Sunday, November 25, 2007 

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Title: Coyote Dreams
Author: C.E. Murphy
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Luna
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 0373802722
Pages: 408
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 25 November, 2007

Third in the Walker Papers series of urban fantasies.

Joanne Walker discovered six months ago that she's a powerful shaman, and she's not happy about it. She's an officer in the Seattle Police Department and a former mechanic, and being a woo-woo shaman does not fit with her self image. She's contrary and stubborn and her determination not to accept her new state leads to big problems.

The people that she's close to are going into comas. In her blundering ignorance when she first came into her powers, she unwittingly awakened an ancient power that wants to bring the world to an end. Joanne has to start accepting her shamanism if she's ever going to save her friends.

Meanwhile, the new boyfriend who seems too good to be true is too good to be true. And her love-hate relationship with her boss, Captain Morrison, becomes even more complicated.

Entertaining.

posted on Monday, November 26, 2007 3:35:17 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: Folly
Author: Laurie R. King
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: HarperCollins
Copyright: 2001
ISBN: 0007111347
Pages: 400
Keywords: fiction, suspense
Reading period: 22-24 November, 2007

Rae Newborn has struggled with depression for decades. The death a year ago of her second husband and their young daughter drove her to attempt suicide. Now she's moved to Folly, a small island in the San Juans that she inherited from Desmond Newborn, her grandfather's brother.

Desmond went off to the First World War and came back broken by shell shock. He bought Folly in the 1920s and built a house with his own hands, then disappeared after the house burned down.

All alone on Folly, Rae starts rebuilding the house and finds herself retracing the events of Desmond's life. The parallels become stronger when she finds his skeleton in a cave and reads his journal.

As we learn her story, we find that she has reason to be fearful. It's not just in her head; there really is someone out to hurt her. The construction is therapeutic: as she rebuilds the house, she begins to rebuild her life. She starts to repair the relationship with her long-estranged elder daughter and draws closer to her beloved granddaughter.

The ending was a little too neat and pat for my liking, but otherwise I greatly enjoyed this book.

posted on Sunday, November 25, 2007 8:14:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, November 22, 2007 

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Title: Wilt in Nowhere
Author: Tom Sharpe
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Arrow
Copyright: 2004
ISBN: 0099481731
Pages: 278
Keywords: humor, satire
Reading period: 19-21 November, 2007

In the Seventies and Eighties, Tom Sharpe was a bestselling author in Britain, pumping out a dozen hilarious satires, marked by their savagery. His particular targets were apartheid, the British class system, and political correctness. Then he dried up, producing only three books in the last twenty years.

Wilt in Nowhere is his fourth book about Henry Wilt, a lecturer at a third-rate community college, married to the formidable Eva and father of four ghastly quadruplets. Eva takes the girls to America to stay with her rich uncle in Tennessee. Henry goes on a walking tour of England. He inadvertently gets caught up in a case of arson, while she somehow becomes the focus of a narcotics investigation.

This is fairly funny, but nowhere near as good as I remember his earlier books.

posted on Friday, November 23, 2007 7:44:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, November 18, 2007 

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Title: 1634: The Baltic War
Author: David Weber, Eric Flint
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 141652102X
Pages: 728
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 18 November, 2007

The latest book from the 1632 series; this one is the long awaited sequel to 1633. The premise of the series is that through some mysterious alien event, a small West Virginian town is sent back to Germany in 1631, in the middle of the Thirty Years' War, utterly changing the course of history. The Americans ally themselves with King Gustav Adolf of Sweden, forming the United States of Europe.

The authors adeptly juggle a series of plots that were set in motion in the earlier book. The town of Luebeck is besieged by the French and the Danes. A diplomatic party has to be broken out of the Tower of London. The American-built "ironside" battle ships have to float down the Elbe and sail into the Baltic. The power of the Spanish in the Netherlands has to be broken.

