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Non-regular thoughts from two non-regular men
Check out birthday cake sparklers and champagne bottle sparklers from Skylighter, Inc.
Skylighter has components to make your own smoke bombs and black powder rockets. And these really cool lanterns.
I just got my copy of the xkcd book. So far I'm enjoying holding it. The pages are numbered strangely but I have faith that there is some reason behind it. So, those of you who are bigger math geeks than me (all of you) can you identify this sequence?:
1, 2, 10, 11, 12, 20, 100, 101, 102, 110, 111, 112, 120, 200, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1020, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1110...
Ok, I'm going to stop typing it out now. But can you identify it?
Matt
p.s. I have Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo. It's sort of like being on drugs for free but crappy.
they're too busy totaling tee to get blitzed with you and me.
Clearly, the music industry is changing. Digital sales are up, total sales are down, and the major labels are becoming more dickish all the time. Every time I turn around someone is getting forced to pay $675,000 for downloading 30 tracks illegally. Maybe I should not turn around so much.
It's frustrating when, as record labels have fallen on hard times, their only concern is still about their bottom line ... The concept of suing fans for stealing music. You know, they're stealing it not to make money from it. They're stealing it because they love it and they want it.
Give it away digitally, because it is free anyway ... Don't fight it. Embrace it. And you want people to have your music, you know. I do.
Lastly, and scariest for publishers I guess, is that inevitably someone will hack the Kindle (or other formats) — and the books will become shareable… and copiable and infinitely reproducible, just like MP3s. People laughed at the record companies, with their reputations as money squanderers and for their waste and extravagance — but music hasn’t suffered, and writing and magazines might not either, especially if both writers and publishers can learn from the record companies and not pretend that publishing is any different.
And someone has some explaining to do!
I'm sitting here watching the Cubs game right now. Through the first 6 innings the Cubs starter (Randy Wells), who is a rookie, was having a great game. He had no hits on six innings and had collected his first major league hit as well as an RBI. I wanted to know more about this guy so I went to wikipedia (like you do) to read his story when I'm presented with the following:
"Randy David Wells (born August 28, 1982 in Belleville, Illinois) is a Major League Baseball pitcher for the Chicago Cubs. Wells threw a complete game no-hitter on June 2, 2009, in a 4-0 victory over the Atlanta Braves in Atlanta."
Wait a minute! That game still isn't over! So now I was all worried that I had accidentally ruined the end of the game I had thought I was watching live.
However, in the 7th, the Braves got a hit and ended the no-hitter.
If I were Wells I would be pissed. What asshole jumped the gun?
Matt
Update: So now I've refreshed the page and the line is gone but instead there is the following:
Wells threw a one-hitter on June 2, 2009, in a 4-0 victory over the Atlanta Braves. After 7 2/3 innings of no-hit ball, this post was placed on wikipedia by one public editor and removed by a different editor only seconds later:
Wells threw a complete game no-hitter on June 2, 2009, in a 4-0 victory over the Atlanta Braves.
Only six minutes later, Chipper Jones broke up the no-hitter with a single. Many feel this post cursed Wells' chance of a no-hitter and put Wikipedia's status as an updated news source in jeopardy."
(For the record this is wrong too. The current score is 5-1 Cubs.)
Update 2: The Cubs just lost. Fuck Wikipedia