My column about today’s now-concluded Digital Democracy Teach-in is now
online here.
I’m with the program!
Now that I have completed my editing-related program activities for the day, I am returning home, where I can resume family-related program activities, until my sleep-related program activities kick in — leaving me refreshed for another day of life-related program activities.
More quake
KCBS says USGS reports it as a 6.4 earthquake near San Simeon (halfway down the Cal. coast between SF and LA)… That’s a fairly big quake: not as big as 1989’s, which, if memory serves, was 7.1 or so, but thankfully (for those of us not living near San Simeon) far away from California’s population centers. A quake that big in the Bay Area or LA would probably have caused considerable damage. Unclear what sort of damage you might find in nearby towns; I’m sure we’ll hear more soon.
Quake
Our office tower just started swaying. Stopped now. Seems like there was just a medium-size quake in the Bay Area…
Microsoft, Longhorn, blogs
My latest column is up today: It offers an overview of Microsoft’s vast Longhorn juggernaut — and a bit of praise for the company (yes, we’re capable of that when it’s warranted) for letting loose its horde of developers to blog about their work on the new operating system. How many will still be blogging in 2006 or beyond, when Longhorn finally ships? We’ll just have to wait and see.
S.F. blackout
The huge power outage in downtown San Francisco yesterday left our offices without power for 27 hours. Our colocation center, where most of our web servers are situated, held up fine, so Salon’s basic site remained live throughout, but some of our back-end services were affected. We’re working this morning to clean up any remaining snafus.
New column: Ode to RSS
Since starting this blog my output of regular columns has declined, but I’m back, tonight, with an ode to RSS. This will be old hat to many reading here, but for the wider world of Salon’s readers and beyond, RSS remains a novelty worth introducing with a fanfare.
Charlie Varon: Wit from woe
Longtime Salon readers may recall a feature we ran in the late ’90s known as the “21st Challenge” — a reader-response humor competition that had its 15 minutes of fame in the form of our “Error Message Haikus,” which went round the world on a million e-mail lists and wound up being mentioned in the Microsoft trial (without credit, alas!).
Charlie Varon was the co-creator of those contests. He’s better known in the Bay Area as a remarkable playwright and performer responsible for some of the past decade’s most original political theater (his shows have included “Rush Limbaugh in Night School,” “Ralph Nader is Missing,” and “The People’s Violin”).
I’m a little biased here, because I’ve known Charlie since we were in high school together and worked on the weekly student paper (he was my first editor, and still one of my best), but so what? I think Charlie is making some extraordinarily original political comedy in these dark days: it’s angry without succumbing to cynicism, hilarious without resorting to sarcasm.
You can hear it for yourself on a new CD he has self-published, titled “Visiting Professor of Pessimism.” It’s a live recording of a show in San Francisco that Varon performed in the middle of the Iraq invasion last spring. The pieces are character-sketch monologues that look, with clear-eyed, heartbreaking humor, at the terrible compromises of the war on terrorism, the awful deadlock in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, and the dilemmas facing Americans committed to peace.
And it kicks off with a parody BBC newscast announcing, among other things, a new breakthrough in genetic engineering, mixing genes from root vegetables and business leaders: “The goal is to breed a humble corporate executive — or, failing that, a ruthless potato.”
You can listen to free samples here, here, or here. Or read more here.
The Web is an amazing thing, part 3486
Andrew Leonard cooked up an incredibly feast for a small party over the weekend, as is his wont. One of the things he cooked was Szechuan duck, from a recipe in the still-amazing (and sadly out of print) “Mrs. Chiang’s Szechwan Cookbook.” One of the things that made the duck extraordinary was a marinade and stuffing of Sichuan peppercorns.
I wanted to know more about this ingredient, which I’d only used a couple of times in the distant past. The Web had all the answers, and more. No imaginable encyclopedia could ever provide such depth of detail. And instantly!
People sometimes get this spice confused with your basic red-hot chile pepper, since that pepper is so widely used in Sichuan cooking; but this is something different, a dried-up brown thing about the size of a matchhead that has a unique, almost numbing impact on the palate. For reasons I was dimly aware of — Andrew’s explanation was to blurt out something like “citrus infestation vector!” — these peppercorns are now illegal to import into the U.S. Which is really too bad. But at least I can read about every chemical compound they contain…
Regulation — it works!
It’s now been several weeks since the no-call list limiting telemarketers’ calls was put into effect, and guess what? Our household — which previously received on average of 2-3 telemarketing calls per weekday evening, inevitably ringing just when I’d sat down in front of a hot dinner or the kids were raising a ruckus in the bathtub or when we’d finally gotten them down to bed — has seen an approximately 99.9 percent reduction in the volume of telemarketing. I think we’ve received one call total, from our own phone company, which can claim it has an “existing business relationship” or whatever with us.
I consider this a major lifestyle improvement.
