Events
Sometimes upgrading or replacing something can expose deficiencies in one's own processes. Last week, my four-year-old MP3 player died. It's pretty sad, actually. It's tiny (20 GB) hard disk just stopped spinning. So, not wanting to hear every background conversation of everyone in my client's office, I decided to replace it. After much evaluation I chose the Apple iPod Classic 120. Then I fired up iTunes and sync'd up my library. It turns out, that phase in the late 1990s when I ripped all of my CDs in...
A report released today says the century-old Illinois Sanitary and Ship Canal is crumbling, which could be bad news for Joliet: "We have 39 feet of water that we are holding off Joliet," [Lockmaster Dave] Nolen said, pointing downstream to downtown Joliet as he stood Thursday on a deck overlooking the watertight gates at one end of the lock. "People in Joliet probably wouldn't be able to sleep at night if they knew how devastating the flooding would be because of a breach," he said, raising his voice to...
Some readers, I know, will find this as interesting as I am: the GPS track (in Google Earth format) of my very long walk around Sint Maarten. Other readers will just figure I'm waaaay too geeky. Both sets will be correct.
I mentioned yesterday that my grade-school friend's restaurant got a great review in the Trib. His wife (also an old friend of mine) emailed this morning that the local ABC affilliate also mentioned it favorably. Rich is having a special event April 14th: he's re-creating the Titanic's last meal, so to speak. Details to follow—but I've already made my reservation.
One of my oldest friends—I mean, 5th-grade-old—opened a restaurant this past fall: Mint Julep Bistro, 53 W. Slade St., Palatine, +1 (847) 934-3000. The Chicago Tribune has now reviewed it: Without reservations on a recent Saturday, we waited in the intimate lounge where, to management's credit, nobody pushed apps or booze on us. But we wanted both, and it fortunately didn't take long to fill our order. There's plenty of bourbon and a lovely wine list by the glass/bottle. We bypassed the bourbon (we’ll...
My 30-ballpark Geas continues into its second season. Just booked: Houston, April 7th, against the Cubs (of course). Astute observers will note that I've visited the Houston ballpark before, when I was on a consulting assignment for a well-known energy trading company that no longer has naming rights to the park. But I decided at the beginning of the Geas that parks I visited before the Geas started didn't count. (This makes New Yankee Stadium and Citi Field problematic, so I split the difference: Old...
As promised, more photos from last weekend. First, South Beach: As much as I enjoy the beach, I actually think the Art Deco buildings are the coolest aspect of Miami Beach. Three iconic images of Sint Maarten follow. First, a reminder that Sint Maarten and St.-Martin have two distinct identities: I took this, for example, in St.-Martin, in Sandy Ground: And this, on Simpson Bay in Sint Maarten: More tomorrow.
California, apparently, has passed its budget, prompting The Economist's observation, "It turns out that the only way to negotiate a budget for the world’s eighth biggest economy is to issue politicians with toothbrushes and lock them in a building." Illinois, meanwhile, is trying to pass a Senator. (For both passings, imagine kidney stones.)
British and French newspapers reported early this week that two of their submarines collided two weeks ago: The Ministry of Defence was under intense pressure last night to explain how the [HMS] Vanguard, which can carry 48 nuclear warheads on 16 missiles, had managed to crash into Le Triomphant - payload 16 missiles - in an incident which some experts say could have caused a nuclear catastrophe. The underwater collision happened earlier this month and was at low speed, and no injuries were reported...
No matter how bad it seems in Illinois right now, at least we have a functioning state government. California, on the other hand... A state budget deal to close a $41 billion shortfall has been put further into question early this morning after Senate Republicans ousted their leader who had helped negotiate the long-awaited plan with other top lawmakers in California. ...[T]he ousted Minority Leader Dave Cogdill, R-Modesto, ...was one of the four legislative leaders who negotiated the emergency budget...
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