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The question is: Would you like your care rationed by the government or by private industry?
Category: linkblog
Grab bag: FriendFeed acquired
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Real time search on Facebook. Actually, ANY search on posts on Facebook is good news; real time is just icing.
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Wow, that’s different–and this is maybe how Facebook gets out of being a walled garden–by bringing the rest of the Internet into its profiles. Hopefully that’s not all it does.
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A way forward out of the disintegration of discourse–just do it like Jon Stewart does it.
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Fallows on the shift in public discourse on healthcare to virulent misinformation.
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Ancestral cemetary for a few generations of the Jarrett family.
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Incredible untold story from the Big Dig–and it’s only halfway presented this week. Two dead in a tunnel under Boston Harbor…
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The real danger of this full court press against health care reform is that it poisons every single legitimate tool of representative government.
Grab bag: the success of fail
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To read.
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The success of FAIL.
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Key to building anything–take notes as you go.
Grab bag: The August everything fell apart?
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Useful runthrough and disemboweling of various talking points against the administration’s healthcare proposals.
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On the current healthcare riots vs. the Social Security discussions: “Indeed, activists made trouble in 2005 by asking Congressmen tough questions about policy. Activists are making trouble now by shouting Congressmen down so they can’t be heard.”
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It’s always nice to see going after the truth in a more confrontational way than “he said, she said” journalism usually does, but this is great.
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I would be irresponsible if I didn’t post the mildest example of this phenomenon, as spotted on Twitter: “If Bill Clinton wants to bring two girls home, not even North Korea can stop him.” I’m very impressed with the rescue operation, seriously, but there’s no way the jokes won’t come, “derangement syndrome” or no.
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Julie Powell’s reflection on the water under the bridge.
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The comments section sums up the attack on Julie Powell nicely. The attacks are childish, mean-spirited, and more than a little sour-grapes. I remember reading the original blog avidly back in the day, and can’t wait to see the movie.
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Using unsupported formats in iTunes. Looks good until you try to sync to an iPod.
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An optimistic view of the likelihood of IE6 going away. To which I say: yes, but if the corporate intranet applications all break under IE7 (not unlikely), it’ll be a cold day in hell before the poor users ever see a real browser.
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Harry Patch was 109.
Grab bag: Mouthwatering edition
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An interesting modern food blog regarding the legendary beef bourguignon recipe from Julia Child. Mouthwatering reading. Makes me want to cook with beef cheeks.
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Probably won’t ever get to the point where oyster shells will again be a common paving material instead of gravel for rural roads, but any rebound of the population is promising.
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Proof there are still arrows in the ex-President’s quiver.
Grab bag: Attention to detail edition
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I read Cooks Illustrated religiously until I got the sense they were returning to the same ground over and over again. Seems like there’s a reason for that.
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Easy to use hex editor for the Mac. Design goal: “This app is about exploring the implementation of standard desktop UI features in the realm of files too large to fully read into main memory. Is it possible to do copy and paste, find and replace, undo and redo, on a document that may top a hundred gigabytes, and make it feel natural?”
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Awesome shot of Julie & Julia author Julie Powell with the mother of all whisks.
Shocked, shocked at shoddy BIOS security
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LoJack is the sort of software that should be absolutely above reproach, because it’s used in a hostile attacker scenario and lives at a very very low level of the operating system. That it is easily hackable is, um, troubling.
Grab bag: It might look easy but it’s not
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Brent, as usual, does a thorough job of documenting why even small features take time and effort to do properly.
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Our momentum release, or what I was working on when I wasn’t blogging this year.
Grab bag: Here comes the fun
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A new children’s album about SCIENCE!!!!11!
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Cory Doctorow points to an Ed Felten article that uncovers the reality of the AP “anti-copying” magic beans–it’s just the hNews microformat, which includes explicit rights definition (using ccREL, which only extends free use and the rights granted by copyright, not restricts them). Someone’s having an Emily Litella moment right now
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Happy birthday to Doc!
