Events
Yeah, it's Passover. Time for this: Same people who brought you this last year:
Quick time-out from my generally useless day (long overdue and appreciated): A sign of a good book is that you spend more time thinking about it than actually passing your eyes over the pages. More on which book in a later post.
Just a quick note about debugging. I just spent about 30 minutes tracking down a bug that caused a client to get invoiced for -18 hours of premium time and 1.12 days of regular time. The basic problem is that an appointment can begin and end at any time, but from 6pm to 8am, an appointment costs more per hour than during business hours. This particular appointment started at 5pm and went until midnight, which should be 6 hours of premium and 1 hour of regular. The bottom line: I had unit tests, which...
At last night's performance, the venue used dim, magenta lighting on the stage that made poor Lauren O'Connell look like a pink ghost. Here's one image exactly as it came out of my camera: Fortunately, I shoot raw photos, which take up lots of room (about 22 MB each) but with the benefit of lots of uncompressed image information. It's therefore relatively easy, using Adobe Lightroom, to correct for it. Magenta lights are pretty grim, though; the only reasonable correction was to make it black and white...
The female half of Pomplamoose, Nataly Dawn Knutsen, played a venue four blocks from my house yesterday, so I just had to go. She and her touring partners Lauren O'Connell and Ryan Lerman were as charming and talented in person as their music makes them seem. Dawn is also tall (178 cm in flats), which isn't readily apparent from her videos. The tour moves east through April before going back to California at month's end. Also, Knutsen assured me that Pomplamoose will continue.
Illinois State Climatologist Jim Angel reports our 12-month drought has finally ended: According to the US Drought Monitor, Illinois is now drought free for the first time since April 3, 2012. Most areas in Illinois have seen positive responses in soil moisture, stream flows, lake levels, and groundwater levels since the fall. A small area of northwest Illinois remains as abnormally dry due to some lingering concerns about subsoil moisture and groundwater levels in that area. It was pretty grim for a...
Things I might have time to read this weekend
BusinessCloudGeneralPoliticsSecurityUS PoliticsWindows AzureWorkWorld Politics
Too much going on: Paul Murphy at Financial Times thinks Cyprus will do the right thing Microsoft released figures about national security letters the FBI has sent it .NET 4 introduced the System.Numerics.Complex type Microsoft's Channel 9 posted a video about migrating applications to Azure virtual machines Jeff Atwood makes a case for the Ruby language BuzzFeed imagines Twitter's 7th anniversary promo video with the Inception theme No one really cares about LinkedIn endorsements T-Mobile has put up an...
Via Sullivan, the European Union has given Cyprus the weekend to get itself put together...or else... Cypriot negotiators have lots of perfectly sensible things they can tell the European purse-string holders about why this obsesssion with debt sustainability is silly. They can point to future natural-gas revenues, for instance, which give Cyprus the potential ability to pay of debts which seem huge right now. They can also point to the denominator here: if failure to reach a deal results in GDP...
The WGN Weather Blog explains it: The unseasonably chilly pattern which has descended on Chicago and the Midwest is being driven by a new round of atmospheric blocking in the arctic. The so-called Greenland block has returned and is predicted by global forecast models to dominate the closing weeks of March and spill over into early April.... Blocking patterns in the arctic, like the one now in place, occur when vast pools of warmer than normal air take up residence aloft. As the planet's arctic regions...
Odd that I'm finding this out through the Chicago Tribune: Amazon.com has introduced a way for users to quickly save and send news articles as well as other items to their Kindle devices for later, off-line reading. The new feature can be added by users in a variety of ways. Amazon has made it possible for users to send items to their Kindles through Web browser extensions for Google Chrome and Firefox, as a feature that can be installed on Macs or PCs, from Google Android mobile devices, or from users'...
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