I enjoyed watching the viewers’s reactions as much as the magic itself. Apple should hire this guy for WWDC.
The iPad is magic
May 31st, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Roared their Terrible Roars
May 8th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
I bought a copy of Where the Wild Things Are for my sons a couple of years ago. It had been a favorite book of mine when I was a boy, and I looked forward to reading it together.
I remember the first time I read it to them, because I had not read the book in years. I was surprised to find that it had a very distinct smell to it. It might be due to the ink used to print it, but whatever the reason it created an indelible memory of my childhood.
If you have a copy of it, I’d like you to go get it now. Ok, you’re ready right?
First, close your eyes and hold the book on your lap. Now, slowly feel the cover with your fingers, and then open the book and raise it to your face. No peeking. Smell the book, breathe it in. If that doesn’t bring your childhood rushing back, I don’t know what will.
Now, open the book and read it, just for yourself, and then find someone you love with whom to share it.
Maurice Sendak’s stories opened the door to the Wild Things
NOT NICE: Maurice Sendak and the perils of childhood
Coolest of the Cool
April 18th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Shawn Blanc has an interesting post up on his site where he quotes a computer review from 31 years ago. Go on and read it and then come back here.
You read it right? Ok, here we go.
After the review he wonders “in 30 years from now will our kids look back and read iPad and iPhone reviews with the same sense of antiquity and novelty that I felt as I read Fallow’s piece?”
My guess, for my kids, who are older than Shawn’s by a few years, is no. My boys use our iPad and iPhones on a daily basis and they absolutely love them. I think it is more likely that they will look back on iPad and iPhone reviews 30 years from now with a fond sense of nostalgia, much as I look back at the original Nintendo, Game Boy, or Super Mario Brothers.
Let me tell you a story. When I was a boy, probably 6 to 8 years old, one of the big three TV stations was promoting a contest during Saturday morning cartoons. I think they had paired up with a cereal company and you had to buy the cereal to enter the contest, but it’s not really relevant. The prize for this contest is what I want to talk about. I wanted to win it so bad that it hurt. It’s one of the first electronic devices that I can remember really wanting, you know the kind of wanting that comes from deep, down inside and won’t be ignored until that craving is filled. So what was this marvelous, amazing device that had me in the throes of technolust?
A hand-held, portable TV. It was a Sony with a telescoping antenna and a 2” by 2” color screen. At that point in my life, that portable TV was the coolest thing I had ever seen. Even now, I can remember the excitement I felt at the prospect of winning it, which was the only way I would ever have gotten one, since it was far too expensive to buy. Just think I could watch TV anywhere; in the car, in my bed under the covers late at night when I was supposed to be asleep, on camping trips, I could even sneak it into school and through its magic be the coolest of the cool kids. I thought that portable TV was awesome, and continued to do so for several more years.
Of course, now, looking back on that TV, it doesn’t seem that amazing. Especially, when compared to the magical iPads and iPhones of today, but it gets me thinking. I wonder what device my boys are going to lust after. What is going to get them excited about the mere prospect of owning it? It’s not the iPad and iPhone, as amazing as those are for most of us, they are normal for my boys and probably your kids too. What’s going to amaze and capture the attention of our kids? What’s going to be the coolest of the cool? Whatever it is, it is going to be awesome, and I can’t wait to find out.
Covering Bond
April 18th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Penguin U.K. is releasing 14 Bond novels timed to the centenary of Fleming’s birth with iconic, new covers wonderfully designed and illustrated by Michael Gillette. Also of interest, Bond fan site, MI6 has an interview with Gillette.
Hat tip: Daring Fireball
Only in Japan
April 17th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
I’ve never been in a town that prohibited dancing.
The Best Tattoo Cover Up Ever
April 14th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Rufioooo!
“So many of his childhood friends that weren’t killed in Vietnam went on to become criminals, prostitutes and/or Democrats.”
April 13th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Best,obituary, ever.
The Subversive Charm of Day Drinking
April 13th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Sounds good, now if you’ll excuse me, I think I’ll pour myself a nice glass of bourbon.
Space and NASA: The Truth
April 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Aaron Wang has it spot on.
“This isn’t the toy you’re looking for…”
April 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Twelve illustrations from Darth Vader and Son. So good.
Forensics Experts Recover Blind Woman’s Novel
April 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
This is such a great story.