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Leave it to Cudlin to not bury the lede: “What does the world need? More videos of cats playing avant-garde 20th century music.”
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Money quote in this article about the rising respectability of “food styling” in movies: “Mr. Flynn had to debone 60 ducks over the course of ‘Julie & Julia.'”
Grab bag: RIP George Russell, new life for Ounce Labs
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RIP George Russell. I still like to go back and dust off his Ezz-thetics album.
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This is what we mean by “can do.” Hope JPL finds a way to get the Rover moving again.
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IBM acquires one of the standalone pure play static analysis source vendors.
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Well done, guys. Makes me proud to be a Wahoo.
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A passing review of the Reqiuem where the reviewer apparently attended a different performance than the one I performed.
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Comprehensive and educated review of Saturday’s Brahms Requiem performance. Will have to go back and listen to that Schütz now.
“A 1982 Impala with blown shocks”
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Nicholson Baker writes a marvelous essay on the hatchet job the Kindle does for the reading experience–but in the end, with a novel, he’s hooked. Illustrated and technical books don’t fare as well in the user experience department. Moving from reading eBooks on the iPod Touch to the Kindle, he writes: “Then, out of a sense of duty, I forced myself to read the book on the physical Kindle 2. It was like going from a Mini Cooper to a white 1982 Impala with blown shocks.”
Byte code analysis is not binary analysis
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Gartner’s Neil MacDonald lays out the difference between bytecode analysis and binary analysis. Veracode does binary, and is the only vendor to offer binary analysis of C/C++ apps.
Grab bag: AP goes nuclear; iPhone encryption hacked
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Quoth Gruber: “Someone just sold the Associated Press a bag of ‘magic beans.'” One wonders what this “digital wrapper” was supposed to be anyway.
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Those fools.
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With physical access and a jailbreak, you can apparently get even supposedly encrypted data off an iPhone.
Grab bag: Common sense and the F-22
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Easy way to force a browser to display RSS as plain XML.
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Finally, some common sense surfaces in Congress. If we can say no to the F-22, the sky is the limit! Maybe.
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Most of these are also the top lies of product managers.
Grab bag: MCA and the big C; Apollo at 40
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Fingers crossed that MCA makes it through without complications.
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Personal history of the Apollo program from Phil Plait. I feel the same way about Columbia.
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Amateur astronomer discovers an impact site on Jupiter, where a comet or asteroid has crashed into the atmosphere near the pole.
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“Cronkite understood that the ultimate role that journalism can be forced to play in democracy is, quite simply, to fight to preserve democracy itself, and that the greatest threat to our republic was when elected leaders choose to lie to the American people. That didn’t mean abandoning the core principles of journalism — aggressive fact finding, which includes first-hand observation and talking to all sides, as Cronkite did on his trip to Vietnam, or an innate sense of fairness and justice. But he knew that journalism was more than rote stenography –parroting the untruths that LBJ and the Pentagon said about the war and finding a political opponent to quote deep down in the story for “balance.” He knew there could be a time when the only way to inform the American people of a higher truth was to step outside the straight jacket of objectivity.”
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John “JP” Park shows how he built a “mystery box” for Wired’s Geekdad columnist John Baichtal.
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The chain of failure for Twitter’s internal documents, unsurprisingly, includes Hotmail, Gmail, Google Docs–and weak passwords and password reuse.
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Stirring essay about Long Island’s ties to spaceflight and the construction of the lunar landers.
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Talk about transparent. The White House blog announces webinars about the transparency provisions in the Recovery Act and provides a full schedule.
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I’ll be providing some of the “weighty German rhetoric” next Saturday, singing the Brahms Requiem as part of the Tanglewood Festival Chorus.
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It’s really, really hard to get good quality photos that meet the copyright test. There are a ton of articles I’ve written where there are no free images available for use.