links for 2009-06-04
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"[L]isten to your iTunes library but only use a part of the resources. This player was designed with one purpose in mind: don't distract or use resources that you need for more important things. Features: playback of audio files from your iTunes Library; playback of playlists from your iTunes Library; shuffle; sticky window"
For Mac OS X Leopard only. Oh, and it's free.
links for 2009-06-02
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Remember when Microsoft knew what it was doing?
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"Christianity, post-Reformation and post-Luther, with its teaching of a direct, personal, two-way link between the individual and God, unmediated by the collective, and unsubordinate to any other human being, smashes straight through the philosphical/spiritual framework I've just described. It offers something to hold on to to those anxious to cast off a crushing tribal groupthink. That is why and how it liberates.
"Those who want Africa to walk tall amid 21st-century global competition must not kid themselves that providing the material means or even the knowhow that accompanies what we call development will make the change. A whole belief system must first be supplanted.
"And I'm afraid it has to be supplanted by another. Removing Christian evangelism from the African equation may leave the continent at the mercy of a malign fusion of Nike, the witch doctor, the mobile phone and the machete."
links for 2009-05-21
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Well, *I* feel better.
links for 2009-05-18
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"Artist Garry Booth takes us back 25 years to 1984, with this exploded design of the first Mac, the computer that changed everything. This Mac 128k was lovingly disassembled and meticulously rendered to reveal its inner beauty."
Having pulled apart many of the all-in-one Macs in my time, just had to get this one.
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David Pogue reviews the Novatel MiFi 2200, available from Verizon. If I traveled more than twice a year, or actually left my house with a computer in hand, I'd be all over this. (5 GB limit? = Lame)
links for 2009-05-17
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Nifty.
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Digging the Helvetica robot. Charcoal, 2X, please.
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"As you might imagine, I receive a lot of email from would-be authors who are trying to get published. Because I make my email address public, it’s pretty easy to get to me.
"However, by the time I hear from people, they are usually frustrated. They can’t get anyone in the book publishing world to respond, and they are convinced that they have a killer-idea. 'If only someone would just read my manuscript,' they plead.
"The problem is that most publishers will not review unsolicited proposals or manuscripts. I personally receive hundreds every year; our staff receives thousands. We simply don’t have the resources to review these. It’s like looking for a needle in a haystack.
"So as an author, what do you do? Here’s what I recommend:"
links for 2009-05-16
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"This is a typeface-driven design based on the 'Here's to the crazy ones' ad campaign from Apple in the 90s, using Motter Tektura, Apple Garamond, Myriad, Univers, Gill Sans, and Volkswagen AG Rounded, fonts present in Apple branding and products."
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My favorites are steps 2 and 5
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Nice collection of some beautiful and dramatic lightning photos.
links for 2009-05-15
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My wife likes the Cake Wrecks blog, and we've seen some pretty impressive cakes thanks to that, but this one blows me away.
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God is a very creative artist.
links for 2009-05-13
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"With the U.S. disengaging militarily, Iraqi militias, insurgents, etc. have every reason to become emboldened and to begin jockeying for an enhanced military position. And with President Obama taking a soft line on Syria (and, indeed, exploring a 'dialogue' with that terror supporting state), the Syrians no longer have much reason to fear paying a price for promoting instability in Iraq.
"Against this backdrop, clueless Nancy Pelosi, on a recent visit to Baghdad, promised that the U.S. will play an 'intense' political role in Iraq even as our military role fades away. How political involvement will stem the flow of terrorists into Iraq, or the terrorist activities of those already present, Pelosi did not explain."
links for 2009-05-08
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I always knew the Empire would take care of that pesky Federation.
The facts of life are conservative
In its boundless ambition, the Left understands that the character of a people can be transformed: British, Canadian and European elections are now about which party can deliver "better services," as if the nation is a hotel, and the government could use some spritelier bellhops. Socialized health care in particular changes the nature of the relationship between citizen and state into something closer to junkie and pusher. On one of the many Obama Web sites the national impresario feels the need to maintain -- "Foundation for Change" -- the president is certainly laying the foundation for something. Among the many subjects expressing their gratitude to Good King Barack the Hopeychanger is "Phil from Cathedral City, Ca.":
"I was laid off in mid-January from a job I had for 12 years. It's really getting hard to make ends meet, but this month I got some great news. This week I received in the mail official notification that my COBRA monthly payments for medical, dental and vision insurance will decrease from $468 to only $163, all due to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. This is a $305 in savings a month!
"I can't tell you how much of a weight off my shoulders this is. I am living proof of how the president's bold initiatives are beginning to work!"
But just exactly how do these "bold initiatives" work? Well, hey, simple folk like you and I and Phil from Cathedral City don't need to worry about the details. Once these "bold initiatives" really hit their stride maybe the cost of everything over four hundred bucks can be brought down to $163. Wouldn't that be great?
