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Moon Wiring Club: INFORMATION SERVICES [Nov. 15th, 2009|02:09 pm]

warren_ellis

I love Moon Wiring Club. And not just because I got their new record this weekend, which I am going to play tonight because I’ve been sick and/or unconscious with some weird bug since Friday morning. Oh no. (What if it cured me?) No, I love them because they do things like this, too:

In 1982, Gelographic RadioTelevision co-broadcast a test transmission for the tentative BBC5 channel.

Although the station idents were deemed a massive success, sadly the only known survivors of this viewing were unable to be traced, due to radiation issues. This archive footage has been recently unearthed, and provides a tempting glimpse into what those who watched through the smoked glass were able to see.

The musical accompaniment, acclaimed in some quarters, features on the new Moon Wiring Club album ’Striped Paint for the Last Post’, due ’sometime’ November. Certainly before the feast of Syllabub in any case.

Remember: confusing electronic music is a great British tradition.

(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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Links for 2009-11-15 [Nov. 15th, 2009|02:00 pm]

warren_ellis
  • Help Phoenix Marie
    "We are raising funds to get urgently needed medical treatment for our beloved friend, Phoenix Marie. She has been battling a life-threatening progressive heart valve disease since 2006, when she had her first heart failure and near death experience. With no insurance to cover her, Phoenix sold almost all of her valuable belongings and clothing and did eBay sales for half a year in order to see a specialist and receive the tests and costly x-rays needed to diagnose her condition. Her heart disease was a congenital defect (from birth) that was apparently misdiagnosed in childhood as harmless and left unchecked…"
    (tags:people )
(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles #540 [Nov. 15th, 2009|12:30 pm]

neilswaab


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Apple Files Patent On Evil [Nov. 15th, 2009|11:23 am]

warren_ellis

Apple has filed for patent on a technology they call an "enforcement routine," that’ll display ads on pretty much any device with a screen and demand that you view them — or else you don’t get your device back:

Its distinctive feature is a design that doesn’t simply invite a user to pay attention to an ad — it also compels attention. The technology can freeze the device until the user clicks a button or answers a test question to demonstrate that he or she has dutifully noticed the commercial message. Because this technology would be embedded in the innermost core of the device, the ads could appear on the screen at any time, no matter what one is doing.

(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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DIA Sunrise [Nov. 15th, 2009|05:15 am]
apod

What's 93 million miles away and still hurts your eyes when you look at it? What's 93 million miles away and still hurts your eyes when you look at it?


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Weekend mid-point [Nov. 14th, 2009|06:38 pm]

teencake
Yesterday I thought I'd get a full day of writing done. Instead, I fed feral cats, cleaned out a cat shelter full of termites and lizards, put up wood blinds, and cleaned house. I was looking for some hardware we've had around forever to put on the kitchen cabinets, when I knocked off some tickets that were stuck to the refrigerator. Tickets for the Dethklok show that was last night, doors opening at 6pm, and it was 4:30 at the time. I called Grady and reminded him. We made it to the show about an hour late, which was when we would have shown up anyway.
Read more )
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[info]dnalounge update [Nov. 14th, 2009|04:32 pm]

jwz
[Tags|]
[music |Pogo -- Symphony #69]

DNA Lounge update, wherein there are some photos.

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Links for 2009-11-14 [Nov. 14th, 2009|04:00 pm]

warren_ellis
(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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Time keeps on ticking, ticking [Nov. 14th, 2009|12:37 pm]

leahruns
I've been thinking a lot about time lately.

Yesterday was all about time. Trying to squeeze stuff into the time allotted, missing things by losing track of tim, being ready in time, not having enough time, time passing too quickly.

I went out to Bastrop to get my long run in yesterday so I could thoroughly give myself over to the Hokahey 5K today for Dano. I had calculated my time pretty precisely. I needed to be on the road at 6:15AM at the latest; I'd get to the park by 7:00AM; I'd be on the trail no later than 7:15AM so that I could be leaving the park no later than 11:20AM to get back to Austin for my 12:00 fun seminar with friends.

I missed my leave time by about 5 mintues--no biggie. I hit every red light leaving my neighborhood, and that adds up. Once on 183, the fog got thicker and thicker and traffic got slower and slower. I didn't pull into Bastrop's Overlook parking lot until 7:30. Shit. I took a few minutes saddling up and hit the trail 7:39AM.

