayed just 1.5 hours. On Monday, she'll go for 3 hours joined by Gran Marie. Then she has a few half days, then she'll go full days.

It's been super special that Tesla has had so much one-on-one time with Gran Marie, and it's sad to change this, but Tesla is also very ready for a group of friends and lots of fun activities. She was actually shy yesterday, and I caught her staring at the other kids in deep observation. She also really wanted to play with all the new toys even though there were fun structured activities going on. Otherwise, I know this school is just perfect. And there is lots of Japanese speaking which makes me very happy. The teachers in fact spoke to her in Japanese only first until they realized she doesn't really talk back in Japanese even though she can understand. I totally love all the teachers, and I'm so excited to see how Tesla's Japanese will evolve!

Here are a few pics.

Black Star

Black Star

May 30, 2009 -- Black Star (Mos Def and Talib Kweli) perform at the Nokia Theatre in New nork, NY.

A challenging shoot as both performers came out wearing hats, casting shadows on their faces, and security did not want the photographers using any flash. Trying for catch-flash it is, then. It was an honor to get to shoot the reunited Black Star, though.

Read the article or view the full set on Flickr.

On donkeys, the "little pistons" of Morocco

Susan Orlean travels to Morocco to find out about donkeys for Smithsonian magazine.

The medina in Fez may well be the largest urbanized area in the world impassable to cars and trucks, where anything that a human being can't carry or push in a handcart is conveyed by a donkey, a horse or a mule. If you need lumber and rebar to add a new room to your house in the medina, a donkey will carry it in for you. If you have a heart attack while building the new room on your house, a donkey might well serve as your ambulance and carry you out. If you realize your new room didn't solve the overcrowding in your house and you decide to move to a bigger house, donkeys will carry your belongings and furniture from your old house to your new one. Your garbage is picked up by donkeys; your food supplies are delivered to the medina's stores and restaurants by mule; when you decide to decamp from the tangle of the medina, donkeys might carry your luggage out or carry it back in when you decide to return. In Fez, it has always been thus, and so it will always be. No car is small enough or nimble enough to squeeze through the medina's byways; most motorbikes cannot make it up the steep, slippery alleys. The medina is now a World Heritage site. Its roads can never be widened, and they will never be changed; the donkeys might carry in computers and flat-screen televisions and satellite dishes and video equipment, but they will never be replaced.

This is probably the most interesting thing you'll ever read about donkeys.

Tags: Morocco   Susan Orlean   travel

Has 3-D already failed?

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Years ago, James Cameron announced that his upcoming film, Avatar, would only be released to theaters capable of showing it in 3-D. Since then, he has proselytized fervently at trade shows and fan cons, hoping that Avatar would be such a blockbuster that exhibitors would finally decide to make that expensive leap and invest to convert their auditoriums to add 3-D.

Many commentators seemed to assume that Cameron’s saying such a thing would make it so. Here’s what Popular Mechanics opined only a little over a year ago:

Cameron’s insistence on 3-D projection will likely force the industry to ramp up the installation of 3-D technology dramatically. “Cameron is going to be able to bully theaters into compliance,” says former Premiere magazine critic Glenn Kenny. “He’s got the clout, and he’s got the mojo to do it. Everybody is going to want his next film.”

Avatar will need about 4,000 screens for a 3-D-only release, estimates Doug Darrow, manager of DLP brand and marketing at Texas Instruments, which makes the chips that power theatrical 3-D projectors. Of course, once the Avatar-inspired infrastructure is in place, other 3-D-only releases will follow.

The problems with conversion are manifest. Number one is the expense. 3-D systems are digital, so first the theater owner must convert from 35mm projectors to digital. 3-D is an add-on system that entails additional expenditure. A digital conversion alone costs over $100,000, about five times the cost of a 35mm platter projector. Right now most “D” theaters have 2K projection, but 4K is gradually being introduced for both shooting and showing. (Che and District 9 were shot mostly on 4K.) What theater owner wants to buy an expensive projector that will be obsolete within a few years? And what was supposed to be the breakthrough year for 3-D sees us at what may be the bottom of a huge financial crisis. It has slowed down an already laggardly process.

Among commentators, there’s apparently a lot of support for Cameron’s position. This year, coverage of Avatar has been considerable and has mostly echoed his prediction that this is the future of cinema. Geeks who tend to love special-effects-heavy sci fi and fantasy films also tend to long for all of those films to be 3-D. Star Wars and The Lord of the Rings cannot be converted into 3-D fast enough for them. They run websites to express their fervor and to report every new technical innovation and every rumor about a future film perhaps being made in 3-D.

I’ll admit that the signs that 3-D is finally going to become a routine and frequent method for making and exhibiting films are clearer than ever this year. More theater chains are announcing conversion to digital projection after years of resistance. More films in 3-D, and good films, are appearing, like Coraline and Up. And I have to admit that I enjoyed Monsters vs. Aliens more than its tepid reviews had suggested I might.

But there are negative signs as well. Perhaps most notably, the major proponents of 3-D, after years of berating the exhibition wing of the industry for its slow adoption of digital and 3-D technology, are still berating it. Jeffrey Katzenberg, who had announced that all Dreamworks Animation features would henceforth be made in 3-D, is one such complainer. Cameron is another. As of now, roughly 320 of the U.K.’s 3600 screen are digital—which doesn’t entail that all have 3-D capacity. In the U.S. it’s 2500 out of 38,000.

These days, a major blockbuster may open on 4000 screens or more. Given Avatar’s massive budget, rumored at $237 million (not counting prints and advertising), Twentieth Century Fox couldn’t settle for showing only in 3-D, even if every properly equipped screen in the country showed it.

The recent theatrical free previews of scenes from Avatar in 3-D have renewed the claims that this approach is the future. Yet some commentators are cautious about that claim. The Guardian quotes Louise Tutt, deputy editor of Screen International: “It seems a little overambitious,” she says. “A little over-enthusiastic. I mean, take a film like 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days – who needs to see that in 3-D? So no, I don’t believe it will happen.” She sighs. “But then who am I to contradict James Cameron?”

Cameron is a mighty force for change, no doubt. The Abyss and Terminator 2 introduced the sort of morphing technology that made digital effects a reality. But oddly, there aren’t a lot of other directors quite that gung-ho about 3-D. They’re willing to praise it and suggest that they may make films in 3-D, but they don’t go around to trade shows pressuring exhibitors to convert their theaters.

Peter Jackson, for example, keeps hinting at such a possibility. Apparently his team is testing the new Red camera’s 3-D model with an eye to using it in the remake of The Dambusters. That’s slated to be produced by Jackson and directed by Christian Rivers. But if Jackson were as enthusiastic about the process as Cameron, wouldn’t The Lovely Bones be in 3-D? Steven Spielberg hasn’t been pushing 3-D, although there are rumors about the Tintin films being 3-D. But rumors and expressed interest don’t influence exhibitors reluctant to invest in upgrading theaters on the basis of the still-limited 3-D product that’s out there so far. Where’s Ridley Scott in this debate? Well, to be fair, he called the Avatar footage “phenomenal,” but I don’t see him making 3-D movies and demanding that they play only in properly equipped theaters. Where’s Tim Burton? Even George Lucas, Mr. Digital Technology, who keeps saying that Star Wars will be converted to 3-D, doesn’t have Cameron’s zeal.

Retro-fitting movies is hugely expensive, by the way. One of the few retro-fitted titles, Tim Burton’s The Nightmare before Christmas, has taken to returning annually, as if to remind us of that fact.

Even Pixar, which has said it will henceforth make all its films in 3-D, has been strangely low-key about its current project of re-doing the first two Toy Story films in 3-D and re-releasing them as a lead-up to the premiere of the third film, planned in 3D from the start. (This year the first two will be shown at the Venice film festival, which has added a 3-D prize.) Presumably they are content to provide both 3-D and 2-D prints.

We’re also not seeing a lot of directors in other countries clamoring for the option of making their movies in 3-D. Hollywood may dominate world cinema in terms of screen time occupied and tickets sold, but there are still thousands of movies made elsewhere each year.

There are still few enough theaters in the U.S. capable of showing 3-D movies that films end up with truncated runs. Coraline perhaps suffered most from being taken off screens while it still had commercial potential and before word of mouth had time to help it gain the audiences it deserved. The release of the partially 3-D Imax version of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince was delayed by the fact that Transformers 2 was still occupying Imax theaters. I can’t help but wonder if there are some studio executives who look at this situation and, without announcing it to the world, decide that the films they’re about to greenlight will be made in 2-D. Plenty of those theaters to go around. (Well, not for all the independent films jostling each other in the market, but that’s another blog topic.)

Cameron has bowed to the inevitable and is allowing Avatar to play in both 3-D and 2-D theaters. It seems obvious that it will still take years before a film can go out into the world without 2-D 35mm prints being included in its distribution.

During those years, there’s the potential that 3-D will lose its luster for audiences. One of the main arguments always rolled out in favor of conversion is that theaters can charge more for 3-D screenings. Proportionately, theaters that show a film in 3-D will take in more at the box-office because they charge in the range of $3 more per ticket than do theaters offering the same title in a flat version.

But what happens when, say, half the films playing at any given time in a city are in 3-D? Will moviegoers decide that the $3 isn’t really worth it? Even now, would they pay $3 extra to see The Proposal or Julie & Julia in 3-D? The kinds of films that seem as if they call out for 3-D are far from being the only kinds people want to see. Films like these already make money on their own, unassisted by fancy technology.

Then there’s the fact that the extra $3 is not simply profit. There has to be an employee handing out the glasses, though sometimes the ticketseller does that. And those glasses in themselves cost money. Some will get damaged. When David and I saw Monsters vs. Aliens, there was a woman with a child, perhaps four years old, in front of us in the concession line. She handed both pairs of glasses to the kid while she dealt with paying for the refreshments. He had his fingers all over the lenses, of course.

If a theater is using the RealD 3-D system, it’s no big deal if kids with sticky fingers get hold of the glasses. They are so cheap as to be disposable, if the theater doesn’t want to bother collecting and re-using them. Problem is, the theater has to buy or rent a special silver screen to project on. The Dolby 3D system doesn’t require a special screen, but its glasses cost a whopping $50 apiece as of 2007. In Dolby theaters, you’ll find tense ushers waiting outside, making absolutely sure everyone returns theirs for washing and re-use.

No doubt 3-D enthusiasts would object that someday the system will be so routine that we’ll all have our own glasses and bring them along. That would cut the expenses to the theater, to be sure. But remember, different 3-D systems require different kinds of glasses. Are audiences willing to collect one of each and keep track of which they need to take along when they head for the theater—especially those $50 ones? (“Check the theaters listings, honey. Is it RealD or Dolby tonight?”) And there are more competitors entering the market, with their own glasses.

Is current audience enthusiasm permanent?

As usual, the studios take box-office figures to equal enthusiasm on the part of fans. In public, at least, they don’t speculate as to whether 3-D might again be, as it was in the 1950s, a mere fad or a specialized taste. But because spectators are willing to pay extra now because 3-D is still a novelty, does that mean they’ll maintain that attitude once 3-D is common?

Maybe not. And maybe even now not all filmgoers care. Some even dislike 3-D.

Roger in 3-d glassesOne vocal critic is Roger Ebert. His “D-Minus for 3-D” blog entry is an eloquent takedown of the technique on aesthetic grounds. He just doesn’t like watching movies in 3-D:

In my review of the 3-D “Journey to the Center of the Earth,” I wrote that I wished I had seen it in 2-D: “Since there’s that part of me with a certain weakness for movies like this, it’s possible I would have liked it more. It would have looked brighter and clearer, and the photography wouldn’t have been cluttered up with all the leaping and gnashing of teeth.” “Journey” will be released on 2-D on DVD, and I am actually planning to watch it that way, to see the movie inside the distracting technique. I expect to feel considerably more affection for it.

Ask yourself this question: Have you ever watched a 2-D movie and wished it were in 3-D? Remember that boulder rolling behind Indiana Jones in “Raiders of the Lost Ark?” Better in 3-D? No, it would have been worse. Would have been a tragedy.

He refutes the widespread argument in favor of realism:

There is a mistaken belief that 3-D is “realistic.” Not at all. In real life we perceive in three dimensions, yes, but we do not perceive parts of our vision dislodging themselves from the rest and leaping at us. Nor do such things, such as arrows, cannonballs or fists, move so slowly that we can perceive them actually in motion. If a cannonball approached that slowly, it would be rolling on the ground.

It’s true that the “coming at you!” effects in 3-D movies are disruptive. I remember the 3-D in Bwana Beowulf, excuse me, Beowulf primarily for those weapons thrusting out of the screen or the gratuitous overhead tracks past beams looking down toward the distant floor. More interesting, though, is that fact that although I saw Coraline and Up in 3-D, I remember them in 2-D. Those films didn’t throw spears at the spectator or otherwise seek to pierce that fourth wall with their props. Of course as I was watching, I noticed that the mise-en-scene had layers of depth and the figures a rounded look, but apparently my life-long movie habits filtered those aspects out as the films entered my memory. I look forward to seeing both films again on DVD, and given the fact that home-theater 3-D is still in its very early stages, I’ll probably see them flat. Fine with me.

Yes, Coraline was carefully designed with 3-D effects in mind, playing with skewed perspective to characterize the two worlds the heroine moves between. But as David showed by reproducing a frame here on our merely 2-D blog, the same motifs worked without the glasses. They’re quite similar, in fact, to the forced or distorted perspective used in Germany films of the 1920s.

We saw District 9 this week. No 3-D, and I for one am glad about that.

On August 26, TheOneRing.net, the premiere Tolkien site on the internet (for both novels and films), pointed to the current results of its ongoing poll. They asked, “Should the Hobbit films be in 3-D?” Many of the fans who frequent TORN do so because of the films. They have heard rumors over the years, mainly hints dropped by Peter Jackson, that The Hobbit might be made in 3-D. So what is their reaction as reflected by the poll? As of August 26, 55% say no, 13% say emphatically no (“Ugh … 3-D?”), 13% are sitting on the fence, and 13% say yes.

TORN subsequently checked with director Guillermo del Toro, who reassured them, “I can safely say that, as of this moment, there are absolutely NO conversations about doing the HOBBIT films in 3D.”

Of course, my title, “Has 3-D already failed?” was meant to be provocative. Its answer depends on how one defines success. If you’re Jeffrey Katzenberg and want every theater in the world now showing 35mm films to convert to digital 3-D, then the answer is probably yes. That goal is unlikely to be met within the next few decades, by which time the equipment now being installed will almost certainly have been replaced by something else.

Right now, the big proliferation is in tiny personal screens, iPod Touches, cell phones, portable gaming devices. Will teenagers allow themselves to look dorky by sitting with 3-D glasses staring at their phones? 3-D has the effect of making films that won’t play well on the very devices that studio heads would love to see playing their movies. So far, it is a remarkably inadaptable technology to try and force on people whose movie-playing gadgets change every few years. The big break-through, home-video 3-D, is aimed at a machine that people are supposedly abandoning in favor of other screens. 3-D movies on your computer? So much for inviting pals over for a sociable evening of popcorn and a movie in your impressive home theater.

