# Monday, December 03, 2007

Google Intranet

GoolgeBlogscoped has an article about the Google Intranet

What the Google Intranet Looks Like

What do around 16,000 Google employees stare at in the morning when they’ve arrived at the office? They might be looking at Moma, the name for the Google intranet. The meaning of the name of “Moma” is a mystery even to some of the employees working on it, we heard, but Moma’s mission is prominently displayed on its footer: “Organize Google’s information and make it accessible and useful to Googlers.”

The article is not all that exciting a read. I don't know really anything about GoolgeBlogscoped and based on the obsessive fascinated tone of the entry I don't think I'll be reading them much.

Monday, December 03, 2007 5:34:11 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |
# Sunday, December 02, 2007

Catalog Junk Mail

My wife and I spent some quality time this weekend getting ourselves taken off of spammy useless catalogs we got in the mail.  It all started when we just started going through the mail pile.  She had a catalog in her hand and remarked, "I need to get taken off this one".  I grabbed it and the phone and dialed the 800 number.  Then she handed me another and another until I had called 19 retailers.  At which point we were flabberghasted that we were recieving so much junk.  There are two others Dover Publications and Anthropologie that have no telephone number that I could find in the catalogs.  So overall there are 21 that I attempted to get us removed from (19 successfully). 

Here is the list of catalogs and the 800 numbers if you're thinking about removing yourself, although you will likely need the catalog to provide exact address and name information:

  1. The Sharper Image (800) 344-444
  2. Garnet Hill (800) 622-6216
  3. Red Envelope (877) 733-6383
  4. sundance (800) 422-2770
  5. Urban Outfitters (800) 282-2200
  6. Athleta (888) 322-5515
  7. Wine County Gift Baskets (800) 394-0394
  8. The Container Store (800) 733-3532
  9. Eddie Bauer (800) 426-8020
  10. J Crew (800) 562-0258
  11. Woolrich (877) 512-7305
  12. Uncommon Goods (888) 365-0056
  13. Neiman Marcus (800) 825-8000
  14. L.L. Bean (800) 221-4221
  15. Space.NK (212) 941-4222
  16. Fossil (866) 510-4460
  17. The Territory Ahead (800) 882-4323
  18. Title Nine (800) 609-0092
  19. Sahalie (800) 458-4438 (this one deserves special mention, when I called the woman on the phone told me there were THREE catalogs she could help me with.  So, she took me off ALL three, the other two I can't recall and have never heard of)

There are 3 we decided to keep:

  1. Archie McPhee
  2. Crate & Barrel (we're in the market for some furniture)
  3. Heifer International (which incidentally is a philanthropic organization dedicated to ending hunger and poverty)

We spread all the catalogs out on the floor and took some pictures so you could see how much stuff all this really is.

Sunday, December 02, 2007 9:24:46 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

MySpace, Facebook, Friendster - Ancient Tribal Stuff.

Friending, Ancient or Otherwise

Published: December 2, 2007
In the collective patter of profile-surfing, messaging and “friending,” academic researchers see the resurgence of older patterns of oral communication.

“In tribal cultures, your identity is completely wrapped up in the question of how people know you,” he says. “When you look at Facebook, you can see the same pattern at work: people projecting their identities by demonstrating their relationships to each other. You define yourself in terms of who your friends are.”

In tribal societies, people routinely give each other jewelry, weapons and ritual objects to cement their social ties. On Facebook, people accomplish the same thing by trading symbolic sock monkeys, disco balls and hula girls.

Sunday, December 02, 2007 9:23:26 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

Pandora for Mobile (only on AT&T and Sprint)

Just was listening to the Holiday Jazz station on Pandora.com watching the snow come down and saw that it is now available for mobile.  I'm sure it's a major battery suck and either requires some signifianct memory use for buffering or is really subject to the data transfer rate - but it's still cool.  It more or less solves the problems I have with phone-as-mp3-player. 
a) I don't want to carry anything large enough as my phone to make it useful as an MP3 player (although I will admit the iPhone is pushing that limit)
b) I don't want to have to think about what I put on my phone. And since I don't want devote enough carry-every-where-I-go meat-space to something large enough to have a decent selection of music on it, I posit that I would always be unhappy with the music on my device.

