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Arvo Pärt’s Fourth Symphony–review of the forthcoming recording from the LA premiere. Can’t wait.
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Sounds like some interesting wine choices, from a region I’ve never heard of.
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Quantifying the nadir of the UVA football program under Groh.
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Full video of the president’s appearance on the Letterman show.
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The basic issues: a retention policy with lots of room for leeway, and no automation.
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Description of the basics of the standard encryption algorithm, by stick figures.
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Positive unintended consequences of London’s city streets tax.
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Security moves up the IT stack.
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Fixes “issues browsing the iTunes store.” Not including fixing iTunes Plus and Complete My Album links–still MIA.
Grab bag: Classical change
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Farewell to Ann Hobson Pilot at the BSO. I wish I could see the premiere of the concerto John Williams wrote for her on Friday night.
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Looks like classical music will be alive and well in Boston. Maybe now they’ll play some real music.
Grab bag: Net un-neutrality, 32-bit code injection
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“By contrast, she said, the FCC appeared to be engaging in ‘regulatory intervention into a vibrant marketplace.'” The irony being that it’s the carriers who propose to quash innovation by discriminating based on protocols.
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Using scripting additions to inject 32 bit Safari plugin code into the 64 bit Safari process. Code injection as a feature raises my eyebrows a little, but I suppose this is no different from any plugin.
How not to spend money at the Volkswagen dealer.
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Pictorial guide to replacing the battery in a VW Passat key remote.
Grab bag: Hacked PBS, balancing PATRIOT
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Man, what a nasty thing this is. Someone browsing to the Curious George PBS page is just trying to entertain their kid, and then suddenly they get infected with malware.
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Putting checks and balances into the PATRIOT Act, and curbing the warrantless wiretapping, is finally some real progress on the constitutional front. Yay.
Grab bag: subpixel type, subpar security
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You have to see the type specimens (actual size) to believe. Really incredible.
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Address space randomization still not fully implemented in Snow Leopard, but data execution prevention is, and the new QuickTime should close some holes too. It’s more secure than Leopard but lacks security features present in Vista and Windows 7. Of course, it’s a smaller target than either of those OSes.
Grab bag: Top N {risks, things}
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Application vulnerabilities exceed OS vulnerabilities.
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Nice essay on the benefit of “list-of-n-things” style writing.
Grab bag: Working longer and harder
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Music geek humor: the first seven notes of “Never Gonna Give You Up” encircle the temporary score — er, scaffold — around the Great Dome of MIT.
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A good reminder: “Someone with less passion and talent and poorer content can totally beat you if they’re willing to work longer and harder than you are.”
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Awesome DIY iPhone dock built from Lego.
iTunes LP: Flash-free interactive content
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Detailed walkthrough on how Apple is using HTML + CSS + Javascript in the iTunes LP format to produce Flash-like effects.
Grab bag: New open source from Apple, new Glee Club CD
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Apple has open-sourced part of the Grand Central Dispatch API from Snow Leopard, which helps automatically split running processes among available resources for better performance.
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The first new Glee Club CD of 2009 is out.
Review: Virginia Glee Club Live!
Virginia Glee Club Live!, the first of this year’s new recordings from the Virginia Glee Club, is now listed on the group’s website and available for purchase through Paypal. I received a copy in the mail about six weeks ago and have had some time to listen and digest, and I can recommend this recording without hesitation.
After I published the recent series on early 20th century Glee Club history and leadership and, um, performance practices, one of the members of the Alumni and Friends Association commented to me that each generation’s Glee Club is different, and I think that’s right. The 1910s group was as different from the 1890s group as the 1990s version was from Don Loach’s Renaissance singers from the 1960s and 1970s. If each group is different, Frank Albinder’s Glee Club is in unusually good shape. This is the best sounding Glee Club recording I’ve heard in a while. (Disclaimer: I didn’t hear all of the Paris live disc or of Bruce Tammen’s recordings.)
