We had a few enormous geese take up residence in the fields around the office. Today I noticed they were all gone. I wonder what happened?
- Z
Zobar's Journal
My Podcast Link
03/15/2010 21:27 #51196
bad scene03/11/2010 21:03 #51160
AXE COPCategory: awexome
Write off the next ten months, I hereby declare AXE COP to be the Best Thing of 2010.
It's written by a five-year-old and illustrated by his 29-year-old brother. I'm pretty sure something this nonsensical needs a special permit from the Pope to be this awesome.
- Z
_______________
ps. Don't listen to your music library sorted ascending by track duration. Bad juju.
pps. Coffee Crisp tastes like a doughnut, if a doughnut were a candy bar instead.
It's written by a five-year-old and illustrated by his 29-year-old brother. I'm pretty sure something this nonsensical needs a special permit from the Pope to be this awesome.
- Z
_______________
ps. Don't listen to your music library sorted ascending by track duration. Bad juju.
pps. Coffee Crisp tastes like a doughnut, if a doughnut were a candy bar instead.
james - 03/11/10 23:54
Oh no. The RSS feed I subscribed to was bad. I was behind.
Oh no. The RSS feed I subscribed to was bad. I was behind.
james - 03/11/10 23:47
I freakin' love Axe Cop, especially his sock-armed side kick.
I freakin' love Axe Cop, especially his sock-armed side kick.
tinypliny - 03/11/10 21:31
Is juju a shard of the pit of the jujube that is unintentionally left in the dried fruit and as a result, bruises or tears the oesophageal mucosa of kids who accidentally swallow them?
I knew that.
Is juju a shard of the pit of the jujube that is unintentionally left in the dried fruit and as a result, bruises or tears the oesophageal mucosa of kids who accidentally swallow them?
I knew that.
03/06/2010 18:19 #51119
derby girlsNo respect for technology.
- Z
- Z
zobar - 03/07/10 17:22
Oh, during the rye bread toss one night someone nearly knocked the $3000 projector off its platform 20ft up. But what's worse is that at another game someone hit an autistic child in the face with a loaf of bread and gave her a bloody nose. Last night it went significantly more smoothly, in part thanks to some 'Sensitivity Training.' I don't know why we never had these problems before..
- Z
Oh, during the rye bread toss one night someone nearly knocked the $3000 projector off its platform 20ft up. But what's worse is that at another game someone hit an autistic child in the face with a loaf of bread and gave her a bloody nose. Last night it went significantly more smoothly, in part thanks to some 'Sensitivity Training.' I don't know why we never had these problems before..
- Z
tinypliny - 03/07/10 16:55
That people eat rye bread when they are sloshed at 10K feet above sea level?
That people eat rye bread when they are sloshed at 10K feet above sea level?
paul - 03/07/10 16:45
What does that mean?
What does that mean?
dragonlady7 - 03/07/10 02:13
IZ THAT THE BEST YOUR CMERA PHONE CAN DO I THOUGHT IW T WOUD BE BETTER.
IZ THAT THE BEST YOUR CMERA PHONE CAN DO I THOUGHT IW T WOUD BE BETTER.
02/20/2010 11:54 #51046
not a stupid windows phone ad(e:paul) wanted to know how my Nexus One compares to an iPhone. I previously had a first-generation iPhone, though (e:dragonlady7) has a 3GS. I'm still on AT&T's network, though not for long. It works just fine on EDGE, though T-Mobile's data service is cheaper and faster.
Except for storage capacity, the Nexus One hardware specs are much better than the iPhone 3GS. It is about the same size [slightly smaller] and weight [slightly lighter]. The battery life is comparable [slightly less]. The display is a little larger but has an insane resolution [800x480 @ 252ppi vs 480x320 @ 163ppi]. The camera has a flash and digital zoom, and is five megapixels rather than three. It records video at 720x480 at 20fps 'or higher', compared with 640x480 at 30fps. It has a 1GHz processor compared with 600MHz [both ARM Cortex A8]. It has twice as much RAM [512MB vs 256MB]. The speaker seems a little tinnier than the iPhone's. The hardware design is slick, the one glitch I found being that the target area for the soft-buttons is actually slightly above them, along the bottom edge of the touch-screen.
