Sep. 8, 2008

This is a pretty exciting post for me. A few months back, the folks over at Smashing Magazine approached esteemed WordPress theme designer Darren Hoyt (who, in the interest of full disclosure, is also my office-mate) about creating a free, high quality WordPress theme to be released as part of that site’s free theme collection. Darren asked that I handle the backend features while he rolled out the design. Today, we’re proud to introduce Agregado.

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Sep. 6, 2008

Not so long ago, I wrote about a method for running complex queries on an ExpressionEngine database using two built-in functions: exp:weblog:entries and exp:query. It’s a neat and useful trick, but the example I suggested was a somewhat limited, specific use case. There are tons of ways to relate one bit of data to another in ExpressionEngine and equally as many ways to get at that data. Let’s take a look at another one of those methods.

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11:39 am

When we think of events in the distant past or distant future we tend to think abstractly about why they happened or will happen, but when we think of events in the near past or near future we tend to think concretely about how they happened or will happen.

Seeing in time is like seeing in space. But there is one important difference between spatial and temporal horizons. When we perceive a distant buffalo, our brains are aware of the fact that the buffalo looks smooth, vague, and lacking in detail because it is far away, and they do not mistakenly conclude that the buffalo itself is smooth and vague. But when we remember or imagine a temporally distant event, our brains seem to overlook the fact that details vanish with temporal distance, and they conclude instead that the distant events actually are as smooth and vague as we are imagining and remembering them.

Daniel Gilbert, on the difficulty of predicting future happiness. (#)

Sep. 5, 2008

Sep. 4, 2008

Sep. 2, 2008

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8:43 pm

Start poking around the names in the Google Chrome comic book and the names are there. Scott McCloud’s drawings aren’t just a useful pictorial explanation of what to expect in Chrome; it’s practically a declaration of independence from the yesteryear traditions of browser design of the past 10 years, going all the way back to Netscape’s heyday when the notion of the web was a vast collection of interlinked documents. With Chrome, the web starts to look more like a nodal grid of documents, with cloud applications running on momentary instances, being run directly and indirectly by people and their agents. This is the browser caught up.

Chris Messina, on the historic significance of Google's announcement – and beta release – of the Chrome browser. (#)

Sep. 1, 2008

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5:28 pm

Yes, we need to have a rational conversation in this country about striking the balance between providing students with age-appropriate sex education and a rational discussion about moral values and their role in making sexual choices. I am a full and complete supporter of comprehensive sex ed – which includes information like “there is no such thing as blue balls” and “no means no” and “saying no to sex can be a sign of respect for both of you.” But clapping our hands in joyous rubbernecking over Bristol Palin’s being in the family way is not going to be the start of any discussion. It makes us look as judge-y as we accuse Them of being, it makes us look like abortion-promoters instead of choice-respecters (it does mean both choices, after all) and it makes us look like we think a 17-year-old target is easier to hit than a 44-year-old target. Sex education will be a great topic for discussion and reform in an Obama Administration, and it wouldn’t – and shouldn’t – involve the now rather-public embarrassment or shaming of a 17-year-old girl.

Megan Carpentier of Jezebel, urging all the lefties to back the eff off the whole Bristol Palin pregnancy annoncement. Since when did Jezebel become the voice of reason? (#)

Aug. 29, 2008

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11:39 pm

Is he kidding? How can John McCain make the argument that Barack Obama isn’t ready to be president when he picks a running mate with even less experience than Obama to be his vice president? Is he actually retarded? When you are seventy two years old and attempting to undertake one of the most strenuous jobs in the world for at least four years, don’t you want to at least consider the notion that you might drop dead?

Memo to John McCain: you might drop dead.

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin has been a governor for two years, and before that a mayor for ten, the mayor of Wasilia (population 5,000). My brother-in-law was the Republican mayor of Waseca, Minnesota, which has about the same size population, and I can tell you with absolute certainty after playing foosball with him in his basement that my brother-in-law is not ready to be president of the United States of America. I’m not even sure that he’s ready to be president of his rotisserie football league.

Michael Ian Black, on John McCain's misguided VP pick. (#)

Aug. 28, 2008

Aug. 27, 2008

In addition to talking about it here, I’ve been chatting up Muxtape to everyone who’ll listen. But now it looks like Muxtape’s gone the way of the dodo. Enter Opentape, a virtual clone of Muxtape with one crucial difference: it’s your turn to do the hosting.

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9:00 pm

Engineers have long (since at least the 1950s) used the term unobtainium when referring to unusual or costly materials, or when theoretically considering a material perfect for their needs in all respects save that it doesn’t exist. By the 1990s, the term was widely used, including formal engineering papers. (As an example, Towards unobtainium [new composite materials for space applications], by Misra and Mohan describes how the ideal material (unobtainium) would weigh almost nothing, but be very stiff and dimensionally stable over large temperature ranges.)

The Wikipedia entry on Unobtanium. (Re-blogged from kottke.org.) (#)

Aug. 26, 2008

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10:49 pm

Any application that lets you “friend,” “follow,” or otherwise observe another user should include a prominent (and silent) “PAUSE” button.

I think users of apps like Flickr, Twitter, Facebook, LiveJournal, Delicious, and, yes, FriendFeed, would benefit from an easy and undramatic way to take a little break from a “friend” – without inducing the grand mal meltdown that “unfriending” causes the web’s more delicately-composed publishers.

Merlin Mann, proposing a (frankly ingenious) way to enable polite personal management of your social network. (#)

I sure as donuts wish someone had written a post like this before I needed it. So even if you don’t need it, file under “useful when someone’s looking for an answer.”

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Aug. 25, 2008