Maybe Hollywood will forge ahead, despite all the obstacles I’ve mentioned. But it also seems possible that the powers that be will decide that 3-D has reached a saturation point, or nearly so. 3-D films are now a regular but very minority product in Hollywood. They justify their existence by bringing in more at the box-office than do 2-D versions of the same films. Maybe for the films that wouldn’t really benefit from 3-D, like Julie & Julia, will continue to be made in 2-D. 3-D is an add-on to a digital projector, so theaters can remove it to show 2-D films. Or a multiplex might reserve two or three of its theaters for 3-D and use the rest for traditional screenings.

If that more modest goal is the one many Hollywood studios are aiming at, then no, 3-D hasn’t failed. But as for 3-D being the one technology that will “save” the movies from competition from games, iTunes, and TV, I remain skeptical. Given the banner year that Hollywood is having, I echo Daffy Duck when in The Scarlet Pumpernickel his lover picks him up and, crying “Save me,” races from her forced marriage, he says,“So what’s to save?”

John Krasinski & Emily Blunt Engaged!

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-Photo by RADCLIFFE/Bauer-Griffin-


It's an Office romance gone good!

The show's star John Krasinski and Devil Wears Prada actress Emily Blunt are getting married.

"We can confirm that John and Emily are engaged," says John's rep.

The couple have been dating since November 2008. Emily was previously hanging with sensitive crooner Michael Buble -- but they broke up last last July.

Congrats to the cuties!

The Traveling Egg

Procure a goose’s egg, and after opening and cleaning it, put a bat into the shell, and then glue a piece of paper fast over the aperture. The motions of the poor little prisoner in struggling to get free, will cause the egg to roll about in a manner that will excite much astonishment.

--The Boy’s Treasury of Sports, Pastimes, and Recreations By Samuel Williams

Le Sportsac's PAPER Magazine Bag!

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check it out. Le Sportsac created a bag in honor of PAPER's 25th anniversary! It'll go on sale in a few weeks!!! Isn't it cute? It has a Day-Glo lining of course...

If your money isn’t buying hap…

If your money isn’t buying happiness, you’re spending it wrong: http://bit.ly/8fd9X

Tobey Maguire Tapped to Play Grant Achatz in Biopic

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A well connected tipster reports that Tobey Maguire is attached to the proposal for the Grant Achatz biopic, tentatively titled "Taste." The movie is an adaptation of the Alinea chef's book Life On The Line, with David Dobkin directing.

It's still premature for confirmations, since the film has yet to get a green light. And it should be noted that Maguire (aka SPIDERMAN) has, oh about 16 projects in development, so who knows. But perhaps all the kudos Meryl Streep received for her Julia role will push him into the chef role. Here's hoping it does (or that he turns it down and they give it to Ethan Hawk).
· EaterWire: Grant Achatz the Movie [~E~]
· Life on the Line: A Peek at Grant Achatz's Memoir [~E~]

Celebrity GPS voices

I had no idea you could get celebrity voices for your GPS navigation device. There's Mr. T ("what does he say if you need to go to the airport?"), Yoda, KITT from Knight Rider, Michael Caine, Kim Cattrall, the Star Trek computer voice, Homer Simpson, Gary Busey, and Dennis Hopper.

And then of course you've got the mashups like Mr. T navigates Mr. Bean, Mr. T navigates Frogger, and Mr. T navigating in Mario Kart Wii.

You may even be able to get a Bob Dylan voice soon.

Tags: celebrities   gps   Mr. T   remix   video

The Detroit Metro Area's Top 25 Pizzas

From Slice

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[Credit: Detroit Free Press]

In May Alan Richman dropped his Top 25 Pizza List in GQ magazine and in a related story somewhat counterintuitively declared Detroit the No. 3 pizza city in the U.S. The Detroit Free Press now seems to be reacting to the pizza spotlight—a little late but better than never.

What's interesting, though, is that the Freep story focuses not on the Sicilian style that Richman praised as being "flawlessly executed" consistently throughout the region but on the up-and-coming pizzerias in the Motor City. The paper rounds up 25 places to check out. View the list, after the jump.

For people who like hard-and-fast ranking, the list may come as a small disappointment. Supino Pizzeria seems to come in at No. 1, but thereafter the pizzerias are listed in alphabetical order. That doesn't bother me so much; if I lived in Detroit, I'd want to check them all out regardless. [Hat tip to everyone who emailed me this link yesterday!]

Detroit Free Press's Top 10 Pizzerias

Supino Pizzeria: 2457 Russell, Detroit MI; 313-567-7879; supinopizza.com

Amici's: 3249 Twelve Mile, Berkley MI; 248-544-4100; amicispizza.com

Buddy's: 31646 Northwestern, Farmington Hills MI; 248-855-4600; buddyspizza.com

Cloverleaf Bar & Restaurant: 24443 Gratiot, Eastpointe MI; 586-777-5391; cloverleafrestaurant.com

Dan Good Pizza: 35346 Twenty-three Mile Road, New Baltimore MI; 586-716-7770; www.dangoodpizza.com">dangoodpizza.com

DiNoto's Genuine Italian: 20223 Mack, Grosse Pointe Woods MI; 313-884-5030; dinotos.com

Green Lantern Lounge: 28960 John R, Madison Heights MI; 248-541-5439; greenlanternlounge.com

Luigis Original Restaurant: 36691 Jefferson, Harrison Township MI; 586-468-7711; luigisoriginal.com

Shield's: 1476 W. Maple, Troy MI; 248-637-3131; shieldspizza.com

Tomatoes Apizza: 29275 Fourteen Mile, Farmington Hills MI; 248-855-3555; tomatoesapizza.com

The Rest of the Top 25 Detroit Pizzerias

Aubree's Pizzeria & Tavern: 2122 Whittaker, Ypsilanti MI; 734-483-1525; aubrees.com

Brooklyn Pizza: 111 Henrietta, Birmingham MI; 248-258-6690; brooklynpizza.biz

Compari's On the Park: 350 S. Main Street, Plymouth MI; 734-416-0100; comparisdining.com

Cottage Inn: 512 East William Street, Ann Arbor MI; 734-663-3379; cottageinn.com

Crust Pizza & Wine Bar: 6622 Telegraph, Bloomfield Township MI; 248-855-5855; crustpizza.net

Frank's Restaurant & Pizzeria: 3144 Biddle, Wyandotte MI; 734-282-0512

Fresh Farms Market: 355 Fisher Road, Grosse Pointe MI; 313-882-5100; freshfarmsmarket.com

Georgio's Pizza & Pasta: 117 S. Main Street, Rochester MI; 248-601-2882; georgiospizzaandpasta.net

Jet's Pizza: 30120 Southfield Road, Southfield MI; 248-645-5387; jetspizza.com

Loui's Pizza: 23141 Dequindre, Hazel Park MI; 248-547-1711

Pizza Cutter: 340 N. Center, Northville MI; 248-348-3333; pizzacutters.com

Pizza Papalis: 4036 Telegraph, Bloomfield Township MI; 248-540-7722; pizzapapalis.com

Primo's Pizza: 10100 W. Nine Mile, Oak Park MI; 248-399-9400

Rosie O'Grady's: 30400 Twenty-three Mile, Chesterfield Township MI; 586-421-1962; 4rosieogradys.com

Sportsman's Pizzeria: 2425 Fort, Wyandotte MI; 734-284-6770

Widescreen vs pan and scan

This video features a number of directors talking about the difference between viewing films in widescreen vs. pan and scan. Martin Scorsese:

[Converting to pan & scan] is, technically, re-directing the movie.

Tags: Martin Scorsese   movies   video

Armadillo Cam!

Armadillo Cam!

Armadillo running and sniffing small shrub.

Consecutive starts with 6+ IP

Check out the longest streaks in 2009 where a starter had at least 6 IP in each game:
                  StreakStart  Streak End Games   W   L   GS  CG SHO  GF  SV   IP     H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR   ERA  HBP  WP  BK Teams
+-----------------+-----------+-----------+-----+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 Adam Wainwright    2009-04-16  2009-08-25    25   14   7  25   1   0   0   0  176.2  164   55   50   46  146  15   2.55   2   6   0 STL                                  

 Ubaldo Jimenez     2009-05-01  2009-08-23    22   11   6  22   1   0   0   0  155.1  123   51   49   49  135   9   2.84   5   6   2 COL                                  

 Danny Haren        2009-04-07  2009-07-18    19   10   5  19   3   1   0   0  138     93   32   30   18  137  12   1.96   2   4   0 ARI                                  

 Josh Beckett       2009-05-05  2009-08-12    18   12   2  18   3   2   0   0  128.1   96   37   31   26  114   9   2.17   4   0   0 BOS                                  

 Tim Lincecum       2009-04-18  2009-07-17    17   10   1  17   3   2   0   0  126.1   91   31   27   29  149   4   1.92   2   6   0 SFG                                  

 Zach Duke          2009-05-12  2009-07-29    15    6   6  15   2   0   0   0  104.1  104   40   40   25   52  11   3.45   3   2   0 PIT                                  
Both Wainwright and Jiminez have active streaks. Going back to 2005, Roy Halladay has the longest streak:
                   StreakStart  Streak End Games   W   L   GS  CG SHO  GF  SV   IP     H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR   ERA  HBP  WP  BK Teams
+-----------------+-----------+-----------+-----+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 Roy Halladay       2008-06-20  2009-06-07    32   22   6  32   7   3   0   0  238.1  212   75   67   38  208  16   2.53   7   5   0 TOR                                  

 C.C. Sabathia      2008-04-22  2008-09-16    28   15   6  28   9   5   0   0  213.1  176   52   47   41  216  14   1.98   5   2   1 CLE-MIL                              
 Chris Carpenter    2005-04-16  2005-09-13    28   20   3  28   7   4   0   0  216    165   54   49   44  197  15   2.04   2   3   0 STL                                  

 Roy Halladay       2007-07-17  2008-06-08    27   14   8  27  10   1   0   0  211.2  195   76   69   37  148  13   2.93   9   2   0 TOR                                  
 Brandon Webb       2005-07-26  2006-06-10    27   14   6  27   2   2   0   0  197.1  179   59   53   32  149  14   2.42   4   5   2 ARI                                  
 Tom Glavine        2005-07-15  2006-06-03    27   15   8  27   2   1   0   0  189.1  155   54   50   43  122  12   2.38   5   0   0 NYM                                  

 Adam Wainwright    2009-04-16  2009-08-25    25   14   7  25   1   0   0   0  176.2  164   55   50   46  146  15   2.55   2   6   0 STL                                  
 Roy Halladay       2006-05-03  2006-09-05    25   13   4  25   4   0   0   0  181.2  168   69   66   28  113  16   3.27   4   2   0 TOR                                  

 Ubaldo Jimenez     2009-05-01  2009-08-23    22   11   6  22   1   0   0   0  155.1  123   51   49   49  135   9   2.84   5   6   2 COL                                  
 Danny Haren        2008-09-16  2009-07-18    22   12   5  22   4   2   0   0  160    112   39   37   21  162  13   2.08   2   5   0 ARI                                  
 Pedro Martinez     2005-04-04  2005-08-03    22   12   3  22   2   0   0   0  157    107   50   49   31  163  12   2.81   2   4   0 NYM                                  
The 2009 leaders both have a shot to match that streak but probably not this season.

The Art of Ponyo

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Viz has released a translation of The Art of Ponyo – the art book for the animated feature film which hit North American theatres this month. As with all the Studio Ghibli art books, the highlights are the watercolours by Hayao Miyazaki himself.

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A few more snaps from between the covers after the jump…

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art-of-ponyo-character-sketches

The Art of Ponyo at Amazon.

Also of interest:
The Art of Wall-E

August 27, 2009

Just Make It Simple

From TPM Reader BR ...

You're right that it makes no sense to not counter lies from Armey about the public option with "expanding Medicare access to those under 65" rhetoric.

What I don't understand is why nobody has talked about Kennedy's Medicare for All act, which is an elegant solution for just that - a public option in which folks can buy into Medicare.

http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s110-1218

http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s109-2229

The reasons this needs to be a big part of the public debate:

- This was Kennedy's last piece of unfinished life work. All those reporters who claim to know what Kennedy wanted are doing a disservice by not citing Kennedy's own legislation on the matter.

- Kennedy himself was personally pushing for a public option in the form of Medicare for All (this negates any claim that Kennedy would have not supported a public option).

- This is an example of what he would have wanted to pass (he reintroduced the bill, so it wasn't just some one-time idea of his).

- The bill was amazing in its simplicity, countering arguments that all health reform components are by nature arcane and indecipherable: every 5 years (every 2 years in another version) the eligibility for Medicare would be lowered by 10 years (and raised from below by 10 years), with those under 65 being asked to check a box on their taxes if they signed up for Medicare (to be charged for it). It's a simple model for the public option, and hard(er) to lie about.

- I believe David Waldman at Daily Kos was correct when he pointed out that it would make sense for the public option to be the "Kennedy plan"; irrespective of the politics, it would make sense because Kennedy's own bill was a public option bill, not a comprehensive reform package with 100 moving parts.

This is an idea whose time has come, and there ought to be robust public discussion about it.



Photo



PAPER Favorite Irina Lazareanu on the cover of Romanian Elle

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PAPER favorite Irina Lazareanu never gets boring for us and this month she looks yummy on the cover of Romanian Elle, shot by Giuliano Bekor. MM didn't even know that Elle has a Romanian edition and MM loves and j'adores all things Romanian!!!!



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Serious Salsa: Salsa Amarilla

From Recipes

Note: You may know Lisa Fain as the Homesick Texan. She joins us each Thursday this summer with a new salsa recipe for you to try. Have at it, Lisa.

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My philosophy is that you can always judge the quality of a taco truck by the appearance of its salsas. For example, if there are no salsas for you to use then you should walk away—these people are not only stingy, but they’re also probably not very proud of their food. If there are only one or two salsas—say, the requisite red and green—I’d probably stay, but first I’d check and see if there are other taco trucks in the area with more condiments on hand.

What exactly am I looking for? How about a truck that has an array of salsas—red, green, yellow and orange—along with pickled jalapenos, sliced radishes, chopped cilantro and onions. If I see this, there’s no question—this taco truck is where I want to eat. And heck, even if the taco isn't all that great, you’ll be able to make it sing with that chorus of delicious condiments. There’s a taco truck I like to go to* and I started eating at it for this reason alone. Out on display for your eating pleasure are usually at least six salsas, if not more.

My favorite taco to order is a carnitas taco and this truck makes them especially well—crisp and juicy. And while I usually opt for a creamy green salsa to put on my carnitas, at this truck I choose a yellow salsa instead.

The first time I had this yellow salsa I was expecting habaneros, but this salsa wasn’t that fiery. Instead, it was more hearty than hot and had a nutty flavor as well. Not being shy about asking for recipes, I asked the taco-truck proprietor if he’d tell me how it was made. He declined to share, but I did learn that he wasn't even Mexican—he was from Ecuador.

A little research led me to discover that in Ecuador they commonly make salsas from ají chiles, which are long medium-hot chiles that can be either red or yellow. They also often add sesame seeds, beans, or peanut butter to their salsas, which gives it a distinctive flavor.

The recipe I came up with is a hybrid of several I found, and while it may not taste exactly the same, it’s pretty close to what I've eaten at this taco truck. Ají chiles aren’t easy to find fresh—if you do see some, definitely buy them. Otherwise, for this salsa recipe you can substitute yellow wax chiles or even jalapenos, in a pinch.

