Okay, at the risk of public embarassment I’ll state here that “I Feel Love” is one of my all-time favorite synth songs. Here’s a video of the guy that did it:
Category: Uncategorized
General blog stuff.
New Photos Up
Tracie just put a bunch of new photos up in the photo gallery. They’re mostly pictures of flowers and plants in our back yard, and some of the cats. (Yes, photos of our cats! Such a surprise, no?) Click here to go there.
Today’s Word Puzzle
[Not that I have a daily word puzzle, mind you.]
There are three words in the English language that start with the letters “DW”. What are they?
(Thanks to Chris for mentioning this.)
Registration Re-Enabled
Well, that was pretty stupid of me. I went to some length to spam-proof the commenting mechanism of this site awhile back, and then I wondered why nobody posted any comments. I mean, I know there isn’t a huge amount of traffic on this site, but no comments at all? It seemed odd. Today I finally noticed that when I previously shut down the commenting mechanism altogether, I also disabled the user registration mechanism, and forgot to enable it when I turned the comments back on. If you’re not logged in you can’t comment, and you can’t log in if you don’t register… Duh.
Pardon the Dust
I’m about to mess around with the layout and appearance of this site. I apologize if you happen to visit in the midst of this activity and find things shifting around in odd ways. “Do not adjust your picture–the problem is not in your set…”
Extreme Origami
Our friend Ann sent me this link to an interesting Discover article about contemporary origami. There’s a photo of a dragon that’s probably the most sophisticated bit of folding in the world, as well as some of Robert Lang‘s recent insects. It’s an interesting article, particularly if you haven’t heard of Lang and his work.
Bob Dylan’s a Bloody Hypocrite
Bob Dylan wrote some amazing songs back in his day (which was around the time I was in diapers), but looks like he’s now at the point at which he’ll criticize the music biz with one side of his mouth while sucking up cash for endorsements with the other.
Quoting from this article : “Bob Dylan says the quality of modern recordings is ‘atrocious,’ and even the songs on his new album sounded much better in the studio than on disc. … Dylan said he does his best to fight technology, but it’s a losing battle. ‘Even these songs probably sounded ten times better in the studio when we recorded ’em. CDs are small. There’s no stature to it.'”
Apple Not Particularly Green
Macrumours.com notes that Apple doesn’t score particularly well in environmental awareness. Quoting from their site:
Late last week, environmental watchdog Greenpeace released their Guide to Greener Electronics (pdf) which rates how eco-friendly different tech companies are based on publicly available information. Apple scored 4th lowest, beating only Leveno, Motorola, and Acer. Among the top-scorers were Nokia and Dell.
[quoting from the report] For a company that claims to lead on product design, Apple scores badly on almost all criteria. The company fails to embrace the precautionary principle, withholds its full list of regulated substances and provides no timelines for eliminating toxic polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and no commitment to phasing out all uses of brominated flame retardants (BFRs). Apple performs poorly on product take back and recycling, with the exception of reporting on the amounts of its electronic waste recycled.
“Rustic”?
This article in today’s New York Times about the new self-created suspect in JonBenet Ramsey’s killing describes Boulder as a “rustic college town.” Okay, there’s a big university here, and yes, the city is about 125,000 people which makes it a town in the eyes of a big city, but rustic? I don’t get that, particularly with all of the commercial development that’s happened in the years since she was killed. Clearly that reporter has never seen Ward, for instance.
The Future of Air Travel Security
Just in case you’re curious about what’s going to happen down the road with airline security, in the wake of the recently foiled liquid-bomb plot, there’s an article by a Time correspondent here that pretty much paints the picture. It’s about airport security in Israel, a country that has forgotten far more about conflict and terrorism than we know, that has never had an outbound airplane hijacked.
The gist of it is this: you can’t win this game by looking for the weapon. You have to look for the people whielding the weapons. It’s like any other arms race: as soon as one side invents a new weapon, the other side invents a way to disarm it, a means to protect against it, or a bigger weapon. Ultimately nobody wins. Just like copy-protection for software, DVDs, and CDs: a few bright people inventing ways to prevent something from being copied are no match for an endless number of fanatics figuring out ways to circumvent that protection.