There's something about a time constraint hanging over my head that makes the run crappy for me. My hips were so stiff; I kept visualizing our old beagle, Benny, whose spine fused together in his final days and make walking painful. I felt like that. Of course, my Ibuprophen was in the car. Grr. Slog it out, keep moving, put my head down and go, go, go. I was going like that when I took the wrong turn at the campgrounds. 20 minutes later, I realize I haven't finished the loop like I should've...and there comes the purple trail where I should never see it. On a day when time mattered, I screwed up the route. Damn. No choice but to take the purple back up to the overlook, doing less than I'd planned. So I did more than basic 8-mile loop but don't know how much more. Look at the watch--what can I do? I figure I came all the way out here to get the long run in, I should at least get more than 16 if I can't get the 19. Off I go to do another loop, this time the short 8-mile loop. I took some Ibuprophen and about 15 minutes in, I felt much better. Ran into Diana...argh...no time to chit chat but I can't be rude...darn, why am I running so slow? With the chit chat, it takes me 2 hours to finish the loop. Uh oh; it's minutes before 12:00, not the 20 'til I'd mentally calculated...I'm really going to be late. Just get in the car and drive; takes me more than an hour to get back, thanks to the truck that lost it's load of lumber in front of Callahan's. I just was not meant to get any of that done satisfactorily.

In the evening, a lovely time with friends out to dinner and seeing the timeless opera, "La Boheme." It's my favorite. I love going to the opera--I wish the whole world worked like that, where you burst into song when overcome with emotion.

Today was the 5K. I was there to support Dano and so my time didn't really matter...except it always does. It makes me so sad to be so slow any more. I've just got so little juice in the legs. One of these days, I'm going to have to completely lay off distance and spend a year or more doing nothing but short and fast. Probably tris to loosen me back up and make sure the pounding doesn't get to me. Sigh.

Time goes by so fast. My baby boy is so grown up. I guess a benefit of being so slow was that I got to see him coming back in as I was heading out. And he was so sweet; he wanted me to warm up with him a bit before the race.

It's nice to have down time this afternoon.
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Hittin' the road. [Nov. 14th, 2009|11:04 am]

shubbe
Slept in a little: Check
3 mile easy run with strides: Check
Packed bag: Check
Gotten head in game: Well, we're still working on that one.

The Team and I are hitting the road to go do the San Antonio half marathon tomorrow (and two folks doing the full). I just keep telling myself this is not my goal race, and I don't need to worry about it. I'll do what I can do and use it to practice mental strength when things get tough. It'll be my first Rock and Roll event, and I'm prepared to be overwhelmed by the size of it.

And no matter how it goes, by this time tomorrow, I'll be done. (Unless it goes really, really, really, really badly.)

Aaaaand I'm off!
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Young Stars in the Rho Ophiuchi Cloud [Nov. 14th, 2009|05:11 am]
apod

Cosmic dust clouds and embedded newborn stars glow Cosmic dust clouds and embedded newborn stars glow


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Wherein I don't bitch about the bike. [Nov. 13th, 2009|06:50 pm]

shubbe


Every time I doubt my cycling ability, I'm just going to remember this picture. And think, "Well.. at least I've come a long way from there!"

And my bike has gotten a bit sexier.



Old bike picture is courtesy of a flurry of scanning of some pictures I recently found. To see the whole set, click here. Be warned, there's

Jazz Hands!
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New Addition [Nov. 13th, 2009|05:44 pm]
drwise
[Tags|]

Originally published at drw. Please leave any comments there.

I guess you might know if you visited this site and looked at the fllickr gallery plugin. But why would you visit this site? I haven’t posted in a while. I’m a bad monkey.

Anyway, wanted to record that… we have a puppy. His name is Pippin. Some notes - he’s extremely friendly to everyone and everything, he likes to nip at heels because he’s a corgi, and he’s a big fat wuss when it comes to pain. Let me amend that last - he was fine GETTING shots at the vet but the soreness afterward caused all sorts of drama.

Here he is being cute:

Fall colors

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I love living in the future. [Nov. 13th, 2009|03:45 pm]

theweaselking
NASA finds water on the moon.
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I love dogs. They're like warm fuzzy posable action figures. [Nov. 13th, 2009|03:04 pm]

theweaselking
[Tags|]

The definition of dignity:



She's technically awake, but at the time of this picture she hasn't woken up enough to realise that I was posing her lip while she slept.

