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Later items

Oddly warm

    David Braverman
ChicagoWeather
Just three days ago, Thursday morning, the temperature in Chicago sank to -18°C, with a wind chill of -23°C. Right now, it's 16°C. Did I mention it's the beginning of January? I'm so happy the U.S. has taken the lead against global warming.
"I'd rather be down here wishing I were up there, than the opposite." So goes the aviation axiom. But this morning, with its 3 km visibilities and 30 m—yes, thirty meters—ceiling, I have postponed a checkout flight for the third time in a row. Here's how weather can be really frustrating. I kept track of my flights (or lack thereof) during the summer of 1999 when I was trying to get my certificate, and put together a Web page to chronicle the frustration. Two notes about the page: first, I haven't...

2008 != 2004

    David Braverman
PoliticsUS Politics
I've had a number of conversations with friends recently about the 2008 elections. A couple are afraid we're going to repeat the 2004 elections, in which we Democrats believed the day before the election we were going to win, but woke up the day after to a brave old world. Today we've seen the first hard number that shows, without a doubt, we're going to rout the Republicans this year: tonight, an all-time record 227,000 Democrats caucused in Iowa, almost double the number in 2004. We're mad as hell...
Gotta love Chicago weather. Right now it's -18°C outside, which is the point where Chicagoans are allowed to complain about the cold without looking wimpy. It builds character. And I do have to get to my office, but you know? I don't want to go out there. Even Parker lasted just long enough to do his business before sprinting back to the door like his tail was on fire. (Of course, that could have been about breakfast and not about the cold.) But this being Chicago, the forecast calls for 10°C weather on...

No idea they could do that

    David Braverman
General
I noticed as I was leaving the office Monday that my cactus changed: I guess it's a happy cactus after all. They're so hard to read, you know.

Today's Daily Parker

    David Braverman
DailyParker
Nothing, not rain, not sleet, not 15 cm of snow on the ground, can keep Parker from a tennis ball:

2008 GMT

    David Braverman
Geography
Now London—and officially, the enitre world, as it's now midnight UTC.

And now, Eastern Europe

    David Braverman
Geography
Happy New Year to everyone in Greece, Israel, and South Africa!
Via Marc Andreesen (yes, the Marc Andreesen), from Variety: [O]verall music [CD] sales during the Christmas shopping season were down an astounding 21% from last year. From the week of Thanksgiving up through the day before Christmas Eve, 83.9 million albums were sold, a decrease of 21.38 million from 2006's 105.28 million. It's important to realize, as the RIAA simply can't grasp, this has nothing to do with piracy. Suing people isn't the answer; getting a clue and selling over the Web is.

Scary blog to read

    David Braverman
BlogsWork
Via Paul Krugman, I've been reading the Calculated Risk blog for a while. They write about finance and economics, from the perspective of a retired senior public-company executive. Very good stuff, and very frightening.

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