One of the better books in the series. The authors have fun exploring the ramifications of such a world-changing event as the effects continue to ripple through Early Modern Europe.

posted on Monday, November 19, 2007 7:36:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, November 17, 2007 

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Title: What Came Before He Shot Her
Author: Elizabeth George
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0060545631
Pages: 722
Keywords: fiction, mystery
Reading period: 11-17 November, 2007

In Elizabeth George's previous book, With No One As Witness, a senior police officer's pregnant wife is gunned down in London by a 12-year-old boy in an apparently random act. This book tells the story of how that shooting came to happen.

The three Campbell children are abandoned on their aunt's doorstep by their feckless grandmother, months before the shooting. They are mixed-race children with deep-seated damage: their alcoholic father was killed in front of them a few years ago and their mother has long been in a mental hospital. Ness, 15, is deeply alienated and truant, and quickly becomes a drug dealer's girlfriend. Toby, 7, is mildly retarded and attracts bullies. Well-meaning, eleven-year-old Joel is his brother's protector. Their Aunt Kendra is wholly unprepared, emotionally or logistically, to become a mother to these troubled children.

Joel, Ness, and Kendra all proceed towards tragedy, through a combination of bad choices, poor options, inadequate coping skills, grevious miscommunication, and events that are beyond their control.

George paints an unsettling picture of a family at the edge. Each of the principals is strongly drawn, each one's actions makes sense of a sort, each one's demons compels them to fuck up. We know that ultimately Joel will kill a woman and we watch despairingly as he makes the choices that box him in to his destiny.

Not easy reading, but compelling.

posted on Saturday, November 17, 2007 10:43:28 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: Paula Spencer
Author: Roddy Doyle
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Viking
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0670038164
Pages: 288
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 2-11 November, 2007

Roddy Doyle has visited Paula Spencer twice before. First in The Family, a BBC TV serial; then in The Woman Who Walked into Doors. Ten years on from the last book, Paula is a recovering alcoholic who only recently crawled out of the bottle. The boom years of the Celtic Tiger have passed her by: Paula continues to clean Dublin offices and houses for a living. Her youngest two children are still at home. Jack is fine but Leanne is heading towards alcoholism herself. Her other son, John Paul, is estranged and a former heroin junkie, and her oldest, Nicola, worries about her.

Paula is pulling herself together, but it's not easy. She is emotionally volatile and insecure, afraid of being rejected by her children, and sometimes only a hairsbreadth away from taking another drink. But she hasn't lost her sense of humor. She's a sympathetic character, not a whinger.

This is vintage Roddy Doyle and it's both very funny and emotionally true, an unsparing but affectionate portrait of a flawed heroine.

Recommended.

posted on Saturday, November 17, 2007 10:42:18 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, November 04, 2007 

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Last week was the second anniversary of my brother Mark's wedding to Lizzy.

Next week will be the first anniversary of my sister Michelle's wedding to David.

The day after that, my parents will be flying to Egypt to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of their first date.

And Emma and I just got back from a three-day weekend in Astoria, Oregon, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of our own first date.

Sheesh!

posted on Monday, November 05, 2007 5:40:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: Knights of the Black and White
Author: Jack Whyte
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Jove
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0515143332
Pages: 749
Keywords: historical
Reading period: 28 October-1 November, 2007

The first book in a trilogy that tells the fictional history of the Templars.

The Order of the Rebirth in Sion is a secret society whose roots go back to Jerusalem before the time of Christ, whose members are drawn from French noble families. When the Pope starts the First Crusade to seize Jerusalem back from the Muslims, a handful of the Order tag along in the hopes of discovering their order's secrets in the long-lost Temple of Solomon. Under the guise of warrior-monks protecting the bandit-infested roads, they dig deep beneath the Temple on the Mount and find the treasure they have been looking for.

A rather hokey potboiler. Occasionally entertaining, but much too long.

posted on Monday, November 05, 2007 5:14:34 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: The Monster of Florence
Author: Magdelen Nabb
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Arrow
Copyright: 1996
ISBN: 0099489899
Pages: 485
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 22-27 October, 2007

Nabb's recurring character, Marshal Guarnaccia, is a non-commissioned officer in the carabinieri, the Italian military-style police, who is stationed in Florence. Guarnaccia is a slow, dogged plodder and a wallflower, who is largely overlooked by those who encounter him, but who nonetheless gets to the bottom of mysteries.

