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Enabling the new WordPress 2.7 comments functionality in a legacy template. Very interesting.
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I don’t think this will be the last marginal retailer to go by the wayside in the next year.
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Did someone say dirty tricks?
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Hmm. Interesting stab at true online identity.
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The line at my precinct (which votes alongside Precinct 14) just 80 minutes before I got there.
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“Where’s the ‘super’?” Heh.
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And that’s what it’s all about.
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So, anti-Obama blogs that don’t link to anything but themselves aren’t really read as blogs but help propagate smears into Google search results. Y’know, where I come from, we call those spam blogs, link spamming, and a bunch of other nasty names.
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This will stand as the election in which voters shook off the shackles of television and reclaimed a fraction of their power.
Fired Up, Ready to Go
I voted this morning at around 8:25 am. I was number 325 at my precinct; a line about 100 people long had been there at 7 am, so I was catching things at a brief resting point. There was a PTA bake sale on the way out. It was a traditional end to a most untraditional election.
This has been the most amazing presidential election I can remember. I followed 2004 closely but wasn’t too plugged into it–went into the general election behind Kerry but was never a huge fan. As I drove cross country the week of the Democratic National Convention listening to podcasted speeches on my iPod, the one that impressed me most was Barack Obama’s, and I didn’t know who he was then. I think we all do now.
Now we’ll see what happens. I’m “fired up, ready to go” but I’m also nervous as hell. It’s been too long a road and there have already been too many notes about dirty tricks for me to relax now. But we knew it would be a long road and I’m ready for a long night tonight if necessary.
There are things I can think of to pass the time–like a little online competition to see who guesses the electoral college split–but I don’t want to jinx the outcome. So for now, to work, and we wait.
And watch the early returns. By all indications this will be a huge turnout election, and it’s already breaking some precedents–like Obama becoming the first Democrat to win in Dixville Notch, NH since 1968.
By the way–when did they stop handing out “I voted” stickers?
Grab bag: 24 more hours of uncertainty
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Brilliantly written review of the history of the vote in America, including fisticuffs and the importing of secret voting from Australia.
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It’s tempting to sniff about critics who don’t understand finance making precious analogies between Black-Scholes and Derrida, but y’know, maybe there’s something there.
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This is the kind of physicist I always wanted to be.
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More fun and games with the voter rolls… in Colorado.
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You know, price cuts on big screen TVs sound interesting, but only if you think the buyer is going to have a job.
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Breaking: Fox is right wing and MSNBC is left wing!
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“A government of national unity starting at 8:45 pm tomorrow” sounds about right.
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Another interesting Obama related song from Funky16Corners.
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Oh my. Hours of fun ahead, I can tell.
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On the benefits of being an outsider in an insider club.
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Heh. Nice one from Woody, a little more stream of consciousness than his old work but sill funny.
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Chatting the election as it goes. Sounds like a party.
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More safe for work than the name suggests. I think they missed a few kerfluffles, but I’m not going to point it out to them.
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Some more thoughts on using Twitter to route around election problems.
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Twitter Vote Report looks like a good way to remind the dirty tricksters that they’re being watched.
Grab bag: Still buzzing on leftover candy
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The Candy Code! I’m particularly amused by the chalk drawing that means “produced in a factory that processes nuts and oils.”
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Interesting tablet mod of a Mac, with a killer service option to convert an existing Macbook.
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Interesting speculation on cabinet posts.
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A new cryptographic algorithm, a candidate replacement for SHA, and a bunch of really fascinating reading…
Worth reposting: an open letter to American social conservatives
I don’t often repost entire blog posts, but this needs to be disseminated widely. Thanks to Estaminet for saying what I wanted to say. Take a look at this and spread it to your friends and family:
estaminet: an open letter to american social conservatives.
Please stop.
Please stop saying that Barack Obama is Muslim. He’s not. He, and his family, are faithful Christians, and have demonstrated that in word and deed. (And even if he were Muslim, that shouldn’t be a strike against him.)
Please stop saying that Barack Obama is an “Arab.” He’s an American, or he wouldn’t be qualified to run for President.
Please stop saying that Barack Obama seeks to destroy Israel. He doesn’t. He, like every other sane-minded person in this crazy world, wants to see an end to violence in the Middle East. In that vision, he supports Israel’s sovreignty.
