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Malcom Gladwell
bolgsblogs. via kottke -
similar to Meyer’s-Briggs. via Herr Doktor Vornov
02/28/2006
links for 2006-02-28
02/27/2006
Remember, Remember
the Fifth of November …
James Wolcott comments on (but does not review) V for Vandetta.
I reread Alan Moore’s graphic novel a couple of weeks ago. The movie opens on March 17th. I’m looking forward to this…
links for 2006-02-27
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via Garret and MeFi
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Teaches you and your kids how to choose good, healthy snacks so you can then produce ‘un beau caca.’ Mr. Hanky en francais (via Parent Hacks)
02/25/2006
links for 2006-02-25
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open source anti-virus package for OS X
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via Dori
Owsley: Kennewick Man Deliberately Buried
This will make things interesting in the Paleo arena! Owsley is one of the big dogs in forensic science.
Report: Kennewick Man Deliberately Buried [Yahoo!/AP]
Kennewick Man was laid to rest alongside a river more than 9,000 years ago, buried by other people, a leading forensic scientist said Thursday.The skeleton, one of the oldest and most complete ever found in North America, has been under close analysis since courts sided with researchers in a legal battle with Indian tribes in the Northwest who wanted the remains found near the Columbia River reburied without study.
Douglas Owsley, an anthropologist [curator and division head for physical anthropology --ed.] at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, discussed his findings in remarks prepared for delivery Thursday evening at a meeting of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences in Seattle.
“We know very little about this time period,” Owsley said in a telephone interview. [understatement! --ed.] “This is a rare opportunity to try and reconstruct the life story of this man. (…) This is his opportunity to tell us what life was like during that time.”
Researchers have disagreed over whether Kennewick Man was buried by other people or swept up in a flood and encased in sediment.
Owsley concluded the man was deliberately buried, between two and three feet deep, his body placed in the grave, head slightly higher than feet, hands placed at his sides.
The location was riverside, with the body parallel to the river and head pointing upstream. [more]
02/24/2006
links for 2006-02-24
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a push for adoption standardized icons for syndicated content. via Rafé
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useful comparison of font legibility. the last row in these screenshots is key for coders. via Rafé
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all things Spiderman. via Kevin
02/23/2006
Where Have You Been?
Like Alwin notes , ‘post often or people no longer come by.’ Here are a few reasons why it has been quiet around here.
Ian and I both have sinus infections and Audrey is not far from coming down with one. Ugh. That means that I haven’t even been doing much of anything online, including making del.icio.us bookmarks.
I started a short-term contract gig doing GIS on Tuesday.
We are trying to find a new day care provider for Ian. The woman we have been using since Ian was three months old is taking her well-deserved retirement in June after 42 years.
So, I’m here, just not saying much. More when when my Mucus Man super powers abate a bit.
[edits]
02/20/2006
President’s Day
Kevin has a fine crop of quotations from Washington and Lincoln in honor of this US holiday. Recommended.
links for 2006-02-20
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via Rafé
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“The abbreviation MAMP stands for: Macintosh, Apache, Mysql and PHP. With just a few mouse-clicks, you can install Apache, PHP and MySQL for Mac OS X!” via Rafé
1962 – First American Orbits Earth
My mother let me stay home from second grade to watch this on television. I’m not really sure if I actively campaigned for this parental sanctioned absence, or if she just said, “of course” the first time I brought it up. I suspect the latter. I was really into the space race.
1962 – AN AMERICAN ORBITS EARTH: [The History Channel - This Day in History]
From Cape Canaveral, Florida, John Hershel Glenn Jr. is successfully launched into space aboard the Friendship 7 spacecraft on the first orbital flight by an American astronaut.Glenn was preceded in space by two Americans, Alan B. Shepard Jr. and Virgil I. “Gus” Grissom, and two Soviets, Yuri A. Gagarin and Gherman S. Titov. In April 1961, Gagarin was the first man in space, and his spacecraft Vostok 1 made a full orbit before returning to Earth. Less than one month later, Shepard was launched into space aboard Freedom 7 on a suborbital flight. In July, Grissom made another brief suborbital flight aboard Liberty Bell 7. In August, with the Americans still having failed to make an orbital flight, the Russians sprinted further ahead in the space race when Titov spent more than 25 hours in space aboard Vostok 2, making 17 orbits. As a technological power, the United States was looking very much second-rate compared with its Cold War adversary. If the Americans wanted to dispel this notion, they needed a multi-orbital flight before another Soviet space advance arrived. (more)