Yearly Archives: 2010

From sex to phones to Star Wars…

what would older Redditors like to let the young whipper-snappers know about the past?

Great thread on Reddit – especially amusing for anyone older than 40. It’s amazing how much things have changed since the 70s/80s, and how much we take technology for granted these days.

Interesting items:

  • If you wanted to see a movie, you went to a theater. If it left the theater, tough shit. Star Wars came out in 1977. It first aired on pay-per-view (if you had that, nobody I knew did) was in 1982, five years later. It also came out on VHS that same year, if you were lucky enough to have a VHS deck. It wasn’t on broadcast TV until 1984, seven years later. But for 5 years after I first saw it, I couldn’t see Star Wars again.
  • If you went to a bar or a club, you would be a walking ashtray, and all your clothes would need washing. I couldn’t go to sleep without showering and washing the smoke and ash out of my hair, or else I’d wake up with a wicked sore throat.
  • People lined up at banks on Fridays, to deposit their paychecks and withdraw cash for the weekend. If you ran out of cash over the weekend, too bad.
  • When credit cards became available, it was usually only men with very solid credit who could get them. Often single women, even successful businesswomen, couldn’t get one. If they were married, they might get them through their husband, with their husband’s name was on the card. There were exceptions of course, but I remember reading a Newsweek article around 1980 about how this was starting to change. By the time I got to college, they were giving away credit cards to anyone with a pulse.
  • If you ran out of film, no more pictures. You would be very selective about what to take a picture of.
  • No cell phone, pagers, texting, voicemail, or answering machines. If you wanted to meet up with someone, you had to call them until they were home and picked up, and then make plans. If you ended up at a party, that was usually it. No “hey I’m over at this address, swing by” or anything like that.
  • Read more…

    Posted in Amusements, Interesting | Leave a comment

    Why the Other Register Line Moves Faster

    Engineer Guy explains queue theory.

    Posted in Interesting | Leave a comment

    Clarus, the Dogcow

    A bit of Apple history. From wikipedia:

    The dogcow, also known as Clarus the Dogcow, is a bitmapped image first introduced by Apple. It is the shape of a dog, originally created in 1983 as part of the Cairo font by Susan Kare as the glyph for “z.”

    Original dogcow icon by Susan Kare for Apple

    That image was later chosen for the Mac OS Print Setup dialog box, though it needed to be slightly redrawn because the original Cairo dog did not proportionally fit the Print Setup dialog box. This modified version became the image famously known as the dogcow.

    The term “dogcow” was first coined by either Scott Zimmerman or Ginger Jernigan. Mark “The Red” Harlan named the dogcow “Clarus” as a joking reference to Apple’s former office-software unit, Claris. The sound she makes is Moof!

    Susan Kare is selling limited edition prints of early Mac icons, including Clarus.

    Links:

    Posted in Mac | Leave a comment

    The Blues

    c/o Mark Ohlund

    If you are new to Blues music, or like it but never really understood the why/wherefore, here are some very fundamental rules:

    1. Most Blues begin with: “Woke up this morning…”

    2. “I got a good woman” is a bad way to begin the Blues, unless you stick something nasty in the next line like, “I got a good woman, with the meanest face in town.”

    3. The Blues is simple. After you get the first line right, repeat it. Then find something that rhymes sort of: “Got a good woman with the meanest face in town. Yes, I got a good woman with the meanest face in town. Got teeth like Margaret Thatcher and she weigh 500 pound.”

    4. The Blues is not about choice. You stuck in a ditch, you stuck in a ditch… Ain’t no way out.

    5. Blues cars: Chevys, Fords, Cadillacs and broken-down trucks. Blues don’t travel in Volvos, BMWs, or Sport Utility Vehicles. Most Blues transportation is a Greyhound bus or a southbound train. Jet aircraft and state-sponsored motor pools ain’t even in the running. Walkin’ plays a major part in the Blues lifestyle. So does fixin’ to die.

    6. Teenagers can’t sing the Blues. They ain’t fixin’ to die yet. Adults sing the Blues. In Blues, “adulthood” means being old enough to get the electric chair if you shot a man in Memphis.

    7. Blues can take place in New York City or New Orleans, but not in Hawaii or anywhere in Canada. Hard times in Minneapolis or Seattle is probably just clinical depression. Chicago, St. Louis and Kansas City are still the best places to have the Blues. You cannot have the Blues in any place that doesn’t get rain.

    8. A man with male pattern baldness ain’t the Blues. A woman with male pattern baldness is. Breaking your leg ’cause you were skiing is not the Blues. Breaking your leg ’cause a alligator be chomping on it is.

    9. You can’t have no Blues in an office or a shopping mall. The lighting is wrong. Go outside to the parking lot and sit by the dumpster.

    10. Good places for the Blues:
    a. Highway
    b. Jailhouse
    c. Empty bed
    d. Bottom of a whiskey glass

    11. Bad places for the Blues:
    a. Nordstrom’s
    b. Gallery openings
    c. Ivy League institutions
    d. Golf courses

    12. No one will believe it’s the Blues if you wear a suit, ‘less you happen to be an old ethnic person, and you slept in it.

