Save, Spend, or So What?

Well it appears that most Americans will end up seeing some kinda hot cash injection from Uncle Sam by the summer time. Because Val is way more practical than I, we'll likely stuff ours in savings (and thus counteract the intended purpose of economic stimulation). Others, however, may have grander things in mind.

While trying not to count chickens before they're hatched (no legislation has actually passed as of this writing), what do you plan to do with your money?

There's no such thing as a PowerBar tree.

man picking up a dropped hot dog

This may be a bit dated, but there's a useful (and sometimes hilarious) interview with Dr. Mehmet Oz from way back in October on Esquire's website.

Some of these I knew, some surprised me, but just about all of them were interesting at the least. I have to disagree with him about pizza, though. While it may not be the most heart healthy, it IS good for the soul.

"...like something out of God’s erector set..."

The Morning News has an informative article from Timothy Ledwith about Staten Island and how the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge affected life in the borough.

It Has Begun

That is all. For now.

SuperDuper is Its Namesake

This weekend I decided to trust the advice of John Gruber (generally not a risky proposition) and purchase SuperDuper, the backup software from Shirt Pocket Software.

Dang, it's quick, easy, and intelligent. See, I connect to an AFP share on my external hard drive, so that's mounted most of the time while my computer is upstairs with the Ethernet cord plugged in. I ran my initial backup creating a disk image on that external drive. I was concerned that if I took my computer away for a day and forgot to remount the AFP share when I returned, that the backup would fail. Well, SuperDuper can execute a script for you immediately preceding the backup process. So I was researching Applescript methods for auto-mounting a volume if it's not already connected, and as the evening wore on, the scheduled backup kicked off. To my delighted surprise, it automatically mounted the volume for me, and problem solved!

I highly recommend this to any of my Mac-slingin' peeps out there (who have an extra drive).

Book Club

all letters in Book Club typeface

This is a really interesting typeface found by my friend Stephanie called Book Club. It's cool looking, but I feel it's a good example of form over function. That's perhaps the intention, which would be fine. I can't tell from the author's website whether it was a commercial project or proof of concept, but in short artistic applications I could see this having a really cool effect.

I do, however, find it humorous that a typeface created with books is difficult to read :-)

Delicious iPhone

I don't own an iPhone (not enough storage for me...yet), and I don't own Delicious Library (2.0 is rumored to be around the corner, so why buy now?). There is, however, an impending SDK for the iPhone which will allow third party software development for the platform.

I've given it a lot of thought, and I think a totally hot piece of software would be a Delicious Library client for the iPhone. Imagine being able to scan your media with the camera on the iPhone instead of having to get a unitasker scanner or holding everything in front of your Mac's iSight. Imagine being able to scan media in the store to check whether you already have something in your home library or add it to a wish list. It could be pretty sweet to manage your media lending on-the-go as well.

I'd pay for that.

New York Giants vs. New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLII

YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhh!!!

Tonight, against the odds, Eli Manning threw NO interceptions, and my NEW YORK GIANTS defeated the excellent Brett Favre and his Green Bay Packers. Much respect to you, Favre, but I'm glad the boys in blue came out victorious.

I know the Patriots are currently a 13-point favorite, but you can't count out the Giants now. Not after taking down Dallas. Not after taking down the Packers. We came pretty close in week 17 against the Pats, and though they learn quickly and rarely falter, I've now watched my team's defense surprise most of the pundits with coverage when it counts.

The added bonus, for me, is that I can count on an extra helping of people rooting for the Giants since there are so many folks embittered towards the Patriots, yearning for their perfect season to be taken away. While I personally think another team with a perfect season would be cool, I don't want it to happen when the Giants stand in the way :-)

Kubrick O'Brien

I just discovered this excellent tribute to Stanley Kubrick's The Shining on the Late Night Underground website. DRAEB EKIRTS!!!

Death of a Salesman (Film)

Before I headed upstairs to finish the aforementioned book, I watched the Dustin Hoffman rendition of Death of a Salesman. I'll not dwell on the details, but I did give it 4 out of 5. The acting was amazing, I already love the story (and the stuck very tightly to the script), and the casting was mostly excellent. My only dings are the production quality (it WAS made for television in the '80s, after all), and Stephen Lang's Happy Loman. Otherwise, it was a treat to see one of John Malkovich's earliest film performances, and he was outstanding as Biff Loman.

