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The Magpie Developer
Jeff Atwood is one of the best programmer/writers around. I love reading his stuff, some I agree wholeheartedly with, other stuff we disagree, but this post is about a dead-on as they come. This idea has been floating in my head for a long time, but it is hard for me to conceptualize it in words, Atwood does a brilliant job at it. Must read for any developer. |
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Andy Olmsted's Last Blog Entry.
(Warning: Pretty rough) No matter how you feel politically about the war, this reminds you that each number people throw around as statistics is a human life. This is extremely well written, and pretty rough on your soul towards the end, but something everyone should read. Its a shitty situation all around, but there is always a human face behind the statistics and I want to make sure I never forget that. |
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Drinking stories that put yours to shame
Via Keith
To preserve his body during the voyage home, the second-in-command stored Nelson's body in the ship's vat of rum and halted all liquor rations to the crew. Not a bad idea, but when the ship reached port, officials went to retrieve Nelson's body and found the vat dry.
Disregarding good taste (in every sense), the crew had been secretly drinking from it the entire way home. After that, naval rum was referred to as Nelson's Blood. |
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making vodka pills in 24 hours
Recently, Chef Fabian was experimenting further with the Adria/Torreblanca technique of making 'vodka pills.' I use this word to describe the process of making liquid-filled candies by pouring flavored alcohol syrups into cornstarch and letting it set until a hard outer shell forms. |
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Strategy Letter VI - joelonsoftware.com
As a programmer, thanks to plummeting memory prices, and CPU speeds doubling every year, you had a choice. You could spend six months rewriting your inner loops in Assembler, or take six months off to play drums in a rock and roll band, and in either case, your program would run faster. Assembler programmers don’t have groupies.
Entire Article is Dead On. A must read for anyone in the software biz. |
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(Tuesday, July 31)
Dos - Culver City Dub Collective
(9 out of 10)
I have been on a Huge Dub kick here lately, mostly because I have been doing a massive amount of coding. When I get really into the code I usually either listen to Miles, Mingus, Coltrane or some combination of them (anything pre-"Bitches" for miles, after that he gets a little too odd for me).
That was until a few years ago when I picked up the Laika Come Home (Gorillaz Vs Space Monkeys) and started to explore Dub and some of the "west african" stuff that Albarn did post-Blur (Mali Music) and while I listened to that for awhile, I just happened to pick up a Trojan Records compilation from Best Buy a few years back and that is when I started listening to more of the Dub/Electronic (think boards of canada) side of Reggae than Reggae itself. I listened to it a decent amount for about 6 months or so then fell back into the pure jazz while coding (I had a coworker who used to let me rip from his insanely extensive collection about 5 years or so ago and he had extremely good taste) so I had plenty to listen to. About 2 or 3 months ago I started to get back into dub again and have been more on the electronic side of it. to make a long story short I picked up Dub Side of the Moon (Floyd in Reggae/Dub) and Radiodread (OK Computer in Reggae/Dub) and started listening to them and started to explore a little more and found Culver City Dub Collective. I had heard The Cave off a Jack Johnson surf compilation recently so I picked up their EP a few days ago and totally got into it, and they had their first full length album "Dos" come out today. It is pretty much amazing to me. Very mellow and absolutely the best programming music for me personally.
Check it out if you are looking for something laid back with your morning coffee/tea if you really can't use any coding musak. I would say it is more jazz than anything, but you can hear the reggae in it also. It is available on iTunes so if you want to hear 30 secs of stuff you can for each song. Certainly worth $10. I have a friend that just moved out to LA where these guys are based (Culver City, orly?) and I am hoping he reads this and go checks them out. If I lived out there I would.
Labels: dub, music
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Travis - The Boy With No Name
Travis is back. I wouldn't say I hated 12 memories, it was meant to be very political, I just thought it went a little overboard and was somewhat preachy. Then when the greatest hits CD came out to be honest I was really hoping it didn't mean the end to one of my favorite brit bands. Boy With No Name is everything they were capable of. Supurb CD all the way through. Every song is brilliant. Big Chair is probably my favorite song and the opening to the CD on 3 Times is as good as it gets in music imho. |
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Pop! Why Bubbles are Great For The Economys (Gross)
One of the better economic books I have read in while, where the author gets their premise across in a well written, clear and concise manner. Basically Gross believes that the infrastructure left over after economic bubbles, provides companies with the ability to move forward (maybe more than the original bubble did). Not a hard read, I would definitely suggest it for a day and the beach/lake. |
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Feist - The Reminder
I CANNOT GET "I feel it all" OUT OF MY HEAD. Period. Great album, angelic voice. |
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Catan - Xbox Live Arcade
I am hopelessly addicted to this board-turned-video game on the xbox360. I had never played the board game but had seen it being played in some comic shops growing up. Click the Pick and play the demo, it isn't the 360 interface, but same game. |
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Arctic Monkeys - Favorite Worse Nightmare
No Sophomore slump here. Just as good (if not better) than Whatever they Say. |
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Beautiful Evidence (Tufte)
Tufte reads like a text book, most people would say bleh, but the information about "information" that he can deliver is top notch. My first Tufte book was "A Visual Display To Quantitative Information" and it was extremely well done, albeit confusing at time. I think beautiful Evidence is a little easier of a read (I am still only half way through it) and a little easier for myself to understand the ideas he is presenting.. |
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Fountains of Wayne - Traffic and Weather
Fountains of Wayne are the Gods of pop music. If Welcome Interstate Managers was a collection of short stories in song form, then Traffic and Weather is an even better collection with more humor. I already feel like CNN has the hottest female anchors, imagining them throwing their lust around like the Title track to the CD makes it even better. |
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Game of Thrones (Martin)
I started this book assuming it was going to be a high fantasy novel. Elfs, Dragons, Magic and the like. It isn't. It IS fantasy but more surrounding the politics and cunning of a few high ranking families. Incest, Murder, Intrigue, unscrupulous midgets. It has it all and more. |
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Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.
© Copyright 2003-2007, Eric Thompson |
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