Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Updated version of Multi-column articles
I've updated my multi-column articles Greasemonkey script to coincide with the release of Firefox 3. The coolest new feature is automatic hyphenation (only works in Firefox 3), accomplished via the awesome hyphenator script. In my experience, automatic hyphenation sometimes provides a significant improvement in readability. Also, support for many more sites has been added in the last few releases, along with other bug fixes. If you installed my script a while ago, it's a good time to update (which requires uninstalling the script and then installing the new version; not sure how to do better).
Friday, May 23, 2008
Professor of Conservative Thought at CU
Take a listen to this interview with University of Colorado chancellor Bud Peterson regarding his effort to create an endowed chair for a Professor of Conservative Thought at the university (and read this article for background). I find it extremely disappointing that a university chancellor would make such inane arguments about the need for such a position, e.g., that the current faculty don't have sufficient expertise to teach the relevant topics. If this is really about plugging a hole in faculty expertise, why even bring up the so-called "liberal bias" in the personal political views of CU faculty? Absolutely infuriating. Rice and Keats has more.
Friday, February 22, 2008
David Simon speaks
David Simon answers some questions about the fifth season of The Wire. I think he has some great responses to the bigger criticisms of this season that have been circulating around. Can't believe there are only a couple episodes left...
Monday, January 21, 2008
HBO Online No Good
I was so excited when I saw the headline "HBO Putting Shows Online, at No Additional Charge." Then I read the article:
The free service will allow access to about 400 hours of movies and original programming each month. It will be made available only to people already subscribing to HBO, and it will be marketed and delivered through cable operators.That really sucks. If HBO wants to reduce downloads of their shows through other channels, they need to address the needs of people who want to pay HBO for their shows but not buy digital cable and 500 other channels.
“There are a lot of people, particularly young people, who are watching TV through the PC. We wanted to create a product for them,” said Eric Kessler, a co-president of HBO.
Most major television networks already make much of their programming available free on the Internet. But as a channel with 29 million subscribers, HBO cannot afford to bypass its cable partners.
Friday, December 07, 2007
Quality of classical MP3s
There have been a bunch of recent articles and blog posts about the sound quality of MP3 files on iPods, some related to the opening of the Deutsche Grammophon (DG) Web Shop. It is disheartening how little evidence is presented regarding the claims of relative quality of MP3s versus CDs. Given how passionate some of the authors are about audiophile equipment and the like, they could have at least done some ABX testing to see how well they could distinguish between the formats. I'd especially like to see Fred Kaplan claim that lossless formats like FLAC only sound "very close to CD-quality" after such a test; give me a break. I'm also curious which of the authors could distinguish the 320kbps MP3s from the DG store from 192kpbs VBR MP3s properly encoded by LAME, the format long used by eMusic. On my decent equipment, I can't tell the difference between the 192kbps VBR MP3s and CDs, and that's good enough for me.
On the other hand, it seems that DG made a good choice with 320kpbs MP3s. The files easily work on all kinds of devices and players, and they seem to satisfy people who usually complain about MP3 sound quality (rationally or otherwise). Personally, until I can get lossless tracks for reasonable prices (around $10 an album), I'm sticking with CDs and eMusic.
On the other hand, it seems that DG made a good choice with 320kpbs MP3s. The files easily work on all kinds of devices and players, and they seem to satisfy people who usually complain about MP3 sound quality (rationally or otherwise). Personally, until I can get lossless tracks for reasonable prices (around $10 an album), I'm sticking with CDs and eMusic.
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Metropolitan Opera and Rhapsody
I just saw that the Metropolitan Opera has has just made available 100 past radio broadcasts on Rhapsody. I'm listening to a great 1958 Otello right now. With this, the theater broadcasts, and the satellite radio station, the Met is really doing amazing things these days.
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
using Gmail IMAP access for email backup
Gmail recently enabled free IMAP access, an extremely useful feature for many reasons. For me, perhaps the best feature of IMAP access is an easier and better method for backing up old email to a Gmail account. Now, email backup is a simple process:
Previously, one could backup email into Gmail using a program like GMail Loader. A key advantage of the IMAP technique is that the original email dates are preserved in the Gmail database. With GMail Loader, the date when a message was imported shows up during search (though the original email date remains in the headers). Use of the import date messes up both search and Gmail's threading features.
Generally, importing email into Thunderbird is a pretty easy process. I successfully imported and backed up some old Eudora email and mail in the MH format (by converting to mbox format with the
- Import the old email into Thunderbird. (Other clients may also work.)
