January 31, 2008

Your Peril Sensitive Sunglasses Just Went Dark

You don't need to know what happened, but it was unpleasant. You don't need to know where it happened, but it was nowhere near here. All you need to know is:
"The child's mother was working on a computer in another part of the library."

Like Pop-Tarts says, children should be supervised.

Posted by Sarah at 04:30 PM

January 30, 2008

Or like suddenly not having your liver pecked out every night

A gem of wisdom from Hijinks Ensue, the webcomic/blog I like not just because it has three dots in a row in the first word:

"Is it just me, or have you all enjoyed this break from TV? I started to realize how little I actually enjoyed some of the shows I was watching (Prison Break), and have been able to let them go. I feel like a contrived, poorly planned, monotonous burden has been lifted from my shoulders."

Posted by Sarah at 04:20 PM

January 28, 2008

Making prank calls less fun

Looking at a list of branches of the Berkeley Public Library, I noticed the Tool Lending Library. I expected it to be a book library on Tool St. or something, but NO! They lend out tools. If I could get an electric snake from my library, I totally would.

Posted by Sarah at 07:24 PM

January 26, 2008

The Rosetta Stone Review

The Rosetta Stone and the Rebirth of Ancient Egypt, Ray. Non-fiction. This was a book club recommendation, and it was extremely informative. Pathetic fallacy (the stone having a sense of humor, the stone having made up its mind to be deciphered by a Frenchman) distracts badly when it appears. Fortunately, it does not appear all that frequently. The work naturally goes into far more detail than the corresponding section of The Codebreakers, and gives a substantially different view of the early work of the two folks who were key in arriving at a translation.

There is a section in which the author offers some awfully tortured rationalizations why keeping artifacts away from their countries of origin is okay (“where would it end?” “who's to say where its home really is?” like that), and while I'm not passionate about returning the marbles or the stone to where they were fashioned, that's mostly because I'm likely to get to London before Athens or Egypt, and I can't pretend I have any justification for my selfish preference.

Posted by Craig at 03:04 PM

January 21, 2008

Be America's pre-test kitchen

If you want to be a beta-tester for Cook's Illustrated recipes, sign up for their recipe tester program.
via Serious Eats.

Posted by Craig at 02:01 PM

January 19, 2008

1 to 100

A short film of age: 1 to 100, plus a drum. It's really sweet, and actually makes aging look quite nice.

Posted by Sarah at 07:11 PM

January 18, 2008

January 16, 2008

Press 0 for aggravation

Lifehacker publishes tips on how to get our of voicemail hell (and phone menu hell) by pressing keys that will get you a human operator. I merely add the request that you make sure that you don't already have the human operator you crave, since pressing buttons in her ear isn't the way to super-friendly service. Just saying. Though it is interesting to see how many times you have to yell "Hello? Yes???" until they knock it off.

Posted by Sarah at 10:28 AM

January 07, 2008

"in case the Dalek within needs to get out to go wee"

A wee proto-dalek.

Posted by Sarah at 03:22 PM

January 04, 2008

So appropriate after the best of '07

A giant plastic bust of Lenin was found in Antarctica. Which reminds me that I must see if I can find out more about the Lenin medallions on the moon.

Later: Correction! Only some of them had Lenin on. They seem to be called "pennants" since they have a trailing ribbony thing, but they look a lot like explodey metal soccer balls. And having just seen two strange re-cuttings of a USSR SF film about landing on Venus, I am less surprised to see that the pennants made it to Venus, too.

Posted by Sarah at 03:37 PM

January 02, 2008

Best of 2007 Reading

Here are my five-star reads from 2007: You can see some of my reading jags in here, with lots of communism and Warren Ellis. Not a lot of super-great teen reading, though.

The Cold War: a new history by John Lewis Gaddis
1984, Orwell
Koba the Dread: Laughter and the Twenty Million, Martin Amis
The secret world of American communism, Harvey Klehr, John Earl Haynes, and Fridrikh Igorevich Firsov
Nextwave, agents of H.A.T.E. Vol. 1, This is what they want, Warren Ellis
Crooked Little Vein, Warren Ellis
Fell. Volume 1, Feral city, written by Warren Ellis, illustrated by Ben Templesmith
The campfire collection: thrilling, chilling tales of alien encounters, edited by Gina Hyams

Teen reading
Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
The absolutely true diary of a part-time Indian, by Sherman Alexie ; art by Ellen Forney
The wall : growing up behind the Iron Curtain / Peter Sís
It's kind of a funny story, Ned Vizzini

Posted by Sarah at 09:57 AM