But, if I could take all my pandora channels with me where ever I go - killer!  Then again doesn't work on the subway so there goes 90% of my player time. Oh well.

If you're interested in the "Jazz Holidays" station try starting a new station with that as the search term.  Oh and as you'll see below, they also do classical music now.

Sunday, December 02, 2007 11:02:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

New Furniture - In Phoenix

While I was in Phoenix last week for Thanksgiving we did a little antiquing on 7th Avenue. We went to a great antique / architectural salvage place called

QCumberz Highly Recommend
4429 N 7th Ave
Phoenix, AZ 85013
map

Long story short, we've been looking for a couch / love seat for our living room - something small and well suited for our tiny NYC apartment. Well we came upon the following and managed to get it for $99 - a bargain if you ask me.

My wife initially picked up on the idea of using them as a couch for our living room. I was a bit skeptical because I'm not a fan of goldenrod, but after the fellow at the store told me how easy they would be to re-upholster and I got a good look at them, I was sold. Now all I have to do is get them here from Phoenix - Road trip anyone?

Sunday, December 02, 2007 9:56:31 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |
# Saturday, December 01, 2007

Category Views Fixed and CAPTCHA problem solved

Thanks for to those of you who pointed out that those two features weren't working. I've fixed both.
Saturday, December 01, 2007 4:33:15 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

Android Developer Challenge Silence

It's certainly old news that Google has released the Android SDK with a $300K bounty for "the best" app. But there are some interesting posts being made on how Google may actually be slowing development down because there are about 10M incentives not to share your expertise and help other developers out.

Is the $10 million Android contest actually slowing developers down? by ZDNet's Garett Rogers -- People with any level of programming skills and a vivid imagination are looking at Google’s $10 million dollar carrot with wide eyes — but is the contest actually working the way Google expected? I’d have to say it’s not — right now anyway. The contest has effectively caused knowledgeable developers to have an [...]

If an inexperienced Java developer is looking to create something unique, they generally start with examples provided in the SDK. When what you need isn’t covered by those tutorials, the next logical stop is to look at documentation or ask for help. Unfortunately, the docs are a bit dry for developers who learn best by example — this is where user contributed code plays a very important role.

The fact there is close to $300,000 on the line for winning projects is making most people think twice about sharing stuff with the community. PHP-like documentation with associated user contributed code would make developing on the Android platform a dream — unfortunately there is no such thing. Unless you are an experienced Java programmer with the skills to interpret the provided documentation without extra code to look at, there is a good chance you are out of luck.

Truth be told, I'm not going to disclose what I'm developing for my entry. The poker folks will tell you - "the pot odds are right". Then again, I am going to be pretty unrelenting in my efforts to get this product together as are most others I'm sure.

Saturday, December 01, 2007 4:17:37 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

How to become the typing bad-ass you've always wanted to be.

Das Keyboard

Blank Keys to Type up to 100% Faster Like on a piano, since there are no keys to look at when typing, your brain will quickly adapt and memorize the key positions. Within a few short weeks users increase their typing accuracy and find themselves typing up to 100% faster.

I just can't justify something this indulgent. I'm already a touch typer who rarely looks at the keyboard. Would it really make me faster? I was counting on 8 hours of practice a day to do that.

Saturday, December 01, 2007 12:42:27 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

State of Dis Repair - Bathroom Remodel End of Day 3 & 4

Where did day 3 go you ask? Yeah, I'm not sure either. Between work and having construction taking over my bathroom I'm a little out of it.

End of Day 3 - I have a new ceiling.
End of Day 4 - I have a bathtub now and the plumbing is in.
Saturday, December 01, 2007 9:17:53 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |
# Friday, November 30, 2007

State of Dis Repair: Day 2

Yes, we're a day behind
Morning of Day 2
End of Day 2
Friday, November 30, 2007 4:44:40 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |
# Thursday, November 29, 2007

For Webdesigners -359 helpful links for webdesigners

Saw this on forgetfoo.com (not always safe for work) he had a post about this site

For Webdesigners: 359 helpful links for webdesigners

Foo is right, it's just one of those sites you bookmark. In fact, now that I'm all del.icio.us'd up - I'm still not sure about the network nature of the thing, I mean i grok it but I don't get it - I'll be adding this to my tag cloud.
Thursday, November 29, 2007 12:04:49 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |
# Wednesday, November 28, 2007

NYT: Bourbon’s Shot at the Big Time

Spirits of The Times
Published: November 28, 2007
Complexity and elegance are qualities that have rarely been associated with bourbon. That is, until now.

