Archive for 2004

Holiday Affirmative Action

Friday, December 10th, 2004

In the false but pervasive spirit of holiday affirmative action, I bring you:

But we all know that this is actually the Christmas season, no matter how many minor holidays we try to include from religions that really would rather not be a party to the national shopping spree. You can keep your Season’s Greetings and Happy Holidays. If you don’t want to specify the holiday, then how about saying something meaningful like Peace on Earth? Nobody objects to that one.

Toys for Tickets

Thursday, December 9th, 2004

Fines are the price of parking in Boston, and now you can pay your fines with toys. Thanks to Seema for the link.

An Icon a Day

Wednesday, December 8th, 2004

Browser of the Day: forget Firefox - Camino is up to 0.8.2.

InterfaceLIFT has nifty Mac icons plus instructions on changing your system icons manually for those of us too cheap to spring for CandyBar.

Pass the Potato Chips

Tuesday, December 7th, 2004

Geek link of the day: free programming books (via Weblog Tools Collection)

I firmly believe that the best things in life are sugar, salt, and fat. Sugar is the gas that makes your body run, salt is an essential mineral without which you’d keel over, and fat…well, fat just tastes good. Salt gets a bad rap, though. We wince in horror when Emeril tosses a handful of it into his latest recipe, we scold people who eat it straight from the shaker (take my word for it on this one), and we feel potato chip guilt—because we know the lowly potato chip is nothing more than a vehicle for the administration of the forbidden mineral.

But I’ll never turn down a potato chip again, because salt is actually completely harmless for the majority of munchers. Earlier this year, JunkScience reported on the Federal government’s ongoing and groundless
Salt Assault. I just spotted the news in their 2004 Junk Science Awards, where the salt assault placed at #9. Here’s the blurb, in their own words:

In early 2004, a panel of the National Academy of Science‚Äôs Institute of Medicine urged that the recommended daily allowance of sodium be drastically reduced by almost 40% and that the average American‚Äôs actual sodium consumption be slashed by more than 60% — even though 10 major studies conducted since 1995 have all concluded that lower sodium diets don‚Äôt produce health benefits and may pose risks for some. Why the extreme recommendation? Political correctness run amok. Read more…

I think I’ll break out the chips to celebrate.

[Update: I posted a longer version of this entry at GNXP, with a bonus link to Emeril’s malassadas recipe.]

Deep Geeking

Monday, December 6th, 2004

But not my geeking. ZDNet UK has an article up about the inner workings of Google. Thanks to Weblog Tools Collection for the link.

Morning Miscellany

Sunday, December 5th, 2004

Lunar Occultation of Jupiter

Saturday, December 4th, 2004

Alert system of the day: The Onion’s Iraqi Terror Alert System

From SpaceWeather.com: early Tuesday morning the Moon will eclipse Jupiter. The occultation will be visible from the eastern two-thirds of North America.

Kate at the Shubert

Friday, December 3rd, 2004

Kate Mulgrew’s one-woman show “Tea at Five” will be playing at the Shubert Theatre from Tuesday through December 19th. Tickets range from expensive to twice as expensive.

Goon Times

Thursday, December 2nd, 2004

I ought to have more time to blog post-nano, but somehow it all still disappears. Here’s a funny joke, though: Diary of a Madman’s Goon from rec.humor.funny.

The Post-NaNo Blues

Wednesday, December 1st, 2004

It’s strange to wake up without 2,000 words hanging over my head. I didn’t write a thing today, but maybe tomorrow I’ll start in on the short story that I’ve wanted to write for a few weeks now.

I don’t hate the characters as much as I thought I would after spending four weeks with them. On the other hand, I think I’d have trouble writing fluff after 50,000 words of Serious Plot. I could write something short, gen, and episode-like, like “Revisions.” I enjoyed the Twilight Zone plot of that episode.