I like to slather this on tacos, but it also goes well on top of potatoes, as a dipping sauce for vegetables or as a chunky dressing for salads. But the best thing about this salsa is what it represents: a salsa that goes beyond the expected and lets you believe that you’re in for a treat.

About the author: Lisa Fain is a seventh-generation Texan who now hangs her hat in New York City. To keep in touch with her roots, she writes and photographs the food blog Homesick Texan.

Nutty Salsa Amarillo

Ingredients

1 teaspoon peanut or olive oil
1 medium-sized yellow tomato, cut into quarters
2 long yellow wax chiles, stems removed and cut into thirds
1 large clove of garlic, cut into quarters
1 teaspoon sesame seeds
1/4 cup of cilantro, minced
Pinch of cumin
Salt to taste

Ingredients

1. In a skillet, heat the oil on medium and then cook the tomato, chiles, and garlic, turning once, for five minutes or until black spots begin to appear. Add the sesame seeds and cook for two minutes more.

2. Place skillet contents in a blender and purée. Stir in the cilantro, cumin and salt. Can serve warm or let it cool overnight.

Note: If you're curious, the taco truck I'm talking about is called El Fogoncito and it’s usually at 85th and Roosevelt in Jackson Heights in Queens, New York. They keep erratic hours, however, so be warned!

Breuckelen-Bound Train Spotted in Manhattan

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At least this underground sign makes more sense than the "Brodaway" tiling spotted on the G platform. The Examiner spotted this one in the Fulton Street station (on the 2/3 platform) pointing towards a train headed to Downtown Breuckelen. This isn't a typo, it's just old-timey! As they point out, "the sign refers to the original Dutch name for Brooklyn. Named after a town in The Netherlands, the Village of Breuckelen was one of the first municipalities in New York State and was founded by the Dutch West India Company in the 1640s."

Who knew the Fulton stop was the MTA equivalent to Doc Brown's DeLorean? Sadly, there's no traveling back in time, as the sign has been taken down. NYCT's Charles Seaton confirmed with us today, "This was indeed a prank and was corrected as soon as it was brought to our attention."



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to do: spend weekend contemplating light beams being slow enough to dodge

I really wish John Scalzi hadn't used the phrase "Epic FAIL" in the title of his piece about technology and design in Star Wars. Because otherwise it's fun reading, in a "yeah, I know, it is sad that I'm simultaneously (a) nodding in agreement, (b) finding it funny and (c) picking which bit to blog about" kind of way.

For the record, here's the bit I picked.

A tactical nightmare: They're incredibly loud, especially for firing what are essentially light beams. The fire ordnance is so slow it can be dodged, and it comes out as a streak of light that reveals your position to your enemies. Let's not even go near the idea of light beams being slow enough to dodge; that's just something you have let go of, or risk insanity.

So for the weekend it's either contemplate light beams slow enough to dodge, or unpack the rules of Eschaton. Either way -- insanity.

I was trying to put my finger on what irritated me about Gawker’s anonymous “Plight of...

I was trying to put my finger on what irritated me about Gawker’s anonymous “Plight of Print’s Lucky Ones” post and I think it’s mostly this:

The writer laments the decline of print and its increasing inability to provide well-paid jobs for people in his/her position.  Senior people are being fired because they’re too expensive, the industry is shrinking and it may not come back.

But here’s the thing:

All of this rests on the assumption that pricing of labor then was somehow more reflective of value then than it is now.  And who’s to say that salaries and what people are willing to pay for production values aren’t simply being corrected to a level that is actually sustainable and reflective of how these businesses should have been run in the first place?

There are a lot of people sitting around doing nothing in between closings? Maybe you’re overstaffed. Writers can’t make six figure salaries anymore? Maybe writing captions for celebrity photos doesn’t warrant six figures. Ad rates are tumbling? Maybe creating content on the back of expensive photo shoots by brand name photogs and high-dollar word rates for recognizable bylines doesn’t work because the quality of the content and the value that advertising against it provides is just not high enough given the cost of production.

Maybe the previous iteration of traditional media was just a creative Weimar Republic.  Maybe this is normal.

A Tribute To Sleater-Kennedy

Wow, afternoon burnout. I just misread the subject line of this mass email from Jersey Senator Bob Menendez as “A Tribute to Sleater-Kinney.” Instead of, you know… “Senator Kennedy.” Let’s be hygienic with our afternoon work products out there, people!

Quick Q&A: Can the Mets acquire Carl Crawford

Kent: I would love to see Carl Crawford call Citi Field home in 2010.  I think Citi Field would suit his talents well.  I read that the Rays may have been looking to trade him before the deadline.  Do you think the Rays will be looking to trade Crawford in the off-season?  What do you think the Mets would have to give up to get him?

Matthew Cerrone: In the days following the trade deadline, I was convinced the Mets would make Crawford a top priority this off season, since he fits many of their Citi-Field needs.  Now, I’m not so sure. 

The Rays are said to be looking to clear money from their payroll, but that was more of 2009 issue, to acquire pitching, than it is a need for 2010.  Frankly, it might have been easier to acquire Crawford last month, assuming a team would take on all of his salary, than it will be to acquire him this winter. 

I have no idea what he’d cost.  I bet there are lots of rumors this winter connecting the Mets and Rays, because they are willing to move three players - 1B Carlos Pena, LHP Scott Kazmir and Crawford - all of whom happen to play positions the Mets will likely look to upgrade.

The 27–year-old Crawford is batting .316 with a .372 OBP, 44 extra base hits and 54 stolen bases this season for the Rays.

He has a $10 million team option for 2010, after which he can become a free agent.

Photoshop CS3 and Snow Leopard. Yea or nea?

Filed under: , , ,

One of the dark spots hanging over the excitement over Snow Leopard is whether or not Photoshop CS3 will work.

Adobe caused some real consternation when they announced earlier this week that CS3 would get no support (along with the rest of the older Creative Suite) and suggested people upgrade to CS4.

In an Adobe FAQ [PDF download link] it's stated: "Older versions of Adobe creative software were not included in our testing efforts. While older Adobe and Macromedia applications may install and run on Mac OS X Snow Leopard (v10.6), they were designed, tested,and released to the public several years before this new operating system became available. You may therefore experience a variety of installation, stability, and reliability issues for which there is no resolution."

Then there was some backtracking from John Nack, Adobe Photoshop product manager. "It turns out that the Photoshop team has tested Photoshop CS3 on Snow Leopard, and to the best of our knowledge, PS CS3 works fine on Snow Leopard."

Hmmm. So will it work? People have invested a fortune in Adobe products. Some users who have used CS3 says it runs OK with late beta releases of Snow Leopard, but others have said there are a lot of problems. I've heard both stories from people using it, and remember, Adobe isn't saying CS4 is perfect either.

If I were making my living with Photoshop or other parts of the Creative Suite and was running CS3, I think I'd wait until there are a lot of user reports. Yes, CS3 has been out for a long time, and yes, Adobe would love to have us update to CS4, but in my case there are some critical plug-ins I use that haven't yet been updated to work with CS4, and I'm probably not alone.

Here's a link to John Nack's blog where some customers are commenting none too happily about Adobe right now.

I expect this issue is going to get a lot of attention when people start upgrading to Snow Leopard. Stand by.

TUAWPhotoshop CS3 and Snow Leopard. Yea or nea? originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 27 Aug 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Atul Gawande profile

Harvard Magazine has a nice profile of surgeon and writer Atul Gawande that talks about, among other things, his constant state of flow.

Gawande had seen that part of the man's colon was ischemic -- dead and gangrenous -- and had ceased to move waste out of the body. He wasn't sure about the cause, but suspected a blood clot. One thing was clear: without immediate surgery, the colon would rupture.

After examining the patient, Gawande conferred with the resident in the corridor outside the man's room. He went through a familiar and well-practiced set of actions that he seemed to do without thinking: slipping his ring finger into his mouth to moisten it, working his wedding band off, unbuckling his watchband, threading it through the ring, and refastening it, all the while carrying on a conversation about stopping the patient's anti-clotting medication and getting a vascular surgeon to assist.

Tags: Atul Gawande   medicine

Ted Kennedy, Going Out Strong

"As recently as a few days ago, Mr. Kennedy was still digging into big bowls of mocha chip and butter crunch ice creams, all smushed together (as he liked it). He and his wife, Vicki, had been watching every James Bond movie and episode of 24 on DVD." [New York Times]

BlackBerry Loves Stupid U2 Song So Much They’re Going To Play It For Us Again And Again And Again

bonoWell of course I think U2 is overrated, their longevity having now earned them a spot in the consensus rock pantheon that the quality of their music never would have otherwise. But to give credit where it’s due, they have made some great music (”One” is about a well-crafted a pop song as you get, I think.) And Bono puts his money (or, well, other rich people’s money, probably… but he puts his time and effort) where his mouth is when it comes to trying to make the world a better place. He’s a force for good. Fine.

But this new BlackBerry commercial that’s running every ten minutes on TV is burning through my goodwill fast. (I won’t even put it up here. You’ve surely seen it more times than want to, right? Here’s a link, if not.) Man, that is some crap, paint-by-the-numbers U2. All ringing high-notes guitar and bombastic melody and premature ejaculation. Even worse is the lyrics: “Every generation has a chance to save the world…” Yes, yes, we know, we know… Something something something and then: “I know I’ll go crazy if I don’t go crazy tonight!”

Yulch. If you’re going to go crazy either way, couldn’t you save it for a night when we don’t have to watch you bathed in sparkles and confetti or whatever, with the stage light reflecting off your futureman shades? Could you give us a break? It’s been a long summer.

The Incredible wd~50 Dinner You're Never Getting Into

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To review, back in June it was announced that a coterie of French chefs would be descending upon New York, taking over the Momofuku Empire and wd~50 for one night in September. Last week, Momofuku released their resys, giving lucky fans the chance to have a once in a lifetime kind of meal. But not a peep has come out of the wd~50 camp. That's because this dinner is too good for the proles.

While Pascal Barbot, Alexandre Gauthier, Iñaki Aizpitarte, and David Kinch descend on Momo, one of the most revered chefs in France and a hero to many over in the States, Michel Bras, will join David Chang and Wylie Dufresne in the kitchen of wd~50. A call to the restaurant today reveals they'll serve one seating at $250 a head, the menu is all Bras' invention—Chang and Dufresne will be quietly chopping vegetables we presume—and the meal is all vegetarian. Kind of makes Chang's recent vegetarian Beard House dinner make a little more sense, eh?

But don't get too excited. The waiting list is already full, and smart money says there won't be a non-VIP in the house that night. Maybe if you're good, they'll let you press your face against the glass.
· Impossible Resys: Chang Hands Over Momo Empire to French Chefs for One Night [~E~]
· BLOCKBUSTER: Momofuku Now Accepting Resys for Epic French Invasion [~E~]

Mark Penn: Not Fired!

MARK PENN TO BE FIRED LATER TODAYThe Wall Street Journal gave Gawker a statement today, about their columnist Mark Penn, whose firm uses his column there to get clients! “Obviously when you have a contributor, they use a column to market themselves. Clearly what was done is not something that we liked. But we’re pretty sure that it’s going to stop.” I am… amused? Angered? Skeeved? No wait: unimpressed.

The case of the missing Wired writer

Wired writer Evan Ratliff is on the lam and Wired is holding a contest to find him. The prize is $5000 and your photo in the magazine.

Starting August 15, I will try to stay hidden for 30 days. Not even my closest friends or my editors will know where I am. I'll remain in the US and will be online regularly. I will continue to use social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, and I'll make cell phone calls. I'll generally stay in the kind of social environment I like to live in (no hiding in a cabin in Montana), and I'll keep track of my pursuers, searching constantly for news about myself.

Wired is keeping a blog detailing Ratliff's breadcrumb trails (emails, IP addresses, CC purchases). Ratliff himself wrote an article for the most recent issue of Wired called Gone Forever: What Does It Take to Really Disappear? which is well worth the read.

Tags: Evan Ratliff

Your Blog is Your Mothership

Chris Alden quotes Web Worker Daily:

There are tons of ways to build a web presence, including a variety of social media and networking sites, but nothing is as important as your blog.

Boy, could this blog use a dose of that attitude. :-)

Terrible Movie Inspires Wonderful Critique

Okay, so it's not an EXACT match“The plot of this film: Tucker Max and two of his bros go to a bachelor party, meeting various cum sluts along the way. Whore bitches can’t get enough of Tucker Max’s bad boy personality, which is probably why so many of these twats want him inside of their vaginas. Tucker fucks a midget stripper and the world loves him for it, the end.”

If Pauline Kael weren’t already dead, this review would kill her. With envy.

NYC Parkour

Rocketboom NYC field correspondent, Ella Morton, meets up with a few New York based traceurs to learn about the art and physicality of Parkour. Jump Britain.

It's about the cheering

"The fans, believe it or not, are a big part of this," said Molina, who has hit three career pinch-hit homers. "They cheer you on and pump you up big time. I hope they understand that."

via SFGiants.com

Venn diagram of mythical creatures

Mythical Venn

My favorite is dog + dog + dog = Cerberus. (thx, ben)

Tags: infoviz   venndiagrams

A Short History of EBooks

Author: Marie Lebert

Language: English

Published: 2009

A short history of ebooks - also called digital books - from the first ebook in 1971 until now, with Project Gutenberg, Amazon, Adobe, Mobipocket, Google Books, the Internet Archive, and many others. This book is based on thousands of hours of web surfing and 100 interviews conducted worldwide. It puts an end to a 10-year research project, and is dedicated to all those who kindly answered my questions in Europe, in America (the whole continent), in Africa, and in Asia.

Stealing 130 Million Credit Card Numbers

Someone has been charged with stealing 130 million credit card numbers.

Yes, it's a lot, but that's the sort of quantities credit card numbers come in. They come by the millions, in large database files. Even if you only want ten, you have to steal millions. I'm sure every one of us has a credit card in our wallet whose number has been stolen. It'll probably never be used for fraudulent purposes, but it's in some stolen database somewhere.

Years ago, when giving advice on how to avoid identity theft, I would tell people to shred their trash. Today, that advice is completely obsolete. No one steals credit card numbers one by one out of the trash when they can be stolen by the millions from merchant databases.

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WHAT DOES RANDOMNESS LOOK LIKE?

RANDOM WALK asks this question and presents experiments in mathematics and physics, showing the mysterious interaction of chaos and order in randomness. The project RANDOM WALK simulates randomness in visualizations, which are easy to understand. In this way, it delivers insight into a phenomenon, which has so far remained unexplained.

(via annoushka)

Fire Escape

Kristine Virsis Fire Escape $7 2 color silkscreen print 8”x6” signed/unlimited edition 12firees_400.gif

August 26, 2009

Lehigh Valley IronPigs baffled by knuckleball in 4-0 loss to Rochester Red Wings

Knuckleballer R.A. Dickey pitched a complete-game two-hitter tonight to lead the Rochester Red Wings to a 4-0 win over the Lehigh Valley IronPigs in an International League baseball game. Dickey (1-1) struck out eight and walked one. The right-hander, who...