A well-made, well-aged bourbon offers a gorgeous spectrum of flavors, beginning with a distinctive sweetness that can, depending on the distiller’s aim, turn spicy and peppery with clear fruitiness, or mellow into a creamy caramel toffee with highlights of citrus.

Bourbon is not Tennessee whiskey, like Jack Daniel’s, which is essentially made like bourbon until it is filtered through charcoal, at which point it becomes Tennessee whiskey. Bourbon is also not corn whiskey, which by law cannot be stored in charred oak containers. A whiskey can be distilled 100 percent from corn, but if it so much as kisses those charred oak containers it becomes bourbon.

While these laws may seem rigid, they leave a lot of room for creative distilling. Once you’ve got your 51 percent corn in the blend of grains (which distillers call the mash bill), you’ve got important decisions to make. Most distillers probably use 65 percent to 75 percent corn, blended with some proportion of rye, wheat or malted barley, and each grain provides different characteristics. The corn offers the sweetness and lush texture that are the basis of so many bourbons. Wheat adds a mellow roundness, while rye provides a spicy, peppery fruitiness and a dry quality. Barley can add a creaminess and a grainy sweetness.

The bourbons we tasted ranged in price from $14 to $120, and while a $20 bottle, Jim Beam Black, was our best value, there was some correlation between price and quality.

Naturally, the bourbon industry wants to capitalize on the cocktail craze, which is fine, but anybody who makes a mixed drink of our No. 1 bourbon, Pappy Van Winkle’s Family Reserve 20-Year-Old, needs some remedial shaking and stirring. This is clearly a sipping whiskey of wonderful complexity, which would be wasted in even the finest mint julep or bourbon punch. The same goes for our No. 2, the fruity and chocolate-and-caramel-flavored [Pappy Van Winkle} Vintage 17-Year-Old.

If mix you must, I would suggest our No. 3, the brisk, spicy Knob Creek, which tastes as if it has a rye component. It might be the perfect whiskey for one of those cocktails that seem to be at home with either rye or bourbon.

Each of us also had a favorite or two that did not make the list. Ethan liked an Elijah Craig 18-Year-Old and an Eagle Rare Single Barrel 10-Year-Old. Pete liked the Eagle and the Wild Turkey. Florence liked the Elijah Craig and the Virginia Gentleman, an old brand that has the distinction of being distilled in Kentucky then redistilled in Virginia. I very much liked a Corner Creek Reserve 8-Year-Old and Bulleit[JW: this won a friend's Bourbon Tasting event a few years ago].

The strongest bourbon in the tasting was Wild Turkey, at 101 proof. The final strength of a whiskey is another choice that distillers must make.

While the just-distilled whiskey can be as high as 160 proof, those pesky federal laws mandate that it must be watered down at least to 125 proof before entering those charred oak containers.

By the time it is bottled, it can be as low as 80 proof, so producers have a lot of room to find just the right strength. If you find a bourbon that seems too strong, do what the producers do and add more water. Or ice.

Tasting Report

Bonus Drink Receipe: Back Forty

It bears stating, I have not tried this, just found it interesting
Published: November 28, 2007 NYT
Adapted from Back Forty
Time: 5 minutes

4 teaspoons maple syrup
2 ounces bourbon
1 ounce lemon juice
3 to 5 dashes orange bitters
Lime wedge for garnish.

In a cocktail shaker, mix syrup with 2 teaspoons hot water.
Add bourbon, lemon juice and bitters.
Add ice and shake. Strain drink over ice in glass. Garnish.

Yield: 1 drink.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007 3:12:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

How Walkable is your Neighborhood?

