June 2005
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
« May   Jul »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Month June 2005

Well, Shit

You might not want to read this post while eating, and possibly not while you’re at work.

When it rains in NYC, it rarely fucks around – it’s either twelve hours of constant spitting, or a solid hour of ruin-your-clothes downpour. Last year around this time, a huge rainstorm knocked concrete out of an overpass, nearly killing a guy driving under it.

Yesterday, we had another substantial rainstorm. While I didn’t hear about any particular parts of the city crumbling under the wetness, there apparently were bigger problems: now we’ve got something in the water.

I realize for people outside of NYC, the thought of our municipal tap water is, well, troubling. The truth is, it’s actually quite good – a lot of money has gone into filtering and whatnot. The very famous bottled water episode of Bullshit had Penn & Teller’s crew going around Times Square with two bottles of water, one tap and one retail – the tap won out by a substantial margin. For all intents and purposes, it’s always been surprisingly good, and I’ve never had a problem drinking it prior to today.

But now, we have thrilling declarations like this from the Department of Health and Mental Hygine:

Following recent heavy rainstorms, higher than normal levels of particles have been detected in the City’s drinking water supply, which can interfere with the water chlorination process.

Particles. Oh sure, particles, those are normal…right? Wait – particles? Of what? Let’s read on:

These high levels were observed at approximately 2am today at the Hillview reservoir just north of New York City. While the affected water was diverted shortly thereafter, out of an abundance of caution, DOHMH is recommending that infants, the elderly, pregnant women and New Yorkers with conditions that compromise their immune systems– those with HIV/AIDS, especially those with CD4 counts less than 200; those with leukemia; and those who are post bone marrow transplantation – use either boiled or bottled water as a precaution for the next 24 hours (until noon Friday).

Okay, so people with weak immune systems should avoid the water for all of 24 hours. So far so good…

The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has requested that doctors increase testing for parasitic illnesses and immediately report these diseases as well as any increase in gastrointestinal symptoms, especially diarrheal illness.

This is where it starts getting unpleasant. The doctors are looking out for diarrhea and/or gastrointestinal problems. I wonder what could cause those problems in people with weak immune systems…oh wait, here’s a helpful list of things to avoid!

General precautions for people with weakened immune systems to prevent diarrheal illness – Avoid sexual practices that may result in exposure to feces. – Avoid drinking or accidentally swallowing water from lakes, rivers, ponds, streams, pools or waterparks. – Avoid contact with feces of all animals, particularly young farm animals such as calves. – Always wash hands thoroughly after any contact with animals; after any contact with soil (e.g., gardening); after changing diapers, or caring for someone with diarrhea; before eating, or preparing food.

They say you learn something new every day, so here’s your lesson for today: apparently anal sex increase your risk for diarrhea. One would hope that if you were going to do something like that with someone, and they were having diarrhea-like symptoms, they would inform you before you even went down that road. That’s not the sort of surprise you want to spring on someone mid-act.

Now that we’re all past that lovely mental image, let’s piece this together: The health departments have alerted doctors to look for diarrheal symptoms, especially in people with weak immune systems. The main recommendation if you want to avoid diarrheal symptoms is to stay away from fecal matter.

One might just conclude that if they’re worried about people contracting said symptoms from said water, that said particles might just be fecal in nature.

I’m not going to lose any sleep over this, though, because even if there is fecal matter in the water supply for the next twelve hours, it doesn’t come nearly as close to the level of bullshit per liter as this water.

The Very Best Of: Stick Figures In Peril

What a Croc

What a Croc, originally posted by courtneyp

<

p> There’s a Flickr group that, more than any other, cracks me horribly – Stick Figures In Peril. Taking the best examples from around the world of innocent stick figures ravaged by the dangers of society, SFIP is the most fun you’re legally allowed to have with stick figures. Besides courtneyp’s excellent photo above (repeat: it’s not mine), here are some other worthwhile shots from the pool:

Travel John
Moving Gate Can Cause Serious Injury Or Death
Stick Figures – concussion
Setting fire to your legs is generally a bad idea
Watch Your Head
Caution: Low Flying Dogs
Modern Dance
Never Leave Baby Unattended

Tunnel Ride

When we got on the train tonight, we rode in the very uncrowded front car. Riding in the front car leads to one of those strange, inexplicable pleasures: standing at the very front door, watching the tunnel go whizzing past you.

It’s not typical that I get to watch the long tunnel linking Manhattan and Queens from the front car – speeds can hit up to 60 mph, which isn’t fast in a car but is rather terrifying in a subway. With the car shaking violently and the loud sound of the tracks, being able to see out the front as you race towards the daylight is a unique experience. (I’ve been known to quietly sing the boat song from Willy Wonka – there’s no earthly way of know-ing, in which direction we are row-ing – when the train shoots through the tunnels too fast.)