Caine’s Arcade
April 10th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
If this doesn’t bring a smile to your face, you’re not human.
The Book of the Future
April 3rd, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Love Is Walking Hand In Hand
March 30th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Love defined by the Peanuts gang, 1965.
Bezos Expeditions Discovers Apollo 11 Rocket Engines at Bottom of the Atlantic
March 29th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Too damn cool.
hat tip: Daring Fireball
Google’s New Product
March 25th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Mat Honan has an interesting and sometimes insightful article up at Gizmodo, The Case Against Google, in which he details Google’s shift from search into something else. Honan believes as many still do that search was Google’s primary product. If you start with this belief it makes Google’s current fumbles with search and paid advertisments over real content, and artificially raising the importance of Google Places, and Google+ over Yelp!, and Twitter to be collosal errors that are out of sync with the company’s DNA and past history. This is the case that Honan presents.
Google is a fundamentally different company than it has been in the past.
I don’t think this is true at all. Google has changed in various ways as a company since its birth and early growth, but I cannot agree that it is fundamentally a different company. Honan believes it is, because he believes that Google has switched their product from search to Google, by which he means everything Google does: Gmail, Maps, Google+, Google Places, and so on.One Googler authorized to speak for the company on background (meaning I could use the information he gave me, but not directly quote or attribute it) told me something that I found shocking. Google isn’t primarily about search anymore. Sure, search is still a core product, but it’s no longer the core product. The core product, he said, is simply Google.
Search has never been Google’s product though, just as the people who use Google to search the internet have never been Google’s customers. Google’s customers have been and still are the advertisers who buy the ads, and the product is the same as it ever was; you are the product. Nothing has changed here, other than Google now wants even more of your personal information to sell to their real customers.
Picture this scenario. You are about to leave San Francisco to drive to Lake Tahoe for a weekend of skiing, so you fire up your Android handset and ask it “what’s the best restaurant between here and Lake Tahoe? It’s an incredibly complex and subjective query. But Google wants to be able to answer it anyway. (This was an actual example given to me by Google.) To provide one, it needs to know things about you. A lot of things. A staggering number of things. To start with, it needs to know where you are. Then there is the question of your route—are you taking 80 up to the north side of the lake, or will you take 50 and the southern route? It needs to know what you like. So it will look to the restaurants you’ve frequented in the past and what you’ve thought of them. It may want to know who is in the car with you—your vegan roommates?—and see their dining and review history as well. It would be helpful to see what kind of restaurants you’ve sought out before. It may look at your Web browsing habits to see what kind of sites you frequent. It wants to know which places your wider circle of friends have recommended. But of course, similar tastes may not mean similar budgets, so it could need to take a look at your spending history. It may look to the types of instructional cooking videos you’ve viewed or the recipes found in your browsing history.
Google of course wants to provide you with these services, of course it wants to answer subjective questions, because in doing so it will gain an even more detailed picture of you which improves its real product. Honan finishes his article with the conclusion that Google’s dominance is inevitable.
The question is not if Google will be able to do this. Of course it will. It doesn’t have to build better products, it just has to force enough people into them. It will leverage everything it has—and it already is—to squeeze more information from us.
Sure there will be those who still believe Google’s “Don’t be Evil” schtick, just as there will be those who don’t care about the invasive breach of their privacy, but I believe that many are openeing their eyes to Google’s prying. I think more and more people are seeking alternative companies and services that respect their privacy and place limits on the collection of private, personal information.
For those of you looking for alternatives, here are a few that I have found to be promising.
- Search – DuckDuckGo
- Maps – Open Street Map
- Gmail – Hushmail
Paintballing with Hezbollah
March 23rd, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
You think you’re tough, playing Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare with your buddies on your widescreen HD TV? Why don’t you take it to the next level like these journalists who played paintball against members of Hezbollah? Oh yeah, they won too.
Blog of Myself
March 23rd, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
If Walt Whitman were alive today would he write this?
World Poetry Day
March 21st, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
While checking out Twitter today I discovered that today is World Poetry Day, and I saw that @PenguinUKBooks is retweeting tweets mentioning people’s favorite poems, so of course I started thinking of mine, of which there are many. It seemed a shame to limit it to a single poem in a world filled with wonderful poetry so here, where I am not constrained by a mere 140 characters, I present a list of my favorite poems.
