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Paul's Journal

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06/03/2004 23:12 #30964

Eating at Merlins
Tonight we went to Merlins on the corner of Breckenridge and Elmwood in celebration of the new spell checking capabilities on the site.

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We ordered 2 dozen steamer clams and corn on the cob. It looks tasty, as you can see below.

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On the wall there is an award and article about Merlins being chosen as the Artvoice reader's choice clam bar, I agree, accept for the wait. I bet the wait would be easier if we were drinking like everybody else.


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Big clams are better than little ones, they fill you up. They also have snow crab legs, a bunch of different types of oysters, shrimp, lobster
dainties, clams casino, oysters rockefeller, and dungeness crab.

As they say in Germany. "it tastes."

06/03/2004 11:36 #30963

Using the Site on the Sly via Email
A lot of you seem concerned about adding entries or reading the site while at work. That is why I created the email system a couple weeks ago. The email system allow you to both read the last ten journal entries or post a journal entry including attached pictures using only your email. This looks a lot less scandalous than the web. For instructions, check out the Info page, which shows up every time you log into the site. Or simply click here [inlink]info,7[/inlink].

06/03/2004 02:40 #30962

Finally Spell Checking
I am so glad that i spent about 12 hours straight developing the spell check. I am so angry that the stupid ISP could not install the pspell libraries for PHP.

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I was tired of waiting though, as I requested it about 3 months ago, so I went ahead and built my own spell checking class and functions. I assembled about 400,000 english words into a mysql database dictionary, and you'll can add to it, using the spell check function. For instructions see the most current news article [inlink]news,319[/inlink]

06/02/2004 16:22 #30961

More on Steve Kurtz and Joi Ito
I was searching through google news, which lead me to CNN which lead me to an article on blogging and a blog by the very famous japanese techy, Joi Ito I was interested in seeing what his blog was like and what he had to say abou internet communication.

BLOG 1 front page - an email from Steve Kurtz to Joi Ito and his response. I will mirror it here because it will surely be gone someday when we try and look back on what happend. You can alos read it at Joi Ito Site

VERBATIM COPY FROM JOI ITO BLOG



Email from artist suspected by FBI of bioterrorism
08:25 JST

Art - Health and Medicine - US Policy and Politics

In the comments on an earlier post on this blog about an artist suspected by the FBI of bioterrorism, there was a great deal of speculation about the incident and the facts.

I emailed the artist, Steven Kurtz, asking him for the facts, and here is his reply.

Steve Kurtz

Hi Joi,

Its a long and complex story.

To shorten it:

I was detained for 22 hours by the FBI/

They seized my wife's body, house, cat and car. These items were released a week later. In the house they seized computers, science equipment, chunks of my library, teaching files, I-D, and all my research for a new book.

The only thing I have gotten back is my wife's birth certificate

On Sunday, two members of CAE got summons to appear before a Grand Jury. (This is bad. It means I will be charged. Grand Jury is a closed court--only the FBI gets to present its case).

The Grand Jury will meet on June 15. In all proabability, I will be arrested shortly thereafter.

Best,
Steve/CAE



ITO's RESPONSE
Many people talked to me about this incident and strongly support the FBI's position on this. I still don't know enough details on the FBI's handling of the matter, but I DO think biotech as art is a legitimate form of art. At Ars Electronica, we did a whole festival on Life Science as art. Artists, including Steve, publish their works, talk about the impact, and often teach. Terrorists do not.

One famous example of biotech art is the bioluminescent rabbit created by genetic engineering, adding genes from a jellyfish to a rabbit to make it glow in the dark. This created a great deal of controversy and debate. It was the intention of the artist to cause this debate with an extremely tangible project.

I believe this form of expression is important and mistaking artistic expression for something else is a great risk to society. However, I suppose it would be prudent for artists to be aware of the risks involved in handling the "supplies" they use for their art.


It's kind of sad that he chose to use the Glow Rabbit as his example of biogenetic art after we heard the CAE people denounce it as fetishist at the Collaborrative Networks conference.


06/01/2004 11:59 #30960

Camping in Smethport
We finished camping in Smethport today. I had no network service, so I began to feel a little disconnected. I get so frustrated now trying to argue about things that have a definate answer when we don't have access to all the information that is available.

For example, do moth and butterfly pupae develop into butterflies, or do the butterflies hatch out of them. I felt that they must develop into them. We could have no answer in our information wasteland.

On another note, Holly's mom braved the campout with her new hip and brought her seriously tasty pecan pie. It was good to see her and she said that camping is the only thing that makes her happy. She also has some pretty funny stories.

Cintra came too and brought her dogs and a chainsaw. She should be on survivor.

A weekend in flames - For my personal taste we had too much fire. I grew up with the whole Low Impact camping ideals, and was taught to only
use as many resources as necessary on a camping trip. The chainsaw kind of saddened me, because I knew there was no way I needed that much fire,
let alone one that runs on iraqi blood. The chainsaw was probably brought in because Matt and I refused to saw more wood. I just felt
saturated with fire, it wasn't cause I was lazy.

If I was alone, I would eat less meat, more trailmix, some instant noodles, and a piece of chicken on a stick, some nuts, and an apple. No
grill, no mega-fire, no cooler, little work.

Matthew and I captured lots of nature pictures, which we will post tonight, including a video of the campfire. We also realized what our next big digital art project would be. I don't want to release any more details till we launch it sometime next month.

Somehow against all weather advisories, we ended up staying too long and got rained on. I am glad I went, I just wish I listened to matthew at
7am, when he said lets go, its starting to rain, instead of waiting till it poured, so I could sleep an extra hour.
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