Betips Going Away

Long after the flavor’s gone, I’ve decided to turn betips.net over to someone else. This is kind of a hard decison – many hundreds of unpaid hours have gone into the site, and it served as a test-bed for some cool things, like TrackerBase. For a couple of years it was one of very few full-time servers running BeOS on the Internet. These days the site is all PHP/MySQL under OS X, but I haven’t touched the content for ages… just keep it around because it’s nice to have a domain at my fingertips for file transfer, etc. But I’ve got other ideas for that now, and this really should be in the hands of someone who lives and breathes BeOS. Let me know if you’re interested in hosting – shacker at birdhouse org.

(This post has been modified).

Music: Velvet Underground :: I Heard Her Call My Name

.Mac Address Sync

.Mac will now sync with your address book. Even better, it will do it across multiple machines, which is the real beauty part. In conjunction with iSync, it will work across multiple machines and your handheld, using your .Mac acct as a backing store. Works and looks fantastic – this could be the “killer app” for .Mac. Chalk up another one for Web Services, the RCA phono jack of internet computing. The missing bridge for me is that I’m using Entourage rather than Mail.app and Address Book. So the bridge I really need is Entourage —> .Mac —> handheld.

Apple is doing better in the server market than analysts expected. Personally, my itch to own and operate an XServe is getting scratchier by the day.

Music: Mable John :: Same Time Same Place

How Should We Use Our Power?

Watched Bush’s State of the Union address outside in the J-School courtyard during a faculty mixer, huddled around the tube with 30 or so journalism profs. A lot of seemingly liberal words coming from his mouth — commitment to hydrogen fuel cells, AIDS assistance in Africa, support for drug addicts domestically… was this the Bush we know talking? As if he was reaching hard to pull himself back toward the center after two years of extremism, trying hard to build emergency support in response to rapidly slipping popularity…. give us a shadow of the Gore we never got? Who knows. All to soften the blow for the war drums to come… But his speech was eloquent, no doubt, except for hilarious consistent use of “nucular.”

Then down to Zellerbach Hall for the big debate. Packed hall, overflow crowds. Unfortunately, the we thought dove (Danner) was a bit soft with his arguments, while the hawk (Hitchens) was kind of arrogant and convoluted, talking way over his time, using 3x more words than necessary to express any given thought. Both brilliant, but neither of them really impressed or illuminated the issues in any significant way.

My big takeaway from the evening was Danner’s point that Iraq is already under containment – occupied by an inspections regime, living under a U.S.-controlled no-fly zone, reeling from years of sanctions, and basically powerless with the world’s eyes on them.

Between Bush’s speech and the debate, we came home with lots to chew on. Things don’t seem quite as clear-cut to me as they did a few days ago. Good. I’m being challenged.

We brought Miles to the debate, which was interesting. He made it through without crying, but you have to put a lot of energy into a baby to keep him calm in an environment like that. Kind of distracting.

Update: Salon.com reviews the debate here.

Music: Medeski Martin & Wood :: Saint

Advance Knowledge

Dude walks into my office* today looking for Christopher Hitchins, one of the participants in tonight’s debate. Leather motorcycle vest over tie-die shirt, walrus mustache.

“Can you help me find Christopher Hitchins?”

“Did you have an appointment?”

“No, but I’m sure he’ll want to meet me — I’m one of the people who had advance knowledge of 9/11.”

“You should drop him an email and set something up.”

“I don’t touch email. I would never do that.”

“Oh [now realizing what I’m dealing with here]. I’m afraid I can’t help you.”

“I’ve known about 9/11 ever since Vietnam. Are you sure you can’t put me in touch with him?”

“I’m sorry.”

Dude walks out.

* It’s not like I’m at the front desk – I work in a half-submerged concrete bunker… people who wander into my office are lost by definition.

Music: Luciano Pavarotti :: Che Gelida Manini

Monowheel

The least-explored, least commercially successful, most fantastical motorized vehicle of all time must be the monowheel. Shown are turn-of-the-century inverted unicycles juxtaposed with modern in-wheel V-8 screamers. Some of these vehicles seem cartoonish and inefficient, others terrifying. The fatal flaw of the genre is the phenomenon of “gerbiling,” wherein the rider gets looped around inside the wheel during breaking or acceleration like a hapless rodent. There’s a great MPEG of a diwheel in action too. Thanks boing-boing.

Weights and Measures

Was reading the FAQ on the California Super Lotto Plus web site, which contains a section “How does the Lottery make sure SuperLotto Plus is completely random?” One part of the answer given is:

At least once a month, each solid rubber ball in all six sets is weighed and measured down to 1/1000 of a gram to ensure consistency in weight and measures.

No wonder random people always win.

Music: Miles Davis :: There’s A Boat That’s Leaving

DIV Height Caching Bug

baald had been letting me know recently that my weblog was truncated halfway down the page in IE6. I’ve had my share of CSS frustrations, but just could not fathom what bug I might have introduced that could cause this. Yesterday I came across this Zeldman post, and another including a workaround. In a nutshell, the flagship browser used by 187% of the surfing population caches the vertical size of DIVs on pure CSS pages. So if it calculates the height of your .blogbody class on one page at 225 pixels, it may try to render it at the same height on subsequent pages, even though it contains different content. Lovely. Some small relief to know this wasn’t my bug.

The fix is a hunk of javascript I’ve stuck into all my templates. You should no longer see the truncation problem on recent birdhouse posts or on the main page – let me know if you do.

Music: Erik Satie :: Brutal

Hyatt on RSS in Safari

Three days after my post predicting that major browsers would have embedded RSS handling capabilities within six months, Safari developer Dave Hyatt is discussing the idea in his own blog. The question is whether browsers should handle RSS feeds or should RSS readers display HTML previews? The latter seems like a no brainer, but the former is where I’m hoping to see all of this go. Thanks Sean for the headsup.

Music: The Incredible String Band :: There Is A Green Crown

The Superbowl Is Opaque

Hoping to enjoy the game with the guys this year, I read the rules in advance and developed what I thought was a pretty good working knowledge of football before the game started. It didn’t help. Understanding in the abstract what was supposed to be going on did not help to discern where the ball was or who was in possession of the play at any given moment. All I can ever see is a blooming, buzzing confusion of bodies. I can’t tell who has the ball until the play has ended.

After five years of trying (granted, not trying too hard), I have come to the conclusion that the excitement of football is permanently opaque to anyone who didn’t grow up with it. I was as confused at the end of the game as I was at the beginning, despite the bottomless patience of friends. Still, it’s a good opportunity to eat hot dogs and guac and enjoy good company. If I could only grok why it is they whoot! when they do. I’d just love to be able to relate to my father-in-law on this count.

Music: Caetano Veloso :: O Estrangeiro (The Stranger)