An old case, involving a series of double murders over a twenty-year period, has been reopened for political reasons. Several police officers, including the Marshal, have been seconded to a task force. The Marshal is troubled by what is clearly an attempt by the prosecutor to put an unsavory pedophile into the frame, in order to close the case quickly, and he starts digging around, finding evidence that had long been overlooked or never gathered.

Somewhat confusing. I had a hard time keeping track of Sergio and Silvano and Flavio and Fabio.

posted on Monday, November 05, 2007 5:13:42 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: The Clan Corporate
Author: Charles Stross
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Tor
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0765348225
Pages: 300
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 20-21 October, 2007

The third book in the Merchant Princes series.

Miriam Beckstein, is a tech journalist in Boston, who discovered in the first book that she was born in a parallel world, and that she and some of her relatives hold a rare gene that allows them to step between worlds. In her feudal home world, her relatives have become merchant princes, wielding enormous power over the local economy.

Miriam, thoroughly American, doesn't fit in well in that other world, and resents becoming a pawn in her family's dynastic games. Meanwhile, back on our Earth, the U.S. government has become aware of the Family and considers them dangerous narco-terrorists.

Very entertaining, but best read in sequence after the first two books.

posted on Monday, November 05, 2007 5:11:14 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: Mr. Vertigo
Author: Paul Auster
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 1994
ISBN: 0140231900
Pages: 293
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 14-20 October, 2007

Walt the Wonder Boy can walk on air. Really. He was a nine-year-old orphan pulled off the streets of 1920s St. Louis by Master Yehudi and taught in a long, grueling process to levitate and walk through the air. Walt becomes a huge hit and he and Master Yehudi travel around America, pulling in the crowds. It can't last of course and Walt loses his ability once puberty strikes. Master Yehudi dies and Walt settles into a second career as a small-time crook and club owner in 1930s Chicago. He goes through several more changes, which are dealt with briefly, before ending up as an old man in the 1990s.

Walt's a firecracker kid with a smart mouth and a product of his times. I could easily see him played by Mickey Rooney. Tragedy strikes him again and again, but he overcomes most of it.

This book is a lot of fun. Highly recommended.

posted on Monday, November 05, 2007 5:10:27 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: Bulletproof Web Design, second edition
Author: Dan Cederholm
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: New Riders
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 0321509021
Pages: 312
Keywords: css, web
Reading period: 10-29 October, 2007

Cederholm clearly explains the CSS techniques required to build a "bulletproof" website: one that is robust in the face of text resizing, window resizing, disabled images, etc, with minimal, semantically correct markup that works across all the major browsers.

Anyone who's serious about building a modern website should read this book.

Cederholm builds up his examples, one step at a time, in a clear manner. For the shorter examples, he tends to show the entire CSS or XHTML again and again, with the latest changes highlighted in orange. I would have preferred him to strip out the unneccessary repetitive material. Otherwise, great book.

posted on Monday, November 05, 2007 5:09:04 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, October 25, 2007 

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I've grown fond of the JavaScript || idiom:

 function FrobImage(img) {
var width = img.width || 400;
var height = img.height || 300;
// ...
}

FrobImage({height: 100, name: "example.png"});

If img.width exists and it's truthy, then width = img.width; otherwise, width = 400. Here, it will be 400 since the img hash has no width property. More than two alternatives may be used: x = a || b || c || ... || q;

A few weeks ago, while cleaning up the error handling in some batch files, I came across a similar idiom:

 foo.exe bar 123 "some stuff"  || goto :Error

Only if foo.exe fails (exit() returns a non-zero value), is the second clause executed.

Perl's die is typically used in a very similar idom:

 chdir '/usr/spool/news' || die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n"

though the or keyword seems to be preferred nowadays to ||.

This morning, I came across the ?? operator in C# 2.0, aka the null coalescing operator:

 Customer cust = getCustomer(id) ?? new Customer();

If getCustomer(id) is not null, then that's the value that cust gets; otherwise it's set to new Customer().

All of these idioms are syntactic sugar and all of them are in my toolbox.

posted on Thursday, October 25, 2007 7:12:34 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, October 23, 2007 

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Picture this.

