Archive for June 1, 2009

College football AND jokes about France

An underexplored genre. To be fair, France did try to surrender in the first quarter – Dr. Saturday… – NCAA Football – Rivals.com.

FT.com / Reportage – A library of the world’s most unusual compounds

FT.com / Reportage – A library of the world’s most unusual compounds — would love to visit this library/museum.

The physical book — the tip of the iceberg

An aha moment for me recently. Two unusual books I have read recently have significant online presences. Rant has a fairly rich site with a lot of content related to the author and the book. Nothing that really changes the book experience, but some useful supporting materials.

The Raw Shark Texts is a much deeper experience – Steven-Hall.org. I can see now that reading the book has only given me a facet of the story, there is a tremendous amount of additional discussion and material online, some of which may be very material to the story and the experience. The physical book is truly just the tip of the iceberg.

I just happened to stumble on the Raw Shark Texts web info, I was looking for the author’s email to send him a note asking about the quality of the Kindle version.

And now I wonder why the Kindle version can’t be more than just a rerendering of the physical book. Why can’t it be a subscription to the ongoing content stream? I’d pay more.

DIY links — plywood,glass etching,nightlight

Stuff I want but don't need — Post Father's Day edition

Had a great father’s day, got some cool photo tools, some books that look great, and a couple of games since I have played Left4Dead and Fallout3 to death. Here’s some stuff I didn’t get and probably for good reason.

Physical Stuff:

  • Faux fountains via Scott Loftesness. Cool looking and an inspiration for Halloween.
  • IP PBX tips for home. I was all excited about this several years ago but increasingly not so…having resident phone technology seems so backwards
  • Projects Watches wristwatches. Cool looking but increasingly I have given up on wristwatches.
  • Television emulator. I don’t know, I think the dogs would prefer to watch real TV.
  • Olympus PEN. Having just hauled the Canon up and down a mountain Sunday morning, the idea of a smaller form factor camera with great lenses is appealing.
  • Super Duper Denon pre-amp. Just can’t face all the cabling problems tho of disconnecting my current and connecting in a new.

Virtual Stuff:
* Mint.com. Like the idea of automated analysis of my financials, but I am just not going to give another party access to all my financial credentials. They should license these tools to financial service firms for use on their own websites.
* Cisco Network Magic. Nice review. Congrats to the former Pure Networks team.
* Filemaker Bento iPhone app. I regularly get sucked into thinking I need a database and this app is sucking me in again. I know tho I will enter 7 records and abandon the damn thing so I am holding off.

Books — Portuguese Irregular Verbs, Real World, Obedience, The Raw Shark Texts, Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey

  • Portuguese Irregular Verbs by Alexander McCall Smith. A self-absorbed eccentric man leads an eccentric life with eccentric friends. Thankfully short. Amazon says 3.5 stars, this seems high. 2 stars I’d say.
  • Real World by Natsuo Kirino. Curious to read a well regarded novel from Japan. But didn’t do it for me. Callow angst-ridden teenagers, yawn. Amazon says 4 stars, I say 1.5. Couldn’t finish the book.
  • Obedience: A Novel by Will Lavender. Kind of interesting premise, a psychological game unfolds on a campus, slowly sucking in some students.  But the characters were thin and the pacing forced and all a little unbelievable. First novel so here’s hoping practice makes perfect. Amazon says 2.5 stars, why did I buy this book?? I’d say 1.5 stars — I could finish it but I wish I hadn’t.
  • The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall. Another first novel, this one is a crackerjack of a story. A gripping opening, an interesting central premise about memes, great imagery. Really awesome. Amazon says 4 stars, I agree wholeheartedly, an interesting book.
  • Rant: an oral biography of Buster Casey by Chuck Palaniuk. Chuck, you need therapy. A disturbing tale of epidemic, time travel, moral laxity, bigotry, disease. Interesting, yes. Corrupting, probably. Amazon says 4 stars, I’d agree, though this is a warped book.

Blueberry Buckle Recipe was fabulous

Blueberry Buckle Recipe : Alton Brown : Food Network — this was stunningly good. We are determined this summer to eat our way through the whole buckle/grunt/slump/cobbler/crisp/pandowdy/brownbetty spectrum this summer, this week may be a pandowdy week.

Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest – Current Conditions

Frustrating morning, up early and out to the trailhead but road chained off. Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest – Current Conditions is supposed to have current conditions, and you can also call the North Bend ranger station 425 888 1421. However they all claim the road is open but it was clearly chained off. Grrr. Try again next weekend.

My first album on Fotopedia

Cougar Mountain photos on Fotopedia – The Photo Encyclopedia — OK this is my first whack at this. I am not certain where Fotopedia will fit in my current suite of photo production and management tools (Canon Digital Photo Pro, Aperture, occasional Photoshop, Smugmug), but it is a great site and a veyr nice piece of client software. The integration with Aperture is nice. Hats off to the Fotopedia team (we are an investor).

After USC, What is the Best Home Game?

After USC, What is the Best Home Game? | Eleven Warriors — nice data on scalping prices and also note the cool fact that either USC or OSU (or both) have been involved in the top-10 scalped games ever per stubhub data.

Brett on Stuff » RedTrails – Interesting Hiking Resource

Awesome find by BrettRedtrails, Wish it showed current snow levels!

Books — The Walls Of The Universe, The Stone Gods, The Right Mistake, Genesis, The Good Guy, Halting State

  • The Walls Of The Universe by Paul Melko. Starts out very promising, protagonist and his doppelgänger travelling through a many worlds multiverse, trying to recapture the lives they had. But the deeper emotional themes get swamped by a uninspiring run-of-the-mill conspiracy story. Amazon gives it 4.5 stars, I’d say 3.
  • The Stone Gods by Jeanette Winterson. Outrage at humanity’s casual misuse of the planet and each other, despair, a smidgen of hope, with hints of Bradbury, LeGuin, Moorcock. Not my taste at all. Amazon says 4 stars, I’d say 2, but some people like this style.
  • The Right Mistake by Walter Mosley. Great collection of stories about a modern day urban Socrates.  Uplifting. Amazon says 4 stars with some saying earlier books in the series are better, I haven’t read them, I liked this one just fine.
  • Genesis by Bernard Beckett. Modern day retelling of the Genesis story with some twists. Entertaining and thoughtful, short and sweet. Amazon says 4 stars, I’d agree.
  • The Good Guy by Dean Koontz. Solid action tale. Ending a bit too pat and the underlying conspiracy a bit too standard, but nice tale up to that point. I expected supernatural from Koontz and was pleased that this book was not supernatural. Amazon says 4 stars, I’m good with that.
  • Halting State by Charles Stross. Good cyber adventure. Stross is reliably entertaining. Another 4 star from Amazon, I like this as well as anything in this set, I might say 4.5 stars.
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