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Alex, could you do somthing about the pollen coming off all these decorative fruit trees they've planted all over the area. It's thick enough to write your name on the hood of the cars parked under them. I dont even have alergies and my lungs feel tuburcular.
- bill 4-18-2002 4:05 pm [link] [2 comments]

I can't find toms original post but Gary Wilson is playing Joe's Pub 5/15 @ 8:00 as per Brian.
- bill 4-18-2002 3:42 pm [link] [add a comment]

Preview/delete bug bit again. For those who missed it, this thread derived from Wheel's absinthe post.
- alex 4-16-2002 6:53 pm [link] [add a comment]

For the first time in more than 50 years, Eastern screech owls have successfully bred in Central Park.
- dave 4-16-2002 3:12 pm [link] [8 comments]

This is pure newspeak: the administration is adopting the term "homicide bomber" instead of "suicide bomber". When we sacrifice ourselves we're "heroes"; when they sacrifice themselves they're just murderers. If we eliminate the word that indicates their degree of commitment, maybe they'll just go away. If not, we'll have to hit 'em with one of our atomic homicide devices.
- alex 4-15-2002 3:39 pm [link] [1 comment]

This is amusing: warbloggerwatch keeps track of the rantings of pro-war crazies and makes a running acerbic commentary.
- tom moody 4-13-2002 3:46 am [link] [add a comment]

Search alert:
"point+pelee+topless" and "difference+between+faith+and+knowledge"
Porno and philosophy on the same log; do I cover the bases or what? (or maybe I just use too damn many words). Unfortunately, nobody with blocking software will ever find my "pictures+of+pussy+willow+trees".

- alex 4-11-2002 6:48 pm [link] [2 comments]

When I was posting the article on Gary Wilson on my Miscellaneous page, I noticed a tag in the New York Times's html for the piece. The article mentions someone picking up a burger at McDonald's, and that word is followed by this tag (invisible unless you're looking at the source code):

org idsrc="NYSE" value="MCD,MCJ,MCW"/

What's going on here? Is this a way for major advertisers to track how many mentions it gets in the Times? If so, that's fucked up, yo! I can't think of any innocent reason for doing this.
- tom moody 4-10-2002 5:32 pm [link] [4 comments]

where were we talking about donahue? anyway, hes back.
- dave 4-09-2002 6:12 pm [link] [2 comments]

Page Six it ain't.
The Papua New Guinea Gossip Newsletter

- alex 4-05-2002 9:45 pm [link] [add a comment]

"We're using dogs in their purest form"
I don't want to see what they do with cats.

- alex 4-05-2002 9:39 pm [link] [add a comment]

Earlier Bird
The Prothonotary Warbler is a favorite of mine; now it's back, with a message about global warming.
- alex 4-05-2002 3:41 pm [link] [add a comment]

jim/mb email alert--please check:>)
- Skinny 4-05-2002 1:40 pm [link] [add a comment]

IMHO Richter has made some of the
most beautiful paintings in the history of art
- Skinny 4-02-2002 7:45 pm [link] [9 comments]

Here's a cogent passage from that Gopnik article on Popper that Dratfink had posted.

But what really underlay the contradiction between what he thought and what he was, I now think, after a quarter-century's reflection, is a perversity of human nature so deep that it is almost a law-the Law of the Mental Mirror Image. We write what we are not. It is not merely that we fail to live up to our best ideas but that our best ideas, and the tone that goes with them, tend to be the opposite of our natural temperament. Rousseau wrote of the feelings of the heart and the beauties of nature while stewing and seething in a little room. Dr. Johnson pleaded for Christian stoicism in desperate fear of damnation. The masters of the wry middle style, Lionel Trilling and Randall Jarrell, were mired in sadness and confusion. The angry and competitive man (James Thurber) writes tender and rueful humor because his own condition is what he seeks to escape. The apostles of calm reason are hypersensitive and neurotic…
I just want to say how true it is. And if any of you have been taken in by that namby-pamby, new age nonsense posted elsewhere, well, just let me assure you that it's strictly therapeutic. I require the bandwidth in order to dispense with these awful impulses of love and understanding that torment me. I am so thankful to have this means of eliminating my baggage, so that I can get back to my real business of being one nasty bastard!
- alex 4-01-2002 6:34 pm [link] [1 comment]

I'm sure this has already been discussed but I missed it. What is up with the yellow underlined words in posts that then link to definitions of that word or in other cases, products.
- jimlouis 4-01-2002 3:59 pm [link] [8 comments]

bucky meets jesus --> future positive
- dave 3-31-2002 11:13 pm [link] [add a comment]

Life: it's the Anti-Death!
(Happy Easter, in despite.)
- alex 3-31-2002 2:52 pm [link] [2 comments]

Obviously the situation is very serious. The most up to the minute weblog reporting from Jerusalem I've found is Michael Bernstein. He's not a news reporter, but like many of us in NYC on 9/11 he is just trying to say what is happening. Does anyone else have any links to other personal reporting from this region? What's really going on over there?
- jim 3-31-2002 2:29 am [link] [1 comment]

free juice.
- frank 3-29-2002 11:36 pm [link] [1 ref] [4 comments]

Elsewhere on the Tree we've been discussing Google, on and off. Two analogies I've been thinking about. Maybe someone else has posted about this.

1. Just as biodiversity is good for an ecosystem, having a lot of search alternatives is healthier than having just one. Practices such as googlebombing emerge because people figure out the weaknesses of the system. Eventually the system becomes unreliable, diseased, because too many people know how to exploit it in ways it wasn't meant to be used. If there are no alternatives remaining when it rots, the ecosystem (Web) as a whole suffers.

2. Google is like the Interstate highway system. Towns on older roads decay and shrivel up because everyone starts building to catch passing traffic on the superhighways. Weblogging, with its heavy dependence on the link-and-constant-update-loving Google, is like Motel 6 and the Olive Garden. Yet just as those clusters of Interstate franchises will be collecting tumbleweeds when the oil economy winds down, many webloggers now furiously linking to each other to "up their ratings" will be history when, say, Google is wrecked by greedy shareholders after it goes public. And there'll be no "old growth" community to fall back on, because static websites will have packed it in for lack of hits (see #1 above).

These are meant to be words of caution, not pessimism. Just use Dogpile once in a while.

- tom moody 3-29-2002 4:40 am [link] [5 comments]

Musto on murderous club-kid king Michael Alig. A movie is in the works, no doubt looking for that audience who's world didn't change on 9/11. Party on, kids.
- alex 3-28-2002 4:43 pm [link] [1 ref] [10 comments]

the gauntlet has been laid down!
- julie 3-27-2002 5:51 pm [link] [add a comment]

The plan is to convert a DNA sequence – the order of the four chemicals that form the genetic code of a plant or animal – into a piece of digitally encoded music that can then be copyrighted like any other tune.
- dave 3-26-2002 5:06 am [link] [add a comment]

Talk about a gestation period; it only took nine months, but I finally got my new Bookstore Clerk! That's a typical government timeframe. She's just out of film school, and I guess the pickings are slim. I told her I know someone who'll hire her, as soon as he gets a job. (Just kidding; no way I'm letting her go.) Now maybe I'll actually be able to take a vacation…
- alex 3-25-2002 5:24 pm [link] [5 comments]