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  • I Love Trash!

    Oscar the Grouch would be quite happy in Boston these days. Boston police ordered the city to remove trash barrels from 30 downtown streets, including places like Beacon Hill, Back Bay, and the Theatre District. The result?

    ”That’s kind of weird,” Donald Contois said, as he crumpled up a 7-Eleven taquito wrapper and went to discard it in an overflowing frame near the corner of Mount Vernon and Charles streets yesterday afternoon. He was working a construction job around the corner and had been busy taking down scaffolding, he said, ”so it would look pretty for the convention.”

    Pretty it wasn’t on Beacon Hill yesterday. Under blooming window boxes and faux gaslights on the hill’s quaint, tony main streets, Starbucks Coffee cups and cigarette butts toppled out of the trash can frames onto narrow brick sidewalks. Over the weekend, city workers began removing public trash cans on much of Charles and Cambridge streets. By yesterday afternoon, complaints flooded the local neighborhood association, and many business owners fumed as they watched the trash pile up outside their stores.

    ”Now, it’s a mess,” lamented Alex Marder, owner of Simmons Liquors on Cambridge Street, where an overflowing trash can frame stood a few feet from a planter he had recently filled with purple and pink flowers. ”People throw out here, they throw out there, they don’t care!” [Boston Globe]

    It is starting to look like every security measure is just stuff they happen to think of off the top of their head. Next up will be backpacks (unless they’re made of clear plastic), soda cans (plastic bottles okay), and iPods.

  • QOTD 07/21/2004

    Quentin Crisp
    “If at first you don’t succeed, failure may be your style.”
    [Quotes of the Day]

  • Let’s Have a Cuddle Party (NOT!)

    Halley points to a Dave Barry post (be sure to read the comments) about Cuddle Parties: “your worst nightmare that is supposedly “sweeping New York.”” Pretty scary, the Cuddle Party site even includes rules for when you have a cuddle party:

    1. Pajamas stay on the whole time.
    2. No SEX. (Yep, you read that right.)
    3. Ask for permission to kiss or nuzzle anyone. Make sure you can handle getting a no before you invite or request anyone to cuddle or kiss.
    4. If you’re a yes, say yes. If you’re a no, say no.
    5. If you’re a maybe, say NO.
    6. You are encouraged to change your mind from a yes to a no, no to a yes anytime you want.
    7. NO DRY HUMPING!
    8. Communicate, communicate, communicate.
    9. If you’re in a relationship, communicate and set your boundaries and agreements BEFORE you go to the Cuddle Party. Don’t re-negotiate those agreements/boundaries during the Cuddle Party. (Trust us on this one.)
    10. Get your Cuddle Life Guard On Duty or Cuddle Caddy if there’s a concern, problem, or question or should you feel unsafe or need assistance with anything during the Cuddle Party.
    11. Crying and giggling are both welcomed and encouraged.
    12. Outside of your personal relationships, it’s nobody’s business who you cuddle, so please be respectful of other people’s privacy when sharing with the outside world about Cuddle Parties.
    13. Arrive on time.
    14. Be hygienically savvy.
    15. Clean up after yourself.
    16. Always say thank you and practice good Cuddle Manners.

    They also say that liquor isn’t allowed, but this kind of event seems like the perfect place for MDMA.

    So what does everyone else out there think? Is their skin crawling as much as mine?

  • Feeling Things In Your Ass

    Gizmodo always has some of the coolest things out there. Here’s one I wouldn’t mind having as part of my home theatre system (though I’m not sure I’d want to feel Jet Li’s punch in my ass, I’m not into that kinda rough stuff):

    Crowson TES 100 Couch Shakers

    TES-100If you’ve ever said, “You know, I just didn’t feel Jet Li’s punch right in my ass,” when watching a DVD — this is an especially strange thing to say if it’s not even a Jet Li movie — then Crowson Technology’s TES 100 “tactile transducers” might be worth keeping an eye, or ass, on. For $650, the TES 100 Couch Kit fits under the four feet of your couch and converts the low bass rumble of your stereo system into a physical rumpshaking effect that replicates the effects of a giant subwoofer without actually producing any (on-purpose) sound. CNet has a fairly technical and fairly positive review, although for $650 (a $350 one-transducer version is available) you’d hope Crowson would include the wire necessary to connect the thing. [Gizmodo]

  • Yet Another Reason The DMCA Sucks

    Ugs, this just pisses me off.