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some of my favorite books [Nov. 13th, 2009|01:52 pm]

anricat
Several years ago I told Roger to pick me a book to read from his collection. I asked him to pick me the one book that he thought I should, nay, NEEDED to read. He picked Neuromancer and I'm sorry to say that I couldn't get into it. It wasn't that it was bad. I could certainly see the interest and appeal, but it wasn't fabulous either. It didn't stand out to me as something so important. But I finished it (I hate not finishing books, even lousy ones) and moved along. We haven't repeated the experiment and he didn't ask me to pick him a book (foo).

It's funny because Roger and I like the same types of books and the same types of music, but really, our tastes are quite different. It's funny to like stuff in the same genre as someone, yet like completely different stuff.

If he had asked me, I don't know that I could have narrowed it down anyway. I tend to like books in a series. I have a very hard time getting to know a character (or characters) and then just letting them go at the end of the book. I like to follow along with them on many many adventures.

My favorite books:

- The Lord of the Rings (and The Hobbit) - Duh.
- A Song of Ice and Fire series by George R. R. Martin - Can't wait for the HBO series! So exciting! (And of course, I'm eagerly awaiting the next book.)
- Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea series. I pretty much like anything by Le Guin. She tends to revisit the same characters or at least the same worlds so there's a lot to explore.
- The Mists of Avalon (and some of the follow-ups) by Marion Zimmer Bradley. I like some of her other stuff, too. I haven't tried any of her Darkover books, but I do own a couple. They are in "the pile."
- Sue Grafton mysteries. The only mysteries I read. My step-mom turned me on to them when I was in high school and I revisited them a few years ago and got caught up. Her latest is coming out in a couple of weeks.
- Harry Potter - There is a reason these books are so popular. They are just so much fun.

There are more. Those are just a few of my top picks. Currently I'm reading The Farseer trilogy on my Kindle for iPhone. I'm on the second book. I stumbled upon it quite by accident when I downloaded the first book (The Assassin's Apprentice) when it was free on Kindle. I liked it so much, I bought the second one. I didn't think I would like reading books on my iPhone, but it works really well, actually! I'm definitely going to be buying more books this way.
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Man, I am *way* out of date with cute puppy picture updates. [Nov. 13th, 2009|02:35 pm]

theweaselking
[Tags|]

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(no subject) [Nov. 13th, 2009|01:36 pm]

theweaselking
McCain: Palin's book is full of lies. Easily falsifiable lies! And they're lies that, if true, would be felonies!
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"What on earth did nerds do in the 1980s to figure this all out?" [Nov. 13th, 2009|09:35 am]
wilwheaton

I'm way late to the party on this, but I just started reading Spook Country this week. Unlike most Gibson books I've read, it doesn't ramp up slowly, and instead hits the ground running (that's not a bad thing). I'm only 30 pages in (it's been a busy week without a lot of time to read) but I'm pretty sure I'm going to like it; I can easily connect to the tone, the characters, the setting, and the storytelling style he uses.

When I logged into Goodreads this morning to put it on my bookshelf, I saw that people had Memories of the Future on their lists, and a few readers had reviewed it (overall, they seem to like it, which pleases me.) One of the readers mentioned that my book was recommended to her by a blog called Stacked. I took at look, and here's what I found:

Christina [Stacked's editor] is watching the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation for the first time ever and reviewing episodes in conjunction with Wil Wheaton's book Memories of the Future.

Christina calls the project Amnesia of the Future, which I just love because it's clever, and I enjoy clever things, as you may already know. I've just read the posts she's done so far (she's up to Code of Honor), and I really enjoyed them. Allow me to share some highlights:

Farpoint

Episode: If someone were to tell me that in a few hundred years humans will regularly be traveling vast swaths of space and encountering other intelligent life forms, I would not at all be surprised to find giant. space. jellyfish included amongst the aliens. Actually, I think it’s kind of cool and in my next life would like to come back as one.

MotF: Post entertaining recap of the episodes, was the “Behind the Scenes Memory” which brings a rather cool dimension to the show. Despite the faults Wil Wheaton points out about the two part episode, they were obviously doing something right. I didn’t notice the repetition of background actors during the mall scene and, even after having it pointed out, re-watched the episode and still missed them despite telling myself “Hey, self, look out for the repeat actors!”