    13. Do you have the right to sing the Blues?
    Yes, if:
    a. You older than dirt
    b. You blind
    c. You shot a man in Memphis
    d. You can’t be satisfied

    No, if:
    a. You have all your teeth
    b. You once were blind but now can see
    c. The man in Memphis lived
    d. You have a 401K or trust fund

    14. Blues is not a matter of color, it’s a matter of bad luck. Tiger Woods cannot sing the Blues. Sonny Liston could have. Ugly white people also got a leg up on the Blues.

    15. If you ask for water and your darlin’ give you gasoline, it’s the Blues. Other acceptable Blues beverages are:
    a. Cheap wine
    b. Whiskey or bourbon
    c. Muddy water
    d. Black coffee
    The following are NOT Blues beverages:
    a. Perrier
    b. Chardonnay
    c. Snapple
    d. Slim Fast

    16. If death occurs in a cheap motel or a shotgun shack, it’s a Blues death. Stabbed in the back by a jealous lover is another Blues way to die. So are the electric chair, substance abuse and dying lonely on a broken-down cot. You can’t have a Blues death if you die during a tennis match or while getting liposuction.

    17. Some Blues names for women:
    a. Sadie
    b. Big Mama
    c. Bessie
    d. Fat River Dumpling

    18. Some Blues names for men:
    a. Joe
    b. Willie
    c. Little Willie, Little Joe
    d. Big Willie, Big Joe

    19. Persons with names like Michelle, Amber, Jennifer, Debbie, and Heather, (or Justin, Joshua, Tyler, Keith) can’t sing the Blues no matter how many men they shot in Memphis.

    20. Make your own Blues name starter kit:
    a. Name of physical infirmity (Blind, Cripple, Lame, etc.)
    b. First name (see above) plus name of fruit (Lemon, Lime,Kiwi, etc.)
    c. Last name of President (Jefferson, Johnson, Fillmore, etc.)
    For example: Blind Lime Jefferson, Jakeleg Lemon Johnson or Cripple Kiwi Fillmore, etc. (Well, maybe not “Kiwi.”)

    21. I don’t care how tragic your life: if you own a computer, you cannot sing the blues – even when it blows up & you lose all that data…

    Posted in Amusements, Music | Leave a comment

    Krautrock: The Rebirth of Germany

    Excellent BBC 4 documentary on the Krautrock musical movement of the late 60s and 70s. Features Tangerine Dream, Kraftwerk, Neu!, Cluster, Can, Faust and others.






    Posted in Music | Leave a comment

    The 24-hour Athenian Democracy

    Good Economist article about Anonymous, their ad-hoc nature and their methods of taking down web sites via DDOS.

    Anonymous does not have a typical hierarchical government, but each mission does have a self-appointed dedicated organising body. This organizing body begins the process of setting up the necessary infrastructure, recruiting new members, researching/identifying vulnerable targets, media outreach, and more. However, the organizing body is free to change (and has changed) as the mission evolves day to day. I have observed at least one takeover when the greater group was not happy about what the organisers were doing.

    Posted in Tech | Leave a comment

    Programmer Joke of the Day

    A woman asks her husband, a programmer, to go shopping.

    Wife: “Dear, please, go to the nearby grocery store to buy some bread. Also, if they have eggs, buy 6.”
    Husband: “O.K., hun.”

    Twenty minutes later the husband comes back bringing 6 loaves of bread. His wife is flabbergasted.

    Wife: “Dear, why on earth did you buy 6 loaves of bread?”
    Husband: “They had eggs.”

    Posted in Amusements, Geek | Tagged | Leave a comment

    A loophole has been discovered

    Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
    Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

    Posted in Amusements, DeepThoughts | Leave a comment

    Ignorance

    “Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'”
    — Isaac Asimov

    Posted in DeepThoughts | Leave a comment

    Musopen – setting music free

    Sure, Beethoven has been dead for almost 200 years, and his music is in the public domain. That doesn’t mean you currently have the ability to share the 9th Symphony with friends, or use the Moonlight Sonata as the background music for your YouTube video. The problem is that there are no public domain recordings of his work. The “Musopen” project is attempting to change this.

    From Ars Technica:

    A radio host recently “referred to me as a Communist,” says Musopen’s Aaron Dunn. Music professors berate him by e-mail because his project is “like Napster.” Dunn’s crime? Setting music free.

    In fact, though, Dunn’s version of “freedom” looks little like Napster. Instead of distributing a recording without permission, Dunn raises money, hires orchestras to record terrific classical music that has fallen into the public domain, and then makes those recordings available to anyone, for any reason.

    To drum up the excitement and donor base needed to give Musopen ongoing life, Dunn put the project on Kickstarter, seeking $11,000 to “hire an internationally renowned orchestra to record and release the rights to: the Beethoven, Brahms, Sibelius, and Tchaikovsky symphonies. We have price quotes from several orchestras and are ready to hire one, pending the funds.”

    See Musopen.com for more information and to donate.

    Posted in Music | 1 Comment