Harvard (well, Partners) is doing a study of people who have recently experienced sudden-onset deafness. Unlike many of the other studies listed on the page, no email address is given, only a phone number. A phone number. For a deafness study. No indication that it is TTY, either, not that you’d expect someone who has become deaf in the last 14 days to already have a TTY phone.
Appreciating a day out of context (idea) – [E]ven if you feel your whole life stinks, there are days, hours, minutes, that are absolutely perfect. They are better than what you would construct in your imagination.
Virginity, my loss of (idea) – I’d say who this one is for, but she’d kill me…
A Shure word
I was reading reviews of the Shure E4c earphones on the Apple Store and, my goodness, people can be stupid. Half of the reviews were from people who seem to Get It and understand how “in-ear” drivers work, the other half posted reviews either without ever owning the product or after using them for only a day or so. Look, of course you can spend your $200-300 buying a big pair of cans or a speaker system. So do it. But I love my E3cs. I’ve had them since last December and at this point getting them in my ears is almost effortless, they stay very well, they don’t hurt, even after a few hours, and the sound is excellent.
These things are quality, and you have to give them some time. You have to play with the various sleeves until you get the right fit in your ear. You have to play with moving your ear around with your hands until you can seat them properly to get a good seal. And you have to take a week or so to let your ears get comfortable wearing them. And, in my case, you have to offset the weight of the big heavy cable with a few strategically placed alligator clips on your shirt, especially if you are going to use them while running, as I do. But after that, you’ll love them.
Here is my evidence that these earphones work *too* well. I have to worry about wearing them while outside because they form such a good seal and provide such nice sound that I often won’t hear people around me or even ambulance sirens. And when I’m at the gym and someone says something to me, all I see is their lips moving until I can pause my music. I love my Shure E3cs. Give them a real try and you won’t be sorry.
How to Be Naked – One of the sessions at this week’s BlogHer conference is about boundaries for personal blogging. I’ve talked about this before, I’ve made mistakes, I’ve experienced the consequences. I await blog entries about this session, so I can link to them. 🙂
Amazon’s used book selling service does not seem to have a major impact on the sales of new books – Which tells us that this is not a zero-sum game, and publishers need not be unduly concerned.
A take on the Grokster decision – Tim is now a fellow at Berkman. I never really said much about Grokster but what the Court did to the Sony bright-line test bothers me for exactly the reasons outlined in the Berkman brief (and explained by Tim here) — the same things that are said about Grokster’s infringing use could be just as easily applied to the iPod, or any other truly innovative new device or piece of software. And in that way, this decision is not only disappointing, but also chilling, in that it discourages real innovation. Which I guess is something that modern-day copyright law is really trying to do anyway, the Constitution be damned.
The strangest coincidences
Today I was reflecting on strange coincidences and the way our lives can take turns we would never expect. This isn’t an original theme, of course, but it caused me to remember an email I received on January 31, 2003. It was from a stranger named Kelli who worked for Student Events at Brandeis and wanted to set up a meeting to talk to me about their web site. I had previously met with the person above her in SE, and he had promised to give me certain information. I sent her back a courteous email saying that I would like to have some information to work with before we met. She said she’d get back to me and forwarded the request to her supervisor, who never responded. The next time I met Kelli was over a year later, at Formal.
What would have happened at that meeting? Probably not too much, but maybe we would have realized we had a common friend in Adam. Maybe I would have realized she was an interesting person. Maybe I would have had some type of meaningful conversation with her before our first one, one year and four months later. Maybe not. But its a fascinating missed connection, seeing as what happened so much later. Could the connection have caused subtle but important changes in my life? Is the fact that we got together later an indication that reality is self-correcting? Or does it mean nothing at all, and its just the sort of coincidence that occurs every day?
I’m pretty sure its the third, and there is no deep meaning here. But it is fascinating none the less. Because think of all the times you’ve passed someone or been introduced and forgot a name or not gone to a class or missed a meeting or turned around just as someone may have been approaching you at an event. Think about that phone call you almost made or that person you just avoided running into on the subway. Now imagine if something else had happened. And maybe somehow you found yourself, oh, I dunno, lets say, in a relationship with that person for the better part of a year. It sort of boggles the mind.
Life is pretty amazing.
Wild Oats guacamole isn’t nearly as good as Whole Foods guacamole. Just so that’s clear.
Boy Scouts ‘All Started Screaming’ – What kind of a fucking stupid headline is that? Four people suffered an awful and untimely death, children were forced to experience the sight and smell of seared flesh and burnt bodies, and the Guardian AP makes a joke about them being girly?
The Chosen One is going to be the next hit reality show – You heard i here first! (Well, second…)
I’m not sure I ever expected I would find myself in a position where I would be advocating for a Windows solution over a Linux one. It is a strange day indeed. But as the person tasked with maintaining all of the Windows computers, I guess it is fitting.
Every week _Wired_ includes a “Found” item from the future on its back page. Generally humorous and insightful, this week’s Found consists of a crossword puzzle from a 2019 issue of the _New York Times_. Someone was kind enough to scan it and put it online (I stopped getting _Wired_ a while back) and I spent most of my lunch break figuring it out. There were one or two clues that I couldn’t figure out and one that I got wrong, but otherwise I did pretty well, and a few of the answers were quite amusing (Former sky layer: OZONE). Print it out and see how you do. 🙂 Puzzle is here, answer key is here.
Ragtime
Last weekend was my last “free” weekend before work began, and I decided to celebrate by traveling to New York City to visit with Shaina, who is there for a summer program, and Amy, of whom I haven’t seen much lately. The impetus for the journey was finding out that the Paper Mill was staging Ragtime, but only for a few more days. Ragtime being one of my favorite shows, if not the favorite, I looked forward to the opportunity to see it again.
It was an excellent production. Broadway-caliber. Others who have seen it noted that the “stripped-down” staging put more emphasis on the characters and removed some of the “ponderousness” of the original production. First let me say that I agree with most of Seth’s short review, namely that several of the actors were superb, and I note his omission of the man who played Coalhouse. His voice bugged me. I also wasn’t fond of the little boy in the sailor suit (as he is referred to in the novel). But I wholeheartedly disagree with Seth’s point in re: the set.
Continue reading “Ragtime”KCRW to podcast Morning Becomes Eclectic – Great news, but due to all of the various stupid licensing restrictions, they’ll only be able to podcast performances and music by independent artists who give explicit consent. The difference being, of course, the stupid and arbitrary distinctions between “broadcast” (i.e. RealPlayer streams) that can are covered by blanket licenses paid by radio stations, and downloadable MP3s, which fall in the same class as CDs that you purchase, and cannot be licensed the same way.