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Abita in play, Dixie might be back there soon. If beer comes back, can the city be far behind?
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C30 – C60 – C90 Go!
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A coherent, articulated strategy and set of goals for, significantly, engagement in both Afghanistan AND Pakistan.
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Are financial wizards like stage magicians, manufacturing money out of thin air? Krugman’s brief blog post is the only thing that’s made me laugh out loud all week.
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The NYPL library is like dinnertime conversation with your favorite erudite, eclectic scholar. Really a joy to read.
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Running OSx on generic Intel hardware.
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Hackintosh distributions. Old article but interesting stuff.
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An Outlook 2007 hotfix is being strongly recommended by Microsoft’s Outlook team because it dramatically improves performance. We’ll see.
Grab bag for Thursday, March 25
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Astute commentary on why the AIG bonus issue, and corporate compensation at the bailout firms in general, has generated such heat.
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Religious tweeting defined in the new NYT blog about words.
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Handy little tip that was pretty well buried in the help Q&A for Facebook. Would it have killed Facebook to put a Feed button somewhere on the profile page?
Persistence: BIOS and Cosmos
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Hulu has Cosmos. I’m going to go back and look for that episode with the Library of Alexandria, which still haunts my dreams.
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The BIOS is the battleground.
Grab bag: Goodnight, Mr. Schilling
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Goodnight, Mr. Schilling.
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On Being a Therapist is a good list of advice, including “you will never be content for very long.”
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A meditation on the Brooklyn Bridge and on the meaning of digging oneself out of a hole.
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A briefly satisfying Woody Allen short piece, but it puts me too much in mind of the Elvis Costello song “…This Town…”: “It was a song with a topical verse which I’m afraid he then proceeded to sing…”
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Router: a nice new sans serif typeface, inspired by a handcut subway sign. The story of the process is pretty compelling.
A reference for my next trip to Rome…in about 20 years.
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Useful, since I can never remember the names of any of the trattorias we tried.
Grab bag: online user experiences
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This is the difference between designing for one transaction (i.e. “give now” button) and designing for a relationship (repeated engagement with and clear value proposition to the donor). Translate it into product management and it’s the difference between “feature to close the deal” and “coherent user experience that solves a business problem.”
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An awesome drag and drop UI that still runs afoul of my chief criticism with mixtape sites–if you try to make it all about sharing the actual music, either you’re breaking the law or you’re limited to a small selection of tracks. How about a replacement for Art of the Mix that just gives a nice UI to share the playlist description?
Persistence of memory: Lengacher’s Cheese House
I ran across a fabulous collection of old postcards from Lancaster County today–a bygone Lancaster County. Not the real Lancaster County that my distant Mennonite ancestors settled, fleeing persecution; nor the modern Lancaster County Route 30, home of strip malls, outlet malls, and the occasional Amish farm, but something in between. Yes, this is the Lancaster County Route 30 that I remember as a child through the 70s and early 80s–the National Wax Museum, Dutch Wonderland, the motels, the Willows (where my mother worked as a cook in the 1960s), the Dutch Haven. Even Miller’s Smorgasbord.
But the one that really hit me square between the ears with nostalgia was this:
Lengacher’s Swiss Cheese, aka the Cheese House. You drove maybe 10 miles east on Route 30 from Dutch Wonderland, past Paradise, toward Gap, and it was on the top of a small hill on the left hand side. The office was at the left in the back. They made cheese on the right hand side, right behind those windows, in big stainless steel and copper vessels. The center part was the store, where they sold imported European treats (like Ricola–back in the late 70s they weren’t widely available–and Toblerone) alongside local food products like honey in plastic bears, and their cheeses.
And I can still remember the cheese. If you’ve ever had locally, freshly made “Swiss” cheese you know how good it can be, and this was outstanding stuff. We would stop at the beginning or end of a visit to my grandparents and stock up, and say hi–and frequently collect my grandmother, who worked behind the counter (I think she ran the register or maybe helped them with bookkeeping–my memory is a little shaky on this score see below). Sometimes during visits she would watch us at the store. I remember napping in the little office on the green couch, and playing with elaborate marble racetrack toys for hours there.
The store, alas, closed in the 1990s–Art and Martha Lengacher, the Helvetian founders, having retired around the same time that the cheese production was kiboshed by tighter Pennsylvania food regulations–and both founders are now gone (Martha passed away in 2002, and I don’t know about Art). But the place gave me a deep love for locally produced food and is an important part of my memory of my grandmother. I was thrilled to find the postcard; it’s the only photo I’ve seen of the place as I remember it.
Update: My mother, whose memory for this sort of detail is naturally better, corrects a few items in the post:
Your grandmother worked not only under the Lenachers but also the Laderachs who owned it first. I went to school with their daugher Jane, and had my first pizza in their upstairs home (before they built the home to the west of the shop.) Your grandmother made sandwiches and served truckers and locals who came in for the signature ham and cheese sandwich. No one before or since has made such a big one! The Lenacher’s son, Artie, did try to run the shop for awhile after Art and Martha retired, but soon gave it up. Too bad!
…
The pictures of the Willows bring back many memories. I started there in the summer of 1959 as a dish washer/ pot scrubber, and worked my way up from there… I spent most of my time in the summers of ’60 – ’62 as a salad preparer. Only at the very end of my stay did I get to serve up orders from behind the steam table. Never was I a cook. Mrs. Neuber would have a fit if she heard me called that as she was the cook. Your grandmother was the pastry chef for a time (cannot remember how long). Yes, she did everything.
Grab bag: Historical photos day
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On Flickr, MIT photo studies of Boston prior to urban planning. Very cool.
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I really, really like where this is going.