Nexus One definitely has a more 'open' feel to it. It isn't carrier-locked. It uses a standard Micro USB connector [although this is not compatible with the more common 'Mini USB' connector]. You can upgrade the storage [MicroSD] relatively cheaply up to 16GB [32GB when it becomes available] without buying a new phone and service contract. You can mount the MicroSD card as a mass-storage device, and transfer files to-and-from without restriction. You can replace the battery. You can install applications on it from third-party sources. OS updates are pushed directly from the manufacturer without going through the carrier. The manual comes with instructions for bypassing your carrier [via Google Voice] when placing international phone calls. You can, in theory, get a shell prompt on the phone or unlock the bootloader using tools supplied and supported by the manufacturer for free [although it's unclear to me how that's useful, and unlocking the bootloader voids the warranty].
Android OS feels comfortable coming from iPhone, but it's definitely different. It has a lot of 'wow' features of varying usefulness - interactive wallpaper; Google Goggles, which lets you search by photo & location; Compass View in maps, which adjusts the display heading when you move the phone. All text fields support voice input, which works pretty well.
Overall, it has a more 'power-user' feel to it, without being excessively geeky. You can place active widgets on your home screen in addition to application icons and bookmarks. Application switching is smoother than in iPhone, with the Back button working smoothly within and between applications. Android also has an 'Alt-Tab' equivalent which shows the last six apps you used. It not only supports but relies heavily on multitasking, and even provides a cumulative display of battery usage broken down by application. If you pull down the status bar at the top of the display, it shows all pending notifications from running applications; poking one takes you to the right place in the right application.
The Android platform encourages interapplication communication, so the applications integrate tightly with each other. To wit: Facebook. My contacts came from Google Contacts and a vCard export I did from Address Book, but the contact photos came from each person's Facebook profile [this is the first time I've ever had reasonable photos in my address book]. When you click on anyone's picture anywhere in the UI, it shows their Facebook status and a list of things you can do to them: phone, text, email, map, Facebook. It's not that Facebook has a deal with Google, but that their application takes advantage of hooks that anyone else can use.
The built-in apps are mixed, in comparison with iPhone. 'Maps' is way better, giving live navigation instructions in the foreground or background. 'Browser' is a version of Mobile Safari, but its zoom feature is a little wonky. Though when you zoom in, it rewraps text to the viewport, which is nice, and it creates auto-links from addresses as well as phone numbers. 'Messaging' is slightly nicer on Android due to some neat minor features like showing the recipient's photo and Facebook status in the header. Gmail as an app is largely comparable to Gmail as a web-app, with the addition of new-message notifications. 'Contacts' has a fairly awful and confusing UI which really needs to be replaced. 'Music' is somewhat disappointing - I miss 'now playing' on the lock screen, sound check, and EQ settings. It's also very difficult to export playlists and music from iTunes. 'Clock' should have a timer and stopwatch in addition to alarms. There is no built-in 'Notes' application.
People have been complaining lately of bugs in Android. Yes there are bugs in Android, but I think the impact on user experience is exaggerated. In any case I've seen, if you are relatively savvy you can probably understand what's happening and work around it.
Oh right and you can also make calls with it. (-:
- Z
Except for storage capacity, the Nexus One hardware specs are much better than the iPhone 3GS. It is about the same size [slightly smaller] and weight [slightly lighter]. The battery life is comparable [slightly less]. The display is a little larger but has an insane resolution [800x480 @ 252ppi vs 480x320 @ 163ppi]. The camera has a flash and digital zoom, and is five megapixels rather than three. It records video at 720x480 at 20fps 'or higher', compared with 640x480 at 30fps. It has a 1GHz processor compared with 600MHz [both ARM Cortex A8]. It has twice as much RAM [512MB vs 256MB]. The speaker seems a little tinnier than the iPhone's. The hardware design is slick, the one glitch I found being that the target area for the soft-buttons is actually slightly above them, along the bottom edge of the touch-screen.
Nexus One definitely has a more 'open' feel to it. It isn't carrier-locked. It uses a standard Micro USB connector [although this is not compatible with the more common 'Mini USB' connector]. You can upgrade the storage [MicroSD] relatively cheaply up to 16GB [32GB when it becomes available] without buying a new phone and service contract. You can mount the MicroSD card as a mass-storage device, and transfer files to-and-from without restriction. You can replace the battery. You can install applications on it from third-party sources. OS updates are pushed directly from the manufacturer without going through the carrier. The manual comes with instructions for bypassing your carrier [via Google Voice] when placing international phone calls. You can, in theory, get a shell prompt on the phone or unlock the bootloader using tools supplied and supported by the manufacturer for free [although it's unclear to me how that's useful, and unlocking the bootloader voids the warranty].