I decided that rather than trying to take more pictures (like the above), I would just shoot video of the view. You can check it out here, or by clicking the picture above. It’s a strange little video – the blurring at the end is caused by the scratchitti and dust in the front window, and the weather was horribly overcast and grey. It is, however, strangely compelling – at least I’ve found it to be. Hope someone enjoys it.

Music That Changed Your Life – A Follow-Up

A little over a week ago, I started a new little musical project: soliciting my reader base for the song that changed your life the most.

To date, I’ve received 18 responses that were able to be included in the list. Some of the responses were succinct (“this got me listening to electronica”), and some were very nuanced. At least three songs have had a major affect on me, so the project has definitely exceeded my expectation. So, huge thanks to everyone who submitted songs.

At this point, I still have room for a few more songs from the credit I’ve accrued, so if you have something to contribute, please feel free to drop me a comment or IM. Instructions are still in the original post.

A week from now, I’ll finish the project and include the song that most changed my life. I’m sure you can’t wait.

EDIT: I would be remiss not to mention an excellent new blog I tripped over that relates to the original post; please check out The Shins Will Change Your Life for the very best in cloying music reviews.

Sticky Weekend

Watching The Central Park Haze

This weather is murderous – high today of 94, muggy, hot enough to make the sky hazy.

But no matter how gross it may be, and how much fluid I need to down after the fact, getting a picture like this makes it worthwhile.

Business Week Butchers The Microsoft Syndication News

It’s always sad when a large magazine like Business Week so badly butchers the news. Today’s offender is Jay Greene, who takes the news of Microsoft extending RSS and including functionality in Longhorn, and completely misses the mark in his coverage and analysis.

Allow me to pick it apart:

The software giant has decided to put its considerable weight behind Really Simple Syndication, known to the digerati simply as RSS.

Consider what this sentence is claiming: it’s called Really Simple Syndication, but the geeks call it RSS. And while I don’t disagree that geeks call it RSS (although a number of us prefer the format-neutral term “feeds”), I don’t know of any non-geeks who refer to it as anything other than RSS.

It should also be noted that Microsoft isn’t merely extended RSS 2.0, which is how most everyone has been treating it. At the bottom of their developer information page linked above, there are links to the specs for Atom and RSS 1.0, in addition to RSS 2.0. There’s no reference in the specs for the extension that it’s linked to merely one of these formats. This extension is not limited to a particular format.

The technology makes it convenient for Web users to keep tabs on their favorite blogs, news feeds, columnists, and video by signing up to have updates automatically zapped to their PCs or mobile devices.

Automatically zapped? Oh, please. I know there’s a need to occasionally dumb things down, but this is just ludicrous.

“Automatically zapped” indicates that any time a site changes, your machine instantly receives the change. This is not how syndication works, and is in fact incorrect on both parts of the phrase. Feeds are not sent to a computer, nor are they instantaneous. A computer has to go out and ask for the feed file, and then compares it to whatever entries it had previously seen. This happens on a regular schedule, or on demand.

Microsoft, which has largely been on the sidelines as RSS gained in popularity, announced plans on June 24 to bake RSS technology into the next version of its Windows operating system, dubbed Longhorn, due at the end of 2006.

They also announced extensions to syndication formats, which is the more shocking part of the news. Obviously this is worth glossing over, as it’s apparently too technical for the reader base. I mean, only the digerati would care about something like that.

What’s more, Microsoft is going after the RSS market in a very un-Microsoft-like way -– it’s making its RSS technology available for free using the so-called Creative Commons license.

If you’re looking for the single most misleading sentence in the whole article, this is it.

Microsoft’s “RSS technology” is not being made available for free; It’s the format extensions that are being released under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. This isn’t to say Microsoft can’t release source code later for their technology, but it’s not at all what was announced.

Furthermore, there is nothing “so-called” about the Creative Commons; it is a total non-sequitur and completely out of place. It’d be akin to me referring to the publication this article was published in as “the so-called Business Week”.

But Microsoft plans to dive much deeper when Longhorn ships. Including the RSS technology in the new operating system will allow thousands of software developers to create programs that take advantage of RSS feeds.

Thousands of software developers can already create programs that take advantage of RSS feeds. Thousands of software developers already have.

What Microsoft is doing to “dive much deeper” is using a system-level subscription list, fetching scheduler, and parser. While I can understand the nicety of the fetching scheduler and maybe the parser, I’m personally ambivalent about the system-wide subscription list. Still, there’s nothing preventing a developer from implementing RSS functionality now.

The giant’s foray into the RSS world is clearly a threat to upstart RSS reader companies.

Which is it – are they allowing thousands of software developers to create programs that take advantage of feeds, or are they the two thousand pound gorilla that is clearly a threat to upstart companies?

