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Good review of young trumpeter’s most recent album.
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Heh. LPs are passe. Wonder if the 78s are shellac? (Hope not; there will be a lot of broken product in the channel.)
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A redshirt running back leaves the UVA football team–because he really wants to major in computer science. I love my alma mater.
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The latest iteration of our report digs deeper into third party code, cloud applications, and metrics around PCI. It’s a scary world out there. But our remediation time findings suggest there is hope–once you find the bugs they can be surprisingly quick to fix.
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To read: “Where Good Ideas Come From.”
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The new opinion pages on nytimes.com are a prominent example of using web fonts for branding purposes. With those headline fonts I can almost smell the newsprint.
Grab bag: Cascading consequences
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This is why physicists make such good product managers. Or maybe bad product managers.
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When is an independent security audit not helpful for your code? When it’s not done. The total breakdown of Haystack after its security weaknesses were discovered in the wild, in a hostile regime, is a good reminder to get your code tested by a pro before engaging in risky behavior.
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The interesting bit here, aside from the fact that women now serve as the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, the President, and the Rector of the University of Virginia, is this tidbit: “Plans changed, however, when Gov. Bob McDonnell chose not to re-appoint Abramson, who contributed to the political campaigns of Kaine, Mark Warner and other Democrats.”
Yup. McDonnell and his administration just can’t keep from trying to screw up the University.
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Just as much evidence for the literal truth of the six-day creation story as for evolution? Why yes, I’ll have what she’s having.
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Awesome illustration of what you can do with web fonts and modern HTML+CSS. I particularly dig the Atlantis example.
Why Jeff Tweedy doesn’t lose sleep
How could anyone who listened to Uncle Tupelo’s farewell album Anodyne, in particular the title track, esteem Jay Farrar as a talented songwriter? Crooning an obscure word as though it were a lover’s name is many things, but songwriting is not one of them.
See also: “Caryatid Easy.”
Grab bag: Near future and dirty present
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A few of these might catch on. (I suffer from an extreme, persistent case of “cover buzz.”)
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Nice capsule overview of Nick Cave’s career in the context of a “Grinderman 2” review.
Corporate grassroots adoption for the iPhone
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Just like Windows taking over from other corporate platforms on the basis of grass-roots employee preferences.
Shawn Moore on the Clemson win
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I remember that game too. Hard to believe that was 20 years ago. Only a few weeks into my first semester at UVa and the team was breaking barriers–and Clemson’s defense. No wonder the Groh years were so disappointing; there was nowhere to go from that season but down.
Grab bag: Free comics, parental hysteria
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Awesome: hundreds and hundreds of Golden Age comics for download to a reader.
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Good illustration of the importance of accurate data, of questioning media hysteria, and of real responsible parenting.
Grab bag: 4’33” and big iron
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The 4’33” playlist has better brand recognition than the 2’13” playlist.
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WhiteHat pulls the curtain aside to talk about their scanning infrastructure.
Grab bag: insecure, and funny
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Interesting list of security issues from Unicode, including lookalike characters, the bidirectional feature, bad Unicode-to-other-charsets mangling, and more fun. From Chris Weber, who went to my high school before he started a security company.
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HackIsWack.com, ironically, has multiple security flaws, including cross site scripting, cross site request forgery, directory listing enabled, arbitrary upload of Flash files, and more. Symantec, we expected more.
Glee Club football songs: “Hike, Virginia”

It’s first and ten for a new season of Virginia football, and for the first time in several years my heart is full of more than the usual blind optimism. With a new coach at the helm, I feel as though Virginia has a chance to shake loose the malaise that’s gripped the team for the past few years. In the spirit of blind optimism, then, I present a little history: the back story of a Virginia football song, “Hike, Virginia.”
As I noted earlier this year, spectators used to sing at Virginia football games. And not just “The Good Old Song”–there were songs for every occasion and for every foe. A 1911 football song book that has come into my possession indicates part of how they were able to pull this off, by having lyrics in front of every fan, but there was much more required to make it happen, from the presence of a band (or the Glee Club) at games to Virginia fans who would write songs to be sung by the crowd. One of these fans was L. D. Crenshaw, and the song was “Hike, Virginia,” cowritten by Crenshaw and C.S. McVeigh.
The story might end there, but I did a little sleuthing and found that L.D. Crenshaw was in fact Lewis D. Crenshaw, first secretary of the UVA Alumni Association, first to successfully accomplish a system of modern reunions, and the originator and host of the University’s bureau in Paris during World War I. He was fondly remembered by many alumni as a redoubtable host; a New Years Eve party in Paris was to continue “‘jusqu’au moment où les vaches rentrent chez ell’ (’til the cows come home). On the menu was ‘de l’egg nogg véritable.’” He was also instrumental in getting the centennial reunion together, with his goal being
to see that every human critter that can walk or hop or crawl or fly or swim, or even float down the Rivanna on his back, gets within calling distance of the old Rotunda… [searching for the] oldest living specimen of the genus alumnus Virginiensis, who we will have seated on the throne of extinct beer kegs [prohibition being in full force], and crowned with a chaplet of fragrant mint leaves.