Android OS feels comfortable coming from iPhone, but it's definitely different. It has a lot of 'wow' features of varying usefulness - interactive wallpaper; Google Goggles, which lets you search by photo & location; Compass View in maps, which adjusts the display heading when you move the phone. All text fields support voice input, which works pretty well.
Overall, it has a more 'power-user' feel to it, without being excessively geeky. You can place active widgets on your home screen in addition to application icons and bookmarks. Application switching is smoother than in iPhone, with the Back button working smoothly within and between applications. Android also has an 'Alt-Tab' equivalent which shows the last six apps you used. It not only supports but relies heavily on multitasking, and even provides a cumulative display of battery usage broken down by application. If you pull down the status bar at the top of the display, it shows all pending notifications from running applications; poking one takes you to the right place in the right application.
The Android platform encourages interapplication communication, so the applications integrate tightly with each other. To wit: Facebook. My contacts came from Google Contacts and a vCard export I did from Address Book, but the contact photos came from each person's Facebook profile [this is the first time I've ever had reasonable photos in my address book]. When you click on anyone's picture anywhere in the UI, it shows their Facebook status and a list of things you can do to them: phone, text, email, map, Facebook. It's not that Facebook has a deal with Google, but that their application takes advantage of hooks that anyone else can use.
The built-in apps are mixed, in comparison with iPhone. 'Maps' is way better, giving live navigation instructions in the foreground or background. 'Browser' is a version of Mobile Safari, but its zoom feature is a little wonky. Though when you zoom in, it rewraps text to the viewport, which is nice, and it creates auto-links from addresses as well as phone numbers. 'Messaging' is slightly nicer on Android due to some neat minor features like showing the recipient's photo and Facebook status in the header. Gmail as an app is largely comparable to Gmail as a web-app, with the addition of new-message notifications. 'Contacts' has a fairly awful and confusing UI which really needs to be replaced. 'Music' is somewhat disappointing - I miss 'now playing' on the lock screen, sound check, and EQ settings. It's also very difficult to export playlists and music from iTunes. 'Clock' should have a timer and stopwatch in addition to alarms. There is no built-in 'Notes' application.
People have been complaining lately of bugs in Android. Yes there are bugs in Android, but I think the impact on user experience is exaggerated. In any case I've seen, if you are relatively savvy you can probably understand what's happening and work around it.
Oh right and you can also make calls with it. (-:
- Z
zobar - 02/20/10 17:43
I haven't talked to a human at T-Mobile yet [I just ordered my SIM card & service online] but their rate schedule makes a lot more sense than AT&T's.
I have a first-generation iPhone. (e:dragonlady7) has an iPhone 3GS. My monthly iPhone surcharge is $20/mo and includes 200 text messages. Her monthly iPhone surcharge is $30/mo plus $5 for 200 text messages. My SMS overage is 5c each, whereas hers is 10c each. I might be persuaded that 3G costs AT&T 75% more to provide, but - when I give my phone to my mom, how much you want to bet they'll charge her the full $30/mo for 2G? Furthermore, they won't unlock my old phone even though my contract is up. It's not for technical reasons, it's just too profitable for them. It doesn't matter how polite they are when they tell me this, it's still crappy.
With T-Mobile, I have my own phone so I don't need a contract. Since I'm not paying off a subsidy my monthly rates are actually lower. And the phone is unlocked so I can do what I want with it. I don't think any mobile phone carrier's customer service is going to make me jizz my pants, but good corporate policy is a good start.
- Z
I haven't talked to a human at T-Mobile yet [I just ordered my SIM card & service online] but their rate schedule makes a lot more sense than AT&T's.
I have a first-generation iPhone. (e:dragonlady7) has an iPhone 3GS. My monthly iPhone surcharge is $20/mo and includes 200 text messages. Her monthly iPhone surcharge is $30/mo plus $5 for 200 text messages. My SMS overage is 5c each, whereas hers is 10c each. I might be persuaded that 3G costs AT&T 75% more to provide, but - when I give my phone to my mom, how much you want to bet they'll charge her the full $30/mo for 2G? Furthermore, they won't unlock my old phone even though my contract is up. It's not for technical reasons, it's just too profitable for them. It doesn't matter how polite they are when they tell me this, it's still crappy.