Chamillionaire On Bill O'Reilly's Rap Rants, "I Think There's A Method To His Madness" [Video]

Chamillionaire recently shared his opinion on controversial television host Bill O'Reilly, who responded to Jay-Z's "Off That" name drop this week, and attempted to explain why the Fox News personality receives so much heat from viewers.

[Visit SOHH.com for more information]

Feral Houses

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feral houses.

(via freddie)

Twitter, Improved Categories, Bookmarklet, and more

Blog it!
The "Blog It" bookmarklet is one of my favorite features on the new TypePad. Quickly make a new post, including photos, video, or text without ever having to toggle back into TypePad. Thanks to your feedback, we made some improvements to the feature. Now, you can finish editing a post in TypePad, tweak the design (including changing the order of clippings/commentary), categorize the post, save as draft for later, schedule for future date, and so on. It's slick!

Twitter comment

Comment With Twitter (Twitter OAuth support)
Twitter's a lot of fun, and now your blog's readers can use their Twitter login to leave a comment, along with their Twitter avatar, too.


Sign in with twitterJust click the dropdown, and your comments are already there.

If you're using Twitter, your TypePad account is automagically set up now to share your posts, if you like. (There's a known issue where you'll manually have to update draft and scheduled posts to share them with Twitter, we're fixing that ASAP.)

Bit.ly integration
If you're on our beta team, you'll see that we've added bit.ly to automagically shorten your posts when you share them with Twitter, and then you can also see your bit.ly stats, right from your TypePad dashboard.

More Bug Fixes and Features of Note:
Comments: We did a ton of work around comments, including a ton of backend stuff you wouldn't be able to see. For people who are blogging with the new TypePad, you can edit, search, and view all comments on a post - all things you've been asking for. We're posting more about this next week in more detail.

  • BIG CATEGORYMade OpenID existing and new accounts show under "Other Accounts"
  • Improved "Forgot Password" flow for OpenID accounts
  • Made categories module expandable - this is a really cool one for those of us with lots of comments: just click the button in the top corner of your categories for an expanded view. 

Have you tried the new TypePad yet? Tell us your thoughts in the comments.

A Note About Git Commit Messages | tpope.net

 Short (50 chars or less) summary of changes

More detailed explanatory text, if necessary. Wrap it to about 72
characters or so. In some contexts, the first line is treated as the
subject of an email and the rest of the text as the body. The blank
line separating the summary from the body is critical (unless you omit
the body entirely); tools like rebase can get confused if you run the
two together.

Write your commit message in the present tense: "Fix bug" and not "Fixed
bug." This convention matches up with commit messages generated by
commands like git merge and git revert.

Further paragraphs come after blank lines.

- Bullet points are okay, too

- Typically a hyphen or asterisk is used for the bullet, preceded by a
single space, with blank lines in between, but conventions vary here

- Use a hanging indent

via www.tpope.net

I understand know why the default vim commit message was weird;). Also I'll switch to the present tense for my commit messages from now on.

The solution to the soprano problem

The soprano problem is the mispronunciation of lyrics by sopranos at the high end of their range. In order to make themselves heard in opera houses, sopranos need their voices to resonate, which they only do when making certain sounds.

Jane Eaglen, a critically acclaimed soprano who has performed Wagner's works in opera houses worldwide, explains that sopranos must try to find a balance between power and clarity. "It's really about how you modify the vowels at the top of the voice so that the words are still understandable but so that you are also making the best sound that you can make," she says.

A pair of scientists have found that the meticulous Richard Wagner may have been aware of this problem and wrote the soprano parts in his operas to minimize the mispronunciations.

Tags: acoustics   music   opera   richardwagner   science

My Complete 20×200 Guest Curator Collection

20x200 Guest Curator You like looking at beautiful things? You’re in the right place. The full collection of pieces from my guest curator stint at online art gallery 20×200 is now available. Check out what they all look like hanging on a wall together. If I had to name this collection, I’d call it nerdy-nostalgic.

As I said earlier, my favorite piece is Rebecca Loyche’s The Office, but Mark Richards’ Apple I comes in a close second. (Aren’t computer innards awesome?) I love all of the pieces, but the other image I can’t get out of my head is Hosang Park’s Howon aerial photograph.

Check out 20×200’s full newsletter about the collection, which includes an IM conversation transcript between myself and gallery owner extraordinaire Jen Bekman. If you need to spice up your cubicle or home, pick up a piece or two (or eight) to support some amazing artists and the gallery who features them.

Photo of the Day: La Tomatina, the Annual Tomato Throwing Festival in Spain

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[Reuters]

The famous La Tomatina festival, a tradition held on the last Wednesday of every August since the mid-1940s, took place today in Bunol, Spain. The epic tomato-launching battle all starts with truckloads of rotten red tomatoes and people prepared in bathing suits and goggles. Catapulting, chucking, and all forms of splattering ensues until 100 tons of tomato guts covers the small town.

Related
Tomatoesareevil.com, Where Tomato Haters Unite
How do YOU Make a Tomato Sandwich? [Talk]
'Oda al Tomate' by Pablo Neruda, an Ode to Tomatoes

Frank Bruni: “There are a lot of reviews I would write differently.”

BRUNIAlso! In other things That Should Be Read, here is an extensive exit interview with outgoing Times food critic Frank Bruni. It took place at Babbo—and, most telling about our current time, the meal’s waiter wrote his own account of the meal. I’m sure the busboy has a Twitter account somewhere.

The MTA Refuses to Rename Subway Station for Michael Jackson

The MTA Refuses to Rename Subway Station for Michael Jackson:

For months now, City Councilwoman Letitia James has been agitating for the MTA to rename Brooklyn’s Hoyt-Schermerhorn station — where the music video for “Bad” was filmed in 1987 — in honor of Michael Jackson. She’s even starting a petition. But the MTA has callously denied her request, since there are currently no guidelines for renaming stations and because “Hoyt-Schermerhorn” already has such a nice ring to it.

Rename the Hoyt-Schemerhorn subway station after a person? What are you trying to do, Tish? Lose my vote?

Incomprehensible Grizzly Bear Mansion

Dentedsanity_01

how much do I wish this game was real?

(via .tiff)

Incomprehensible Grizzly Bear Mansion

Dentedsanity_01

how much do I wish this game was real?

(via .tiff)

Papa John Gets Camaro Back; Chain Offers Free Pizza to Camaro Owners Today

From Slice

[Credit: Jalopnik]

In 1983 John Schnatter somewhat famously sold his 1971 1/2 Camaro Z28 to keep afloat his father's tavern, the family business that would become the springboard for the Papa John's pizza chain. This year, Schnatter and PJ's began capitalizing on that origin story by conducting a very public search for the car.

The automobile blog Jalopnik helped reunite the pizza mogul and his wheels, and now, in celebration, the chain is offering free pizza to Camaro owners. Anyone who drives his or her Camaro to the nearest Papa John's today will get a large one-topping pie.

The First Congressional Website

Apparently Ted Kennedy, in addition to his other accomplishments, was the first member of congress to have a website:

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Netscape!

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Blg_1_s

McMurray, a mail-order chicken company, was on CoolTools today. Maybe the chickens are great, but I just like the drawings.

CNN Article on Wikipedia: Correcting my quote

I'm quoted today Today's CNN article on Wikipedia

"She said some user-generated sites need an "army of backbreaking community management martinets," or people who help steer conversations in a productive direction, to keep these sites functioning well. That's not a bad thing, she said, just a sign that online communities are evolving and are finding new ways to promote a "culture of generosity.""

That's not what I said....online communities are NOT evolving or finding new ways to promote "the culture of generosity" -- I would posit that in fact nothing has changed, that the rules of civilization and good public behavior have been around since the Ten Commandments, Hammurabi or the Polis.

When I was talking on the phone with John about sites that have that "army of community management martinets" I was saying that was a bad thing and describing corporate sites that do not permit communities to express themselves -- NOT UGC sites such as Wikipedia. Taken out of context he seems to imply that I was recommending that kind of control. I was not. What I was actually saying was that sites like Wikipedia are managed by *the community itself* and that there is no "us" and "them", no overlords, no army.

What the press refuses to understand is that Wikipedia is MORE open as a result of the recent changes. Headline should be: Wikipedia unlocks thousands of topics to user contribution.

UPDATE: John saw my Twitter, read this blog post and then called me, then took the quote down. Good!

The Top 5 Reasons RSS Readers Went Wrong

Sam Diaz over at ZDNet wrote the following in a blog entry titled RSS: A good idea at the time but there are better ways now in response to an announcement of a new feature in Google Reader

Once a big advocate for Google Reader, I have to admit that I haven’t logged in in weeks, maybe months. That’s not to say I’m not reading. Sometimes I feel like reading - and writing this blog - are the only things I do. But my sources of for reading material are scattered across the Web, not in one aggregated spot.

I catch headlines on Yahoo News and Google News. I have a pretty extensive lineup of browser bookmarks to take me to sites that I scan throughout the day. Techmeme is always in one of my browser tabs so I can keep a pulse on what others in my industry are talking about. And then there are Twitter and Facebook. I actually pick up a lot of interesting reading material from people I’m following on Twitter and some friends on Facebook, with some of it becoming fodder for blog posts here.

 

The truth of the matter is that RSS readers are a Web 1.0 tool, an aggregator of news headlines that never really caught on with the mainstream the way Twitter and Facebook have.

I take issue with the title of Sam’s post since his complaint is really about the current generation of consumer tools for reading RSS feeds not the underlying technology itself. In general, I agree with Sam that the current generation of RSS readers have failed users and I now use pretty much the same tools that he does to catch up on blog (i.e. Twitter & Techmeme). I’ve listed some of my gripes with RSS readers including the one I wrote (RSS Bandit) in the past and will reiterate some of these points below

  1. Dave Winer was right about River of News style aggregators. A user interface where I see a stream of news and can click on the bits that interest me without doing a lot of management is superior to the using the current dominant RSS reader paradigm where I need to click on multiple folders, manage read/unread state and wade through massive walls of text I don’t want to read to get to the gems.

  2. Today’s RSS readers are a one way tool instead of a two-way tool. One of the things I like about shared links in Twitter & Facebook is that I can start or read a conversation about the story and otherwise give feedback (i.e. “like” or retweet) to the publisher of the news as part of the experience. This is where I think Sam’s comment that these are “Web 1.0” tools rings the truest. Google Reader recently added a “like” feature but it is broken in that the information about who liked one of my posts never gets back to me whereas it does when I share this post on Twitter or Facebook.

  3. As Dave McClure once ranted, it's all about the faces. The user interface of RSS readers is sterile and impersonal compared to social sites like Twitter and Facebook because of the lack of pictures/faces of the people whose words you are reading. It always makes a difference to me when I read a blog and there is a picture of the author and the same goes for just browsing a Twitter account.

  4. No good ways to separate the wheat from the chaff. As if it isn’t bad enough that you are nagged about having thousands of unread blog posts when you don’t visit your RSS reader for a few days, there isn’t a good way to get an overview of what is most interesting/pressing and then move on by marking everything as read. On the other hand, when I go to Techmeme I can always see what the current top stories are and can even go back to see what was popular on the days I didn’t visit the site. 

  5. The process of adding feeds still takes too many steps. If I see your Twitter profile and think you’re worth following, I click the “follow” button and I’m done. On the other hand, if I visit your blog there’s a multi-step process involved to adding you to my subscriptions even if I use a web-based RSS aggregator like Google Reader.

These are the five biggest bugs in the traditional RSS reading experience today that I hope eventually get fixed since it is holding back the benefits people can get from reading blogs and/other activity streams using the open & standard infrastructure of the Web.

Amazon Adds A Virtual Private Cloud

Shared by Bud
Is it private enough?

logo_aws_august.gifAmazon has launched a new endeavor that integrates traditional IT infrastructure with its EC2 cloud service. Amazon Virtual Private Cloud allows IT to connect to an isolated set of AWS resources to a datacenter using a VPN connection. Minus all the acronyms, that means that Amazon has created a hybrid cloud that can work securely for the enterprise, balancing the need for encryption with the low cost and scaling power that the cloud provides.

Amazon VPC provides an avenue for enterprises to more comfortably link up their infrastructure with the cloud. For Amazon, it's an endorsement of the hybrid approach, but it's also meant to combat the growing interest in private clouds. VPC is currently in limited beta (you can apply here) and doesn't work with the S3 cloud storage service or any other parts of AWS.

Sponsor

The Specs

In a blog post about VPC, Amazon CTO Werner Vogels admitted the problems the company has faced when it comes to enterprise adoption of their cloud services. VPC is clearly an attempt to dispel the very legitimate fears that exist when it comes to the cloud. Here's how it works in practice:

First a VPC is created and assigned an IP block, one which allows only those addresses that your enterprise wants to use access. The VPC is divided up into subnets, with the maximum being 20 unless you request more.

Next a VPN connection is made between the gateway and an IPSec-based router you host. Traffic is then configured to flow so that the IP block is applied to the VPN connection. Once you've got a VPN with an IP block up and running, any AWS resources assigned will be subject to regular enterprise firewall and routing policies.

Attacking the Private Cloud Head-on

Vogels spent more than little effort in his post attacking the idea of the private cloud. Before he even got into how VPC worked, he paused to assert that private clouds lack the elasticity of Amazon's services, and bluntly declaring, "I don't think of them as true clouds."

Amazon would surely have worries without the idea of private clouds being shopped about, but it definitely doesn't help for enterprises to throw up their hands in vain and try to create their own miniature versions of public cloud computing services. VPC is really a compromise for Amazon that acknowledges the attraction that private clouds have for the enterprise.

A Hybrid Cloud

Amazon is basically creating a hybrid cloud, one that uses some of the standard enterprise encryption methods. It seems they're not alone either. Recently many companies have been testing the waters when it comes to this approach, with Microsoft and EMC partnering as well as IBM with Juniper Networks.

There have even been companies that have attempted to beat Amazon to punch by offering VPN overlays to EC2, such as Cohesive's VPN-Cubed. It seems that Amazon has seen the light when it comes to enticing enterprises to the cloud. VPC is recognition that a mixed strategy that improves security, not a miraculous shift in enterprise IT culture, is the way forward.

