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Big Wheel

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Everything posted by Big Wheel

  1. The Insprion notebooks seem to run hot and have inadequate cooling systems. I wrecked two hard drives in mine by neglecting to always use the computer on hard surfaces. So yeah, at least partly my fault, but still...annoying that you have to be so careful with a portable machine.
  2. To me Ellis sounds like someone who could have (and did) cut it as a bebopper, but eventually chose not to. Even if the grooves are more rock than anything else, there's still something down deep that implies the ability to swing. The album or two I've heard of Kenton sounded to me more like someone who is on the outside looking in - a guy who couldn't have pulled swinging off even if he tried. (Not to say it's necessarily bad, just to be evaluated on different terms.)
  3. Thanks, everybody. Disneyland, airplanes, and strippers all in one day...it wasn't half as hot as that sounds, though. btw, FFA is an asshole
  4. Are there still cheap OJCSs available at Newbury? I'm likely going to be in Boston next month for work and would stop by if there are.
  5. bev is a man Wasn't Fran also a dude? I thought the story was that he meant to type in "Frank" when registering but inadvertently hit Return a little too early.
  6. Does the clock display words on it for anything? And have you tried playing with "E, I, F, S, G" to see what happens when you set it? My guess is that it's a language setting: English, Italian, French, Spanish, German. (I know, German speakers would want a D instead of a G and Spanish speakers would want an E instead of an S....but as you said, the thing cost $9.) Here's a more expensive version: http://www.walgreens.com/store/product.jsp...;id=prod3253526 Note the language selections available.
  7. McGraw is yet another example of my First Rule of America: always presume that anything coming from Oklahoma is bad until it proves itself good.
  8. Gawd, I'm a doofus. I kept forgetting to finish my purchase, and now the sale is over.
  9. There was a very windy storm in '95 that knocked down trees and damaged a lot of signs, at least in SF. When they get to a certain level, they should call these storms what they are---typhoons. Except they aren't typhoons. A typhoon or hurricane forms in the tropics in warm water and rotates around a well-defined center that eventually becomes an eye if the storm gets strong enough. What we had was just a big nasty winter storm - comparable to a nor'easter on the East Coast. 70mph gusts are not fun, but they don't even reach to the level of a category 1 hurricane (which has to have sustained winds - not gusts - of >74mph to even be called a hurricane).
  10. Well, fortunately I'm not one of them. The power did go out as I was standing in the shower, though, and stayed out for at least 10 hours.
  11. I just walked a mile in this shit. We had worse in Florida, but of course SF infrastructure is wimpy and my power went out as I was taking a shower. The Bay looks like it did through most of Star Trek IV .
  12. The 5 Neat Guys also do a mean cover...
  13. Has anyone linked to this one yet? For the Big Lebowski fan in the family. Pretty sure it's only available on the 45s from the website. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8X7nVZhqb04
  14. Another good SCTV clip: http://youtube.com/watch?v=USh-msend-o
  15. http://blog.wfmu.org/freeform/2007/11/brian-wilsons-l.html
  16. Not to nitpick, but the post the may or not have been the "last straw" for Jim doesn't even seem to me to have been a negative post: Past tense (ok, past progressive or whatever): this is the sort of self-centered arrogance which was ruining the board. Given the context that the poster making this post left the board in frustration and then came back later , it seems to me that this is what he intended and not something like: this is the sort of self-centered arrogance which ruined/has ruined the board.
  17. Review airfarewatchdog.com first for all the best fares, then book directly with the airlines when possible. Also, try moving back a day - try different dates/days of the week if you can be flexible. I can't imagine that the East Coast to Madrid in winter should set you back much more than $600-700. I flew Thanksgiving weekend Boston-London one year for $250. How much of a pain in the ass are you/your daughter willing to tolerate to save money? It may be much cheaper to use major hubs rather than try to make the most direct route. For example, I bet NYC-Dublin on a major carrier, then Dublin-Madrid on Ryanair would likely save a big pile of cash. What is your preferred starting airport? Edit: ah, I just realized the return leg of this journey is going to be in April-June. My hunch is that fare sales for the high season haven't happened yet and that for this trip you'll save the most money by buying a one-way ticket now and another one-way in a couple of months. Does your daughter have firm dates set on when she needs to be back in the US?