- Enable IMAP access to your Gmail account in Thunderbird.
- Drag and drop the old email folders into your Gmail account.
Previously, one could backup email into Gmail using a program like GMail Loader. A key advantage of the IMAP technique is that the original email dates are preserved in the Gmail database. With GMail Loader, the date when a message was imported shows up during search (though the original email date remains in the headers). Use of the import date messes up both search and Gmail's threading features.
Generally, importing email into Thunderbird is a pretty easy process. I successfully imported and backed up some old Eudora email and mail in the MH format (by converting to mbox format with the
packf
command). The only downside of this whole process is the time one inevitably wastes reading ancient emails :).
Sunday, November 04, 2007
"Long-Form" News Aggregators
I've had a lot of spare time recently, and one thing I've been doing even more than usual is reading in-depth newspaper and magazine articles. There are a bunch of good aggregators for these kinds of articles on the web, and I thought I'd point out my favorites:
- Arts and Letters Daily, the classic
- NewsDog (of course)
- The Informed Reader, which summarizes about three articles a day
- Other Magazines in Slate, updated once or twice a week
- Brijit, a new site that seems promising
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Wire Season 5 teaser / Wire with a laugh track?
There's a promo up for Season 5 of The Wire: I can't wait. I also found this clip pretty funny, in a sort of disturbing way:
Tuesday, October 09, 2007
Vegetarian Frosted Mini-Wheats
We were recently told that 365 brand Bite-Size Frosted Shredded Wheat, the Whole Foods generic version of Frosted Mini-Wheats, is free of gelatin and hence vegetarian. We've been eating them like mad ever since. Apparently Organic Frosted Mini-Wheats are also vegetarian; sweet!
Thursday, October 04, 2007
comparing renting and buying
David posted a nice analysis of whether to rent or buy a house, along with a handy spreadsheet to do your own calculation. Check it out.
Wednesday, October 03, 2007
Feed for Josh Marshall's posts on Talking Points Memo
Finally, full text feeds are available for Talking Points Memo. I've wanted a feed just for Josh Marshall's posts on the blog for a while. Now that these full feeds are available, creating such a feed was easily done using Yahoo! Pipes. The pipe for Josh Marshall's posts is here. Enjoy!
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Toshiba Portege M200 and Dell 2407WFP
Warning: This post has specific technical tips that you probably won't find interesting unless you have hardware similar to that mentioned in the title.
I just got a new 24" monitor (the Dell 2407WFP-HC), and I had to set it up as an external display for my Toshiba Portege M200 Tablet PC. Unfortunately, the video drivers on my laptop didn't support the native 1920x1200 resolution of the monitor, even though the video card (an NVIDIA GeForce FX Go 5200) could do so. Furthermore, Toshiba is quite lax about updating the official video drivers for the laptop, and NVIDIA artificially cripples their official drivers so they don't work on older cards by default.
Fortunately, there's a web site dedicated to solving these problems: Laptop Video 2 Go. The site provides various versions of NVIDIA drivers along with modified INF files to enable those drivers to work on older hardware. I got things working with driver version 97.44 and this INF file, following these installation instructions. My INF file differed from that provided by the site in two ways:
Anyway, things seem to be working nicely now. Hopefully this post will help others in a similar situation.
I just got a new 24" monitor (the Dell 2407WFP-HC), and I had to set it up as an external display for my Toshiba Portege M200 Tablet PC. Unfortunately, the video drivers on my laptop didn't support the native 1920x1200 resolution of the monitor, even though the video card (an NVIDIA GeForce FX Go 5200) could do so. Furthermore, Toshiba is quite lax about updating the official video drivers for the laptop, and NVIDIA artificially cripples their official drivers so they don't work on older cards by default.
Fortunately, there's a web site dedicated to solving these problems: Laptop Video 2 Go. The site provides various versions of NVIDIA drivers along with modified INF files to enable those drivers to work on older hardware. I got things working with driver version 97.44 and this INF file, following these installation instructions. My INF file differed from that provided by the site in two ways:
- I added the appropriate resolutions for the 24" monitor and for my laptop screen (1400x1050), as in this post.
- I added support for Tablet PC features like rotating the laptop screen, as in this post.
Anyway, things seem to be working nicely now. Hopefully this post will help others in a similar situation.