Please stop saying that Barack Obama is the antichrist. First of all, the Revelation of John was written in a literary code, and no one can say for sure what the high-flung, apocalyptic rhetoric of that book really means. Second, one of the main points of the book is that, if and when the end of the world comes, we won’t know it’s coming. People have been looking for signs for ages now — since the book was written. You’re using the Bible to fit your own fears and prejudices, and that’s not right.
Please stop saying that, if Barack Obama is elected President, he’ll make everyone in the country do X, Y, and Z. Since when has any President ever been able to make Americans do something? (Not counting the draft for a minute — let’s focus on the so-called “family” issues.) No one will force you to marry someone of the same gender, no one will force you to have an abortion, and no one will force your children to be communist transvestite Phish roadies or whatever. You and your children will have as much ability to intelligently decide your lives’ paths for yourselves as you ever did. If other people in America have the freedom to live their lives as they see fit (which is, after all, what America’s always been all about), the country will be a better place.
Please stop being afraid of people who are different from you, and thinking that, if Barack Obama is elected President, that “the blacks will take over.” (Seriously. I’ve read that you’ve said that. I’ll look up the source later.) Everyone’s afraid, in some way, of everyone else. Let’s try talking to each other, and treating each other as people. And, by the way, things are going to change in this country’s race relations no matter who’s elected.
Please stop objectifying Sarah Palin. Seriously. And yes, you so are. I’ve spent too much time denigrating her myself, in a mean-spirited way. I’ll stop being so mean, if you’ll stop fetishizing her.
Please, please, please stop being so afraid. Your anger and fear is scaring me. It makes me afraid for the future of this country, no matter who wins the election. My own anger and fear scares me, too. Can we both stop being afraid? Can we work together?
Happy Halloween
Random collection of thoughts this morning:
- I just rode on my first Segway this morning. One of our QA engineers was an employee and got a pre-production experimental model as part of his severance, and he brought it in this morning. My question to him after tooling around a little on it: how on earth did W manage to fall off the thing? His response: a combination of his getting started before the diagnostic mode had finished, and “natural talent.”
- Listening to the full Black Album for the first time, and while there’s no denying the brilliance of some of the beats, I have to say that I prefer Danger Mouse’s version.
- How we got such a gorgeous October is beyond my comprehension. We’ve had astonishing sunrises and clear, crisp skies for a few days now. Now the trick is to find some time to get out and enjoy it.
Grab bag: Slightly late edition
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Interesting and righteous take on the abortion rights issue. You go, cafe!
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Qualitative research, or anecdotes? Interesting profiles of Republicans and independents voting for Obama.
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What will we follow obsessively once the election is over? Try Mark Cuban’s BailoutSleuth.com, following public artifacts of the bailout.
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LinkedIn’s response to Facebook positions it as the “serious cat” of social networking.
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The most surprising thing about the proposal to turn Hereford into first-year housing while the Alderman Road dorms are rebuilt is that some students are upset about having to leave.
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I think I can get away with getting a compost bin this fall. Now I just have to figure out where it goes.
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“We’re set up, unlike other states in the union, where it’s collectively Alaskans own the resources. So we share in the wealth when the development of these resources occurs.”
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Nice summary of reactions from conservative politicians and media to the Palin selection. I can’t help but think it would look more impressive as a printed page rather than with the Flash mouseovers.
A report on the usability testing for WordPress 2.7
Jane Wells at WordPress opens the kimono further on the decision to redesign the administrative user interface for 2.7. I griped a while back that it seemed like the design changes were being made in a non-systematic way, but it turns out there were solid usability testing exercises prior to the surveys we’ve all seen about structuring the navigation menu. She also includes a detailed usability report covering the eye tracking studies and the different stages of the process. Sounds like the new administrative screen is genuinely a usability improvement in terms of the metrics that matter (task success and time on task).
I also found it interesting that participants had a strong emotional connection to the 2.5 admin interface even when the formal usability metrics proved that they had trouble using it! Apparently good graphic design (my attraction to the UI) helps to mitigate formal usability flaws–a point worth remembering.