Unfortunately, the infant Alumni Association could not afford to keep up Crenshaw’s salary, reports University historian Virginius Dabney–it seems alums were delinquent in their dues even in the beginning–so he resigned his post and returned to Paris indefinitely.
Less is known of C.S. McVeigh, save that he was in the Glee Club in 1905, per concert reviews in the spring of that year published in the Baltimore Sun and the Alexandria Gazette. (It is becoming axiomatic that just about every Virginia song I run across has at least one Glee Club man responsible for its authorship.) But together they produced a lesser known but still fun gem in the annals of Virginia songs.
“Hike, Virginia” was first recorded on Songs of the University of Virginia and can be heard on the Glee Club’s current record, Songs of Virginia, along with other Virginia songs.
Grab bag: Album tacos!
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Album tacos!
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Be sure to check out the large scale photos of the model. Simply staggering amounts of detail.
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The lab formerly known as CEBAF, where I cut my teeth running cables and wiring data acquisition boards while in high school.
The elephant in the room
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The toll for this unnecessary, dishonest war is too high.
Glee Club history: from “The Cavalier Song” to McCarthy

Today’s odd moment in Virginia Glee Club history comes by way of that “other” official Virginia song, “The Cavalier Song.” While most alums today are familiar only with “The Good Old Song,” that collectively authored song-about-a-song set to the tune of “Auld Lang Syne” by Glee Club alum E.A. Craighill and sung by swaying Hoos at every touchdown, that song was never an official song of the University, though it has been the de facto alma mater since its introduction in 1895.
Instead, the University’s two official songs were chosen through a contest sponsored by College Topics (now The Cavalier Daily) in 1923. Seeking official University songs, the contest netted “Virginia, Hail, All Hail!“, by Glee Club alum John Albert Morrow, and “The Cavalier Song,” by English instructor Lawrence Lee and Glee Club alum Fulton Lewis, Jr. While most alums are familiar with “Virginia, Hail, All Hail!” only, if at all, through Glee Club performances, “The Cavalier Song” has been played at Virginia sports events by the various bands (University Band, Pep Band, Cavalier Marching Band) during the school’s history since its introduction. Because it’s typically performed as an instrumental, its lyrics have faded into obscurity, meaning that it is Fulton Lewis Jr.’s tune that we know best about the song.
It’s perhaps ironic that Lewis’s contribution to the University has been so long lasting, since many of his other contributions to history were decidedly less cheery. Described as “an indifferent student,” he left the University without a degree after three years and sought his fortune as a journalist, becoming a reporter and editor at the Washington Herald. After helping to unmask spy for Japan “Agent K” as Naval officer John Semer Farnsworth, he rose to fame as a conservative radio commentator, where at his peak he was syndicated on over 500 stations. As a commentator, he staked out a series of positions on the wrong side of history: against the New Deal and FDR, against America’s entry into World War II, and in support of Barry Goldwater and Joe McCarthy–backing the latter even after his nationwide disgrace.
Lewis’s ongoing support of McCarthy cost him his national audience, though he continued on the air until his death in 1966. He left behind him a noxious legacy and a reputation for subjective partisanship: the New Republic noted that his “wild charges were part of his campaign over many years to smear in every way possible the New Deal, the Fair Deal, and everybody not in accord with the most reactionary political beliefs”; the Washington Post memorialized him in 1987 as “one of the most unprincipled journalists ever to practice the trade”; and a profile on Salon calls him “a master of the partisan smear.” He called moderate Republicans, like Casper Weinberger, Communists. In many ways, then, he was ahead of his time.
Who redistributes the wealth?
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The cries of "wealth distribution" from people who have made their fortunes redistributing wealth are disingenuous at best.
Grab bag: Seduction of the innocent edition
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Dr. Wertham has become a special sort of villain in the minds of comics aficionados. It will be interesting to hear what sorts of things surface from these papers.
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Indeed. Proponents of jailbreaking don’t seem to realize that what they call “jailbreaks” others call “exploitable security vulnerabilities” that make it trivial for a hostile attacker to pwn the device.
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In Defense of Links, Part One: Nick Carr, hypertext and delinkification — Scott Rosenberg’s WordyardNot all hyperlinks are created equal. Critiquing the written web by the standards of hypertextual fiction is misleading.
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Interesting discussion of the intersection between IT, privacy and the honor system.
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No wonder there is an anxiety of influence.
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The highschooler who outsoloed Wynton Marsalis and other fun Seattle jazz stuff. Includes a callout to Matt Jorgenson.