The Naked Now

Episode: ...the assistant engineer is acting like a five-year-old attempting to master Jenga and Wesley Crusher is speaking way to coherently for a drunken fourteen-year-old. In fact, he doesn’t seem much different from the previous episode’s overly-exuberant puppynerd self. Shouldn’t a normal drunk teenager be slurring and trying to get laid? 

Dear Wesley, I hope you enjoy being a virgin for the rest of your life. You might want to start stocking up on pocket protectors now.

MotF: I’m so smart! Wil Wheaton also feels that this episode came too soon.  I definitely think that moving it back to a later spot in the season would have been a wise move and an opportunity to play with the repressed desires of the characters that would be bound to come out when intoxicated.

Code of Honor

Episode: Ultimately, the episode was just as hokey for me as The Naked Now. I appreciate the analogy and moral questions raised and the set-up for what happens rolls out very nicely. But where is the Jell-O? If you’re going to have juvenile boy-thoughts about a girl fight, shouldn’t they be in bikinis and Jell-O?  Give them such “advanced” weaponry and have them fight on the set of Flashdance, but Tasha gets to remain in her uniform with her communicator on?  At least Yarinna got to wear a pink lamé bodysuit and come out like the reigning champion.

MotF: Really Wil Wheaton? Pillow fight was as good as you could come up with? Were you afraid of trademark issue in mentioning Jell-O? Because Jell-O fight trumps pillow fight any day. At least you had the Beavis and Butthead running joke. I found that to be infantile and pointless at first, but you pulled it off nicely.

Now I kind of can't wait for her next bout of amnesia (cue the All My Circuits theme) because it's interesting and entertaining to read the first-time impressions of a new TNG viewer 22 years after we made the show, especially when that viewer is reviewing my book in tandem with the episodes. It's just so delightfully meta, I couldn't not link to it. I'll be interested to see if she gets the same facepalm fatigue I started to get, and when it arrives if she does.

Speaking of Memories of the Future, I thought some of you may like to know that work has begun on Volume Two; Angel One is ready to go beneath Andrew's Red Pen of Doom.

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So, I'm cutting out sugar. [Nov. 13th, 2009|09:10 am]

meilaan
My sister can't eat sugar. My mother-in-law can't eat it. And anything that causes me to crave it must have some inherent evilness (only partly kidding there), so that's a big enough tap on the shoulder for me.

Yesterday was Day One, and I ingested probably about 4 grams total thanks to prepackaged foods that were the least of many bad choices in our pantry. Reminder to self: go food shopping. The hardest time seems to be breakfast.

Things that I require in the morning:

--ease of use (that's my user experience jargon...I can handle only about 2-3 steps prep in the morning before I reach my "screw this" threshold)

--protein (or else I will upchuck my vitamins)

If you have any food suggestions that qualify, feel free to let me know. Keep in mind that I'm non-dairy, so no cheese or milk.

I've heard steel-cut oats are good (right, Karen S.?).
Other possibilities...turkey sausage and tortillas.
Maybe I can make and freeze my own breakfast burritos with eggs.

Cheers! (But not Cheerios.)
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(no subject) [Nov. 13th, 2009|08:56 am]

theweaselking
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(no subject) [Nov. 13th, 2009|08:17 am]

with_gusto
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Art and Science in NGC 918 [Nov. 13th, 2009|06:24 am]
apod

This beautiful telescopic skyscape features spiral galaxy NGC 918. This beautiful telescopic skyscape features spiral galaxy NGC 918.


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iPhone or Droid [Nov. 13th, 2009|05:00 am]
xkcd_rss
It may be a fundamentally empty experience, but holy crap the Droid's 265 ppi screen is amazing.
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(no subject) [Nov. 12th, 2009|11:12 pm]

theweaselking
Man fights off mountain lion with chainsaw.
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(no subject) [Nov. 12th, 2009|11:05 pm]

theweaselking
If you work for the Republican Party, your health insurance covers elective abortion - and has, since 1991.
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Cyberpunk. [Nov. 12th, 2009|08:02 pm]

jwz
[Tags|, , ]

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Guess the state! [Nov. 12th, 2009|10:47 pm]

theweaselking
"Atheists exist!" billboard relocated after billboard-specific death threats to the owner of the property next to it.

But it's not terrorism when white male Christians do it.

