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Interesting SaaS authentication play.
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How many shofars would it take to bring down masonry?
Author: Tim's Bookmarks
Grab bag: Old Boston edition
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Q: How do you get rid of lots and lots of snow? A: Salt. An unsurprising exchange except for the persons involved.
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Reading through the catalog of this upcoming auction (as Boston shutters this 78 year old printing office) is enough to make any typophile excited and/or sad.
No mere ham, he
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One of the things that made me want to go into space, when I was a kid. Very cool.
Unicode Snowman says sorry for all the drifts
On developing useful, usable services
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I should really look into Instapaper.
Grab bag: I heard there was a secret chord
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How Stravinsky’s Firebird is related to Afrika Bambaataa’s “Planet Rock”, the Art of Noise’s “Beat Box,” and just about every other 1980s hit. An appreciation of the Fairlight.
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Killer terminal app for OSX.
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A market driven solution to antivax parents endangering all our children? Don’t know if there’s a high enough price that someone could pay for that.
Movin’ on up
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Very interesting.
Grab bag: Baby you can drive my car
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A system that allows passively sniffing and replay signals to open car doors and even start the ignition needs a little work.
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UVa alum John Roll died shielding Giffords aide Ron Barber from Loughner’s bullets.
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Nice chartporn walking through Apple’s financial reporting. Bets on when the iPad line crosses the Mac line?
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Launch the app and your iPhone (or iPad, or what have you) turns into an active AirPlay end point.
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Transparency on the methods of Mac app crackers.
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If it didn’t require OneNote 2010 I’d consider it. Still, pretty cool that Microsoft is writing iPhone versions of their core office suite applications.
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Useful-looking tool from Microsoft that enumerates the attack surface of a Windows machine. Run it before and after an application installation to validate that the application isn’t unnecessarily endangering you. Cool.
Timelines on the web
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Amazingly, someone has finally done something visually innovative with RSS and publish dates.
Grab bag: Improving Stuxnet
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Opportunities abound for improvement in the state of the art of malware.
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Beautiful, elegant description of key strategies for managing highly detail oriented people.
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“Six months, thought Litvinov. By then Schwimmer could have all three yellows if I don’t prevent it. Schwimmer, Litvinov’s former partner, had recently passed Go and was liquid. He could build. Litvinov, for his part, held two gray properties, Vermont and Connecticut, but his ex-wife Jessica owned Oriental, and he knew she would never trade it to him.”
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There is a sense of hope for the future of political discourse in this country in this piece that I wish I could share.
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Yikes. Again.
links for 2011-01-14
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Fairly astute prediction of what Google's decision to drop H.264 support in Chrome means (more Flash for Chrome users).
Grab bag: Spoofs and Strangers
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Someone spoofs the National Portrait Gallery over the Wojnarowicz incident. Anonymous?
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On point.
Grab bag: bricks, vaccines, and Beowulf
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Brick your phone! No, really!
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Look at the table summarizing differences between the MMR – autism study as published and as reviewed, then read the full text. There is not a single shred of evidence in this paper that vaccines led to autism or other issues. If you are a parent who refuses to vaccinate your children because of studies like this, you are endangering your kids and mine with no valid reason.
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After looking for a long long time, I finally found someone who could explain why the medieval Christmas carol “Nowel: out of your slepe” calls Mary the “empresse of Hell.” In this case it means the earth, as in the Norse _hel_.
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Hwaet! The Beowulf manuscript in your pocket. This is kind of a nice app–interesting price point though.
Grab bag: Wilson in the Virginia Glee Club
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New stuff in the Google Books index for 2011, including an item from an 1879 UVA Magazine article about Woodrow Wilson in the Virginia Glee Club.
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The infrastructure beneath all major cities forms a completely different layer of reality. It’s the difference between how people perceive cities and how they really operate.
Grab bag: Hidden complexity
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Like anything else, the destruction of the Saddam statue in the center of Baghdad was a more complex act than it appeared at the time. The article shows that it wasn’t orchestrated but places heavy responsibility on the media for the distortion of what happened.
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New version of the convenient one-button hack to enable AirPrint for shared printers on your Mac. Now no longer redistributes Apple files.