The problem in the Western world is that governments are spending money faster than their citizenry or economies can generate it. As Gerald Ford liked to say, "A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take away everything you have." And that's true. But there's an intermediate stage: A government big enough to give Phil from Cathedral City everything he wants isn't big enough to get Phil to give any of it back. That's the stage the Europeans are at: Their electorates are hooked on unsustainable levels of "services," but no longer can conceive of life without them.
ATPM 15.05
The May issue of About This Particular Macintosh is now available for your reading pleasure. Reading about Mark's travails in obtaining faster broadband across the Pond, I'm thankful our step up to fiber optic a couple of years ago was relatively painless. I'm also thankful we've never had the sort of printer troubles Mark's run in to, thought he does aptly highlight how inkjet printers are pretty much a commodity now. In some cases, it's to the point of, "We need more ink? The new ink costs how much?!? How much was that new printer at Costco?" Ed updates the master GTD app list for May, while Sylvester walks us through Front Row. Linus' attempt at making it through the Bible of GTD, David Allen's Getting Things Done, offered at least inspiration for this month's Qaptain Qwerty. I'm especially proud of this month's desktop pictures selection. Not only were they were shot by Jessica, the teenage daughter of my good friend Rob Leitao, but they were done so not with even a low-end digital SLR, but with a run-of-the-mill Canon PowerShot point-and-shoot. We hope you enjoy Jessica's stunning photos from Yosemite National Park. Lee works out the combo of Slappa's PTAC laptop sleeve and shoulder bag, while Chris crisscrosses the country with his iPhone in a Core Case. Rob puts iWeb '09 through the wringer as he creates from scratch a new web site. Chris puts two non-case iPhone accessories through their paces: the Pogo Sketch stylus, and the "tuned conical deflection chamber" of the SoundClip. Finally, Ed pours some audio through the interesting Transcriva: dump in the audio, out comes text transcripts. I may have to look into that one myself. As always, ATPM is available in a variety of formats for your enjoyment: + Offline Webzine + Print-optimized PDF + Screen-optimized PDF
links for 2009-05-02
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A free online Greek & Hebrew Reader's Bible, for my theologically-inclined friends who can read Greek and/or Hebrew.
Today's Shuffle 10
I haven't done this in a while, so here are the first ten songs from the iPod's shuffle mode today:
"Remedy" - David Crowder Band
"Already" - Rush of Fools
"The Fist Fight/The Flying Wing" - Raiders of the Lost Ark Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
"Once Again" - Matt Redman
"666 Degrees" - Ceili Rain
"There's No Way" - Alabama
"There's a Mother Always Waiting at Home" - Johnny Cash *
"Go" - MercyMe
"Dr. Feelgood" - Motley Crue
"The Wall" - Johnny Cash
As usual, all links are to the song on the Amazon MP3 store, except those marked with an asterisk. Those links are to the physical CD, as the song isn't sold in MP3 format.
links for 2009-04-29
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Spike TV's Food Dude shows us how to make a Hawaiian Cheesesteak. I'm thinking this might be a good entree for a pool party...
links for 2009-04-23
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You may have encountered the famous "The earth is out mother" speech attributed to Chief Seattle. Maybe you got it in an e-mail. Maybe you read it in the children's book, Brother Eagle, Sister Sky: A Message from Chief Seattle. Perhaps you heard or read it in Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth.
The inconvenient truth here is that while the words are real, Chief Seattle never spoke them. They were penned by a screeenwriter in 1971, over a hundred years after Seattle died, for an ecology film.
links for 2009-04-21
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Nixon speech writer William Safire had prepared text in case Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin died on the Moon.
Those who don't learn from history...
"Would it not be better to simplify the system of taxation rather than to spread it over such a variety of subjects and pass through so many new hands."
--Thomas Jefferson, letter to James Madison, 1784
links for 2009-04-18
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I know what you're going to say. Eighty-nine bucks for a pen?!?
Yes, but not just any pen. The Mil-Tac Tactical Defense Pen is made from aircraft-grade anodized aluminum, and has a pointed end, which can be used as a defensive (or under certain code red situations, an offensive) tool. Opposite that is a blunt end, usable as a control device, especially if one has that sort of training. Stash it pretty much anywhere with the integrated clip. Oh, and since it is a writing implement, after all, there's the refillable pen inside.
I'll take mine in black or grey, please.
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"From now until when this campaign ends (approximately one month from now), every post will be related to my campaign to raise as much money as possible for Soldier's Angels.
"Soldier's Angels is a non-profit organization that does more for deployed troops than I can write here. The best way to find out everything they offer is to visit their website.
[...]
"I plan to auction off, on eBay, a signed copy of Homefront. One hundred percent of the proceeds will be donated to Soldier's Angels.
"I realize I'm a 'nobody.' I'm not someone whose name will really mean anything scribbled inside of the book. However, I put over a year of my time, and every ounce of whatever writing talent I have, into this book. [...]
"It's the best, and most important, thing I've ever written. I'm giving it because it's all I have to give for this effort, and because it's not about the book, anyway. It's about where the money is going."