Poll #1484673 Guess The State!
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 70

Guess The State!

View Answers

Ohio!
53 (75.7%)

Florida!
17 (24.3%)

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(no subject) [Nov. 12th, 2009|10:31 pm]

theweaselking
"Call Of Duty 4 Three: Red Dawn: The Videogame" is completely stupidly awesome. Emphasis on "stupid".

I hid the President in the meat locker of a DC Burger King while ten billion Russians tried to kill us with tanks. And this is *after* jumping off a mountain onto a snowmobile and riding it off a ski jump to get safely into a helicopter.

No, really. And there's an Achievement for killing 10 guys with 1 bullet, which I have. Because I'm just that awesome, apparently.

WOLVERINES!
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cowgirl [Nov. 12th, 2009|05:08 pm]

jwz
[Tags|, , , , , ]
[music |Veruca Salt -- All Dressed Up]

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Conan! What Is Best In Life? [Nov. 12th, 2009|05:43 pm]

warren_ellis

"DAY-GLO HUMAN UDDERS!"

tumblr_kt0ltn519I1qzocfyo1_500

(I feel I must point out that these are really not what are best in life, and that Molly Crabapple should be arrested and probably waterboarded for making me look at this.)

(And also this.)

(Cowgirls. Honestly.)

(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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Dear AccountabilityBlog, [Nov. 12th, 2009|05:45 pm]

shubbe
Okay, NaBloPoMo.. I don't like you, and you don't like me. I'm struggling this year. Posts are forced and uninteresting. So since you're being a pain, I might as well try to use you to my advantage somehow.

We have this room in our house. The room that's not the bedroom and not the office. It's the Other room. It's part sewing room, part workout-stuff room, part.. miscellaneous Other stuff. On the best of days, it's a bit of a disorganized mess. But I've allowed it to really get bad lately. So I'm going to post pictures of it, even though I find them horribly embarrassing. And I'm going to post pictures again at the end of the month. And hopefully that fact will inspire me to clean up sometime between the two postings. I have high hopes! As a bonus, that gets me a post for today, AND a post for sometime at the end of the month. Yay!

So here's the current state. It's not normally this bad, and I could have made it better before taking the pictures, but I thought it'd look more impressive if I showed it at its absolute worst. I may have even thrown some extra crap in there that isn't normally there, for effect.

Sewing stuff. Vacuum cleaner. Clothes that need to be given away. Clothes that need to be put away. A billion bags.


Dress dummy, chewbacca backpack, old yearbooks and D&D manuals and photo albums. Filing cabinet. Giant jar of pennies buried under purses.


Old, very defunct pet gate. Many costumes. A currently-too-small wetsuit. More sewing stuff. Wrapping paper. More bags. Empty shoeboxes. An aerohelmet.


Workout clothes. Shoes. Goggles. More bags. Even more bags. Sunscreen. Swimcaps. A rubber chicken.


Wish me luck!
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Regretsy [Nov. 12th, 2009|02:05 pm]

jwz
[Tags|, , ]
[music |Veruca Salt -- Wet Suit]

"Really? That's interesting. Because to me, this is a $200 necklace of worms fucking."

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Links for 2009-11-12 [Nov. 12th, 2009|03:00 pm]

warren_ellis
(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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HAPPY()SAD Tumblr Theme [Nov. 12th, 2009|02:54 pm]

warren_ellis

Because Ariana’s sliiiightly crazy, she’s created a free HAPPY()SAD theme for Tumblr users. This is, of course, based on the HAPPY()SAD t-shirt she and Rich Stevens released yesterday.

(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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Calisthenics [Nov. 12th, 2009|02:06 pm]

teencake
I officially started this program and this program last night, after doing the initial tests for them on Monday. I remember Amy started the push-up program back in the beginning of the year, I think, and I thought it was a really cool idea. I don't remember why I didn't start it then, but a recent doctor visit and talking about bone density reminded me that I need to do something lifty, and I don't like lifting weights. So, I shall lift myself, and I'll throw in some core work while I'm at it.

So, I did the initial tests and was MORTIFIED by how much I sucked. Seriously, I used to do push-ups and sit-ups (or crunches, and d'oh, I just realized I've been doing real sit-ups, while it calls for crunches...might have to redo that test) every night off and on for several years, so even after a few months of doing none, I could knock out a decent number if given a reason. Holy shit, age matters! So, yeah, the utter suckiness of my initial test invigorated my desire to do this program. One hundred push-ups and two hundred sit-ups, here I come.

