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Temple of Heaven: Special Gunpowder

special-heaven

Temple of Heaven: Special Gunpowder
I found this menacing looking box at Haji’s. I’ve been cold brewing this green tea, as it’s much more convenient than coffee. Supposedly it’s good for you too. It doesn’t give me the shakes like too much coffee does. Anyway I have a simple method of preparing this tea which I will share:

  1. Dump a handful of green tea in the pitcher
  2. Next fill the pitcher with water
  3. Put it in the fridge

The green tea expands and floats and sinks in the pitcher. For the first 2-3 days it is in a state of continous motion, I don’t have a scientific explanation for that. It’s ready in an hour and this nice Ikea pitcher filters out the debris as I pour a cold glass. The tea is never bitter, which can be a problem when hot brewing green tea. Admittedly I’ve had better tea than Special Gunpowder, but you really can’t beat the name.

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Brutally Hot in Phoenix, Arizona

You think you know. Yes, it’s hot in Arizona, but honestly you don’t know what hot is. Get a load of this:

July 18th Partly Cloudy 113 Degrees Fahrenheit

July 19th Partly Cloudy 112 Degrees Fahrenheit

July 20th Partly Cloudy 109 Degrees Fahrenheit

July 21th Thunderstorm 118 Degrees Fahrenheit

July 22th Partly Cloudy 116 Degrees Fahrenheit

July 23th Thunderstorm 114 Degrees Fahrenheit

July 24th Thunderstorm 114 Degrees Fahrenheit

Sandwiched between the hot city pavement and the gray monsoon sky, one point four million mortal souls bake in this deadly convection oven. Welcome to Phoenix.

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Tristram Shandy and the status of e-text in this modern age

I had the pleasure of watching A Cock and Bull Story last night. It was chaotic, funny and fresh. Obvious, low brow jokes are woven into a tapestry of delicious philosophical irony in this retelling of “The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman” by Laurence Sterne. A book I had never heard of before now.

After consulting Google, I decided to read it in an electronic format. Crazy huh? The last e-book I read was this text file, and my horrible flickering Packard Bell monitor left me with a massive headache. I’m hoping my iBook LCD will treat me better.

Also Tristam Shandy isn’t a book that lends itself to a dot txt file. Sterne includes non-textual data in his books, like including an all black page when a character dies. The format would have to be html.

I’ve found a couple of sources:

Project Gutenberg:

http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1079

The html version looks good. The yellow around the text doesn’t sit well with me (I suppose I could alter the .css file). At least there is a lot of text on each screen which means less scrolling. It looks like only volumes one through four are available. Like any other Gutenberg file, you can download it for offline viewing.

The Tristam Shandy Web:

http://www.tristramshandyweb.it/home.htm

This one looks beautiful, but doesn’t display much text per screen, which means lots of scrolling. Also you must click on a icon to move to the next page. I don’t see any way to download it (short of using a web ripper). Still, in my totally unqualified opinion this is the most accurate representation of a first edition available on the web. It is complete, with all nine volumes.

Laurence Sterne in Cyberspace:

http://www.gifu-u.ac.jp/~masaru/Sterne_on_the_Net.html

You can skip the Google search, as Masaru Uchida maintains this excellent directory on all things related to Laurence Stern.

I think I will begin with the Gutenberg version, I just like to be able to hit the down arrow as I read. If I reach the end of the first four volumes then I will switch off to the Tristam Shandy Web.

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Nanosolar unveils plans for a new solar plant in the Bay area

When built it will be the largest US based solar plant:

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/politics/14863899.htm

I can’t wait for cheap solar. Yes I’m some kind of a hippy.

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EXTRA! Yellow Journalism at “The New York Times”

What is with tech journalism today?

I just read the New York Times article entitled “Growing Wikipedia Revises Its ‘Anyone Can Edit’ Policy“. A provocative tagline that is disingenuous, on multiple levels. First of all, it’s not a revision to the policy, Wikipedia has had page protection for quite some time now. Futhermore anyone can edit, so long as they abide by the rules. So nothing has changed. Wikipedia’s methods continue to produce great results. Jimmy Wales, we salute thee!

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Securing Windows XP - Part 1: Antivirus w/ Free Software

I use a simple recipe to keep virus free

  1. Clamwin
  2. Firefox:
  3. Clamwin Glue for Firefox
  4. Common Sense

Clamwin is a free anti-virus scanner, with high detection rates. The only thing that keeps it off the desktop of many users is that it’s missing what many consider to be a critical feature; real time scanning. Most modern anti-virus programs remain in memory, and check every file when it is opened, moved or created. This is a very thorough way to check for virii but it is very taxing on the performance of your system. Since I need those computational cycles for other tasks I usually disable or limit real time scanning to newly created files.

