Jul 30, 2006
12:50PM
Stolen Bukowski
The City Lights bookstore keeps their Bukowski next to the register because, apparently, he is the most stolen author.
The City Lights bookstore keeps their Bukowski next to the register because, apparently, he is the most stolen author.
via oodagroup:
More Edison videos can be found at Edison Motion Pictures.
Scans from the 1981 Atari Catalog. Isn't it strange that the Super Breakout man is doing aerobic exercise in an space suit?

In preparation for my move to San Francisco, I amassed a stack of documents that I have no need for, but contain sensitive information about me (social security #, W2 forms, etc.). I felt weird about throwing them away, since I'm sure data-miners root through my garbage everyday. I don't have access to a paper shredder, so I decided to put them in my baby webber and scorch them. It took them a while (and half a bottle of lighter fluid) to really get going, but once they did, they burned pretty well. The crazy thing was the huge amounts of putrid yellow smoke that they gave off once the flame had gone out. I thought I might be killing some bird passers-by, so I doused the ashes with a bucket of water, which created a stream of grey, sensitive-information sludge.

fire

fire!

fire
Eric Feng's illustrations are amazing. Portfolio and prints for sale at Feric Studio.

Sun Microsystems is developing a search engine which compares the acoustic similarites of millions of songs (not unlike the Musical Genome Project).
From the article:"The result is a striking visualization that not only shows which specific songs are similar to other songs of the same genre, but that also illustrates the degree of acoustic similarity between songs of different genres."
Pandora is an internet radio station along similar lines, which uses the Musical Genome Project to generate a playlist based on your tastes. You can guide it by voting for or against songs that it suggests.

Maureen and I went to Sardine tonight, so I thought I'd post some pictures and my initial impressions for those who are looking for a bit more about Sardine. I have no experience writing about restaurants and my pictures were taken with a crappy camera, so that makes me The Definitive Source.
Here is a discussion on the Isthmus forum that has more (informed) impressions of Sardine. For my impression, continue reading.
I will arbitrarily rate things with a 5 star system. An asterisk is good, and a dash is bad. So 3 out of 5 stars looks like this: [***--].
The interior of the restaurant is nice [****-]. It's in the Machinery Row building on the shore of Lake Monona, and tonight was a great night to sit outdoors and overlook the lake [*****], but we didn't [*----]. They have done a really nice job keeping with the style of the existing wood floors and exposed ceiling, but it also looks very fresh and new. There is a big, weird mirror [-----], but I can let that slide since they really nailed everything else.
The meal came with bread, and I think I overheard someone say it was made by Madison Sourdough Bread Co.. Very delicious [****-]. As an appetizer we got the steamed mussels and frites. The mussels were great and they came in a tasty, creamy broth [*****] that I tried to sip out of the mussel shells as if it was a spoon, but that became dirty, and I probably wont do it again. Sardine insists on calling the fries 'frites' which I guess is OK, assuming that a 'frite' is a wrinkly, soggy cousin of the fry [**---].
For the main course, Maureen had the salmon with portobello mushrooms. Based on my 2 bites, the mushrooms were great and the fish seemed pretty good, but lacking soul [***--]. I had the veal and gnocchi, despite the fact that I've always hated gnocchi. The veal was so-so [**---]. I'm not sure what I should be looking for in veal, since I've never had it, but it should be said that it was very tender. Something about the tomato sauce made it taste like pork though, and having one species of meat taste like another is a little unsettling. The gnocchi was bad, and thats my own fault [-----]. The cappuccino and a blackberry 'tartlet' that followed for desert were fine [***--].
The staff was nice.
I liked Sardine, and would go back if we weren't moving in a couple of weeks. I have faith that their (short) menu has other good things to eat, and you can't go wrong with the space.
Table setting w/ nice paper menu
Main dining room
Waiters' island
Mussels and fries frites, w/ bread
Blackberry tartlet
Goodbye!
I was looking for a way to express the datetime-design-pattern in Rails, which is a common datetime format for microformats such as hCalendar, hReview and hAtom. I found that Time#xmlschema does just that, but it seems to be a new addition to Ruby, because it doesn't work in irb 0.9.5.
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