  18. Holy crap, they're still doing it. This brings such a smile to my face.
  19. One experience that I'll never forget is seeing the Halcyon Steel Orchestra, an amazing steel drum band, at the top of Shirley Heights, the highest point in Antigua. They were apparently regulars playing at this place on the weekends. They did this version of The Barber of Seville that was just sick - amazingly musical and carefully orchestrated. I've been trying to get more info about them every once in a while using Google, with little success. And now it turns out there are clips on Youtube!
  20. Hate Joe Buck and Tim McCarver calling baseball. Generally think Al Michaels is acceptable as an announcer but I get the sense that he's a moron as a person. On the subject of announcers, I got a kick out of this Bill Simmons quote about Keith Jackson:
  21. Sorry, this is just a retarded statement. Forget for a minute that the words "anecdote" and "data" are not synonyms and also forget that the IPO made about 10 employees billionaires and only about another 800-1000 Googlers millionaires. Also forget that a Google-esque IPO or acquisition comes around maybe (I'm being charitable here) once every 4-5 years or so, meaning that the average worker in America has maybe 10 chances during his working life to identify and join such a company (assuming it's conveniently located to where he lives). Also forget that most of the people who emerged millionaires from the IPO would undoubtedly have made tidy fortunes pulling down between $100,000 and $200,000 a year as some of the most highly educated and talented software engineers in the world, even if they hadn't gone to work for Google before 2004. We're not exactly talking about rags to riches cases here. Actually don't forget any of that, because it's ample evidence of just how little Dan knows what he's talking about. But anyway, let me point out what a stupid strawman it is to claim, as Dan is, that his opponents in this debate think that plutocracy means that it's completely impossible for someone in the second to fifth income quintiles to jump into the top 0.1 percent. Nobody claimed that it's impossible, they're just claiming that it makes it much more difficult. I fail to see how pointing to a once-in-five-years occurrence constitutes a counterexample to that.
  22. BW, Something in your story doesn't quite wash. If checking accounts at banks really are a perfect alternative to check cashing services... why are people still using check cashing services? I'm guessing it's a combination of poor access to local banking services, perhaps distrusts and/or unawareness of local banking services... For what it's worth, AFAIK I cannot access the full cash amount of a deposited check after depositing it, but only a fraction. For somebody who needs cash NOW that could be a significant constraint. The poor (in the US and elsewhere) are "underbanked". Reducing access to payday lending isn't going to solve this problem. The poor access thing is unlikely to be a factor in urban areas. For example, here's a rough map I made of San Francisco's Tenderloin, with banks (or at least ATMs) marked in green and check cashing joints in blue. (Note: I can't vouch for Google Maps being 100% accurate and up-to-date with its business listings.) While check cashing stores are way more prevalent in the heart of the neighborhood, no bank is much more than a quarter mile away, I'd guess. Banks versus check cashing
  23. I think this is outside the scope of this article, but let's not forget one reason we consider these "payday lenders" predatory that has nothing to do with the interest rates they charge on loans: the fact that a substantial part of their business comes from check cashing services. That's right, people actually pay these places to cash their paycheck if they don't have a bank account, which usually costs $0 to open.
  24. Whoever compiled these is a poor reader who can't distinguish between a normative statement and a prediction. For example, the Charles Darwin quote: Darwin isn't saying that he predicts that his views will be uncontroversial to the religious. He's saying that there aren't any good reasons why religious people would find his views controversial. That is, people certainly may find his book controversial in light of their religious beliefs, but if they do they are doing so without good reasons (the likely corollary to this is that they don't understand what his views actually are and are thus taking issue with strawmen).
  25. No sir, I don't think I'd like that. Not one bit. To give some context, the floors of this building seem to shake a little bit even in non-seismic conditions (someone stomping on the floor, overhead pipes shaking for some reason hard enough to make the top floor shake). This didn't feel much stronger than that to me, but my buddy and I just looked at each other as the elevator went from the fourth floor to the first and said "Uh, why is the elevator swaying?"
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