With T-Mobile, I have my own phone so I don't need a contract. Since I'm not paying off a subsidy my monthly rates are actually lower. And the phone is unlocked so I can do what I want with it. I don't think any mobile phone carrier's customer service is going to make me jizz my pants, but good corporate policy is a good start.
- Z
zobar - 02/20/10 16:11
Sure it can do file uploads. You just have to undef ANDROID_DISABLE_UPLOAD in WebCore/WebCorePrefixAndroid.h:104 and tinker with ChromeClientAndroid::runOpenPanel in WebKit/Android/WebCoreSupport/ChromeClientAndroid.cpp:371
No that's not Linux humor. :::link::: :::link:::
- Z
Sure it can do file uploads. You just have to undef ANDROID_DISABLE_UPLOAD in WebCore/WebCorePrefixAndroid.h:104 and tinker with ChromeClientAndroid::runOpenPanel in WebKit/Android/WebCoreSupport/ChromeClientAndroid.cpp:371
No that's not Linux humor. :::link::: :::link:::
- Z
paul - 02/20/10 15:02
Can you upload files in the browser yet?
I will probably switch at some point althought the thing I do most on mu phone are listen to music and browse both of which the iPhone are pretty good at.
Cost was the main issue for me. I used to always spent like $500 on phones until the iPhone. Since then it's been way cheaper. Also i can't justify 2g edge speeds after like 3 years of 3g. I guess if I went with tmobile it would be cheaper and 3g but I used to really hate them both in terms of network and customer service when I had he nokia 7710. Maybe it's better now.
For the unlocked price I felt like if I was going to spend that much I would go with the Nokia n900 which also has awesome resolution - the thing I miss most.
Can you upload files in the browser yet?
I will probably switch at some point althought the thing I do most on mu phone are listen to music and browse both of which the iPhone are pretty good at.
Cost was the main issue for me. I used to always spent like $500 on phones until the iPhone. Since then it's been way cheaper. Also i can't justify 2g edge speeds after like 3 years of 3g. I guess if I went with tmobile it would be cheaper and 3g but I used to really hate them both in terms of network and customer service when I had he nokia 7710. Maybe it's better now.
For the unlocked price I felt like if I was going to spend that much I would go with the Nokia n900 which also has awesome resolution - the thing I miss most.
jenks - 02/20/10 12:45
wow, that actually sounds pretty good.
and a minor point, fwiw- a recent iphone fb app update lets you sync your Address Book photos with FB. I.e. puts people's FB photos into your Address Book. Which I like.
wow, that actually sounds pretty good.
and a minor point, fwiw- a recent iphone fb app update lets you sync your Address Book photos with FB. I.e. puts people's FB photos into your Address Book. Which I like.
02/18/2010 20:27 #51040
i'm aiight if you're aiightSorry about Chocolate Rain, guys. [Although I admit, Tay Zonday singing You're A Mean One, Mr Grinch is pretty hilarious.] For penance I changed my user sound [which I must not have done in years] to a CD I dug up at the office. -->
Thus bringing us to today's moment of Wikipedia Zen:
UPDATED TO ADD:
- Z
Thus bringing us to today's moment of Wikipedia Zen:
Terminator X quit the hip-hop scene in 2003 and has been running an ostrich farm in South Carolina.
UPDATED TO ADD:
- Z
tinypliny - 03/15/10 22:07
So how many large eggs worth is an ostrich egg? Is ostrich farming primarily done for their eggs? I wonder how serious bakers deal with this layer of measurement complexity - their lives seem strife with repetitive measuring without the ostrich-egg-boggle-factor.
So how many large eggs worth is an ostrich egg? Is ostrich farming primarily done for their eggs? I wonder how serious bakers deal with this layer of measurement complexity - their lives seem strife with repetitive measuring without the ostrich-egg-boggle-factor.
I was running low on lunch money. Nom nom nom, etc.
Someone snatched em and brought em to the butcher for processing. That's what happened.
That's as close as I got to it- just feathers, as far as I can tell.
- Z
Is that a rotting goose corpse in the middle? You need to do better than this if you want to slide into the roadkill (e:strip) roster.