I am now regretting letting my parents still use Windows instead of forcing them to the Mac during their last hardware upgrade cycles. This is just amazing.
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I am now regretting letting my parents still use Windows instead of forcing them to the Mac during their last hardware upgrade cycles. This is just amazing.
September 30, 2004 | Permalink
- If I'm using Google News to look at news, I don't just want the headlines, I want the news. Google listing headlines from web sites I can't get to is about as useful to me as Google listing headlines from print-only sources.
- People are acting like China is the only place that bans certain news agencies. Many countries large and small throughout the world do this, often more effectively (that is, brutally) than China.
It would be great if people here didn't think that Chinese internet users were stupid (well, any more stupid than western internet users). They know that there are news sources that are banned; they hear about them the same way we hear about repressed news sources. Google doesn't need to say "hey, we smart westerners know better than your government what headlines you should see".
I don't hear many statements that Google is bad for not showing the web headlines from some of the less-moderate Arabic web sites talking about the US's actions. Funny, that.
September 29, 2004 | Permalink
No.
eMusic.com has a bunch of unknown labels with little-known bands (and the occasional well-known band but only a single album that they did while waiting for better labels to sign them). Worse yet, the subscription plan is just plain dumb for most music buyers. You pay a fixed fee, starting at $10/month for 40 downloads. Yes, that 1/4 the price of iMS, but it also completely limits you to that many songs. If you find a band you really, really like, and they have five albums out, you have to pick and choose the ones you want now and then buy the rest next month.
Sillier yet, if you don't use all you 40 downloads in a month, you pay anyway. So, if you get bored of eMusic.com (which is not difficult) and forget to cancel, you'll get nailed next month. Gee, that'll cause happy subscribers and make them want to stay. You can almost hear the membership sales people say "let's punish our users for not downloading exactly the right number of songs per month."
I was hopeful about their re-launch because they also were going to start selling soundboard-quality recordings of live shows, which they got when they bought the Digital Club Network. But the selection is so limited that you'd have a hard time finding many shows from any particular genre that you would want. And, in the same "let's try to trick our customers into wasting money", they sell filler talk as separate songs. Clicking "download entire show" is almost a sure way of throwing away a buck.
They probably have some happy customers who will want to stay more than a few moths, but so few that no one will notice.
September 24, 2004 | Permalink
And the next silly Google craze will be to do such a search and make up a story linking the photos on the first page.
Followup:Tim points out that many/most cameras start at 0100, so IMG_1050 is actually the 1050th picture taken. That makes the results a little more depressing.
September 24, 2004 | Permalink
September 23, 2004 | Permalink
And I can't say enough about freshly-picked local organic figs; it's taking great willpower not to down the whole basket.
September 22, 2004 | Permalink
September 15, 2004 | Permalink
One quibble I have with James' essay is that he calls these names "Christian" and "English". Many of them could be considered Christian names, but I am now in fairly frequent contact with Chinese people whose names are "Merlin" and "Linus". OK, maybe those are "English" and "Christian", respectively, but I think it is easier to classify them as "dweeby" in the positive sense of the word. ☺
September 13, 2004 | Permalink
Land of the Living, by Lucy Kaplansky
Late afternoon back in New York town
Waking up as the wheels touch down
Pick up my guitar and walk away
Wish I was going home to stay
Line of taxis, I wait my turn
Tar and asphalt, exhaust and fumes
Beside the road on a patch of ground
Taxi drivers are kneeling down
Beneath the concrete sky I watch them pray
While the people of the world hurry on their way
I think they're praying for us all today
And the stories that fell from the sky that day
CHORUS
This is the land of the living
This is the land that's mine
She still watches over Manhattan
She's still holding onto that torch for life
Back home fire's still burning, I can see it in the air
Pictures of faces posted everywhere
They say "hazel eyes, chestnut hair
Mother of two missing down there"
I pass the firemen on duty tonight
Carpets of flowers in candlelight
And thank you in a child's scrawl
Taped to the Third Street firehouse wall
There's shadows of the lost on the faces I see
Brothers and strangers on this island of grief
There's death in the air but there's life on this street
There's life on this street
CHORUS
This is the land of the living
This is the land that's mine
She still watches over Manhattan
She's still holding onto that torch for life
Then I got in a taxi, said "Hudson Street please"
He started the meter and he looked at me
I glanced at his name on the back of his seat
And I looked out the window at the ghost filled streets
I noticed cuts on his hand and his face
And I said "You're bleeding, are you okay?"
He said "I'm not so good, got beat up today
And I'm not one of them no matter what they say
I'm just worried about my family
My wife's in the house and she's scared to leave"
And I didn't know what to say
I didn't know what to say, but I said a prayer for him anyway
CHORUS
This is the land of the living
This is the land that's mine
She still watches over Manhattan
She's still holding onto that torch for life
September 10, 2004 | Permalink
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