VPC_Diagram.gif
Discuss

Beckett’s bad start

Josh Beckett recently had a bad (and very unusual) start in which he pitched 8 innings but allowed 8 earned runs. Here are the starts since 1980 in which the pitcher has gone at least 8 but also allowed at least 8 runs:

  Cnt Player            Date          Tm   Opp GmReslt App,Dec    IP   H  R ER BB SO HR Pit Str GmSc IR IS BF AB 2B 3B IBB HBP SH SF GDP SB CS Pk BK WP   ERA
+----+-----------------+-------------+---+----+-------+---------+----+--+--+--+--+--+--+---+---+----+--+--+--+--+--+--+---+---+--+--+---+--+--+--+--+--+------+
    1 Josh Beckett      2009-08-23    BOS  NYY L  4-8  GS-8  ,L   8    9  8  8  0  5  5 120  87   37       33 33  0  0   0   0  0  0   0  0  0  0  0  0   9.00

    2 Carlos Silva      2006-04-18    MIN  LAA L  2-8  GS-9  ,L   8.2 12  8  8  1  1  1 109  78   28       37 35  3  0   0   0  1  0   1  1  0  0  0  0   8.31

    3 Paul Byrd         2002-09-09    KCR  CHW L  6-10 GS-8  ,L   8   10 10 10  2  3  4 112  74   23       35 31  3  1   0   0  0  2   0  0  1  0  0  1  11.25

    4 Randy Johnson     1998-07-05    SEA @TEX L  4-8  CG 8  ,L   8    9  8  8  2 12  3 141  84   42       35 33  3  0   0   0  0  0   0  1  0  0  0  1   9.00

    5 Pat Hentgen       1997-06-25    TOR  BOS L 12-13 GS-8  ,L   8   13 11 11  0  4  5  76  47   16       38 37  2  1   0   1  0  0   0  1  1  0  0  1  12.38

    6 Pat Hentgen       1996-08-07    TOR @BOS L  0-8  CG 8  ,L   8    9  8  8  1  5  3 103  69   36       34 31  0  0   0   2  0  0   1  0  0  0  0  0   9.00

    7 Ben McDonald      1992-06-21    BAL  NYY L  2-8  GS-9  ,L   8.2  6  8  8  4  7  4 136  76   43       36 32  2  0   1   0  0  0   0  0  0  0  0  0   8.31

    8 Mark Williamson   1988-05-25    BAL @OAK L  1-8  CG 8  ,L   8    9  8  8  2  7  2 129  84   37       35 32  3  0   0   1  0  0   0  0  0  0  0  0   9.00

    9 Mike Morgan       1987-04-10    SEA  MIN L  1-8  GS-8  ,L   8   11  8  8  0  3  3           31       33 32  1  1   0   0  1  0   1  0  1  0  0  0   9.00

   10 Floyd Youmans     1986-10-02    MON  NYM L  2-8  CG 9  ,L   9    8  8  8  3 10  2           46       36 33  2  0   0   0  0  0   1  3  0  0  0  0   8.00
   11 Fernando Valenzue 1986-05-09    LAD @MON L  4-8  CG 8  ,L   8   11  8  8  1  6  3           33       35 33  1  1   1   0  1  0   0  1  0  0  0  0   9.00

   12 Britt Burns       1985-07-13    CHW @BAL W 10-8  CG 9  ,W   9    8  8  8  5  4  3           38       37 32  0  0   0   0  0  0   2  0  0  0  0  0   8.00

   13 Chris Codiroli    1983-06-12(2) OAK  CHW L  1-8  CG 9  ,L   9   11  8  8  4  4  0           33       42 38  3  0   1   0  0  0   0  0  0  0  0  0   8.00

   14 Jack Morris       1981-09-25    DET  MIL L  6-8  GS-9  ,L   8.2  9  8  8  4  7  3           37       38 33  2  0   0   1  0  0   1  0  1  0  0  0   8.31

   15 Rick Langford     1980-10-02    OAK @CHW L  4-9  CG 8  ,L   8   15  9  8  1  2  1           19       39 34  1  0   0   0  1  3   0  0  0  0  0  0   9.00
   16 Mike Norris       1980-09-26    OAK  MIL L  7-10 CG 9  ,L   9   17 10 10  1  9  4           21       45 44  3  0   0   0  0  0   0  0  0  0  0  1  10.00
   17 Byron McLaughlin  1980-08-16    SEA  OAK L  3-8  GS-8  ,L   8    9  8  8  5  2  3           29       37 32  2  1   2   0  0  0   1  0  0  0  0  0   9.00
   18 Mike Norris       1980-06-16    OAK @BOS W 11-8  CG 9  ,W   9   12  8  8  2  3  3           32       41 39  3  0   0   0  0  0   0  0  0  0  0  0   8.00

These are mostly pretty good pitchers. Hentgen and Norris are on there twice.

Britt Burns and Norris actually won a game under these circumstances!

Today in Feminist History

19th amendment Pictures, Images and Photos

On August 26th, 1920 the 19th Amendment went into effect. It gave women the right to vote in the United States. Via InfoPlease

This is why today is also marked the annual Women's Equality Day, started in 1971 by Bella Abzug.

August 25, 2009

Ted Kennedy

America has had a few precious individuals who are both passionate about social justice and also understand deep in their bones its practical meaning. And we have had a few who possess great political shrewdness and can make the clunky machinery of democratic governance actually work. But I have known but one person who combined all these traits and abilities. His passing is an inestimable loss.

Most Americans will never know how many things Ted Kennedy did to make their lives better, how many things he prevented that would have hurt them, and how tenaciously he fought on their behalf. In 1969, for example, he introduced a bill in the Senate calling for universal health insurance, and then, for the next forty years, pushed and prodded colleagues and presidents to get on with it. If and when we ever achieve that goal it will be in no small measure due to the dedication and perseverance of this one remarkable man. We owe it to him and his memory to do it soon and do it well.

I Heart Holovaty

It's like asking me, after I put together a band of musicians, why I didn't choose the musician who spoke Portuguese. What difference does it make if a musician speaks Portuguese? I'm going to pick the band member based on how good of a musician he is, not which languages he speaks. That's completely unrelated. Of course, if our band planned to tour in Portugal, it might be a different story, but let's put it this way: the band is not planning to tour in Portugal.

--the inimitable Adrian Holovaty on whether EveryBlock should have been purchased by a newspaper group instead.

Anne Margaret “Bye Bye Birdie” opening sequence 1963...



Anne Margaret “Bye Bye Birdie” opening sequence

1963 and I will just have to agree to disagree on this one because Holy Christ, is this the least sexually appealing thing I’ve ever seen happen on a screen. As featured in s03e02 of Mad Men, all I could muster while seeing it projected in a boardroom of ogling, dapper young men was “Oh God, make it stop.”

A pizza oven grows in Brooklyn

Adam Kuban interviewed my friend Mark about the pizza oven he built in his Brooklyn backyard.

It is actually pretty amazing how well the oven works. The first thing we made after pizza was a roasted chicken. I just can't describe how amazing it was. Not to mention the pizzas. They cook in about 90 seconds, and when I pulled the first one out of the oven, and the backyard smelled like a pizzeria, we knew all the work was worth it.

Mark and I work in the same office and it's nice to hear that his daily phone conversations about stucco, stucco suppliers, stucco styles, and stucco application techniques have resulted in success.

Tags: Adam Kuban   food   interviews   Mark Wilkie   NYC   pizza

A pizza oven grows in Brooklyn

Adam Kuban interviewed my friend Mark about the pizza oven he built in his Brooklyn backyard.

It is actually pretty amazing how well the oven works. The first thing we made after pizza was a roasted chicken. I just can't describe how amazing it was. Not to mention the pizzas. They cook in about 90 seconds, and when I pulled the first one out of the oven, and the backyard smelled like a pizzeria, we knew all the work was worth it.

Mark and I work in the same office and it's nice to hear that his daily phone conversations about stucco, stucco suppliers, stucco styles, and stucco application techniques have resulted in success.

Tags: Adam Kuban   food   interviews   Mark Wilkie   NYC   pizza

I can't find my bluetooth!

Shared by sippey
Has anyone seen Jorge's Bluetooth headset?
But I know it's here somewhere, because it keeps connecting to my phone and disrupting my calls.

I've narrowed the signal down to the kitchen and living room. And I also moved the garbage can out of range to make sure I hadn't accidentally tossed it.

But I still don't know where the **** it is.

(As you can see it's starting to frustrate me.)

Basics - Brain Is a Co-Conspirator in a Vicious Stress Loop - NYTimes.com

Basics - Brain Is a Co-Conspirator in a Vicious Stress Loop - NYTimes.com:

Reporting earlier this summer in the journal Science, Nuno Sousa of the Life and Health Sciences Research Institute at the University of Minho in Portugal and his colleagues described experiments in which chronically stressed rats lost their elastic rat cunning and instead fell back on familiar routines and rote responses, like compulsively pressing a bar for food pellets they had no intention of eating.

Moreover, the rats’ behavioral perturbations were reflected by a pair of complementary changes in their underlying neural circuitry. On the one hand, regions of the brain associated with executive decision-making and goal-directed behaviors had shriveled, while, conversely, brain sectors linked to habit formation had bloomed.

News: Mets acquire 1B-OF Chris Carter

According to Boston Globe, one of the two players to be named in the Billy Wagner trade is 26–year-old 1B-OF Chris Carter.

Carter is batting .279 with a .340 OBP, 14 HR and 59 RBI this season for Triple-A Pawtucket.

Red Sox Monster says Carter is known for his ‘intensity,’ while Sox Prospects writes the following:

“Extremely intelligent, Carter is a real student of hitting, and has demonstrated success with the bat at every level.  Excellent power with the potential for more.   Hits for average and consistently gets on base at a very good clip.  Hits lefties and righties well.  Below average speed.   In the field, Carter has spent much of his career at 1B but was moved to the outfield in 2008.  He has always been known as a poor fielder, and still doesn’t look particularly comfortable at any position.  He has focused on his glove and footwork and has improved slightly, but still not enough.”

The Sox acquired Carter from the D-Backs in 2007, during a trade involving Wily Mo Pena, and a three-way deal with the Nationals.

Ruby Fern

Annie talks to her Grandma, Ruby Fern, 103 years old.

A lot of her memories that day went all the way back to when she was a young girl living on the family farm in Arkansas. All the family, aunts, uncles and cousins had little houses on the one big family farm. There was a creek named Sugar Loaf and each kid had a rope swing that swung out over it. They rode their horses into town to buy material and supplies and to go to church. I tried to get her to talk about the Great Depression or how she and my grandpa came out west during the war in their old jalopy with their little baby in tow, warming her milk bottles on the radiator. However, her mind wanted to stay back on the farm of her childhood. She was happy there.

Ikea as tourist attraction

For many Chinese, the Ikea in Beijing is not just a store, it's a lifestyle amusement park with free admission.

Bai mapped out a five-hour outing. First, they had hot dogs and soft ice cream cones at noon. Then they enjoyed a long rest lounging on the beds. Bai kicked off her sandals and sprawled out on a Tromso bunk bed. The 36-year-old homemaker made herself comfortable and even answered passing shoppers' questions about the quality of the mattress. "It's soft and a great buy at this price," she told a young woman, pointing to a dangling price tag. After that, Bai and her family took group pictures. By 5 p.m., it was time for another meal, so they headed to the cafeteria and ate braised mushrooms with rice.

Tags: beijing   China   Ikea

Ten of Times 50 Best Sites were built in NY

jschwa:

Time just released the 50 Best Websites of 2009 and ten of them were built right here in New York.  Congratulations to the founders and their teams.

#2 Delicious
#15
Vimeo
#20 Kayak (CT)
#22 Etsy
#23 PropertyShark
#28 ConsumerSearch
#35 Supercook
#43 Drop.io
#46 OMGPOP
#50 Know Your Meme

Not to downplay our inclusion but what kind of list puts Delicious as #3 (Sorry, Josh) but no mention of Tumblr? (And no, this isn’t Tumblrbait.)

don't trust a man without a middle name

peterfeld:

Doesn’t the 8. get a period?

I didn’t realize it was an initial. (For 8888888?)

Magma Open to Everyone

magmavideos:

Today marks a big day for Magma — our website is now officially open to everyone. Sign up now if you have not already.

We owe a large thanks to the nearly five thousand beta users. Their wonderful suggestions and feedback were invaluable during our three month beta period. During that time, we have collected over 65,000 videos, millions of rows of video statistics, and tons of great feedback on what people want to do with the site.

Thanks again to everyone for their wonderful support! Keep your eyes peeled for new features and improvements.

The Magma Team
Andrew, Jamie, Kenyatta, Greg & Todd.

Healthy Skepticism

I've been putting a lot of speculative ideas out lately; It's nice to see some healthy (and respectful) criticism from people who are skeptical about what I'm saying.

Gautham Nagesh followed up on my earlier post and fairly criticized the recent government websites I praised as being too tentative and unproven to merit the praise I'd given them. Interestingly, I had a throwaway half-sentence saying "I think Gautham and I just disagree about government's role in general", and Gautham interpreted this as a bit of an attack on his journalistic integrity, by implying that he wasn't being impartial about the story. That certainly wasn't my intention, but more importantly I think I just forgot (being a blogger myself) that Serious Journalists still care a whole lot about that idea. For what it's worth, I think it's great when journalists have a clearly disclosed partiality about a story.

Similarly, Mitch Wagner talked about my post a bit on InformationWeek's Government Blog, saying I'm "being excessively optimistic, because the Obama White House's record on transparency is decidedly mixed at best, as noted by the Washington Post in a May editorial." A fair criticism, though I think I was highlighting these recent efforts by the government as signals of intent to use the web well, rather than declaring Mission Accomplished. Hence, most interesting startup of 2009, not most successful. I went into this a bit further in this interview I did with Maggie Shiels for the BBC's tech blog:

"I am not a Polyanna about this, " Mr Dash told me.

"I don't think necessarily everything that comes out of this will be immediately great. It will take people some time to understand the potential there is for something great to happen.

On a less critical note, I did like that Inc's take on my post mentioned the success that private companies have had with similar API and data efforts; That was an analogy I should have made more explicitly and prominently in my own post.

A history of modern art in three paragraphs

Impressionism - painting outside of a studio with quick, loose brushstrokes to capture an evocative impression of their subject. Van Gogh was an Impressionist but wanted to express how he felt about what he saw so he distorted the subject. This helped to lead to Expressionism practised by artists from Edvard Munch through to Francis Bacon. The Fauves (wild beasts) expressed themselves by painting with bright colours. Jackson Pollock did it by throwing or dripping paint on a canvas. His paintings were abstract -- Abstract Expressionism.

Cezanne was very important. He began as an Impressionist but then started to look at a subject from two different perspectives to represent how we see. Picasso and his friend Georges Braque were very impressed and started to paint subjects from lots of different views. This is Cubism. Marcel Duchamp was a Cubist but then changed art for ever. He said the idea is more important than the medium and refused to stick with the limited choice of canvas or stone. So he chose everyday objects and called them art because he had altered their context. This led to Conceptual Art where the idea becomes the medium.

The Dadaists were very cross. They blamed the horrors of the First World War on the Establishment's reliance on rational and reasoned thought. They radically opposed rational thought and became nihilistic -- the punk rock of modern art movements. Dada plus Sigmund Freud equals Surrealism. The Surrealists were fascinated by the unconscious mind, as that's where they thought truth resided. Piet Mondrian thought he could paint everything he knew, felt and saw by using two lines placed at rectangles and three primary colours. This was called Neo-Plasticism and was inspired by Cubism. So was Futurism, which is Cubism with motion added. Vorticism is the same as Futurism, but British. The Minimalists might represent the real truth because they weren't trying to represent anything. Performance Art is Dada live.

That's from Will Gompertz in the Times. (via sippey)

Tags: art   history   Will Gompertz

A long time ago and far, far away

Contact

Just logged into my Amazon.com account to see if I could access my entire account history and find my very first order. Looks like it was on August 8, 1997 and it contained this book. When was your first Amazon.com order, and what did it contain?

Chipotle Relaunches iPhone App

20090825-chipotle-qb-iphone.jpgA new Chipotle-ordering iPhone App allows you to customize orders and even pay for your meal without pointing to a single salsa tub in line, according to Business Insider. Technically it's not new, but there were some previous kinks that should be gone now. Download it here.

