Links
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Friday roundup
- Do your children determine your politics? The gender of your children that is? VIA MR
- Husband and wife entrepreneurship.
- Sugar in the Gourd – Old time radio.
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A site for my many readers
As my brain is soft and fuzzy right now, I’ll suggest this one without much comment.
Crime Library – tons of great history.
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This is cool
Safe for work despite the name, it’s for a television manufacturer I’ve never heard of. Link via CodePoet.
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More Ajax links
- Sortable Lists
- HoverSmack!
- Suggest Drop Downs
- Code Samples
- The Ajax Weblog
- Google Suggest, alas, in ASP 2.0
- AjaxInfo.com
- Ajax.net
- From 15 seconds
- CodeProject Ajax
Update: Fixed the link to Ajax Info after a reader alerted me to an error in the URL. Thanks Alexei!
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Tuesday rapid fire
- S.F. mayor sees wireless service as basic right – Gavin Newsom is truly the most publicity-hungry mayor in America. A basic right? This makes me rather glad that we don’t have nationalized health care.
- Liquids per gallon – Hot Hooters Booby Oil is my favorite
- US finds fever bacteria during war protest weekend – This sees like it should be a bigger story.
- DOT frowns at U.S. 78 monitors – private industry stepping into help with a public problem, gets “frowned at” by government
- $100 Laptop – this could be really cool, if only it existed.
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Friday rapid fire
- Assess your risks! – this is the first time I’ve said this, but there is a very good series over at the Daily Kos about disaster preparedness
- Pay for blog pay rates
- Texas Emergency Management blog – oddly enough I’ve heard of this guy before. Good stuff, he quotes Clausewitz with
Everything is very simple in war, but the simplest thing is difficult. These difficulties accumulate and produce a friction, which no man can imagine exactly who has not seen war…
Friction is the only conception which, in a general way, corresponds to that which distinguishes real war from war on paper. The military machine, the army and all belonging to it, is in fact simple; and appears, on this account, easy to manage. But let us reflect that no part of it is in one piece, that it is composed entirely of individuals, each of which keeps up its own friction in all directions…
This enormous friction, which is not concentrated, as in mechanics, at a few points, is therefore everywhere brought into contact with chance, and thus facts take place upon which it was impossible to calculate, their chief origin being chance, As an instance of one such chance, take the weather…
Which is a quote well worthy of reflection.
- GreenPeace vs Kennedys – about time.
- An oldie but a goodie by one of my favorite lefties, David Corn, about the infrastructure of the modern anti-war movement.
- Federalism RIP – mandatory evacuations of pets? debated in the US Senate.
- In this rather ordinary column by Steven Moore in Opinion Journal, he does the math and finds that the current numbers currently slated to be spent on Katrina work out to $400,000 to every family displaced by Katrina.
- The AJC on school “Resegregation” – Education central planners are a plague upon our society, a quote
Typically in New York, they’ll go to a high school in which there are 4,000 kids, all black and Latino except for maybe 10 whites and 15 Asian kids, and they’ll say, “This is a diverse population, with many minorities.” Diverse has come to be a euphemism for segregated. And when they say many minorities, it’s very deceptive to readers, as if these were Albanians. No, these are apartheid schools. But if you won’t name reality, you can’t change it.
Why does anyone take these people seriously, let alone regard them as humanitarians? They want to micromanage society in ways that Mussolini only dreamed about, but they precede it with 5 fuzzy adjectives and they’re heroes.
- Kaus has a nice post about the serious and long-term effects of the Davis-Bacon Act
- Chris Nolan has an incoherent post in favor of (as near as I can tell) inertia and the status quo. The criticism she replies to does seem to be very valid though.
Hehe. I do a spell check and the spell checker wants to replace Micromanage with “necromancer”.
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Althouse says it better
When did you stop watching “The Daily Show”?
This week’s show, the first post-Katrina coverage, has been just blatantly telegraphing from the very first moment that the whole point of the show is to slam Bush. I’m upset about the hurricane and find it very off-putting to see political ideologues salivating over a chance to get Bush over this. I’m not even sure that’s what the show goes on to do. I just can’t bear to watch it. Instinctively, I don’t want to watch.
I’ve found that I mostly Tivo through most of it to get to some of the interviews and sketches. It’s also a bit strange that they’ve cut down on the sketches (they’ve gone from every episode to less than half) in favor of Stewart holding forth on some topic or another.
To quote Greg Geraldo on the late and lamented Tough Crowd
Most comics, they just go for the laugh, but you, you like to tell a story….
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Sunday rapid fire
- Big Lebowski Fest – I peruse Wikipedia trying to find the population of Louisville and find their entry on the annual Big Lebowski festival.
- A fine post by Dave Kopel on the current gun grabbing in New Orleans.
- And would you believe that a Hot Brown isn’t a term for some vile act?
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Friday rapid fire
- The Laws of Cartoon Physics
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Do you believe that no one can voice support of the IRAQ war UNLESS they are willing to serve in it?
YET when it came to the flood, you readily assumed an expertise in crisis management within hours of the disaster? - Interesting post on the previous strife between the NO mayor and the LA govenor.
- Useful post on disaster preparedness.
- This is bad
- Commercial geo-coding of photographs makes it’s first appearance.
- Very good article in the NYT on the legal issues of using the National Guard and regular army troops in disasters.
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Thursday rapid fire
- Shoplifting as Social Commentary – We truly have it easy and are getting soft when we (the West that is, not the US) this happens. Germany should sentence them to live in Darfour for a year as punishment.
- E-Machine Shop – It would seem that Instapundit’s era of cottage industry here. Originally from a Wired article (not online yet). You can design something entirely online, they fab it and ship it off.
- Men Smarter than Women in Australia – The article doesn’t actually provide much useful information on the distribution. It also doesn’t address Paulos’ notion that the reason women aren’t at the good end of the Bell curve is a matter of personal taste and habit (i.e. they are more likely to occasionally clean (taking up valuable time) and maintaining personal relationships whereas men are more likely willing to live in filth and lose everyone in their lives in the pursuit of a goal.)
- Cars, PHEV, and Green Tuning
- Another superb article + photos from Michael Yon always worth reading