Twisted's Journal
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01/16/2005 04:27 #36506
X Concert"What?"
The New World
[size=s](first song of second encore)[/size]
"honest to goodness the bars werent open this morning they must have been voting for a new president of something do you have a quarter?" i said yes because i did honest to goodness the tears have been falling all over the countrys face it was better before before they voted for whats his name this is suppose to be the new world flint ford auto mobil alabama windshield wiper buffalo new york gary indiana don't forget the motor city baltimore and d.c. now all we need is don't forget the motor city this was suppose to be the new world all we need is money just give us what you can spare twenty or thirty pounds of potatoes or twenty of thirty beers a turkey on thanks giving like alms for the poor all we need are the necessities and more it was better before they voted for what his name this is suppose to be the new world don't forget the motor city this was suppose to be the new world
01/15/2005 22:42 #36505
One more giftLooks a little busier than I imagined it. Maybe it's just because of the cutting board grid. Oh lord.
I can't wait to see X [inlink]twisted,59[/inlink] tonight!
OMG! I just heard about this on the radio --
Cinema for the Ear
The San Francisco Tape Music Festival 2005
January 20-22, 2005
ODC Theater, San Francisco
A 3-day festival of fixed media audio art distributed in real-time across a sixteen-loudspeaker surround sound system. Featured works include classics by Morton Feldman, Gyorgy Ligeti, and Frank Zappa; audio dramas; 3D nature recordings; and new compositions by local and international composers...
01/31/2005 17:42 #36504
Internet Archive Way Back MachineCategory: web
The Internet Archive is building a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, we provide free access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public.
Elmwoodstrip.com circa May 2003
02/01/2005 12:52 #36502
Local business directory with picturesCategory: web
Early Thursday, the company announced the first phase of its service, called A9.com Yellow Pages, with 20 million images from 10 cities, including Chicago, New York, San Francisco and Seattle.
People can call up a business listing to find contact information (with an Internet-to-phone dialing service), reviews, a local map and a photo of the business' facade. With a feature called "block view," people can also click to see adjacent businesses or surrounding neighborhoods.
To accomplish this feat, the company has sent a handful of vans onto the streets of America, touring around with digital video cameras strapped to their rooftops. The cameras are synchronized to a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver so that A9 can map local addresses to their images once recorded onto a computer hard drive. Because GPS can be inexact, the company has proprietary software to further map some images with addresses.
So far it has taken photos of roughly 1 million businesses in 10 metropolitan areas: Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, Denver, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, and Portland, Ore.
02/01/2005 13:59 #36503
What I won't be reading this monthThe articles with links have summaries online that anybody can read. You have to be a subscriber to read the whole thing. Maybe I should just bequeath my online subscription to someone who might use it.
The Atlantic Preview
Volume 295 No. 2 | March 2005
COMMENT American Casino
The promise and perils of Bush's "ownership society"
by Robert J. Shiller
FOREIGN POLICY What "W" Owes to "WW"
President Bush may not even know it, but he can trace his view of the world to Woodrow Wilson, who defined a diplomatic destiny for America that we can't escape
by David M. Kennedy
VERBATIM Rather's Familiar Quotations
THE LIST Security Fences
by Abigail Cutler
MEDIA J-School for Jerks
How you, too, can learn to behave like Bill O'Reilly
by Joshua Green
THE ODDS Who Will Be the Next James Bond?
by John Sellers
What's the Matter With Central Park West?
by Walter Shapiro
Primary Sources
Hizbollah's new toy; America's "Pedestrian Danger Index"; the perils of dialing drunk
THE WORLD IN NUMBERS The New Opium War
by Matthew Quirk
[This article is not available online.]
The Accuser
One woman has spent decades documenting crimes against humanity in Iraq. Now Saddam and his circle are facing justice
by William Langewiesche
The Accidental Autocrat
Vladimir Putin is not a democrat. Nor is he a czar like Alexander III, a paranoid like Stalin, or a religious nationalist like Dostoyevsky. But he is a little of all these--which is just what Russians seem to want
by Paul Starobin
The Truth About Harvard
It may be hard to get into Harvard, but it's easy to get out without learning much of enduring value at all. A recent graduate's report
by Ross Douthat
POETRY Male Voices, From Below
by John Updike
POETRY Now
by Frannie Lindsay
Meeting
A drawing
by Guy Billout
EDITOR'S CHOICE Clothes-Minded
The London Look: Fashion From Street to Catwalk, by Christopher Breward, Edwina Ehrman, and Caroline Evans; Harvard Rules, by Richard Bradley; The Glorious Cause, by Robert Middlekauff; The Meaning of Independence, by Edmund Morgan
by Benjamin Schwarz
I'll Be Damned
Graham Greene's most fervent loyalty was to betrayal
by Christopher Hitchens
READING LIST One Great Book Per Life
Writers who said it all to perfection in a single book and then most decently died
by Allan Gurganus
Marshal Plan
The age of parents as friends is over
by Sandra Tsing Loh
Backfire
A leading observer of militant Islam argues that the movement will undermine itself--if only the United States will let it
by Peter Beinart
INNOCENT BYSTANDER Feeling Entitled?
Huey Long's aspiration--"Every man a king!"--is at last within our grasp
by Cullen Murphy
A LOOK BACK 55 Years Ago in The Atlantic
"My Father: Leslie Stephen"
SPORT The Magician
The world's best pool player sees shots no one else can
by Pat Jordan
THE PUZZLER Cloverleaf
by Emily Cox & Henry Rathvon
Word Fugitives
by Barbara Wallraff
POST MORTEM Ex-Husband of Love Goddesses
Artie Shaw (1910-2004)
by Mark Steyn
Who's Who
A selective index to this month's issue
Compiled by Benjamin Healy
p.s. - they don't have an RSS feed or I would have just added it.