It is perfectly safe not to use real time scanning, but you need to understand how a virus comes to infect your computer in the first place. A virus sneaks inside your computer on a file that you introduce by one of the following means:

  1. You download it
  2. You get it in an email
  3. You bring it on removable media, like a floppy disc, CD, or a usb thumb drive

So all you really need to do, in order to keep your computer clean and virus free, is to scan all the files at these entry points before you use them. That’s where common sense comes in.

Luckily there are tools to make this a bit easier. Clamwin Glue for Firefox scans anything you download using Firefox. Clamwin also has a plugin for Microsoft Outlook. This covers the most common points of entry automatically. Add a nightly scan of your entire system, and you’ve got a free anti-virus solution that doesn’t constantly burn CPU cycles.

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A Tiny Interview with Nanosolar CEO Martin Roscheisen

The single greatest problem with solar energy has been getting the cost of solar panels down to the point at which they pay for themselves in a short time. Current solar technology is based on expensive silicon technology, however several companies are working on a cheaper process, thin film solar cells.

I’ve been watching Nanosolar ever since I read this Slashdot article and the corresponding article in the Hindu. Nanosolar has been real quiet lately, and I’ve been getting worried that we will never see these cheap solar cells. After watching for news for about six months I finally contacted Nanosolar to find out for myself. An email interview was arranged and Martin Roscheisen emailed this response with remarkable speed:

1) A little about yourself: I’ve read the official stuff on the site and what I’ve found on the web, but I’m unclear on a lot of things.
How old are you? Where do you live? What precisely is your role at Nanosolar, researcher or more administrative? What other things are important to you, aside from Nanosolar?

I’m 37 and live in San Francisco. Here’s my house…they actually put it onto the cover of Dwell in Jan: http://www.rmartinr.com/Dwell.htm

My role at Nanosolar is to lead the team in the right direction as a company. I don’t do adminstration. I work very closely with our team which is mostly engineers right now. I’ve always been very involved in all aspects of the technology, whether the overall choices or other key items. I’m also spending a good chunk of time with customers. I know how to make decisions in situations when there’s only very partial information and/or very little time available to make such decisions — and build a company and a business from nothing much there.

Other things important to me: I like architecture (see above).

2) What are the primary challenges Nanosolar is facing right now?

We have the process and the capital to deliver the products we want…so our present focus is on building a factory that delivers the production capacity we want.

3) Why has Nanosolar been so quiet lately? For reasons of secrecy or strategy?

We do not yet have any PR or marketing person on our team, and we’re very much focused on product and production development. So if we’re quiet, the main reason for this is that we’re simply busy! Things are going very very well. Everything is coming together very nicely. But since you have reminded me, we should probably announce a few things we’ve recently accomplished.

4) When will your product reach the market? 2007? Will the product be offered to large commercial interests before it is available to residential customers?

We have prototype products now; we’re testing them very thoroughly in environmental chambers and outdoors. The larger volumes will be available from our production fab in 2007, yes.

So there you have it, sit tight and we will have practical solar by 2007!

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War

Cryptome has a collection of AP photos from the Iraq war here.

I think all Americans need to see this, without turning away. Understand war.

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Plagiarism Today crumbles to the Slashdot effect

Ouch. Looks like plagiarismtoday.com wasn’t ready for hordes of mindless Slashdotters to access their blog. Congratulations and condolences.

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Diebold voting machines weaken Democracy

The latest Diebold debacle makes one think. If a county clerk is fired for attempting to assess the security of these voting machines, and the public is not allowed access to the source code then our Democracy has taken a fundamental shift. Our current sytem is open and verifiable. The system provided by Diebold is not! Don’t get me wrong, I’m not against computer based voting. In fact I think it is a good idea. However I think that a voting system needs the following to be compatable with American Democracy:

1.) Open Source

The American public has a right to know exactly how each vote is tallied. This means that the source code and design of any voting machine needs to be made available for public review.

2.) Immutable

A hard drive or flash card is not an acceptable media for storing votes. Each vote should be recorded on at least two permanent media sources. This redundancy is necessary to protect against equipment failure. For example the vote may be both printed out and written to a cdrom.

3.) Verifiable

Furthermore each vote should have a cryptographic checksum, which the voter receives as a receipt. The checksum will not show the actual contents of the vote, just that the vote was counted and is unaltered. The voter should be able to verify his vote online, and also could submit his receipt to his party or an independant observer.

For more information on the Diebold voting fiasco:
SecurityFocus
BradBlog
Wired
Click here to support whistelblower Bruce Funk.

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