My Pizza Oven: Mark Wilkie, Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn

From Slice

When I put out a call for people to be featured in the My Pizza Oven series, I never thought I'd get a response from someone who lived a mile away from me in Brooklyn. I mean, it's New York City—not that many people have their own yards here, and of those who do, how many are crazy* enough to put in a backyard pizza oven? Nice to see an oven grow here. —The Mgmt.

20090825-mpo-wilkie-finished.jpg

Mark Wilkie's oven—just finished over the weekend. [Photographs: Mark Wilkie]

You put a pizza oven in the garden of your Brooklyn home. First question, then: Do you rent or own?!?

"When we first started building the oven people thought we were building a bunker..."

We rent. I know it seems a bit crazy to build an oven in the backyard of your rental apartment, but my wife and I have always wanted to build a bread oven, and she started baking a ton of bread this winter. We had the space out back, so we thought why not. I figured it'd probably take a couple of oven builds to get it right, and it seemed as good a time as any to get some oven building experience.

Our landlords are pretty great, and after sending them a few photos of ovens made with the plans we wanted to use, they were all for it.

Of course they were—you just increased their property/rental value. (By the way, lemme know if you ever plan to move.) Anyway, I see you did the work yourself.

We did. My brother helped a ton. He is a piano mover/refinisher out on Long Island, so he has a panel truck we used to haul all the cement/bricks/supplies. The plans we used are for novices and experts alike, and we had basically zero masonry skills when we started. It has been a learning experience, to say the least.

20090825-mpo-wilkie-cement-bags.jpg

The tough part about building in Brooklyn is the limited access to the backyard. We had to lug all the materials though our basement. Once I had hauled a dozen or so 80-pound bags of concrete through the basement, I discovered a newfound appreciation for my desk job.

20090825-mpo-wilkie-sketchup.jpg

Wilkie's Google SketchUp design of the Pompeii oven base.

Where did you get the plans?

I started looking for info about building ovens on the web, and found this great site: fornobravo.com. They have free plans for building Pompeii brick ovens, and once I got the idea of building a brick pizza oven (one that could also make bread) I became obsessed. The guys at Forno Bravo are great, and they have forums as well with tons of info from people out there building ovens. It was an invaluable resource.

When did you put it in and how long did the construction take?

We started in earnest around the beginning of May, and we just finished the final touches last weekend (steel door, finish coat of stucco), so about three and a half months total. It rained a ton this summer, so we missed a lot of days where we couldn't pour cement and such, not to mention days we were out of town. To be fair, I'd say we worked about a full day, at most a day and a half, for each weekend in the past three months. We made our first pie around the end of July.

20090825-mpo-wilkie-leveling.jpg

How often do you use it?

So far, we've fired it about two times a week when the weather permits.

20090825-mpo-wilkie-bread.jpg

Do you cook anything besides pizza in it?

It is modeled after an Italian brick oven, and they are designed to make all sorts of great things. So far we've made:

  • Pizza
  • Roasted Chicken
  • A handful of breads
  • Banana nut streusel muffins
  • Corn bread
  • Roast pork loin
  • Roasted garlic

It is actually pretty amazing how well the oven works. The first thing we made after pizza was a roasted chicken. I just can't describe how amazing it was. Not to mention the pizzas. They cook in about 90 seconds, and when I pulled the first one out of the oven, and the backyard smelled like a pizzeria, we knew all the work was worth it.

Forno Bravo has a free PDF cookbook for making all sorts of things in the oven. They also have a great list of PDF books from building an oven to cooking pizza at home with a pizza stone: http://www.fornobravo.com/store/eBooks-CD-ROMs-p-1-c-260.html

20090825-mpo-wilkie-pies.jpg

What style of pizza do you normally do?

I grew up on Long Island, so I like a good New York–style pie, but that said, I am a big fan of a good Neapolitan pizza, and I love Grimaldi's. We've been playing with different ideas and styles of pizza. We have been using Vincent's Sauce (from Vincent's in Little Italy) on our pies lately with interesting results.

Do you cook for friends/neighbors?

Yes and yes.

20090825-mpo-wilkie-pie-cooking.jpg

On that note, most of us live in close quarters in Brooklyn. Are your neighbors ever bothered by the smoke? Do you see neighbors from other buildings looking down into your yard as you bake?

Our closest neighbor said the other day that he loves the smell of the fire, so hopefully the rest of the neighborhood shares the sentiment. When we first started building the oven people thought we were building a bunker, but as it came together they seemed pretty interested in the whole affair.

20090825-mpo-wilkie-wood.jpg

What does your family think of your pizza madness?

I can see in their eyes that they think I'm crazy, but they don't dare say it while I'm sliding fresh brick oven pizza onto the table.

Do you have a backyard pizza oven? Would you like to be featured on Slice? Hit us up: adam@sliceny.com.

Further Reading

Bitter Pill is Mark Wilkie's blog
View Wilkie's Pompeii oven photo set on Flickr

Related

My Pizza Oven: Nick and Robin Gladdis, Paso Robles, California
My Pizza Oven: Steve O. in Wisconsin
My Pizza Oven: Dan Curry, Kansas City
An Evening with Paulie Gee, Pizza Madman of New Jersey
Going Mobile: Pizza Ovens on Wheels

*The good kind of crazy, of course.

Andrew Keen interviews me about Google books on Telegraph Blogs

Check it out:

Untitled from andrewkeen on Vimeo.

Coffee Chronicles: Reconsidering New York's Coffee Identity

Editor's note: Longtime Serious Eats contributor Allison Hemler knows her coffee, having spent two years as a barista and more than five in the service industry. She'll be joining us each week with Coffee Chronicles, taking a look at the New York coffee world, one espresso at a time. Please welcome Allison!

20090825-nyccoffee01.jpg

Serious espresso. Photograph: tonx on Flickr.

Learning about coffee comes from hours of lingering near bags of green coffee beans at a roastery, spending days behind the bar watching espresso develop its creamy caramel hue, and forming what's known as the "barista muscle" on your dominant arm. Learning how people consume coffee is an ongoing observation from visiting other cafes, restaurants, and brewing it at home for visitors.

Between the two, in the years I've been serving both terrible and mind-blowing coffee, I've witnessed a steadily mounting coffee craze. New York has started to look at coffee in the way of cities such as Seattle, where espresso is served at gas stations and strip clubs. The problem in the city is that most of us are constantly on the go, and since most coffee out there is brown sludge, we don't take the time to discover that it can be enjoyable. Here, it's about getting it fast, dark, and cheap. It's the caffeine New Yorkers care about—we think it's supposed to taste bad. When was the last time you were able to savor every sip of coffee like a glass of a Willamette Valley Pinot Noir or a Vermont hard raw-milk chevre?

New York didn't see quality coffee until around 2000, when independent shops highlighting small roasters surfaced and delivered a consistent cup. In a city of cutthroat competition for the dollar and favorable reviews, a consistent and high-quality product is a goldmine. That's why Ninth Street, Joe, Grumpy, Gimme, and Abraço are now household names—and still in business. But not every patron is here for a cappuccino in a porcelain mug. Our pace in New York hasn't slowed. We still want the "large coffee" to go, from whatever roast is the freshest.

So how can we get New York to actually enjoy coffee, when they do find a moment to relax? Introduce coffee as a well-crafted beverage in the city's most popular industry—restaurants. If the job of a good restaurant is to provide an amazing experience from beginning to end, then coffee, as the token end to a meal, should be just as memorable as that amuse bouche.

20090825gramtav.jpgTake Gramercy Tavern. About one year ago, they brought Blue Bottle trainers out from San Francisco to teach baristas on a manual La Marzocco, provided them with beans (with a known bean-to-cup trail), and started pulling high-quality shots to finely tuned palates. I took my friend Erin Hulbert, a Seattle native with over ten years in the coffee industry, on a weekday excursion to Gramercy Tavern to sip some 'spro and brainstorm on serving coffee to the masses.

We began with a Blue Bottle double ristretto shot ($5) which was brought to the bar at least 15 seconds after it was pulled. In that time, espresso tends to lose its flavor as the crema fades, but we still couldn't find much to complain about. ("Good enough for a dead shot," Erin commented.) I doubt diners would notice—it'll probably still be the best espresso shot they've ever had.

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Then we ordered a cappuccino ($6), which brought out some of the dirtier characteristics of the espresso, and possibly the machine. Erin always tells me a clean machine is a happy machine. Still, by its appearances, the cappuccino seemed pretty damn happy to be there.

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While the espresso drinks aren't listed anywhere on the menu, the dessert menu features press pots with beans from Queens-based Dallis Coffee. We tried the Harrar (Ethopia), brewed in a French press with cinnamon, cardamom pods, and orange peel ($6, can serve two at about 6 oz. of coffee per person). This is the effort you expect to see from Gramercy Tavern—a crafted cup from a restaurant with an incredible beverage program. While the cup doesn't highlight the bean or represent its origins, it's a cup that forces you to reconsider the placement of coffee in a meal. Why must coffee be listed beside a graham cracked crusted strawberry shortcake, when it may go just as well with a pork chop or risotto? Brunch may be the place for coffee paired with savory items, but it may be just as interesting at 5 p.m. or 10 p.m. It's difficult to popularize a coffee like Blue Bottle espresso if it can't be seen on the menu, but word of mouth and blog coverage seems to be enough for frequent diners.

Gramercy Tavern isn't the only restaurant pulling decent shots of espresso—but they're one of the most well-known. A strong coffee program in restaurants is possible even with smaller establishments, who don't have the money for a $15,000 machine, if they research and plan into a reasonable machine, grinder, and choice of roaster, and master the techniques. French press coffee is unbelievably easy to brew—restaurants just need to have enough presses, timers, and hot water. The infusion highlights the inherent flavors of the bean, especially with freshly ground.

If Gramercy Tavern, Brooklyn brunch hangouts, Stumptown's Brooklyn roastery, and other roasters planning relocations and shops all work together to develop a new respect for coffee in this town, maybe we'll all start taking a minute or fifteen to enjoy our coffee, whether it's espresso-based, drip, or press-pot. I'm not claiming we'll be the next Seattle, but we'll form our own identity in coffee—brewed with plenty of sass.

Memo to Teachers: Shake Up the First Day of School

Examiner column for August 26.

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    Have you forgotten the anxiety of the first day of school? The fitful sleep of the night before--worrying about friends, what you’ll wear, your new teachers? All this is followed by a day where teachers enumerate rules, expectations, and details about what you can and can’t do during the coming months. Bummer.

    My high school students often confided that the first day was such a sleep-deprived blur, they never could remember all the “essential” information thrown at them by teachers and principals. After more than a decade of playing along with the typical first day scenario, my teaching partner and I decided to shake it up. We created a hands-on activity based on summer reading, and postponed talk of rules and textbooks until the second or third day. Our lesson became the talk of the lunchroom!

            The three-hour activity was based on George Orwell’s “1984,” assigned as summer reading. We replicated each of Orwell’s repressive four ministries and divided the class in fourths so they could pass through each one in small numbers.

            Keeping in mind that Orwell’s ministries are the opposite of what they seem, the Ministry of “Plenty” asks students to become the College of William and Mary admissions committee, faced with choosing between several equally qualified candidates. In the Ministry of “Peace” students write and talk about famous quotations on war. In the Ministry of “Love,” where characters are tortured, students brainstorm a list of ways they feel “tortured” on the first day of school. And in the Ministry of “Truth,” where Winston and Julia rewrite history according to government whim, students recount a painful school experience, then rewrite it so it has a happy ending.

            Students love many aspects of this activity. Instead of the teacher being the focus the first day, students are the focus. They are able to share their writings and ideas—especially welcome on a day when they simply want to get to know one another. Students are allowed to admit that the start of school can seem like torture. Plus, they can rewrite an embarrassing experience and discover that others have experienced similarly mortifying moments, just aching for a “do over.”

            The academic plus of the “Four Ministries” lesson is that it reinforces the scary warnings of “1984.” As fun as it might be to rewrite history, students are aware of the dangers of fictionalizing experience. Choosing who will be accepted to an elite Virginia school shows them how competitive college admission can be, how difficult it is to ration something in scarce supply--and how misleading the title “plenty” is.

            Every teacher can craft a lesson that taps into students’ desire for sociability on the first day, and their limited attention spans given all the anxieties associated with the new school year. And the lesson needn’t be a gimmick, like the “name game,” divorced from learning. The key is to make the day active, social, and student-centered—with no lists of rules to dampen the upbeat mood. (There will always be time for rules and expectations the following day.)

            Ultimately, your students may even look forward to the coming year in your classroom—a gift without equal.


Wham! Pow! Zing! Kenya Shots!

kenyaReSize.jpgThis week in the lab we are deconstructing our leftist blend by pulling single origin shots of its components. The spectrum of flavors in the coffees pulled by themselves as shots was amazing.  Boy did we find some gems! The Kenya Gatomboya was by far the favorite! shotReSize.jpgIf you are looking for a mellow, rich espresso to build milk drinks, than shots of Kenya are probably not for you..... If you are looking for an exciting burst of flavor that challenges what you think coffee tastes like, then pick up a bag and give this a try. These shots were a party in our mouths! Juicy! Sweeter than Sweet! Bright fruit notes of pineapple, orange and the crispness of an apple! The body was thin compared to the leftist blend. That didn't matter, the zing of the top of the mouth taste made us forget all about body. These shots were like candy...

LabfunReSize.jpgOur favorite shots were pulled with a 19 gram dose, 5 second preinfusion time, and 20 second total shot run time. Water temp was 198.5 degrees. The shots we tried that were updosed or that ran slower because of a finer grind ventured into the dreaded vegetal territory. The apple crispness was perceived more as celery soup! So, run them light and fast, and be prepared for juicy clean shots. Party on!

Anna Rocks Dave's World

Last night marked Anna Wintour's television debut.

Vogue's editor-in-chief landed on Letterman's Late Night couch to promote The September Issue and Fashion's Night Out and though CBS billed the segment as "The Devil Meets Dave," she was, dare we say, delightful.

She starts out recommending that Dave explore Thom Browne, "He cuts his pants like really short, so you can focus entirely on the socks," before bantering back and forth about the film, the economic state of the fashion industry, her relationship with Grace Coddington and her icy reputation. Despite looking nervous, she holds her own and even Dave seems impressed.

The best bit's after the movie clip when she desperately tries to hold back laughter.




Sponsored Topics: annawintour - Fashion - Vogue - Thom Browne - Arts

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Derek Jeter–greatest Yankee ever?

Derek Jeter. What more can be said about this guy? I think he might be both the most overrated and underrated player of all time. The guy has benefited from playing in many post-seasons and has also made a handful of spectacular defensive plays that left the average fan thinking he was a much defender than he actually was.