Kitchen Confidential

cover of the book Kitchen Confidential

Last night I finished reading Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential. This book was easily one of the funniest volumes I've read in the past several years. Coarse, profane, yet insightful - this book is less an exposé of the commercial kitchen than of the author himself. Bourdain shares expertly crafted anecdotes about his restaurant years, all the while exhorting the readers to accept and appreciate professional cooking (and it's oft unseemly cast of characters) for what it is.

Two stand-out chapters (also the longest, I think...):
1. A Day in the Life - Here we follow Bourdain from his waking before 6 AM through a grueling restaurant Friday ending, exhausted, in a bar at 1 AM. The pacing and detail is extraordinary, convincing me further that I never wish to run a restaurant :-)

2. Mission to Tokyo - The chef is sent by the owners of Les Halles to a satellite restaurant in Tokyo to consult about the menu. Left to his own exploring devices, Bourdain rapidly falls in love with Japanese food culture. The sense of discovery is palpable, and the reader (or at least THIS reader) is filled with a desire to see the Roppongi district.

I absolutely recommend this book. It's not for the faint of heart, but it IS hilarious and informative. The format is mildly scattered - more the feeling of semi-chronological narrative with various asides - but easily readable. Taste and enjoy.

Maybach Landaulet

Maybach Landaulet car with top open

Because nothing says conspicuous consumption quite like gold-flecked granite. In your CAR.

Fluid

I know many folks who check my site already read Signal vs. Noise, but this program they posted about today is such a cool concept that I had to write it up as well.

Fluid is a tool from Todd Ditchendorf which allows users to create a stand-alone desktop "app" for any web app. This is accomplished through the generation of a standalone browser for the page, and it supports RSS and the like as well.

Some questions I have (until I try it out at home this evening):
1. What's the resource usage on this puppy - does an "app" for GMail use more ram than Flickr? Is there a minimum RAM/CPU usage regardless of the web app?
2. Does the Fluid app have to stay running in order to use the "apps" you've created? Or is Fluid just the generator?
3. Once you reveal the regular Webkit controls, can you then navigate away from the site? Wouldn't that then make these "apps" simply standalone instances of a Webkit browser? If that's the case, it sounds like running multiple instances of Toad on my Windows 2000 work PC, where each instance has a process ID, and each can crash independently (which they do!).

I'll update this with my findings as soon as I get to play with the new program.

UPDATE: Ha haaaaaa...Seems I missed the fine print. This requires Leopard, and it seems I don't have that. Whoops!

Monkey Tea, Monkey Do

bag of tea picked by monkeys

How can you make almost anything better? With MONKEYS, that's how. And tea, that fine brewed beverage, is no exception (yes, monkeys really picked this tea). If this stuff wasn't so pricey, I'd consider purchasing a pouch, because really - shouldn't monkey's do more work for us?

(via Uncrate)

You Hoboken.

I've not yet seen this Orbit Gum commercial on television, but my boss sent this around the office, and it's hilarious:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWDgQPSomGk&rel=1&w=425&h=355]

What the French, toast?

Macworld 2008 Keynote Roundup

Here's a summary of what Jobs unveiled (for those three or four readers of mine who aren't nerdy enough to follow the whole thing in real time):

1. Time Capsule - a full-fledged Airport base station with built in hard drive. Nice! I wish I hadn't bought that blasted LaCie!

2. Update to iPhone software, stuff that doesn't affect most of the folks I know (since we're all too poor to own one!).

3. iTunes Movie Rentals - as expected. 3 bucks for library titles, 4 for new releases, 5 for HD titles. You have 30 days to start watching the movie, and after you start, you have 24 hours to finish. You can also transfer it to any Apple device - iPhone, iPod, Apple TV...and speaking of that...

4. New version of Apple TV software to handle this hot new video goodness. This includes a more robust video browsing interface to support the movie rentals. The hardware price dropped as well.

5. MacBook Air. Super thin, like, ranging from 0.16" to 0.76" - that's right, barely more than 3/4 of an inch...AT IT'S THICKEST. Dang. Magnetic latch and 13.3" LED-back-lit screen, built-in iSight, ambient light sensor for the keyboard (like my MBP)...MULTI-TOUCH TRACK PAD. And you can even order one with a 64 Gig flash disk if you want to pony up the dough. Battery life? Try FIVE HOURS. There's no optical drive (to save space and battery power), but you can wirelessly share another computer's optical drive, even reading a Mac disc on a Windows computer's disc drive! It starts at 1800 clams, and that sounds fair to me considering what they crammed into such a small form factor.

Everybody was counting on a more portable laptop, but man - I don't think anybody expected a full-spec computer this size.

