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Monthly Archive for April, 2005

Darth Vader’s Blog

This is destined to be a very well-known site very soon, I think, but if you are even remotely familiar with Star Wars, you really must visit The Darth Side. It seems to be Darth Vader’s blog, beginning just after the Death Star was attacked by the rebels, or, between Episodes 4 and 5. Darth begins with a sentiment we know all too well: My Sinister Agents have failed me again.

This is one of most successfully humorous websites I’ve seen in a long time, funny because it is actually brilliantly written and hilarious, not just because it is silly. For the full effect, read some of the comments; Darth stops in to respond to people’s comments quite frequently.

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Object Oriented Javascript

I didn’t know that you could do this, but Chris Casciano of ChunkySoup.net has an article about Object Oriented Javascript — or at least, the closest you can come to such a thing right now.

This is a cool thing, something I’ll probalby tinker with tonight.

How I found the page was an interesting mini-odyssey. Just in case we’ve forgotten how easy the web makes it to discover new things, and how powerful the phemomenon can potentially be… I followed a link from GoogleNews (something about Linux) to OsDir.com, from which I visited Danny O’Brien’s monthly review of the evil that men do on the interweb, in which Danny talked about de.licio.us and de.lirio.us, which are pretty old news now, but I had never really given either more than a cursory glance, so I popped over to de.lirio.us and saw a link to Julien Couvreur’s programming blog, in which he was speaking about Object Oriented Javascript and linking back to chunkysoup.net. Phew.

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Letters to a young conservative

I started reading Dinesh D’Souza’s Letters to a Young Conservative the other day. I picked it up on impulse in Borders yesterday, and was impressed enough to carry it up to the cashier and purchase it. As I left, the cashier asked, smiling, if I were a young conservative. An odd question, considering the book I had just bought. I said that I wasn’t that young (I’m 31).

It’s a good book. I had never heard of D’Souza before yesterday; then again, I was a drug-addled anarchist in the early nineties, and primarily apolitical up until about 1999….

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Pictures of New York City

The quality is not the best; the camera is cheap to begin with, and then I scaled them down to fit without being resized dynamically. Enjoy.

If I remember correctly, this is the New York Real Estate building. It is kitty corner from what was once the World Trade Center.

{mospagebreak}

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Highest/Lowest paid CEOs

While I’m still on lunch, and still browsing Fortune’s site, here’s an interesting article on the highest and lowest paid CEOs of the past year.

I will freely admit that I am not one who finds large amounts of money obscene, nor do I pretend to comprehend the mindset that does so; so the largest of these figures not only doesn’t alarm or offend me, I think it’s great.

What is more fascinating to me is the lowest paid CEOs — Apple’s Steve Jobs and Kinder Morgan Energy’s Richard Kinder both brought home a walloping $1. This a great idea for tax purposes, since earned income is taxed at a higher rate than any other income. Most likely they each had bonuses from stock options, or they may have both lived off other investments, hard to say.

Larry Ellison (Oracle) has them beat, though; a few years back (2001 or 2002, I think), he drew a salary of $0; however, he also redeemed an unprecedented $706 million dollars worth of stock options that year. Not a bad year after all.

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Google a threat to Microsoft?

I started subscribing to Fortune magazine not too long ago, and their latest cover story is pretty interesting (you can read the first page online, the full article requires a subscription… or you can stop by your local Borders or Barnes & Noble (or Chapters) to check it out).

Entitled "Gates vs. Google: Search and Destroy," (get it? "Search"? These journalists, I tell you what, they sure are clever) it summarizes how Google has become more of a software company than simply a search engine, how Microsoft employees (apparently over 100 so far) are jumping ship to work for Google (Joe Beda is a well known example), and how Google differs from other competitors Microsoft has crushed in the past.

The main difference, of course, is that simply owning the Operating System doesn’t give Microsoft a way to muscle Google off the scene. In the case of Netscape and WordPerfect (probably the most well-known examples of market leaders crushed by MS), all that Microsoft needed to do was come up with something "good enough," and make it slightly more available (pre-installed and integrated, in the case of IE). In the case of Google, the same action is not really available. Certainly MSN search is, and will definitely remain, the default search engine when you fire up IE for the first time, but users, even non-tech-savvy users, have become accustomed to choice on the web. If users want to use Google, they simply will, and this is so easy to change that any possible attempt to make it more difficult is only likely to frustrate and alienate users.

Gates is quoted as saying both, "[Google] is more like us than anyone else we’ve competed with," and also that, "When we’re through, people will look back at how they used to ‘Google’ things and laugh." Evidently Bill thinks that Google will fold just like every other competition has in the past.

I’d say that Bill’s attitude is certainly appropriate; after all it’s his company, and he has a right (even a duty) to be fanatically optimistic about its success. But while his attitude is appropriate given his position, that doesn’t necessarily mean it’s accurate. I have my doubts that Google will be as easily unseated as Microsoft hopes. The new MSN Search, while an improvement, was not really all that impressive.

Fortune’s article points out that it’s been years since a Microsoft product generated the sort of buzz that Google generates almost on a monthly basis. Now that is a very good point, one I don’t see changing any time soon.

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Luggage, etc.

The luggage arrived late this afternoon. Other than one of the wheels having been totally busted off the larger of our two suitcases, all was intact.

For only having been gone two days (three, but no mail would have been delivered Sunday), my mailbox was alarmingly full. A good portion of that can be attributed to my latest burst of Amazon purchases. I’m sold on Amazon’s used book selections; even with shipping costs, I usually save close to 50%, more or less, on each title I find. There are exceptions, of course, depending on the book. The gap in price between new and used books is an interesting gage of the actually supply and demand for the book; some used books are pretty close in price to the retail value, probably an indication of a book that is well-regarded, and probably worth the money.

We have some reasonably interesting pictures from New York. Tomorrow, I will attempt to get a selection of those, and of my wife’s recent trip to Chile, online.

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Home, again

Well, we’re home again. It was a good vacation; other than visit MoMA we didn’t do much in the way of touristy sightseeing. We didn’t go to the Statue of Liberty or the Empire State building, mainly because of time restrictions. We did get to visit the crater that used to be the World Trade Center, and it remains a sobering sight. The buildings to either side of the site still have their sides and top sections blown off, and are still under repair. The names of those who died, presumably both occupants and rescuers, are listed on the viewing fence around the area.

Other than that, we visited SoHo, which I had no idea was named for "South of Houston Street" — which it is. North of Houston Street is called NoHo. It was fun; I guess I didn’t know what to expect there, but it’s basically just a trendy shopping/living area.

All in all, New York city was a great place to visit. I’d visit again in a second.

US Airways, on the other hand, I cannot recommend quite so highly. They lost our bags in Philadelphia, but we are supposed to be getting these back today.

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NY, continued

New York is a great place. We went to MoMA (the Museum of Modern Art) last night, that was really quite cool — they have a full room of Jackson Pollock, the seeing of which caused me to rethink (yet again) my ambivalent attitude toward "art". I finally concluded that I don’t dislike art, I just dislike snobbery; of which I’ve been guilty myself. (Find the book "Snobbery" by Joseph Epstein; interesting read). The Pollock room was quite amazing, as was most of the other work. Maybe more later on this.

For dinner we went to some small place called the Playwright Tavern on 53rd St. A really cool place with good food; I recommend it if you can’t find a restaurant and you’re around that area.

Gotta run!

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In New York

We’re in New York city for a few days. If anyone reading this has suggestions for fun/cool stuff to do in New York, please leave a comment — thanks! I may only be posting sporadically, but I have wireless here in my hotel room, so then again I may find time to blog a bit.

Later!
  
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