Not really helping
A good friend is trying to decide whether or not to buy an iPhone, and I was attempting to help him reason it out.

"Steve Jobs officially owns June 29."
So sayeth Jeff Harrell, upon the realization that Ratatouille opens nationwide today as well.
How do you know you have iPhone fever?
When, while watching a show recorded on your TiVo, and fast-forwarding through the commercials, you stop and back up to watch the iPhone commercial you've already seen about fifty times, then proceed to fast-forward through the remaining commercials.
links for 2007-06-29
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An art project of galactic proportions, as different artists decorate Darth Vader helmets.
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Portable, affordable teleprompter
links for 2007-06-28
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Just how hot is that pepper on your plate?
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Home of Mac Face, a Facebook notification application for Mac OS X.
links for 2007-06-16
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Seen in Business 2.0, all-natural chocolate candy bar, with only 130-150 calories per bar. And they have dark chocolate, too!
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I don't think I'll ever beat Brian Fortner's grocery shopping record--I'm picky with the produce--but I like his fatherhood rules.
links for 2007-06-15
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A blast from the past. A desktop picture I threw together using a high-resolution PR image from Apple. The third-generation iPod shown was the second model I owned. May it rest in peace. (pieces?)
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A spill of liquid, that is, not a spill as in a fall.
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Sony's 9-ounce, half-inch thick, e-book reader.
links for 2007-06-14
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Free tool from Yahoo will tell you how often a word or term is searched for.
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I've killed a phone before by dropping it in water, and a pager, too.
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Just what it says. For serious road warriors who live and die on their laptops.
I weep for the future
Nanny statism run amok: No running on playgrounds. (The second paragraph of the article is the one which will fill you with utter disbelief.) No microwave popcorn allowed. (Maybe.) Granted, I know former coworkers who were too...um, challenged to pop popcorn in a microwave without burning it, thus endearing themselves to the entire office by way of the clouds of smoke pouring out of the device and bag, but I don't think a blanket ban is the answer. Both via Cam.
Sweetheart, if you still need an idea for a Father's Day gift for me...
The greatest, gutsiest Father’s Day gift set I have ever seen:
Stop and think: what does it say when you give your father a Darth Vader/Luke Skywalker set for Father’s Day?
- "Dad, you are the genocidal embodiment of evil, but I will eventually redeem you"?
- "Dad, you tortured my sister and cut my hand off"?
- "Dad, I’d rather throw myself down to certain destruction than acknowledge you as my father"?
- "Dad, cut back on the smoking"?
[...] Freud would have had a field day. I share Bruce's sentiment, or would, were I at Wallyworld: I, of course, bought one on the spot. So, honey, if you happen to make it to Wal-Mart this week before I do... (Via And Still I Persist.)
links for 2007-06-13
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Guuuhhhhh......urrrrrrr......ffffffff.....ffffiiiiiffffff..... (slap!) Did they really say FIFTY megapixels?!?!?
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Not yet shipping (as of 13 June 2007), but looks awesome and is less than a buck a gig.
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You know, if Trek wants to market an "everyman bike" for non-cycling enthusiasts, it might help if it didn't cost over 500 bucks.
links for 2007-06-12
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This is definitely not your average teddy bear.
Hasta la semana proxima
Well, dear readers, after being gone for a week on a family vacation, I'm now leaving in the wee morning hours--in six hours, to be precise--on a mission trip to Juarez, Mexico. It's an annual thing our church does, and this year I decided to go as one of the adult volunteers. It's really a mission trip for the youth of the church, with something around a 65-35 breakdown of youth to adults. Normally the trip is to build simple homes for the poor of the area, but this year we've been asked by the mission sponsor, Amor Ministries, to build some duplex housing for attendees of the local Bible college. So you won't be seeing any updates from the phisch bowl for a bit, as we will have little power available, little running water (which we don't drink any way, we bring our own drinking water), and absolutely no Internet access of any kind. Mobile phone coverage is even spotty, and insanely expensive. It's going to be a blast. See you next week.
links for 2007-06-01
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The latest brainchild of Jason Calacanis, it's a human-optimized search engine. This means it will supposedly return more relevant results than Google, as SEO ad sites will be weeded out.
"<em>Happy</em>" Memorial Day?
Today we stopped by a local mall. The missus needed to make a return of some merchandise to Nordstrom, and we took in lunch as well. While waiting for a table at our eatery of choice, I caught the end of a conversation where an unidentified woman told her equally unidentifiable conversation partner, "Happy Memorial Day." in closing.
Happy Memorial Day?
Are you serious?
There was a time in this country when Memorial Day was treated with the solemn respect it deserves. When businesses actually closed for the day (as was Costco, we learned, when we stopped to fill up the gas tank), instead of having Memorial Day Weekend Sales™. (The irony of my making this statement while having engaged in a small bit of consumerism on this day is not lost on me.)
People made efforts to remember those who have fallen in service to our nation, for this is not a "holiday", but rather a day of mourning. It is sad that so many have had to give their lives in the cause of freedom, and we should be graciously thankful those who have died were willing to make the sacrifice in our stead. They deserve our utmost respect, which does not translate to saving a few bucks on jeans and cosmetics.
Notably, they are not deserving of someone wishing another a "Happy" Memorial Day, for the occasion is not one of happiness but remembrance. How many of us even pause for a moment's reflection today? How many of us participate in any sort of remembrance ceremony, rain or shine, today? How many of us set aside time to go to a local cemetery and clean the grave sites of fallen servicemen, to lay flowers and plant flags?
We, fellow countrymen, owe a debt that we can never repay, yet it is a debt we should nonetheless honor. You may feel otherwise, but I can't help but feel that said honor does not come from shopping and failing to acknowledge, even in passing, what this day truly is about. It comes from remembering the fallen, honoring their memories, praying for their families and sharing in their grief at having lost their beloved so young. Because so many of those lost are young. Such has it always been, and such it is likely to always be.
War is a terrible, terrible thing. Yet it is often a necessary thing, and we should be thankful there are those willing to fight, and to die. Remember our men and women who have given their lives. Offer a prayer of thanks, if you are the praying sort. Treat this day with the solemnness it deserves.
The Chance To Say Goodbye
I did not get the chance to say goodbye
To shake his hand, look him in the eye
To offer for his service my thanks
For what he did on the Rhine's banks
Or in Hue city, Berlin, or Khe Sanh
Paris, Baghdad, Iwo Jima, Okinawa
Tripoli, Italy, the Belleau Wood
Croatia, Chosin, or the skies above
Or in the waters deep, or atop the oceans' waves
Slinging missiles, marking the Unknowns' graves
Delivering the mail to a far-out firebase
Medevacing out those with injuries of the worst case
I did not get the chance to say goodbye
To shake his hand, look him in the eye
To offer for his service my thanks
For now all I have are these words in this place
--Christopher Turner, 27 March 2007
links for 2007-05-28
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Pick the way you want to raise funds. No selling products. No door-to-door if you don't want to. Walk-a-thons, read-a-thons, you name it.
links for 2007-05-22
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One of the latest tees from Threadless. I have a soft spot for rhinos, so this goes on the t-shirt wish list.