Events

Later items

I'm sitting at my remote office working on a conundrum: how to balance human usability against good software design. The problem is: how can I create an Azure table partitioning scheme that uses Azure efficiently and still allows the user (me) efficiently to troubleshoot problems with the feature in question. This is a direct consequence of the issues I worked on this morning. The feature is the component of the Weather Now parsing system that stores raw weather data from NOAA temporarily. By...
Even though we've just gotten our first snowfall, and today has started giving us snow, freezing rain, sleet, and icy roads, there is good news. January 27th is when things officially start looking brighter in Chicago every year. Tonight, for the first time in almost two months, the sun sets at 5pm. Then things start to become noticeably brighter: a 7am sunrise next Monday, a 5:30pm sunset two weeks after that, then a 6:30am sunrise less than a week later. Yes, this is dorky, but trust me: you'll notice...
The Inner Drive Technology International Data Center continues to whir away (and use electricity), despite my best efforts to shut it down by moving everything to Microsoft Windows Azure. Most of the delay finishing the move has nothing to do with its technology. Simply, my real job has taken a lot of time this month as we've worked toward launching a new application tomorrow. Against the 145 hours spent on that project this month, not counting the 38 hours spent helping with other projects, squeezing...
I've come a across a number of stories over the last few days about the Republican Party's efforts to win elections. GOP chair Reince Preibus wonders where they go from here. Legislators in Mississippi apparently don't understand federalism. Republican legislatures gerrymandered every state they controlled in 2011—nothing new there—but now they want to get more Electoral College votes in swing states by going to proportional voting. Virginia's legislature passed a bill that would have thrown 9 of 13...

335

    David Braverman
ChicagoWeather
Well, Chicago finally found out how long was the longest stretch in recorded history without a 25 mm snowfall: 335 days. The official tally through 6 am was 28 mm, which looked like this in Lincoln Park: It really won't last. The forecast calls for 11°C by Tuesday.

I miss flying

    David Braverman
AviationTravel
Work, work, work, and more than an hour each way to the airport, and it turns out I haven't flown in three years. Time to renew my medical certificate and get back in the air. I miss this, this, and this. Oh, and this.
Maps? Check. Dogs? Check. New York? Check. I give you, Dogs of NYC: If you own a dog in New York City, odds are it’s a mutt named Max. The city’s dog licensing records show that out of almost 100,000 registered dogs, this is the most common breed and name in town. WNYC obtained the complete list from the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, which runs the dog licensing program. The first thing you notice is the names. The most popular ones in the city hew pretty close to the most popular names...
While in New York this past weekend, I visited my old hangout in Hoboken, N.J., The Nag's Head: It looked subtly different than I remembered it, about which I asked the manager. She explained that they had to nearly gut the place after Sandy. Take a look at this: You can just make out a change in the bar's finish about halfway up from the floor. That's where the floodwaters sat for about four days. This blogger posted a flood map of Hoboken after the storm that gives you an idea just how bad things...

Census Dotmap

    David Braverman
CoolWork
This is exceedingly cool: What is this This is a map of every person counted by the 2010 US and 2011 Canadian censuses. The map has 341,817,095 dots - one for each person. Why? I wanted an image of human settlement patterns unmediated by proxies like city boundaries, arterial roads, state lines, &c. Also, it was an interesting challenge. Who is responsible for this? The US and Canadian censuses, mostly. I made the map. I'm Brandon Martin-Anderson. Kieran Huggins came to the rescue with spare server...
Earlier I brought up yesterday's (tonight's in the U.S.) elections in Israel, which surprised me because (a) they're not taking the country into a right-wing dystopia and (b) it started to look like Binyamin Netanyahu might lose his job. (b) is important because the farther away Netanyahu gets from the button, the less likely the U.S. will get drawn into an unwinnable war against Iran. Well, some hours later, the reports from Tel Aviv are encouraging, but not definitive: Hours after polls closed on...

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