Look, it’s great if Microsoft is including a feed reader in IE – every browser should have one, simply because if people use it, they will see the benefits of syndication. Don’t think, however, that a product bound into the operating system is going to quench everyone’s thirst for tools. People still choose Firefox over IE and Safari, Eudora over Outlook, Adium over iChat. Third parties can survive, even with core OS support for technologies and protocols.

But Microsoft’s mere presence in the market will do one thing that all the other companies combined haven’t been able to achieve yet: It will make RSS mainstream technology.

How this reads to you depends on if you’re an optimist or a pessimist. As a realist, I will go down both paths.

Optimists will tell you syndication has been mainstream for years – look at the level of syndication provided by major companies like BBC, New York Times, Google, Reuters, et cetera. Look at the number of feed readers available like My Yahoo, My MSN, Bloglines, NetNewsWire, Gmail clips, and the like. People use RSS without knowing it: Apple’s whizzy new screensaver in Tiger, syndicated accounts on LiveJournal (if you’re reading this on LJ, you’re using syndication), live bookmarks in Firefox, and more.

Syndication has been mainstream for years, if you look at it that way.

Pessimists will tell you that even with all these great tools out there, there still aren’t enough people actually using it. Syndication scares people. Feeds are too hard to find, too hard to subscribe to via a standard method, and lead to quirks when you deal with things like character encoding and updated posts. None of the things Microsoft are doing – the features in Longhorn and IE, as well as the extensions to the formats – change any of this.

From this standpoint, syndication will never be mainstream.

Point being made: Either you can believe syndication is already mainstream and Microsoft’s work isn’t going to change anything, or you can believe that syndication isn’t mainstreams for reasons such that Microsoft’s work isn’t going to change anything. Net result: Microsoft’s work is not going to change anything.

On The New Box

I love this picture I took yesterday – it’s so easy to see the sun coming through.

Poor IRC Jokes Just Happen Naturally

First off, apologies about the Blosxom tutorial being delayed. It’ll be up soon – today was a bit kooky.

After an oddly-timed work day, I took off this afternoon for JFK, making my first ride on the Airtrain to get to the JetBlue terminal. Not that I was flying – I was merely meeting up with Suw for the short layover duration she had before she had to fly off back to London.

Having some time to kill when I got there, I logged onto IRC through my Sidekick so I could keep mutual friends up to date on her arrival. Now, IRC over the Sidekick requires going through SSH, and the signal in the baggage claim is lacking at best. Still, it managed to hold for most of the time I was waiting before arrival.

A bit after Suw appeared (the silly girl snuck past me, and then had to double back to find me), and we were waiting for her suitcase, I checked my Sidekick and noticed I had been knocked offline. I shrugged, not really caring to keep the connection open at this point. But apparently I missed an unintentionally funny quit message, given my location:

[17:22] *** RemyAtJFK quit ("Lost terminal")

Apple’s Other Great OS: OS X Server

Most everyone’s well familiar with OS X by now, be it from daily use over the last five years, or from hatred or jealousy. Speaking as to the powers of OS X would be silly; they’re well advertised, well known, and would only act as filler.

But not everyone has used Apple’s other OS, the server version of OS X. This is largely due to price – for consumers, it can be up to over seven times more expensive with no real benefits for end users. As such, it is often only those of us in institutions that have already invested in it that get to enjoy its perks.

So this post goes out to all the geeks toiling away in IT departments but haven’t looked at Apple’s offerings yet. Below the fold, you’ll find the five reasons I heart OS X Server and its related products – and why you should integrate it into your deployments.

Chapter 6

“Let’s start with the end,” Mr. Whittier would say.

He’d say, “Let’s start with a plot spoiler.”

The meaning of life. A unified field theory. The big reason why.

He’d say, “Lets get this big, big surprise over and done with.”

The earth, he’d say, is just a big machine. A big processing plant. A factory. That’s your answer. The big truth.

Think of a rock polisher, one of those drums, goes round and round, rolls twenty-four/seven, full of water and rocks and gravel. Grinding it all up. Round and round. Polishing those ugly rocks into gemstones. That’s the earth. Why it goes around. We’re the rocks. And what happens to us — the drama and pain and joy and war and sickness and victory and abuse — why, that’s just the water and sand to erode us. Grind us down. To polish us up, nice and bright.

That’s what Mr. Whittier would tell you.

Smooth as glass, that’s our Mr. Whittier. Buffed by pain. Polished and shining.

That’s why we love conflict, he says. We love to hate. To stop a war, we declare war on it. We must wipe out poverty. We must fight hunger. We campaign and challenge and defeat and destroy.

As human beings, our first commandment is:

Something needs to happen.

Mr. Whittier had no idea he was so right.

[Taken from pages 99-100 of Chuck Palahniuk's *Haunted.]*