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Google’s new line of experimental web apps are probably more properly called Modern Javascript Experiments, because they work just fine in Safari 4 beta and Firefox 3. Domtris would be a great game if it weren’t for the controls (space should be drop, since Enter is inconveniently situated on a Mac laptop keyboard).
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Lancaster County vintage images. There’s a lot of stuff that I remember here from growing up visiting my grandparents.
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Part of a set of vintage postcards from Lancaster County. My grandmother worked at Lengacher’s for years, and their “Swiss” cheese was superb.
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Wartella makes three–three of my former UVA publishing comrades to make careers in cartooning and animation (after Slowpoke’s Jen Sorenson and PES). Must have been something in the water…
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And, with that, hopefully we can drive a stake through the heart of IE6.
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Tips for frying fish for tacos, if you don’t want to chicken out and get the panko-crusted tilapia from Costco to make them with. (Which, shamefully, I usually do.)
Grab bag: Mysteries on Fifth Avenue, Boylston St, Gitmo
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This is absolutely incredible–a scavenger hunt of hidden panels, drawers, cryptograms, and hidden poems in New York.
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Getting ready for performance on the Old South organ, silenced since the crack opened up in the wall last winter. Cool video of the organ being tuned.
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The real points here: 1. A lot of innocent people were swept into Gitmo through incompetence or ignorance. 2. Some in the Bush administration tried to correct the issue, but Rumsfeld & Cheney insisted on keeping everyone there. 3. We’ve gotten nothing useful from any detainee. 4. Gitmo isn’t stopping Al Qaeda from reforming. 5. Cheney is using Gitmo to whip up the base, knowing damned well his criticisms of the administration are baseless.
Grab bag: AIG, Dylan 33
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11 AIG executives who received “retention” bonuses of more than $1 million … are no longer at the company. Sounds less like “bonuses” and more like “looting.”
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Alex Ross gives an early review of Dylan’s latest, due out at the end of April.
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Still time to start playing…
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A formal study of Wikipedia’s dispute resolution and arbitration processes concludes that they are successful because they don’t resolve disputes. Rather, they weed out unproductive users and encourage productive users to engage constructively in further debate.
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Working around hotel and airport firewalls.
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Happy Evacuation Day, everyone! Today in Boston, we celebrate the evacuation of the British from the town after Washington trained guns on their positions from Dorchester Heights. And that’s why government offices are closed and people take sick days from work. Right?
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Odds that there will be a lot of noise in the streets? I don’t know; what’s the current unemployment rate? Might get interesting.
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Feck off!!
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If the pizza here was as great in character as the owner, this is a big loss: “‘For 85 years we’re doing the same thing, dropping the coals into the firebox every night,’ said Ms. Ciminieri, who promised to kiss this reporter if he did not reveal her age. ‘Why would this happen now? I don’t know.’”
Grab bag: Opening Facebook, monetizing Hadoop
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So this is kind of game changing: you can now make content available outside of your pool of friends on Facebook. Like, to all users. So if you want to read what I’m writing on Facebook, and you don’t want to friend me, I could just make my posts public to all users. Kind of cool.
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Cyberwarfare as proxy wars–interesting thesis.
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With lots of large commercial enterprises banking on Hadoop, I wonder what’s next for this open source package?
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Worth a listen, for sure.
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Any hack involving both IKEA and Lego is a good idea.
Getting ready for IE8
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Differences between IE7 and IE8, and nuances of compatibility mode. Nice rundown .
Grab bag: Excel and XML, SOURCE, and Cramer
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Excel will create an XSD from an XML document that doesn’t have one. With a little work you can get the XSD back out again:
“Start the Visual Basic Editor with Alt+F11. In the Visual Basic Editor, hit Ctrl+G to open the immediate pane. In the immediate pane, type:
Print ActiveWorkbook.XmlMaps(1).Schemas(1).Xml”
Genius.
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One indispensable feature of this toolbox is the ability to reload a modified schema without having to recreate all your XML mappings. Unfortunately it doesn’t work with Excel 2007.
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When cyberwar — politically motivated DDOS and other attacks — becomes commonplace, computer security becomes national security.
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Advice from SOURCE Boston: don’t secure the systems, secure the data.
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What’s the right way to disclose security flaws? Full disclosure, partial disclosure, or responsible disclosure? I only wish I were kidding.
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Jim Cramer and Jon Stewart sit down and do extended fisticuffs. In three parts.
Open letter to President Obama on copyright treaties and “national security”
I just used the Contact form on whitehouse.gov to send the following to President Obama and am reposting it here. Please reach out to the White House with your own concerns on this matter.
Dear Mr. Obama:
As a supporter, I was surprised to see that Carmen Suro-Bredie, chief FOIA officer in the White House’s Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, rejected a FOIA request for the text of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement by claiming that the proposed treaty was a “properly classified national security secret.”
My concern, as copyright extensions continue to eat away at the public domain, taking value from the public, is that worldwide negotiations about the future of copyright are being held in utter secrecy without any public input–without the public even being told what’s under consideration.
For an administration that pledged transparency and a reversal of your predecessor’s policy of putting things under the seal of “national security” to avoid scrutiny, this is upsetting and unbecoming. Why is this treaty considered a “national security secret”? Surely this would be a good opportunity to practice some of the transparency we were promised.
Sincerely
Tim Jarrett
I’m a little more optimistic than some of the BoingBoing commenters that this can be corrected.
iPhone 3, “national security” copyright
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Um. Come again? I can’t think of a single reason that discussions about copyright can’t be conducted in the open, unless there’s something shameful going on.
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iPhone 3.0, oh boy. Wonder if it will run on O.G. iPhone hardware?