Oh, and my arms are a weeeee bit sore today. Ow.
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Molly Lewis is a national treasure [Nov. 12th, 2009|09:12 am]
wilwheaton

In the world of entertainment, there are things that make me laugh, there are things that make me cry, and there are the rare things that work on so many different levels, or are so surprising, they simply drop my jaw to the floor and blow my mind.

This cover of Poker Face by Molly Lewis is one of those things.

Molly Lewis, you are a national treasure. It is an honor to occasionally share the stage with you.

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(no subject) [Nov. 12th, 2009|09:36 am]

theweaselking
"The odds are greatly against you being immensely smarter than everyone else in the field. If your analysis says your terminal velocity is twice the speed of light, you may have invented warp drive, but the chances are a lot better that you've screwed up."
- #19, Dave Akins' Laws Of Spacecraft Design.
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(no subject) [Nov. 12th, 2009|08:20 am]

with_gusto
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look before you leap [Nov. 12th, 2009|11:45 pm]

ghewgill
I started to investigate yesterday's idea of a shell implementation in Perl, and immediately got mired in the Byzantine shell quoting rules. The most basic thing about the shell turns out to be unnecessarily hard, and besides, it's already been done. Why did I think this was a good idea again?

Somehow I had got it into my head that msysgit on Windows would only run from the msysgit shell. Since I don't actually use Git on Windows, it turns out I was mistaken. If you run any Git command from the regular Windows command prompt, it already works. The appropriate shell is invoked to execute the shell script (git-rebase is one such shell script, instead of being part of the native C implementation).

Nothing to see here, move along...
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Great Observatories Explore Galactic Center [Nov. 12th, 2009|05:45 am]
apod

Where can a telescope take you?  Where can a telescope take you?


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Family. [Nov. 11th, 2009|09:44 pm]

shubbe
I'm not sure how I got so lucky, but my family is just fantastic.

My parents still live in the house I grew up in, Matt and I live about 2 miles away, and in between us, about a mile from each, are my sister and John. We all get along great, we see each other often, and it's just kinda sickeningly wonderful. In a really snarky, sarcastic, obnoxious kinda way. My whole family is very similar to me, so if you don't like my sense of humor, maybe don't come to our family gatherings.

Tonight we went out to dinner for my dad's birthday. My mom had declared a general ban on having our phones out during dinner (Matt and I are still showing off our shiny toys, and my dad is still in the honeymoon phase with his iphone, and Laura generally has hers out). However, someone found some excuse to bring out their phone after the meal, and before we knew it, everyone had theirs out. And mom couldn't object, because she was playing with Laura's phone. Mom is.. very new to smart phones. Like, tonight was the first time she'd played with one. And she has zero text messaging experience. And she's actually a really good typist, but.. maybe needs some practice on the iphone keypad. Here's the conversation we had via text message while sitting at the same table.

Me: Hi, mom!

Mom:
Jo amy

Mom: Go Amit

Mom: J
J

J
J
J
Hi amuy

Mom: Jo amy

Me: Jo mama!

Mom: How you be

Me: I be good

Mom: Ooi love u

Me: Oooooi love u 2

--

Needs a little work, but she'll get there!

Happy birthday, dad!

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Guess The State! [Nov. 11th, 2009|06:30 pm]

theweaselking
Homophobic gay porn star/US Marine assaults, beats with tire iron, chases, Greek Orthodox Priest who "acted like a terrorist" by asking him for directions.

For bonus points: Marine's excuses include that priest "acted like a terrorist", "tried to rob him", "grabbed his crotch and made a sexual overture in perfect English[1]"

[1]: The priest in question does not speak English.

Poll #1484160 Guess The State!
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 103

Guess The State!

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Ohio!
29 (28.2%)

Florida!
74 (71.8%)

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Stefano Bonazzi [Nov. 11th, 2009|01:58 pm]

jwz
[Tags|, , , ]
[music |50 Foot Wave -- Hot Pink, Distorted]

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git on windows [Nov. 12th, 2009|07:59 am]

ghewgill
Git is mostly written in C, with some important parts in shell and Perl. This works well on Unix-like platforms, but unfortunately suffers on Windows because there is no native Windows (Bourne) shell. Git can be built under the Cygwin environment, but that is a heavyweight solution and Cygwin is not appropriate for general use. msysgit builds a native Windows executable plus uses the msys shell implementation, which provides a workable solution, but still requires Git operations to be done within the msys shell and not the native Windows command shell.