The new disc, as the name suggests, is a compilation concert recording over the past five years, spanning Albinder’s tenure to date as Glee Club director. The repertoire includes some “usual suspects” — “Brothers, Sing On!”, Chesnokov’s “Spaseniye sodelal”, “Ride the Chariot,” and the Biebl “Ave Maria” make appearances — as well as mini-sets of more specialized material, such as commissioned works and Virginiana. The focus on short repertoire makes the disc eminently listenable, and the performance standards are generally quite high.
A note on the commissions: The recording features the first appearance in Glee Club history of the group’s recent commissions, Lee Hoiby’s “Last Letter Home” and Judith Shatin’s “Jabberwocky,” in a set together with the Club’s 1991-1992 commission of James Erb’s male voices arrangement of “Shenandoah.” The Hoiby work, a setting of the last letter home from Iraq of PFC Jesse Givens, is given a sensitive performance, and Shatin’s “Jabberwocky” is the surprise hit of the recording, an adventurous and jazzy rollick through Lewis Carroll’s poem. Sadly, the Erb is one of the few low points on the disc. I remember all too well the many opportunities for a group to go flat in the first stanza, and the Glee Club doesn’t avoid them, ending the piece about a half tone low.
The Virginiana at the end, consisting of Loach’s arrangement of “Vir-ir-gin-i-a”, the “Virginia Yell Song” (which regained currency during my tenure with Club), “Rugby Road,” and the University’s alma maters, is sung powerfully and with gusto (and, unlike the 1972 recording, this version of “Rugby Road” includes one of the more scandalous verses). I look forward to playing it to console myself as the football team buries itself this fall (seriously: William and Mary???)
All in all, the piece is a great souvenir of a student group that is performing at a high level of competence. If the concert recording is this good, I can’t wait for the Club’s next recording, the Songs of Virginia collection.
Eight years ago today…
…Forget about everything else. Here’s the story on washingtonpost.com.
Dave Winer has a good weblog of news stories as they come in. Use your common sense to sort through news and rumors. Don’t trust anything that isn’t linked.
The context: I had already awakened and written a short blog post, and was at work in the library at the MIT Sloan school, before I started seeing the headlines on Yahoo.
Note that the Washington Post story I linked to is no longer available. I didn’t link directly to Dave’s story, but his homepage is still there, of course, and his archives have the stream of September 11 news as it happened. Most of the news sites were slammed, but the blogs kept running.
Eight years on. Different leadership, different perspectives on how to keep us secure.
Osama Bin Laden is still at large.
Doug Ketcham is still missed.
(Also see, from 2002: One Year and Further thoughts; from 2003: Remembering and moving on; from 2008, Number Three on Flight Eleven).
Upload new music to iTunes easily
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I can see this coming in handy when I rip vinyl.
Grab bag: New life for iTunes, Hubble, Globe
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Evidence that iTunes 9 content is plain ol’ gzipped HTML. I wonder what sort of XSS protection is in the iTunes Store…
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Well, that’s nice. Now how about actually doing something constructive with the paper, instead of letting it wither into irrelevance?
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The iTunes Plus upgrade link isn’t on the front page of the new iTunes store, but it’s still live here.
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Fantastic new photos from everyone’s favorite temporarily-no-longer-endangered orbital telescope.
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Getting this popup on startup? Don’t use Outlook Express? The indexing service is at fault and this shows how to fix it.
iTunes Plus de-emphasized in iTunes Store?
Looking at the new iTunes Store experience in iTunes 9, I had difficulty finding any information about iTunes Plus upgrades, Apple’s offer that allows you to upgrade your old DRM-crippled protected files to the new “purchased” format.
Fortunately, it seems that the page is still there and working in the store, just not promoted. Bookmark the link…
Update: In the comments, David C. points out that the link is there, but it looks like it’s not loading reliably–it certainly didn’t ever load for me yesterday. The box in the upper right corner of the store loads progressively, and the bottom links (including iTunes Plus and Complete My Album) load after a delay.