But just when you start thinking the guy is overrated, you see a list like this. All-time hits by a Yankee, 1901-present:

  Cnt Player              **H**  From  To   Ages   G    PA    AB    R   2B  3B  HR  RBI  BB  IBB  SO  HBP  SH  SF GDP  SB   CS   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS  Positions
+----+-----------------+--------+----+----+-----+----+-----+-----+----+---+---+---+----+----+---+----+---+---+---+---+----+---+-----+-----+-----+-----+---------+
    1 Lou Gehrig          2721   1923 1939 20-36 2164  9660  8001 1888 534 163 493 1995 1508   0  790  45 106   0   2  102 101  .340  .447  .632 1.079 *3/976
    2 Derek Jeter         2701   1995 2009 21-35 2103  9647  8525 1553 433  58 222 1059  861  32 1441 142  75  44 208  296  79  .317  .387  .459  .846 *6/D
    3 Babe Ruth           2518   1920 1934 25-39 2084  9197  7216 1959 424 106 659 1975 1852   0 1122  35  94   0   0  110 117  .349  .484  .711 1.195 *97/831
    4 Mickey Mantle       2415   1951 1968 19-36 2401  9909  8102 1677 344  72 536 1509 1733 126 1710  13  14  47 113  153  38  .298  .421  .557  .978 *8397/645
    5 Bernie Williams     2336   1991 2006 22-37 2076  9053  7869 1366 449  55 287 1257 1069  97 1212  39  12  64 223  147  87  .297  .381  .477  .858 *8D/97
    6 Joe DiMaggio        2214   1936 1951 21-36 1736  7671  6821 1390 389 131 361 1537  790   0  369  46  14   0 130   30   9  .325  .398  .579  .977 *8/793
    7 Don Mattingly       2153   1982 1995 21-34 1785  7721  7003 1007 442  20 222 1099  588 136  444  21  13  96 191   14   9  .307  .358  .471  .829 *3/D97584
    8 Yogi Berra          2148   1946 1963 21-38 2116  8355  7546 1174 321  49 358 1430  704  49  411  52   9  44 146   30  26  .285  .348  .483  .831 *279/35
    9 Bill Dickey         1969   1928 1946 21-39 1789  7060  6300  930 343  72 202 1209  678   0  289  31  51   0  49   37  29  .313  .382  .486  .868 *2
   10 Earle Combs         1866   1924 1935 25-36 1455  6507  5746 1186 309 154  58  632  670   0  278  17  74   0   0   96  71  .325  .397  .462  .859 *87/9

That’s right…barring an injury or major slump, by the end of the season, Jeter is going to have the most career hits by a Yankee. Just think about that for a second. More than Gehrig, more than Mantle, more than DiMaggio….and he’s had a long career but he’s not going to get this record just through longevity. He has a career batting average of .317 and in this, his 14th full major league season, he’s batting .332 with a 127 OPS+. The lowest batting average he’s ever had in a full season in .291 and he’s never had an OPS+ that was average (or below average.)

His career ranks among Yankees: 5th in batting average, 4th in runs scored, 5th in total bases, 10th in RBI, and 2nd in stolen bases.

August 24, 2009

Yes, I Ran Spell Check

Let’s see if the Spielberg bashers put-off by the metaphysics in Kingdom of the Crystal Skull will be as offended by District 9’s mangled anthropology. If you saw District 9 on time, you're probably already familiar with Armond White's takedown of the film ("Bullship") and the ensuing blogorrhea. As Adriana pointed out to me, the Nigeria tribe of cannibals living in District 9's are reminiscent of the orcs in Lord of the Rings. It's more surprising today because District 9 is largely a film about race, and LOTR obviously wasn't. As an Armond White fanboy, I do wish that he'd acknowledge that District 9 is masterfully produced and shot. It's no Transporter 3, but it's surely equal to Transformers 2 or G.I. Joe (all movies that White loved for their kinetic cinematography).

Tumblr Grows

tumblrppTumblr served 255 million page views in July, according to stats measured by third party analytics firm Quantcast. The NY based microblogging service is projected to serve over 330 million page impressions. That’s 50 million visitors in the last 30 days, 650,000 posts per day (about 6 new posts worldwide per second), and 1.5 posts reblogged every second, with 5,000 new users every day. Tumblr’s adding 5 new servers to keep up with the demand, in recent months an iPhone app was unveiled, there’s audio recording and flash based photoset functionality, great for onboard slideshows.

The Tumblr service is expanding, a new submission button where readers can contribute, via e-mail or the web is now in service; that’s cross hybrid submission/contributed comment functionality. Tumblr founder David Karp notes, “The author starts posting about a topic they care about, the readers start contributing, and before you know it, the author has become a curator. Tumblr has always been uniquely suited for this type of blog.” (Some of these stats paraphrased from TechCrunch)

TumblUpon also launched last week, the more you “like” a post the smarter the service gets, similar to StumbleUpon, the web toolbar recommends other posts of interests that fall within the framework of a users “I like” algorithm.

I’ve been using Tumblr since the summer of 08′ (see my Tumblr here) and the service keeps chugging along, growing in spurts. At it’s best Tumblr is an open-ended indeterminate set of entries curated by a great diversity of intellectual and cultural currents that offer context through a a variety of lenses; ethical, social, sexual, emotional, imaginative, political and so forth. It’s micro-blogging, it’s macro-blogging, it’s twitter streamed into the mix, (lifestream, even though I hate that term) comment and reader participation similar to the js.kit commenting system but with less fuss. No design, yet templates help you sort out a design if you like. It’s easy.

This is on the quick Post Modern curating at it’s finest (wait, did I just use the term Post Modern, wtf?!), try for the new, experiment and explore, test against subjective and objective consequences, learn from your mistakes, take nothing for granted, treat all as provisional, assume no absolutes…or something like that. Sure you get “dick tumblrs” and “muscle tumblrs” and “everything under the sun”. At it’s worst Tumblr is the domain of hunters and collectors, those manic personalities that used to underwhelm myspace comment sections with bandwidth munching animated gifs of kittens carrying ak47s. The question begs, where did you get that, perhaps what it is or is not is less important than where it came from. A little context please and yes, attribution at the very least.

The future of Tumblr, stay tuned, even SixApart/Typepad are rolling out a microblogging service that looks a bit like Posterous.

Robocop on a unicorn

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Source, not quite via Ffff. This is of course one representative of a glorious genre, masterminded by artist Olav Rokne.



it's hard, and i could use a little help

Chicagoist interviews Traywick Contemporary* artist Ken Fandell. The video they discuss below is one of my favorites of his.

C: Some of your pieces remind me of the myth of Sisyphus — for example, "It's Hard, and I Could Use a Little Help" (a five-minute video in which the artist tries to assemble tiny human figurines, but ends up with a sticky mess of glue and plastic limbs). Instead of pushing a boulder that keeps rolling back down, you're trying to make these people and it doesn't work.

KF: When I had to write art statements, Sisyphus would come up. But a key difference is that Sisyphus would get the boulder to the top, and then the rock would roll back down — and I'm interested in never getting to the top. My work is about the process of going there — in that video, for instance, it's important that the people are never made; the video mostly shows me trying to assemble them. (That piece took a long time to make.)

* Disclosure: I'm married to the Traywick in Traywick Contemporary. In fact, sometimes people call me "Mr. Traywick."

Even Fox News Digs Summer Streets

How much of a non-event was this year's Summer Streets in terms of media critique? In this Fox News piece, via Crooks and Liars, the story isn't traffic tie-ups or wacky spandex-clad elitists or howling business owners, but the fact that more everyday New Yorkers are taking to the streets on two wheels. Summer Streets, it seems, has become a mainstream event in just its second year. Reported the Downtown Express at the beginning of August:

"I thought last year it was going to cause havoc in the community," said John Fratta, chairperson of Community Board 1's Seaport/Civic Center Committee. "For the most part I was pretty pleased. It was a nice event." He said he supports the event this year.

The Fox segment does refer to the questionable Hunter College study on unsafe cyclist behavior (without acknowledging more revealing data on the causes of bike-car collisions), and there's a completely unsupported ticker squib that attributes complaints over spending on bike infrastructure to unnamed "critics." But these feel like token attempts to "balance" an otherwise positive story.

Who knows, maybe in a year or two even Steve Cuozzo will have to re-read his old columns to remember what he hated so much about car-free Times Square. 

Comment of the Day: "I'm going to every bodega in...

"I'm going to every bodega in New York and will rate their basic cup of coffee. Everything is all Starbucks this and Stumptown that!" — bibendum [Launches & Releases]

Religion and science sitting in a tree, c-o-o-p-e-r-a-t-i-n-g

Writing in the New York Times this weekend, Robert Wright attempts to reconcile religion and science. The middle ground is the "built-in" moral sense of our universe, in that the universe builds and rewards organisms that cooperate with one another.

I bring good news! These two warring groups have more in common than they realize. And, no, it isn't just that they're both wrong. It's that they're wrong for the same reason. Oddly, an underestimation of natural selection's creative power clouds the vision not just of the intensely religious but also of the militantly atheistic.

If both groups were to truly accept that power, the landscape might look different. Believers could scale back their conception of God's role in creation, and atheists could accept that some notions of "higher purpose" are compatible with scientific materialism. And the two might learn to get along.

This is essentially the subject of the last chapter or two of Wright's The Evolution of God, the only part of this excellent book that I didn't quite buy into, even though I've been thinking about his conclusion quite a bit since finishing the book.

Tags: evolution   religion   Robert Wright   science   The Evolution of God

Running Themselves Into The Ground

The Mets may not have much left to play for this season, but they could at least avoid hitting into game-ending triple plays.  Let’s analyze Jerry Manuel’s decision to hit and run (assuming it was a hit and run and not a missed sign by Jeff Francoeur) on a case-by-case basis:

Swing and miss: Probable CS.  Francoeur strikes out; if the pitch is a ball, he is forced to swing at it instead of going to a full count (though given Frenchy’s proclivities he probably would have swung anyway).  Big loss.

Groundball: double play is probably avoided, though it may not have been possible anyway.  Runners advance, though they may have anyway.  Holes will be opened up by fielders covering the bases, but other holes (e.g. up the middle) are closed.  Win.

Flyball: usually a push, though in some cases the runners might not get back in time to tag up.  Slight loss.

Caught line drive: double play all but guaranteed, with a triple play a distinct possibility.  Huge loss.

Single: Luis Castillo scores for sure, but he probably would have anyway; it doesn’t much matter, as with the the Mets down by two his run is insignificant.  Daniel Murphy probably goes first-to-third, but he may have anyway; besides, with nobody out, having runners on first and third is not that much better than having runners on first and second (run expectations of 1.8 and 1.5, respectively).  Slight win.

Extra-base hit: Push.

Calling for a hit and run in this situation was a terrible decision; add in the fact that Francoeur is a poor contact hitter with good power and it’s sheer lunacy.  I’d really like to do a proper analysis of the hit and run, but in most cases the play-by-play data do not allow one to distinguish between a hit and run and a straight steal.  Nonetheless, generalizing the considerations above should be sufficient to cast serious doubt on the strategy.  Sure, it’s exciting to watch and looks pretty when it works out, but it seems that the reward is rarely, if ever, worth the risk.

fallows on the brain

James Fallows, who has a long history of writing about the "personal information management" category, discovers The Brain, a piece of software I've had an on-again off-again relationship with for more than a decade.

The program has the rare combination of virtues I have previously appreciated in Zoot, Agenda, et al. It is very flexible: there are few hard-wired constraints, and if you decide at any time that you want to change how info is structure or organized, that's easy to do.

What threw me for a loop, though, was that a screenshot in the piece of David Allen's brain includes a reference to a former colleague of mine, Jack Griffin, who's living in Switzerland.

Small world.

Felissimo: 500 colored pencil set


designed by felissimo for social designer this complete set of 500 colored pencils consists of 20 units, each pencil telling its own story with a unique name. you cannot buy the complete set of pencils all at once, but you can receive them over the course of 20 months. four different display methods let you keep your pencils at hand, while being displayed either as an artwork, or kept aside as a special collection. the cases have been designed especially for the 500 colored pencils and are available in a limited edition.
'orchestra' is a wall-mounted display which allows you to snap and swap pencils, giving you control over how to orchestrate colors on your wall.
single piece of 'color wave' --> See more at DesignBoom

37signals: Rework


37 Signals wont say much about their new book Rework except "Everything we know about business is in Rework" and that Crown (their publisher) designed the cover. Nice job Designers at Crown.

Immaculate innings

Immaculate innings are those innings in baseball games where the pitcher strikes out all three batters with nine pitches. It's only happened 42 times in the history of the game. David Archer is tracking the frequency of such innings; they are getting more common.

As one friend pointed out, the best explanation for the increase in recent decades appears to be the advent of the modern reliever, especially the flame-throwing, one inning closer (more immaculate innings have been thrown in the 9th inning* (eight) than in any other inning), though starters -- such as Burnett -- have also been throwing them with impressive frequency.

Update: See also three-pitch innings. (via noah brier)

Tags: baseball   David Archer   sports

Yo dawg, Time.com herd you liek Know Your Meme so they featured...



Yo dawg, Time.com herd you liek Know Your Meme so they featured it on their website as the top 50 Websites of 2009 http://meme.ly/kym50 - gleuch: knowyourmeme

They also gave us this neat little thingamajigger to put on our resume and wear on our lapel at parties!

50BestWebsites2009-75x75

Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 7 Preview



vorticism is the same as futurism, but british

Will Gompertz, a director at the Tate Gallery, is putting on a one hour show at the Edinburgh Fringe festival where he gives the entire history of modern art in an hour. With humor, of course, lest anyone in the audience want to slit their wrists with memories of trying to stay awake through endless slide carousels in the dark room of Art History 101.

He published a taste of the show this weekend in the Times; here's a fantastic three paragraph romp through modern art.

Impressionism — painting outside of a studio with quick, loose brushstrokes to capture an evocative impression of their subject. Van Gogh was an Impressionist but wanted to express how he felt about what he saw so he distorted the subject. This helped to lead to Expressionism practised by artists from Edvard Munch through to Francis Bacon. The Fauves (wild beasts) expressed themselves by painting with bright colours. Jackson Pollock did it by throwing or dripping paint on a canvas. His paintings were abstract — Abstract Expressionism.

Cézanne was very important. He began as an Impressionist but then started to look at a subject from two different perspectives to represent how we see. Picasso and his friend Georges Braque were very impressed and started to paint subjects from lots of different views. This is Cubism. Marcel Duchamp was a Cubist but then changed art for ever. He said the idea is more important than the medium and refused to stick with the limited choice of canvas or stone. So he chose everyday objects and called them art because he had altered their context. This led to Conceptual Art where the idea becomes the medium.

The Dadaists were very cross. They blamed the horrors of the First World War on the Establishment’s reliance on rational and reasoned thought. They radically opposed rational thought and became nihilistic — the punk rock of modern art movements. Dada plus Sigmund Freud equals Surrealism. The Surrealists were fascinated by the unconscious mind, as that’s where they thought truth resided. Piet Mondrian thought he could paint everything he knew, felt and saw by using two lines placed at rectangles and three primary colours. This was called Neo-Plasticism and was inspired by Cubism. So was Futurism, which is Cubism with motion added. Vorticism is the same as Futurism, but British. The Minimalists might represent the real truth because they weren’t trying to represent anything. Performance Art is Dada live.

Of course the jokes are better if you stayed awake through Art History 201.

Pitchfork's songs of the decade

As part of their review of the music of the 2000s, Pitchfork listed the top 500 tracks of the past decade. Here are the top 10:

10. Arcade Fire, "Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)"
9. Animal Collective, "My Girls"
8. Radiohead, "Idioteque"
7. Missy Elliott, "Get Ur Freak On"
6. Yeah Yeah Yeahs, "Maps"
5. Daft Punk, "One More Time"
4. Beyonce [ft. Jay-Z], "Crazy in Love"
3. M.I.A. [ft. Bun B and Rich Boy], "Paper Planes (Diplo Remix)"
2. LCD Soundsystem, "All My Friends"
1. OutKast, "B.O.B."