Some of my favorite poems, but not all
- The Tyger -William Blake
- Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey -William Wordworth
- The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and
- Kubla Khan -Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- The Lady of Shalott and
- The Charge of the Light Brigade -Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám -Edward Fitzgerald
- Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came -Robert Browning (I was introduced to this marvelous poem by a favorite author, Stephen King)
- Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse and
- The Scholar Gypsy -Matthew Arnold
- Jabberwocky -Lewis Carroll
- The Walk -Thomas Hardy
- Apologia Pro Pemate Meo and
- Dulce Et Decorum Est -Wilfred Owen
- If -Rudyard Kipling
- The Waste Land -TS Eliot
- Leaves of Grass, Song of Myself -Walt Whitman
- The Red Wheelbarrow, and
- This is Just to Say, and
- A sort of a Song -William Carlos Willaims
- In a Station of the Metro -Ezra Pound
- anyone lived in a pretty how town and
- in Just -EE Cummings
- Persimmons -Li-Young Lee
- Instructions -Neil Gaiman
Two of my favorite haiku, which are without titles
In this hush profound,
Into the very rocks it seeps–
The cicada sound.
-Basho
Death Poem
Leaves of words:
autumn colors
a still mountain.
Jomei
In Search for Alien Life, Researchers Enlist Human Minds
March 21st, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Sounds like SETI is being more careful with their budget than they were in the 90′s. Sounds like a cool project for space buffs though.
Tonx and the Quest for The Best, Damn Cup of Coffee™
March 15th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Several weeks ago I heard about Tonx, a small coffee-subscription company. For $38 a month you get a 12 ounce bag of fresh, hand-roasted beans sourced from some of the world’s best coffee co-ops twice a month. I heard about them, and maybe you did too, because they were running a special promotion: if you subscribed they would send you a half-sized bag of beans for free with no obligation to continue the subscription. I thought I’d just get some free coffee out of the deal, but I was mistaken.
I made a fresh cup right after it arrived and there is no other way to describe it than heavenly. I knew immediately after drinking that first cup that I couldn’t go back to the cheap–well, not so cheap really–stale coffee that my wife and I have been drinking for the past couple of years. The only problem would be convincing my wife that $38 a month for coffee that tastes this good would be a steal in a half. You see, my wife is in no way a coffee snob, in fact, she readily admits that she would be happy with freeze-dried instant coffee. For her, the caffeine is the important thing, the coffee is just the delivery system, and if she had an alternative method of getting her fix that was easier than making a fresh pot o’joe when she is groggy and bleary eyed first thing in the morning I am sure she would take it.
I realized I would need a well calculated and implemented plan to sway her to my way of thinking. While she doesn’t mind bad coffee as long as it’s not decaf, she does have tastebuds, so I decided that the best way to turn her to my side was by making her The Best Damn Cup of Coffee™. Surely then she would agree to the need for this wondrous coffee from Tonx. Accordingly I planned to make a nice, fresh pot of coffee on Saturday morning before she woke up so there’d be a steaming, hot cup ready for her when she first came downstairs.
I got up far too early Saturday morning as our two boys turned the downstairs into their private war zone. I pulled on a sweater and stumbled into the bathroom and then downstairs. The boys immediately told me they were hungry and started ordering breakfasts of varying degrees of difficulty. I grunted a response and stumbled into the kitchen to start making their breakfast, but not before taking some cold medicine, for I seemed to have caught a cold from boy number one, and I could hardly breathe. By the time I finished making breakfast for the boys I didn’t even feel like taking the time to grind the beans and make The Best Damn Cup of Coffee™. So I grabbed the bag of the el-cheapo coffee, measured out four and a half tablespoons, put it in the coffee maker, filled it with two cups of filtered water, and hit the brew button. I know, I know, but really, I felt like hell and just needed that caffeine. Shortly after it finished brewing I had a cup and then went upstairs to grab my phone. When I came back downstairs my wife was sitting at the dining table with a fresh, steaming, hot cup of coffee and her iPad. She turned to me smiling, holding up the cup and said,”Is this that coffee you got? It is really, really good!” I sank into my chair in defeat, took a long drink of the el-cheapo coffee, and reluctantly admitted that it was just our regular stuff. “Oh” she said and then went back to checking her email. I drank another long slug of coffee and reflected that sometimes, it turns out, the caffeine is enough.
