The Mendacity Index: Which president told the biggest whoppers? – The last 4 presidents get rated on their biggest lies. Guess who wins out?
Related: an excerpt [8KiB TXT] from Al Franken’s new book, “Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them.”
random($foo) is the occassionally still updated blog of Leonard Lin. My pics are on Flickr, code is on Github. @lhl on Twitter. More »
The Mendacity Index: Which president told the biggest whoppers? – The last 4 presidents get rated on their biggest lies. Guess who wins out?
Related: an excerpt [8KiB TXT] from Al Franken’s new book, “Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them.”
Interesting, jz and Doug Bowman will be doing some consulting on Apple’s website.
Although promised otherwise, USC still seems to still be offering NS 4.76 for download (as well as NS 6.0.2, a release so horrendously buggy that it doesn’t exist in Netscape’s product archive).
Microsoft’s big role on campus:
Bearing gifts of cash, software and computers worth $25 million, Microsoft Corp. came to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1999, saying it wanted to jointly develop educational technologies. Some scholars expressed more suspicion than gratitude.
Was on Sony.com today; the front page design isn’t horrible, but notice anything going on with the text? That’s right, the tabs are JPEGs, not GIF/PNG. Quite icky. Of course, I probably shouldn’t be one to talk…
I signed away the rights of my first film in class today. One can’t take the class without doing so.
Joyce Park: Towards Semi-Permeable Blogging (w/ mod_pubsub) – very good summary of the problem-space (-1 for use of term ‘Blogistan’)
Turning off auto-email checks would probably make me a lot more productive. Juha Haataja writes:
Jeremy Zawodny
writes: “E-mail is not real-time. It never has been. Why do you assume
that your messages and received and read within 20 seconds? Some people
actually work.” — This is a good point. You don’t need to be
available immediately! There is a recent report
(in PDF) about the cost of e-mail interruption: “The time it takes the
average employee to recover from an email interrupt and to return to
their work at the same work rate at which they left it, is on average
64 seconds.” Thus, if you receive 50 e-mails in a day, you might lose
almost on hour of productive time. Thus, setting in your mail program
the interval between e-mail checks to one hour is a good tactic, as is
disabling all notifications of received e-mail.
A recent /. post prod me to do some research on CD-Rs for archival purposes. It looks like the MAM-A (and MAM-E in Europe) lines of CD-Rs, with the combination of Phtalocyanine dye and superior uniformity/quality make it ideal for archiving (and it looks like there aren’t many other players in the market anymore). Their top of the line Gold/Gold (650MiB) goes for $0.94/pop in quantities of 100 ($1.48/GiB), while the Silver/Gold (700MiB) can is $0.66 in quantities of 100 ($0.97/GiB).
Of course, doing large backups makes one wonder, why not DVD-Rs? And why not? A 50/pack of MAM-A DVD-Rs is $169.99 for 50, which comes out to $3.40/disc, or $0.78/GiB.
BTW, doing searching for the cost/GiB conversions has firmly convinced me that separate binary unit notation really is needed, otherwise evil marketing causes confusion.
So, I’m not quite running around with my head cut off, but I haven’t really had a chance to post anything recently. Last week was spent trying to tie up loose ends, filling out lots of paperwork (class registration, financial crap, etc.) and this weekend was topped off by coming down with a nice little bug. My first class starts tomorrow, so we’ll see how it goes. In the meantime, I’ve realized that I’ve acquired almost 40 open browser windows (it’d be too scary to count the number of tabs).
My thoughts: listings are fine, but for large sites, it probably makes sense to organize by role (more specifically function) – need to come back to this later
Matt has a writeup of how the Lazyweb helped him set up VNC to get his PC and Mac to happily coexist.