Be sure to click through for the extensive explanations. It would easy to nitpick specific selections, but that's a pretty good top 10.

Gorilla vs. Bear also shared their top songs and albums of the decade.

Tags: best of   lists   music   The 2000s

Jay-Z "Run This Town" Director's Commentary

The official (by which I mean totally unofficial) director's commentary for the new Jay-Z video with Kanye West and Rihanna. "The blueprint on this Blueprint track. "

Snow Leopard set for release on August 28th

Filed under: , ,

Amid the leaks and speculation, the online Apple Store went down this morning, only to return with Snow Leopard release information -- August 28th. It also turns out that the box photo that was leaked last weekend was legit, showing the Snow Leopard on the front.

The pricing remains at $29US for a single user upgrade, or $49 for a Family Pack upgrade. You can only install the upgrade edition if you're using Leopard. If you're not, you'll need to buy the Mac Box Set, available for $169 for a single user or $229 for a Family Pack.

Before you install, check out our upgrade guide. Also, note that If you purchased a qualifying Mac on or after June 8, 2009, that does not include Mac OS X Snow Leopard, you can upgrade for $9.95.

Thanks to everyone who sent this in!

TUAWSnow Leopard set for release on August 28th originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 24 Aug 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mysterious Tubular Clouds Defy Explanation

morninggloryclouds

These long, crazy-looking clouds can grow to be 600 miles long and can move at up to 35 miles per hour, causing problems for aircraft even on windless days.

Known as Morning Glory clouds, they appear every fall over Burketown, Queensland, Australia, a remote town with fewer than 200 residents. A small number of pilots and tourists travel there each year in hopes of “cloud surfing” with the mysterious phenomenon.

Similar tubular shaped clouds called roll clouds appear in various places around the globe. But nobody has yet figured out what causes the Morning Glory clouds.

This shot was captured by photographer Mick Petroff from his plane near Australia’s Gulf of Carpenteria.

Image: Mick Petroff

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Ben Fried on “The Brian Lehrer Show” Today

Ben, along with Yonah Freemark of The Transport Politic, will be on WNYC this morning to talk about Mayor Bloomberg's transit platform. The segment should air between 10:30 and 11.

Attention deconcentration

It's a bummer that Alec Wilkinson's article on free diving isn't available online (except for NYer subscribers)...it's fascinating and right up the alley of the relaxed concentration/deliberate practice enthusiast. One of the two divers profiled uses a technique called attention deconcentration to govern her body and mind as she dives.

To still the unbidden apprehensions that might interfere with her dive -- what she describes as "the subjective feeling of empty lungs at the deep" -- Molchanova uses a technique that she refers to as "attention deconcentration." ("They get it from the military," Ericson said.) Molchanova told me, "It means distribution of the whole field of attention -- you try to feel everything simultaneously. This condition creates an empty consciousness, so the bad thoughts don't exist."

"Is it difficult to learn?"

"Yes, it's difficult. I teach it in my university. It's a technique from ancient warriors -- it was used by samurai -- but it was developed by a Russian scientist, Oleg Bakhtiyarov, as a psychological-state-management technique for people sho do very monotonous jobs."

I asked if it was like meditation.

"To some degree, except meditation means you're completely free, but if you're in the sea at depth you will have to be focussed, or it will get bad. What you do to start learning is you focus on the edges, not the center of things, as if you were looking at a screen. Basically, all the time I am diving, I have an empty consciousness. I have a kind of melody going through my mind that keeps me going, but otherwise I am completely not in my mind."

I found only one other reference online to attention deconcentration, an article on free diving written by Natalia Molchanova herself. In it, she talks about the three types of attention deconcentration: visual, aural, and tactile.

Rising from the depth, it is important to constantly scan your condition to prevent shallow water black-out, which can occur without any discomfort sensations. Somatic attention deconcentration appears to be extremely useful in this situation. Somatic AD implies attention distribution on the whole volume of the body and allows noticing tiny changes of organism state.

There is one more kind of AD -- aural attention deconcentration. It is not so effective in the water, but it helps preparing to the dive and not to be distracted by judge's countdown.

It's interesting that both the attention deconcentration and flow techniques are designed to get the practitioner to basically the same place (i.e. ready to perform difficult tasks) from opposite directions.

Somewhat related, a reader (thx, martin) recently sent in a link to The Game, a mind game with an unusual objective:

The Game is an ongoing mind game, the objective of which is to avoid thinking about The Game itself. Thinking about The Game constitutes a loss, which, according to the rules of The Game, must then be announced. How to win The Game is not defined in the rules; players can only attempt to avoid losing for as long as possible. The Game has been described alternately as pointless and infuriating, or as a challenging game that is fun to play.

Tags: Alec Wilkinson   attention deconcentration   free diving   sports

Judo champ finally gets her gold


Rena Kanokogi with her gold medal - one she should have won in 1959

The New York Daily News has an interesting profile of a Brooklyn woman who was stripped of her first place medal in judo after judges realized she was a woman competing against men. (And beating them - which I suspect was the real issue.)

[Kanokogi] vividly recalls the moment she took on her opponent in the New York State YMCA judo championships.

She was an alternate, and had to step in when a male team member was injured.

Although women were not explicity barred from the YMCA contests, no female had ever tried to take part. Because her hair was as short as a boy's and she had an athletic build and tape around her breasts, Kanokogi's gender wasn't questioned until she won her fight - and her team won the contest.

She was pulled aside and forced to admit she was a woman or else her teammates would have been stripped of the title.

"It was very demeaning, painful," she said.

Now, fifty years later, the medal that was taken from her in 1959 has been restored. The New York State YMCA gave her the medal last week to make amends, and to honor a lifetime of work on behalf of women and sports: After losing the medal Kanokogi went on to fund the first female judo world championships and worked to get women's judo into the 1988 Olympics.

Rapper behind 'Roxanne's Revenge' gets Warner Music to pay for Ph.D

Shared by dc
how fucking genius is roxanne shante?!
After two albums, Shante said, she was disillusioned by the sleazy music industry and swindled by her record company. The teen mother, living in the Queensbridge Houses, recalled how her life was shattered. "Everybody was cheating with the contracts, stealing and telling lies," she said. "And to find out that I was just a commodity was heartbreaking." But Shante, then 19, remembered a clause in her Warner Music recording contract: The company would fund her education for life. She eventually cashed in, earning a Ph.D. in psychology from Cornell to the tune of $217,000 - all covered by the label. But getting Warner Music to cough up the dough was a battle.

It Came From The Oddball Box - part 1

I had an epiphany this weekend and came to the conclusion that I am Burned Out. Pretty much in all aspects of my life. Unfortunately in the next two weeks, things will be getting Much Worse and not better. As a result, I have decided to take off from serious blogging until after Labor Day.

I don't want to drop off the face of the earth through, so I've pulled out two weeks' worth of goodies out of an old box of junk cards I found in the basement this weekend. I don't think I've seriously looked through this box in well over a decade if not two. Warning: very little baseball content follows so find alternate means of fueling your hardball card fix 'till after the holiday. This card is tangentially related to baseball, as Jim Bouton was the founder of the card company.

Leading off is a Big League Cards promo for the DeKalb County, Georgia Fire Department. This robot looking thing went to schools and told kids not to burn the house down too much or some such wisdom. There's sort of an unholy lovechild of Robbie the Robot and Fireman Sam theme going on here. Love does what it will, I shall not judge. I don't recall ever seeing this refugee from a Dr. Who episode in person, but the card ended up in my possession somehow.

The back shows where the metallic monster got its name. A local furrier helped bring it online on 1/1/86. Thus, Captain Avanti. Oddly the copyright on the card is 1985. There's some kind of Skynet Terminator schtuff goin' on right here, I know it. Since it only weighs 120 pounds there's probably a lot of futuristic lightweight alloys in the frame of this fire fighting killing machine. Most frightening is the listing of two of his favorite things: children and breakdancing. I'm sure there was a lot of breaking going on during that dance, especially if children got a little too close.

Today’s Headlines

  • Teen Driver Hits and Kills Queens Man, Passes Breathalyzer, Case Closed (News)
  • DOT Dumps Company Charged With Modernizing NYC's Traffic Signal System (Post)
  • Car With NYPD Placard Blocks FDNY From Fire Hydrant as Blaze Injures Four Kids (Post)
  • The Subway Ceiling Collapse Wake Up Call: We Need to Fund Transit Infrastructure (NYFI)
  • Study: Cyclists Cause Fewer Than 10 Percent of Bike/Car Collisions (TreeHugger)
  • Can a Constitutional Convention Fix Albany? (NYT)
  • DOT Ramps Up Its Ped Countdown Timer Pilot Program (NY1)
  • Brooklyn CB1 Presses City to Keep Its Promises on Taming Truck Traffic in North Brooklyn (MTR)
  • NYC Reps Weiner and McMahon: Cash for Clunkers "a Great Program" (Bklyn Eagle)
  • Confronting the Tragic Fixation on Easy Parking (Sustainable Savannah via Streetsblog.net)

Can it be? Yes ... LINKTASTIC FRIDAY RETURNS! On a Monday.


black lace dress from Reware Vintage



Reware Vintage
(in Pontiac, Michigan) is having a sale -- that's Bethany's black lace dress up there, B40 and $36 (!) -- 20% everything using coupon code THIEF.

Wendy at PatternStash is having a sale; it runs today through Tuesday. 20% discount with code "Dressaday".

A reader (who is NOT a pattern-seller, but a pattern-buyer) has asked if I could make a post about what people would like to see in online pattern stores, and also what they would NOT like to see. If you have wishes or pet peeves, would you email them to me? I'll compile a list and post it here (and you can be as anonymous as you like).

If you missed the comments on the COPA entry, I've set up a Google group for a potential co-op, and you can sign up to join here.

Lisa gives me some of the best news I've heard in a while ... Liberty + Target? Please let it be true ...

Great new blog from the FIDM Museum ... I especially liked this post.

Trista of Sugardale is getting rid of some vintage patterns on Etsy (you remember Trista, don't you?) and you can find them here.

Do you guys know about the California Art Deco Society's Gatsby Afternoon? That's not my time period but I'm very tempted ... (thanks to Kate for the link!)

It's a dress, it's a kayak, it's a cool link from Tracey. Check it out.

Sarah (of ColorKitten) sent a link to Little Golden Book fabric! (*WANT*)

That's it for today! Enjoy your little dose of Friday on a Monday this week.

August 23, 2009

Dale La Vuelta Al Mundo

It’s rare to see a large, established non-profit take a bold risk with their branding. All the more reason I love the striking, typographic treatment of the graphics designed by Hey Studio for a campaign by Oxfam International Spain. (via)

Oxfam España

Perl coming to Android phones

By François Charette

Android is an operating system for mobile phones that runs a modified Linux kernel and the Java environment. The Android Scripting Environment (ASE) allows you to edit and execute scripts directly on the Android device. Until now only Python, Lua and BeanShell were supported, but a request was filed to add Perl as well. Recently, support for Perl was added to the development tree, and today that feature request was closed, and is part of OSE 0.11 alpha.

This means we can expect that Perl will be officially supported on Android with the next stable release of the ASE. It will then be possible to write neat Perl programs on an Android phone, like this "hello world" example.

François Charette is an independent scholar in the humanities with a passion for Perl. He is the initiator and co-developer of Biber, a BibTeX replacement written in Perl.

A Player Collector’s Impossible Mission


It’s been a great couple of weeks with regards to my Andrew Miller collection. Reader “Chris W.” sent in a 2007 Topps Chrome Xfractor in a trade that should be nearing completion and The Wax Report’s Mr. Scott sent two ‘09 Allen & Ginter parallels I needed, including the hand-numbered Mini I didn’t think I’d ever find.

On Saturday, my eBay purchase finally arrived. For under $1 dollar (minus shipping) I got a 2009 UDx game-used relic of Andrew Miller. Unfortunately, the card is pretty damaged in two spots around the relic which leads me to believe that this was how it came from the pack. The auction had no mention of any damage.

Considering the card is for my personal collection, I’ll proudly accept it as is and will likely leave a Neutral feedback. You won’t believe this but the card itself is not so bad. Not counting the fact that Andrew’s been a Marlin for two years and the picture depicts him with a Tigers uniform, I’d say this is one of Andrew’s best game-used relics I’ve seen.

As for my collection, I am now up to 170 different cards. With August almost down the drain it seems unlikely that I will reach 200 different cards considering that the card companies are snubbing Miller left and right in upcoming releases and because Andrew is stuck in the Minors and will likely have no more cards produced until he rejoins the Fish.

You can check out a detailed list of my collection HERE.

Paired: Scher + Stewart

The World by Paula Scher
The World by Paula Scher

The Map of the World Confused with Its Territory

In a drawer I found a map of the world,
folded into eighths and then once again
and each country bore the wrong name because
the map of the world is an orphanage.

The edges of the earth had a margin
as frayed as the hem of the falling night
and a crease moved down toward the center of
the earth, halving the identical stars.

Every river ran with its thin blue
brother out from the heart of a country:
there cedars twisted toward the southern sky
and reeds plumed eastward like an augur’s pens.

No dates on the wrinkles of that broad face,
no slow grinding of mountains and sand, for—
all at once, like a knife on a whetstone—
the map of the world spoke in snakes and tongues.

The hard-topped roads of the western suburbs
and the distant lights of the capitol
each pull away from the yellowed beaches
and step into the lost sea of daybreak.

The map of the world is a canvas turning
away from the painter’s ink-stained hands
while the pigments cake in their little glass
jars and the brushes grow stiff with forgetting.

There is no model, shy and half-undressed,
no open window and flickering lamp,
yet someone has left this sealed blue letter,
this gypsy’s bandana on the darkening

Table, each corner held down by a conch
shell. What does the body remember at
dusk? That the palms of the hands are a map
of the world, erased and drawn again and

Again, then covered with rivers and earth.

Susan Stewart

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Dodgeball.com

Dodgeball.com: Oh, sad.

Small Bike Business

NYT profiles Hambone Designs. They make bicycle bags for keys, wallets, and cellphones. The owner Mrs Grillos started the business after her contract position at Willams-sonoma was not renewed.

hambone_on_quickbeam.jpg

In Seattle, Bike So Good recently opened as repair shop. The shops we're talking to have adjusted and doing ok. That's not great, like years past, but ok.

Your Bike Business

Included in our coverage of Interbike next month (the bike industry's big trade show), we want to focus on the small business. Tell us what you're doing. Did you get laid of from some big corp and are making something interesting our bikes must have?

See the $4.99 MessengerMirror as an example of what we want to blog about.

Fast Track to Sourdough

Since April 8th, 2001, the day Sourdoughhome.com was launched, I have received tens of thousands of emails asking questions about sourdough. Questions the writers didn't want to ask in public forums. Questions that revealed the weaknesses in the books and web pages covering sourdough - including this one. These questions, and their answers, have served to hone this web site to a keen edge. Over those years, I have seen many of the same questions from people who are trying to bake with sourdough again and again. There's a ton of information about sourdough in books and on the Internet. And much of it is contradictory and more of it is just plain wrong. What has been missing is a single page that focuses on the first time you bake sourdough bread. Painlessly. via www.sourdoughhome.com

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