Joel on Software has a great post about a site called Walk Score that lets you put in your address and find out how walkable your neighborhood is. I have several friends looking for apartments right now and this is a pretty killer.

I was pleased to find my apartment has a 91 out of 100 walk score.


and my parent's house in Southern California has a score of 54 out of 100 - which is about how I remember it being in my pre-driver's license youth.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007 12:35:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

Agile Dilbert


thanks Kelly and the kind people over at dilbert.com
Wednesday, November 28, 2007 11:35:03 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

NYT: Cracking the Code of the Zombie

This article is awesome! I have a special place in my heart for all things tiki, especially the cocktails.  You can further expect that I'll review the books published by Jeff Barry, the apparent scion of Tiki mixology in America.

Published: November 28, 2007
A tiki bar detective’s mission: to elevate the lowly reputation of umbrella drinks to their rightful standing.

Many of the cocktails that Mr. Berry has studied, the Zombie included, owe their creation to a raconteur named Ernest Raymond Beaumont-Gantt who remade himself as Donn Beach and started the tiki craze in 1934 by opening Don the Beachcomber’s in Hollywood. In their interior design, the tiki joints inspired by Mr. Beach tended to thoroughly fake pastiches of tropical themes — swaying hula girls, angry savages — that can offend some modern eyes.

...To recreate the Beachcomber drinks, Mr. Berry became a kind of cocktail shamus. He visited libraries and thumbed through old issues of Gourmet on the chance any recipes had been printed (they hadn’t). Eventually, he learned that some of the Beachcomber’s bar staff had kept the secret recipes in little black books. Mr. Berry got his hands on one of the recipe books — but found that it too was coded.


The Audio Slide Show: The History of Tiki
Next question, when is the food club going to make a tour of all the Tiki establishments of New York City? The gauntlet is thrown.

Finally, the two books:
Beachbum Berry's Intoxica!
and
Beachbum Berry's Taboo Table
Wednesday, November 28, 2007 8:30:33 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

State of Dis Repair - Bathroom Remodel End of Day 1

Day 1 complete. Living room and kitchen covered entirely in a fine dust of plaster. Luckily the office and the bedroom were more or less spared.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007 8:02:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |
# Tuesday, November 27, 2007

It's 10 o'clock, do you know where your cross-dressers are?

Fox News is reporting:

Cops: McDonald's Workers Attacked by Cross-Dressers

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

MEMPHIS,Tenn. —  A troublesome trio of transvestites allegedly laid siege to a Memphis McDonald's restaurant Sunday night, sparking a brawl with the restaurant's crew, according to reports.

Police said they were working on a more detailed description of three men dressed in drag who came into a McDonald's restaurant and started swinging.

Restaurant employee Martez Brisco was working the drive-through window when he reportedly got into an argument with the suspects. When Brisco ignored them tapping at the window, they came in.

"They come to the window, 'Tap, tap, tap.' I'm still ignoring them," Brisco told WMC-TV. "I guess that just pissed them off worser."

Click here to read the WMC-TV.com report.

The transvestites allegedly struck the manager with a tire iron, and when he swung back, the drag queens took off their stiletto boots, removed their earrings and prepared to attack. The manager, Albert Bolton, was covered with scratch marks after suspects clawed him with their fingernails.

Bolton grabbed a pot of scalding french-fry grease and hurled it at his attackers. One of the cross-dressers then smacked Bolton with a wet floor sign, sending him to the hospital in an ambulance, WMC-TV reported.

Before driving off, the three attackers smashed the drive-through window.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

There must be NOTHING to do in Memphis these days. (thanks Anna)
Tuesday, November 27, 2007 3:44:35 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

Grumpy Tuesday

Today has been named Grumpy Tuesday.  The best way to illustrate the reason is to give you a brief timeline of the last 12 hours:

Yesterday:
10 PM MST- Leave for Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport
11:30 PM MST - Depart on Jet Blue Flight for John F. Kennedy International Airport

Today:
12:30-1:15 PM MST - Really great turbulence over Texas
6:15 AM EST (4:15 AM MST) - Arrive at JFK having not really slept on the plane.  Thankfully, we flew JetBlue so at least I got to watch trashy television.  Why is MTV running spring break 2007 content? and why did I watch it?
6:45 AM - Get in cab stand line at JFK to get cab to my apartment
7:25 AM - Due to really fun traffic on the Van Wyck arrive at my apartment
8:25 AM - Landlord and contractor arrrive at my apartment to remodel my bathroom - first day task: demolition.