Luckily, a few days later I did manage to make a pot of the good stuff for her. I don’t think she really found it as amazing as I did, but being a good wife she agreed to continuing the subscription, on one condition, that I get up every morning and make the coffee before she leaves for work. I’d say that’s a fair trade.
Evolution of the Moon
March 14th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Witness the Moon’s evolution over 4.5 billion years in less than three minutes.
Memory Foam: Everything There Is to Know About NASA’s Butt Protector
March 14th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
So, if you like to slam the headboard, they’re awesome.
Gizmodo has a good piece up on NASA’s creation of Memory foam. Don’t miss the comments for some info on how they handle during intimate moments.
Risk is our Business
March 13th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Hell yes.
I like words
March 13th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
I like words. I like fat buttery words, such as ooze, turpitude, glutinous, toady. I like solemn, angular, creaky words, such as straitlaced, cantankerous, pecunious, valedictory. I like spurious, black-is-white words, such as mortician, liquidate, tonsorial, demi-monde.
Via the always great Letters of Note.
Blocked on Weibo
March 12th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Interesting Tumblr blog that lists words that have been blocked on Weibo, China’s version of Twitter.
Ueli Steck speed solo Eiger record
March 12th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
I was more nervous watching him run, unroped, across the ridge once he reached the summit than I was during the actual climb.
My findings in Japan’s existential fallout
March 12th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Yet there is something troubling in a manager on the ground disobeying instructions from above so brazenly. It is even more troubling to see his rebellion widely praised in the court of public opinion. In truth, this a story without heroes – only a long sigh of relief and an invoice of vital morals to be parsed.
Faces of the Tsunami
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Wonderful portraits of tsunami survivors by the New York Times.
Children of the Tsunami
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
A heartbreaking look at the aftermath of the Great East Japan Earthquake through the eyes of the children who survived it.
Sea Change
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Foreign Policy has an amazing collection of found personal photographs that have been altered by the waters of the tsunami.
Nuclear Disaster in Japan Was Avoidable, Critics Contend
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
TEPCO and all else responsible should be held criminally liable.
Japan’s nuclear refugees
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Another great series of photographs on The Big Picture showcasing Phyllis B. Dooney’s photographs documenting the current life of those forced to evacuate their homes due to radiation.
Japan tsunami pictures: before and after
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
The Big Picture has some of the best photographs showing the devastation and the recovery made in the most damage struck areas in Japan.
A year after the earthquake, building a new Japan
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Op-ed by Prime Minister Noda in the Washington Post which shows that regardless how the Great Eastern Japan Earthquake changed many things in Japan, politics was not one of them.
3.11: One Year On
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
The Japan Times has consolidated all of the #311memory hash tags on Twitter. Get a unique perspective on the tragic event, and then leave your own #311memory on Twitter.
In the Wake of Disaster
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Excellent interactive feature by the NY Times covering the one-year anniversary of the Great Eastern Japan Earthquake.
The End of Japanese Illusions
March 11th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
Excellent op-ed from Yoichi Funabashi in the New York Times on how the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown changed long-held Japanese beliefs.
The Empty Spaces
March 10th, 2012 § Comments Off § permalink
The one year anniversary of the Great East Japan Earthquake is approaching and I’ve been attempting to gather my thoughts enough to write something about it. I’ve read many great pieces from the media, and from individuals personally affected, but it wasn’t until I looked at the photographs at The Big Picture that I knew what I wanted to say about this tragic event.
Looking at the photographs that show the devastation caused by the earthquake and resulting tsunami last year and the same scenes now I am struck most, not by the cleanup and recovery, remarkable though it is, but by the empty spaces.
Having lived and worked in Japan for a number of years, both in the city and in the countryside I know that most of Japan is unbelievably congested with buildings and everything else packed in tight just like the commuters on the infamous Tokyo trains. So to see these empty spaces and know that they were once shops, offices, clinics, schools and homes. To know that these empty spaces were just a year ago filled with people, with life it is heart wrenching to look at them now. In fact I feel it speaks far more of the incredible injury Japan has suffered to see these empty spaces than it does to look at the immediate after math of the tsunami’s destruction as horrific as it was.
Of course, with time those spaces will be filled. There will be new buildings, new shops, offices, clinics, schools and homes that will take the place of those lost. Perhaps it’s fitting then, that those spaces are still empty still reminding us of what was lost that day and the terrible days following which can never be replaced.