Events

Later items

Climate shock

    David Braverman
Weather
My friend Danielle is finishing up her tour with the Peace Corps. She's been in Kiribati, where the temperature never seems to get below 30°C (86°F). Danielle, if you have a chance, you may want to check the weather here before getting on the plane. It's supposed to go below -18°C (0°F) tonight.

Why people may not be happy

    David Braverman
Politics
From yesterday's column from Paul Krugman (reg.req.): Over the last few years G.D.P. growth has been reasonably good, and corporate profits have soared. But that growth has failed to trickle down to most Americans. So where are all those corporate profits going, I wonder?

I'll drink to that!

    David Braverman
Politics
It was on this day in 1933 that Prohibition ended. Shortly afterward, marijuana was criminalized, in no small part because the alcohol lobby has always been more powerful, and in the 1930s popularly associated with a different ethnic group, than the marijuana proponents. I was going to provide links to scholarship to support this point, but there isn't a lot of it out on the Web right now. Even the relatively de-politicized National Institutes of Health and the Journal of the AMA have a dearth of...

More overnight snow

    David Braverman
Weather
We got about 10 cm (4 in.) of snow last night, so this morning Anne and I went out to shovel.

Happy birthday, Illinois

    David Braverman
Politics
It was on this day in 1818 that my native Illinois became the 21st of the United States. Tangential question: Why does the History Channel put this tidbit in the Old West category?

Wait Wait!

    David Braverman
SoftwareWork
Anne and I attended the taping last night of Wait Wait — Don't Tell Me!, the NPR News Quiz. It airs Saturday. If you don't listen to the show, tune in, and find out how to get Aerosmith and Kenny G to play the same gig, among other things. Note: You may have seen this post earlier. In a continuation (recurrence?) of earlier problems, Das Blog ate the post about an hour after it went up. Grr.

Post-season extra innings

    David Braverman
Weather
From the National Hurricane Center just a few minutes ago: ...EPSILON BECOMES YET ANOTHER HURRICANE IN THE RECORD BREAKING 2005 ATLANTIC HURRICANE SEASON... Epsilon, the 26th named storm in the Atlantic this year, is now its 14th hurricane. See the complete public advisory. Hurricane season ended Wednesday. Apparently Mother Nature didn't get the memo. Update, 20:53 UTC: Forecaster Stewart at the NHC added this comment to the latest Hurricane Epsilon discussion: GOING BACK TO 1851... HISTORICAL RECORDS...
North Carolina executed the 1,000th person since the U.S. reinstated capital punishment in 1976, putting us 1,000 ahead of our friends and allies in the contest to become the most barbarous democracy on earth. I don't have time at the moment to go over the problems with the death penalty, except to note that the Jeanine Nicarico case is back in the newspapers in Chicago. The man most likely responsible for Nicarico's murder is finally on trial for it 20 years after a man who couldn't possibly have...

Source-control etiquette

    David Braverman
SoftwareWork
Any software project that has more than one developer working on it needs to have some way of ensuring that there is one and only one "official" version of the code. This is called source control, for which teams use tools like Microsoft SourceSafe and Rational ClearCase. In the land of myth and legend, the code checked in to source control is ready to roll. Checking something in that doesn't work, or that prevents other parts of the software project from working, is called "breaking the build."...

It was 50 years ago today

    David Braverman
Politics
...that Rosa Parks was jailed for not giving up her bus seat to a white man in Montgomery, Ala. Thanks to eagle-eyed attorney Angela Riccetti for a correction to this item.

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