I had a thought the other day, that one could implement a Bourne shell interpreter in a more widely available language such as Python. This would provide a more widely portable option for using Git, and on Windows in particular. Such a shell implementation would provide the minimum implementation necessary to run Git's shell scripts (and which would include minimal implementations of various utitilies such as grep, sed, and awk). That wouldn't solve the Perl script problem, so it seems obvious that a portable shell interpreter designed for use with Git should be written in Perl.

A long time ago there was the Perl Power Tools project, which aimed to provide implementations of various Unix utilities in native Perl. Unfortunately, nobody ever submitted an implementation for sh. Is there any existing implementation of a Bourne-like shell in Perl? More generally, is this a viable plan to make Git work better on Windows?

Update: See the next post to find out just how far I got with this.
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you can relax on both sides of the tracks [Nov. 11th, 2009|10:03 am]
wilwheaton

I've struggled for most of the morning to come up with some profound and lyrical way to mark the day, but the words I usually find so easy to command just refuse to reveal themselves ... so I'm just going to keep this post simple and to the point: Thank you, veterans, for your service.

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HAPPY()SAD [Nov. 11th, 2009|10:04 am]

warren_ellis

I’m not sure how the universe has withstood Rich Stevens (DIESEL SWEETIES) and Ariana Osborne (SHIVERING SANDS, this site, designing various things of mine at Avatar) teaming up to produce a t-shirt, of all things… but this is the result.

Available to order now, ships in 1 - 2 weeks.

happysaddiagram

(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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Simon Reynolds’ NOTES ON THE NOUGHTIES: Beard Rock [Nov. 11th, 2009|09:52 am]

warren_ellis

Simon Reynolds is one of my favourite writers. It’s funny, really: I agree with what he writes maybe half the time, at best, but he says it so fucking well, and in such a way that I always have to think about the subject again.

He’s now doing notes on the decade at the Guardian, beginning with a piece on "beard rock." I was, I admit, hoping for a clue as to why I find Will Oldham so inexplicably creepy, but, you know, it’s a fun piece anyway:

…beardedness is tantamount to a visual rhetoric, almost a form of authentication, as though the band are wearing their music on their faces…

(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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SHIVERING SANDS: One Week On [Nov. 11th, 2009|09:34 am]

warren_ellis

So, one week later. Copies of SHIVERING SANDS are now starting to arrive with people — I found this on Kat Foisy’s blog this morning:

4095065007_69e2df83fe

(If you want to send me a photo of you posing with SHIVERING SANDS? Email it to my dump address at warrenellis [at] gmail dot com, along with your website address or twitter ID or whatever, and I’ll run it and your link here)

A week since launch of the book. We’ve sold, I believe, a little over four hundred copies. Given that the production of the book involved 1) me culling from seven years of jabbering and sticking it all into a couple of RTF files 2) Ariana flowing all that into a single file and spending a couple months’ worth of spare moments fiddling with it 3) Ariana uploading the thing, ordering a proof and spending an hour checking it over… we were well into any definition of profit by the end of day one.

It is, of course, the long game that pays off. It’s interesting to look at the first week, but it’s not defining.

A persistent criticism of my interest in POD has been that only writers at my level of cultural awareness can make any kind of success out of it. And some of them will now be saying, well, even Warren Ellis can only move 400 copies in the first week of a POD project. But, for one thing, it is about the long game. For everybody. The book doesn’t go away. And, for another, if I’m not aware enough of you to order that POD project — whose fault is that, really? Because, I’ve got to tell you, I wasn’t born with a book deal in one hand and an exclusive comics contract wrapped around my other flipper. Hell, when I was starting out, there wasn’t even an internet.

SHIVERING SANDS is published through Lulu.

(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)
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3 + 3 = 6 I am awesome [Nov. 11th, 2009|10:00 am]

crabbyoldjaws
3miles yesterday...so slow it's not even funny...no pain. 3 miles this morning but had to walk alot...no pain, just dead legs and lungs...i'm pathetic and out of shape. but did i mention, no pain?!?!? then some weights at the y.

it's veterans day and i'm going to dano's house! hug a vet today, i am.
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