Sunday, September 09, 2007
Insane Tetris Video
I'm not sure if this is real, but in any case, it's pretty awesome:
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Mad Men
We started watching Mad Men a few weeks ago, and now we are addicted. Matthew Weiner, who wrote for The Sopranos, is the executive producer, and as one would expect the writing on Mad Men is amazing. The show is also richly detailed in terms of props, costumes, etc., and the acting is fantastic. There was a nice interview with Weiner on NPR this past weekend about the show. Anyway, it's definitely worth a look, and if you do start watching, be sure to stick with it until Episode 4, which in my opinion was the first great episode (Episode 7 from last week was the second).
Wednesday, August 01, 2007
Playing With Prediction Markets
David writes about our weekend toying with prediction markets like Intrade. Apart from the clearly false assertion that I'm smarter than him, it's a good read.
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Two Quick Recommendations
1. I've listened to Björk's new album Volta a few times now, and it's fantastic. It's easily her best album since Homogenic.
2. I just watched the first episode of 30 Rock online, and it had me laughing out loud in places. I'll post again if the show holds up.
2. I just watched the first episode of 30 Rock online, and it had me laughing out loud in places. I'll post again if the show holds up.
Thursday, July 12, 2007
The Wire on Wikipedia
Today's featured article on Wikipedia is the entry on The Wire. I watch for changes on the entry (correcting sabotage, inaccuracies, etc.), and it's gratifying to see that people think it's an especially good article. Check it out if you haven't already.
Sunday, June 03, 2007
Remnick on "The Sopranos"
I enjoyed reading this David Remnick article from 2001 on "The Sopranos." I especially enjoyed the end (the piece ran during the third season):
Heh. With the show really ending soon, I guess we have a Christian-rock movie to look forward to.
And, as Chase told me, there’s probably only one more season left in him before “The Sopranos” gets stale. He wants out. His next planned project is a feature, backed by HBO and distributed by Warner Brothers. And it is not about the Mafia. It’s about the Christian-rock scene.
Mother of Mercy, is this the end of Rico?
Heh. With the show really ending soon, I guess we have a Christian-rock movie to look forward to.
Thursday, May 03, 2007
Multi-Column Article View Greasemonkey Script
I'm finally ready to reveal to the world my procrastination tool of the past few weeks, a Greasemonkey script that creates a multi-column, multi-page view of long articles. A screenshot will probably do much more than that description:

The view is obviously inspired by the New York Times Reader (which I've previously written about). Usage should be fairly straightforward. For most sites, using the script simply requires navigating to the printer-friendly version of an article (the original article is modified for sites like nybooks.com that don't provide printer-friendly pages). The pages can be navigated with the left and right arrow keys or with the buttons.
Some aspects of the script are not entirely debugged. In particular, sometimes the text alignment on a page is slightly off. I've found that slightly resizing the window often fixes this problem. If there are any Javascript experts out there, I'd welcome a patch to make the script more robust. Also note that I've primarily used the script along with Adblock, and it's possible that if ads are present the viewer will misbehave.
The viewer works on the printer-friendly version of an article, or the main article if no printer-friendly view exists. The following sites are currently supported:
Update (5/22): I updated the screen shot to show the aesthetic changes in version 0.1.3 contributed by Dave.
Update (6/27): Instead of updating things in two places, I'm only going to keep the userscripts.org page up-to-date with a complete list of supported sites and a change log from now on. So go there to see the latest news.
The view is obviously inspired by the New York Times Reader (which I've previously written about). Usage should be fairly straightforward. For most sites, using the script simply requires navigating to the printer-friendly version of an article (the original article is modified for sites like nybooks.com that don't provide printer-friendly pages). The pages can be navigated with the left and right arrow keys or with the buttons.
Some aspects of the script are not entirely debugged. In particular, sometimes the text alignment on a page is slightly off. I've found that slightly resizing the window often fixes this problem. If there are any Javascript experts out there, I'd welcome a patch to make the script more robust. Also note that I've primarily used the script along with Adblock, and it's possible that if ads are present the viewer will misbehave.
The viewer works on the printer-friendly version of an article, or the main article if no printer-friendly view exists. The following sites are currently supported:
- New York Times
- New York Review of Books
- Washington Post
- Los Angeles Times
- Boston Globe
- The New Yorker
- Boston Review
- The Atlantic
- New York Magazine
- San Jose Mercury News
Update (5/22): I updated the screen shot to show the aesthetic changes in version 0.1.3 contributed by Dave.
Update (6/27): Instead of updating things in two places, I'm only going to keep the userscripts.org page up-to-date with a complete list of supported sites and a change log from now on. So go there to see the latest news.
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