Yearly Archives: 2004

And this was posted via SharpMT

In my quest for the perfect blog editor, I have also installed SharpMT on my desktop. Very positive impressions so far…

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Test of Pocket SharpMT

This entry was posted via my PocketPC using Pocket SharpMT software.

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Huh?

Just received the following spam:

Dear Popular-Soft Client!

I am “Colony C. Metamorphic”, and I work at Hot-Software representative office.

You are is so grave for our organization!

You waste your banknote and your time at our Company,
and I wanna to present that our company have conclude update of software assortment.

We like to remind u that our company propose that this time We have more larger 1555 toprated soft products for huga low Price with your individual Client discount on a price.

please spare few of Your expensive Time to test our updated Oem-Soft catalogue righ here: http://embarrassment.bestwarez.info/

With the best regards,
Purchasers Service section, “Colony C. Metamorphic”

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"Must Buy" Kids Books

“I, Crocodile” by Fred Marcellino

“Skippyjon Jones” by Judith Byron Schachner

“Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type” by Doreen Cronin, Betsy Lewin

“Giggle, Giggle, Quack” by Doreen Cronin, Betsy Lewin

“A Light in the Attic” by Shel Silverstein

“Katy and the Big Snow” by Virginia Lee Burton

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Moebius Strips for Kids

Little Tikes Commercial has created a Moebius strip for playgrounds. The “Infinity Climber” recently won a 2004 Industrial Design Excellence Award (IDEA).

Damn, I really want one of these for the back yard…

Update: Boing Boing has posted my submission for this item, and I stand corrected – it’s not a Moebius strip, as there are two twists in the structure. It’s actually a “Double Twist Strip”.

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Hating America

Intersting article by Bruce Bawer on Hudson Review:

Living in Europe, I gradually came to appreciate American virtues I’d always taken for granted, or even disdained—among them a lack of self-seriousness, a grasp of irony and self-deprecating humor, a friendly informality with strangers, an unashamed curiosity, an openness to new experience, an innate optimism, a willingness to think for oneself and speak one’s mind and question the accepted way of doing things. (One reason why Euro- peans view Americans as ignorant is that when we don’t know something, we’re more likely to admit it freely and ask questions.) While Americans, I saw, cherished liberty, Europeans tended to take it for granted or dismiss it as a naive or cynical, and somehow vaguely embarrassing, American fiction. I found myself toting up words that begin with i: individuality, imagination, initiative, inventiveness, independence of mind. Americans, it seemed to me, were more likely to think for themselves and trust their own judgments, and less easily cowed by authorities or bossed around by “experts”; they believed in their own ability to make things better. No wonder so many smart, ambitious young Europeans look for inspiration to the United States, which has a dynamism their own countries lack, and which communicates the idea that life can be an adventure and that there’s important, exciting work to be done.

Another interesting quote:

Yet the endlessly reiterated claim that George W. Bush “squandered” Western Europe’s post-9/11 sympathy is nonsense. The sympathy was a blip; the anti-Americanism is chronic.
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Isaac Hayes' Three Laws of Robotics

From Engadget:

Isaac Hayes’ Three Laws of Robotics:

  1. A robot must risk his neck for his brother man, and may not cop out when there’s danger all about.
  2. A robot must be a sex machine to all the chicks, except where such actions conflict with the will of his main woman.
  3. A robot must at all times strive to be one bad motha-shutchyomouth.
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PC Reliability and Service

Interesting survey results from PC World:

Compaq (sold by Hewlett-Packard)

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Poor
  • Satisfaction with service: Poor

    Dell

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Good
  • Satisfaction with service: Fair

    EMachines (sold by Gateway)

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Fair
  • Satisfaction with service: Fair

    Gateway

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Fair
  • Satisfaction with service: Fair

    Hewlett-Packard

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Poor
  • Satisfaction with service: Poor

    IBM

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Fair
  • Satisfaction with service: Fair

    Sony

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Good
  • Satisfaction with service: Fair

    Independent Stores

  • Satisfaction with reliability: Fair
  • Satisfaction with service: Good
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    “Once again," Mr. Cheney replied, “it’s on.”

    How it really went down – c/o the New Yorker (by way of JWZ):

    “Oh, it’s like that?” Mr. Cheney queried.

    “Whut? Whut?” Mr. Leahy shot back.

    “Once again,” Mr. Cheney replied (quite obviously quoting a lyric from Ice Cube’s 1990 album, “AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted”), “it’s on.”

    As a quick-thinking senatorial aide switched on the Senate’s public-address system and cued up the infamous “Seven Minutes of Funk” break, Mr. Leahy and Mr. Cheney went head-to-head in what can only be described as a “take no prisoners” freestyle rap battle.

    Most of the rhymes kicked therein cannot be quoted in a family publication, but observers gave Mr. Cheney credit for his deceptively laid-back flow. Mr. Leahy was applauded for managing to rhyme the phrases “unethical for certain,” “crude oil spurtin’,” and “like Halliburton.”

    Despite the fact that both participants brought their A-game and succeeded in dropping mad scientifics, the bout seemed to end in a draw.

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    Even the Catholic Church is Outsourcing to India

    From Ekklesia:

    As US and European companies outsource hi-tech work to India to benefit from low-cost and abundant skilled labour, the clergy is doing likewise seeking to compensate for the acute shortage of priests in the West reports Sky News.

    Foreign priests are reportedly shipping out “Mass intentions” — requests for services such as thanksgiving and forgiveness of sins — to congregations in India, with each earning a priest about five euros or six dollars.

    The Mass intentions usually come by post or e-mail through the church, although some Indian priests take down the requests by telephone from friends and contacts made abroad.

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