New mix: Power’s out in the heart of man
As so often happens as I’m putting mixes together, I’ve collected enough tracks for about three mixes since I published “picture of you where it began” back in May (“Blasphemous Rumors” was a one-off theme mix that didn’t dip into this pool). So I ended up splitting out this first set of tracks as the first go-round via a stochastic process of picking the first and last songs and removing every other song from the list. After a little re-ordering, it shaped up into the dark bullet below.
As previously announced, my mixes will no longer be appearing on Art of the Mix, but I’m not sure what the right way is to have them show up in the blog. In this case, the iTunes mix widget was just about right because all the tracks from the mix were available in the store (except for the Elvis Costello cut, which was the original version from Brutal Youth–and now I’m curious about the alternate version in the store). But going forward I’ll probably use some other method to publish the lists. Anyone got a favorite?
Grab bag: All music, no election edition
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Yes We Can remix record. Lee Dorsey ftw.
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C-Ville’s review is positive but I think a little misguided. A song about fleeing the state after burning down a house (metaphorically or literally) is not rose-colored nostalgia.
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Torrent of Shannon Worrell record release show.
Google and publishers agree to sit down and make some money
New York Times: Google Settles Suit Over Book-Scanning. It’s good to see the book publishing industry come to its senses.
Now that the parties have agreed to revenue sharing from book sales and library use, it becomes even more clear that Google Books is yet another Internet mediated disintermediation. Google Books is probably the best targeted marketing vehicle for the book industry since the original Amazon, because of its reach and ease of use and its ability to make transparent the previously opaque covers of books to help us find useful content. I’ve personally found it more useful than the usual suspects (book reviews, bestseller lists) when it comes to finding useful research works; sometimes you need to read the original book to decide if it’s useful to you rather than relying on third-hand opinion.
Here’s to a win for all involved–Google, book publishers, and above all, for you and me.
Grab bag: Monday linkfest
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Get your Flickr photos out of the trunk.
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The French Toast alert system is back!!
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I’m surprised it took this long for someone to surface who was this crazy.
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Pursue those talking points, fearless independent media!!!
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Cool image processing stuff.
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CNN looks at the other side of the “vote fraud” question–allegations of voter suppression and “purges.”
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Interesting lessons learned from the development of the iPhone version of Flickr.
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What sort of nerve does it take to bug your opponent during a debate, and then file a criminal complaint for theft and destruction of property when he confiscates the recorder and erases the tape?
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Interesting overview of Chuck Hagel and his differences with McCain.
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OMG. Watching Andy Griffith do this spot is one of the sweetest things I think I’ve ever seen.
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The Met may finally have found something to replace Saturday afternoon radio broadcasts. I would never in a million years have predicted this movie theatre thing would take off like this, but hey, awesome.
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Interesting notes in here about taking an iTunes XML file, doing some transforms on it, and then using it to publish a playlist description.
The fifty state strategy in action
A piece in the Las Vegas Sun about Howard Dean caught my attention. After the “Dean Scream” got played into the ground by the media, Dean has largely been ignored by the popular press, but I think his actions at the DNC have been substantial in positioning the Democrats in 2008. And it’s instructive to take a look at the actual speech which preceded his “scream”:
Not only are we going to New Hampshire, Tom Harkin, we’re going to South Carolina and Oklahoma and Arizona and North Dakota and New Mexico, and we’re going to California and Texas and New York … And we’re going to South Dakota and Oregon and Washington and Michigan, and then we’re going to Washington, D.C., to take back the White House! Yeah!
I linked to electoral poll results for each of the states Dean called out. It’s interesting to see that while many red states have stayed red, Arizona, North Dakota, and Michigan are all clearly in play, while New Mexico has moved solidly into the “safe Democratic” column. And geez, look what’s happened in Virginia and North Carolina.
I think that the overplaying of the Dean Scream may have been one of the biggest injustices ever done to a presidential candidate by the media, but in the long run, maybe the party is better off for having him in the internal role that he’s excelled at.
The really interesting question, raised by Kos this weekend, is: who will the right find to rebuild the party? Who will play Howard Dean for the GOP?
Grab bag: crow, vote
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Yes, I’m eating it too. Go Hoos!
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Quick steps if you get turned away at the polls. Key is call 1-866-OURVOTE or 866ourvote.org.
Saying goodbye
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As someone who lost his last grandparent in January, I have to say this is among the most personally moving articles this election cycle. Mrs. Dunham, our thoughts and prayers and blessings with you and your grandson.