9:00 AM - Time of blog entry (everything beyond this is... the future)

9:15 AM - Head to Gym around the corner to shower (cause my bathroom is being demo'd)
9:30 AM - Drop clothes at home and head to work.
10:15 AM - Arrive at work
12:00 PM - Fat Sal deliver's on Two Slice Tuesday - I know I'm exhausted casue that sounds really good right now
4:15 PM - F2F Interview with a potential hire
5:30 PM - Limp home from work because If I stay longer my head will explode
6:15 PM - order thai food delivered for dinner. Hello chicken pad kee mao and beef panang with extra vegetables and maybe some tum yum goong
6:30 PM - Stare blankly at some television until I either pass out or become truly comatose
8:30 PM - Realize that I've lost the battle and crawl into bed.

If that doesn't clarify why I might call this Grumpy Tuesday I don't know what else will.  As I write this, on the other side of the wall are two men with hammers knocking out plaster and tile.  In a way I'm glad that they are there, otherwise the only conclusion I would be left with is that the pounding was inside my head.
Tuesday, November 27, 2007 9:14:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [2] |
# Monday, November 26, 2007

Rubio's Fish Tacos - Mmmmm

I love going to Phoenix for many reasons (of course family, etc) but a awesome fringe benefit is Rubio's.  I grew up in Southern California and love Baja style mexican food and a Rubio's fish taco does the trick. I went to their website and punched in New York City I got the following message:

There are no Rubio's Fresh Mexican Grill locations matching your search criteria near New York City, New York


It would seem the closest Rubio's to me is just south of Denver (or 1,776 mi – about 1 day 3 hours driving).

At any rate, two Fish Tacos Especial hit the spot.

Monday, November 26, 2007 6:35:13 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |

JSLink.VS - JSLint add-in for Visual Studio

By Predrag Tomasevic.

Visual Studio Add-in that uses JSLint to verify JavaScript files that are part of Solution

I have yet to put this in and play with it.  But it looks like just what the doctor ordered.  I am still ramping up on JavaScript.  Hopefully between this for VS 2005 and the yet to be worked with Intellisense in VS 2008, I may have half a chance at moving up the learning curve quickly.

Monday, November 26, 2007 2:35:19 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [1] |

A cool little quick and dirty CSS Layout Tool - Layout-o-Matic

Layout-o-Matic, A quick and dirty way to get a some HTML and CSS for you're desired layout. Sure, it's simple to do this yourself, but if you can get it for free in 60 seconds I'm all for it.

What you get:

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<meta name="generator" content="http://www.inknoise.com/experimental/layoutomatic.php" />
    <style type="text/css">
        #container {
            width: 760px;
            \width: 780px;
            w\idth: 760px;
            border: 1px solid gray;
            margin: 10px;
            margin-left: auto;
            margin-right: auto;
            padding: 10px;
        }

        #banner {
            padding: 5px;
            margin-bottom: ;
            background-color: rgb(213, 219, 225);
        }

        #content {
            padding: 5px;
            margin-right: ;
            background-color: gray;
        }

        #sidebar-a {
            float: right;
            width: ;
            margin: 0;
            margin-left: ;
            padding: 5px;
            background-color: rgb(235, 235, 235);
        }

        #footer {
            clear: both;
            padding: 5px;
            margin-top: ;
            
            background-color: rgb(213, 219, 225);
        }
    </style>
</head>
<body>
    <div id="container">
        <div id="banner">&nbsp;</div>

        <div id="sidebar-a">&nbsp;</div>

        <div id="content">&nbsp;</div>

        <div id="footer">&nbsp;</div>
    </div>
</body>
</html>

Got this from the post The Best CSS Tools which seems to be a total regurgitation of stuff long seen before. I just like the look and name of Layout-O-Matic.

Monday, November 26, 2007 1:31:21 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
#    Comments [0] |