    DMCA hammer comes down on tech service vendor

    This just in: A district court in Boston has used the DMCA to grant a preliminary injunction against a third party service vendor who tried to fix StorageTek tape library backup systems for legitimate purchasers of the system.

    How is this a DMCA violation? Well, it turns out that StorageTek allegedly uses some kind of algorithmic “key” to control access to its “Maintenance Code”, the module that allows the service tech to debug the storage system. The court found that third party service techs who used the key without StorageTek’s permission “circumvented” to gain access to the copyrighted code in violation of the DMCA, even though they had the explicit permission of the purchasers to fix their machines. [LawGeek] [via boingboing]

    What scares me the most about this is thinking about what the next step from here could be. Could a car manufacturer do a similar thing with the computer in your car? I’m not a lawyer, so I don’t know for sure, but it seems like it could be done.

  • SPIM?

    From an article on CNET about Yahoo blocking Trillian:

    IM spam, commonly referred to as “spim,” has been flagged by experts as a growing problem. However, experts have also written off spim as a far cry from e-mail spam, which has caused enormous headaches for consumers and businesses alike. [CNET.com]

    SPIM? I have to say this is one of the lamer terms I’ve heard. If you look at the origin of the term spam, it doesn’t even seem to come from email at all. So I guess that means for email we should be calling it ‘spem’.

  • My Amazon Wish List

    Via The Universal Church of Cosmic Uncertainty, a link to a cool project for making an Amazon Wish-of-the-Month club. Each month it randomly picks something for you to buy from your wish list and buys it and sends it to you. You set things like a price maximum so that you don’t end up buying something too expensive. Quite the cool idea.

  • Airport Express and iTunes 4.6 and What I Think Is Missing

    globalnavexpresshi06072004Apple’s new Airport Express sounds great. It’s one of the things I’ve really been looking for. A nice way to have a wireless repeater that (hopefully) doesn’t kill the network speed. Everything else is just really good icing. Mini base station, great. Printer server, great. Streaming audio receiver: great. AirTunes, which is part of iTunes 4.6, here’s where I think they missed slightly. You can only stream to an Airport Express box. I would have loved to have seen the ability to stream to any other box running iTunes. Yes, there is music sharing, which is great, but I can think of times when I might want to be just streaming to a laptop. Or both a laptop and an airport express. I live in a fairly good sized house and maybe people in multiple places want to be able to tune in.

    I think Apple also needs to come out with some kind of stereo/AV component for listening to music and viewing photos (and maybe even movies) on your home theatre system. Something that works like TiVo’s Home Media Option (which is now included in the TiVo subscription instead of as an add-on), but more tuned to how Apple does things. It would let you listen to AAC encoded files, and AAC files you bought from iTMS. But it would act more like the iTunes music sharing does. To me, this could be the killer box for Apple. Roku comes close with their products, but it still isn’t exactly what I’m looking for. The one thing I know I don’t really want is a full computer attached to my home theatre system. It just seems like overkill to me when I have a server already that has all that stuff stored on it.

  • How to Spend the Day

    How do I spend the day when the power is out for most of it? By playing my Fire Emblem and the original Legend of Zelda on my GBA. I’m kind of amazed at how much I remember of a game that came out 15 or so years ago. And by how much it still holds my attention.

  • More Manga in the News

    The New York Times Magazine had an article on manga last sunday that’s a pretty cool read.