And that's it, really. Gaze and enjoy:

macbook air, partially open

Macworld Expo 2008

So today I wait, with baited breath, for Steve Jobs to deliver his keynote address at 9 am Pacific (noon over here).

I already blocked off 1.5 hours on my Outlook calendar for "lunch" and I don't expect to get anything done during the talk. Everybody has their predictions, including Gruber, and Apple stock has been fluctuating wildly in the run up (and will continue today, I'm sure). I just can't wait to see what's up. Surprises would be nice :-)

A Rare Awesome Idea from Microsoft

Every once in a while, the boys in Redmond come up with some idea that actually makes sense. Today, Engadget's Paul Miller tells us about Microsoft's forthcoming tech-enabled shopping cart.

Using RFID tags on the merchandise and smart shopping carts, it looks like such a concept could actually save shoppers time (and possibly money if they see a running total on the screen).

Here's hoping they don't screw the pooch in the execution.

Netflix Takes One Step Sideways

Preface: I love Netflix - their shipping is fast, their selection is great, and their recommendation system (especially since I've rated over 1100 movies) is excellent and marvelously prescient. Last year, they decided to become even more awesome by introducing online viewing for subscribers to their existing DVD service. Members could, in addition to their regular DVDs, view as many hours of streaming video as they paid in dollars every month. This means that I could watch about 15 hours of video every month based on my plan. Netflix topped itself, though, by announcing recently an end to that cap of online video watching time - a move seen to preempt the expected announcement by Apple to start providing digital movie rentals. Pretty nice, huh?

Preface over.

You see, it's not actually nice. Because I don't have a computer at work or home that can play this online Netflix video. Their current system requirements indicate that I need Windows XP or Vista to use the online viewing service. At work? Stuck on some vintage Windows 2000. At home? I chose an Apple computer that has OS X, so no dice for me.

So while I'm excited that Netflix is allowing for unlimited online movie watching (from the 6000+ available titles), I can't get to pumped because it does me no good. As soon as they code a freaking Mac tool for viewing, then I'll be jumping for joy.

The Dallas Cowpies

Woohoo!!! Looks like my New York Giants get to spend next Sunday evening in the cold reaches of Green Bay, Wisconsin playing against Gran-daddy Favre and the Packers in the NFC Championship game for a chance to appear in Super Bowl XLII.

It's amazing to me that our defense was able to pull off tonight's victory over Dallas, and I'm hoping we can do at least as well next week.

Without Representation

I'm not generally a fan of Lou Dobbs, but truth is independent of who says it:

The greatest crisis in this country today is the fact that the American people are not being represented by their government.

Lou Dobbs on A Daily Show with John Stewart, January 10th 2008


Glengarry Glen Ross

Last night I started and subsequently got sucked into David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross - his drama which won the Pulitzer in 1984. This short play (2 acts, about 100 pages) feels like a series of rapid-fire conversations which demonstrate the lengths to which desperate and/or ambitious men will go for their ends. Mugs sent this to me shortly after Christmas, and it was well worth my reading. I highly recommend it.

Hell of a Movie

Had I bothered to research director Guillermo del Toro after I watched the incredible Pan's Labyrinth I would no doubt have noticed that he also directed the comic book movie Hellboy. Since I didn't look up the director, it wasn't until just now after reluctantly checking out the trailer for the forthcoming Hellboy II that I even bothered to check out del Toro's resume. I was curious whether he'd directed the first installment if he was working on the sequel, and sure enough, he did.

Now I've not seen the first movie, but del Toro did the screenplay with consultation from the comic book's author. Since del Toro wrote and directed Pan's Labyrinth, which was incredible, I think my curiosity is overwhelming my resistance to what seemed like a cheesy film.

Have any of my handful of readers seen it? Is it worth it? At least on the merits of its film-making?

Sliding into Obscurity

Woof.

So those slides about which I was so pumped?

Well, it turns out I underexposed pretty much every one. I should've stepped down a bit on the shutter speed, I guess, because I had fantastic bright sunlight in nearly every picture I took. All the slides are dark, grainy, and not very enjoyable to look at - and even the best exposures still look like crappy tourist shots from 1947.

Oh well, learning experience and all that. On a lighter note, I learned that Richmond Camera will cross-process film upon request. Rawk!

Times for a Change

stairwell in the New York Times building

Slate has an informative slide-show essay concerning the new digs for The New York Times. The wood floors in the lobby (obviously not pictured above) are glorious, but I bet they'll be a bear to maintain...