An external USB hard drive plugged in to a machine running Win64. The OS has virtualized the underlying transport so that it's essentially indistinguishable from an internal IDE, SCSi, or SATA drive. Call the machine, Boss, and the USB drive, L:.

Boss is running Virtual PC, which is hosting a 32-bit virtual machine on top of Boss's 64-bit OS. Let's call the 32-bit VM, Sidekick.

Sidekick is not only a VM, but a virtual network host. Boss is bridging connections to Sidekick, and Sidekick and Boss both appear on the LAN as separate network hosts.

The USB drive has several ISO images, which Sidekick wants to use. Sidekick connects to \\Master\L$ over the virtual network, and uses a tool like VcdTool to mount the remote ISO on a virtual CD drive.

Amazingly enough, it all just worked for me last night.

I'm trying to set up an environment where I can build Vim with various 32-bit and 64-bit Microsoft compilers and, more importantly, run the Win64 binary. I have a set of VM images with distinct flavors of MSVC, which was necessary to update INSTALLpc.txt and to keep Make_mvc.mak building.

In previous iterations, I got Remote Desktop access to a colleague's Win64 machine, but that was at Atlas, so it's no longer an option. I bought a new AMD64 desktop system a few months ago and over the weekend set it up to dual boot.

posted on Wednesday, October 24, 2007 3:57:53 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, October 15, 2007 

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Title: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe
Author: C.S. Lewis
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper Collins
Copyright: 1950
ISBN: 0060764899
Pages: 256
Keywords: fantasy, children
Reading period: 13-14 October, 2007

We saw the movie last week and I remarked that I had never read any of the Chronicles of Narnia books, so Emma dug out her copies.

The book is old-fashioned and innocent. It reminds of some of the British books that I read in my childhood, such as the Famous Five.

By way of an enchanted wardrobe, four plucky human children fall into a parallel world, where they are acclaimed as saviors, fulfilling a prophecy. They quickly fall afoul of the evil tyrant, the White Witch, but make their way to Aslan, the noble lion, who eventually saves the day after a noble sacrifice.

Indeed a classic children's tale.

posted on Tuesday, October 16, 2007 5:42:31 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: At End of Day
Author: George V. Higgins
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harcourt
Copyright: 2000
ISBN: 0151003580
Pages: 383
Keywords: crime fiction
Reading period: 30 September-7 October, 2007

At End of Day is Higgins' last novel, published after his death. McKeach and Cistaro are crime bosses who have avoided arrest for more than 30 years. Partly because they're very smart, very competent, and quite paranoid. Partly because they have a secret deal with the local FBI office: they provide information in return for protection. All good things come to an end, of course.

Higgins' style is odd, conducted largely in monologue. His characters jaw and jaw. Boy, do they love the sounds of their own voices. It works, but it's tiring to read.

Higgins tells a complex tale: a slice of life of the FBI, the Massechusetts state police, and the crooks, both in the present and in flashback. No one is particularly likeable, but it's hard to look away.

Recommended.

posted on Tuesday, October 16, 2007 5:40:55 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, October 11, 2007 

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I've been meaning to play around with Greasemonkey for a couple of years. Greasemonkey is a Firefox extension that allows users to install scripts that make on-the-fly changes to the look and feel of third-party websites. For example, adding price comparisons to Amazon or thumbnail images to Google search results. UserScripts.org has a large repository of Greasemonkey scripts.

I finally built my first script the other day. We're putting together a new feature at Cozi that integrates partner websites with our site. Since the feature is not yet announced, I'll just say that partners will add a link to Cozi on many of their database-driven pages. That link has a complex, page-dependent querystring. Until the partners do the work to add the link to their sites, we were limited to testing and demoing with hand-modified pages.

I wrote a little Greasemonkey script that finds the right spot on the partner pages to place the link, scrapes some context to construct the querystring, and inserts the link. Now we can test against the real sites and show a compelling demo. Of course, it only works on Firefox and it requires you to install both Greasemonkey and this script. Our partners will have to make minor changes to their sites before ordinary users can take advantage of the feature.

Some gotchas with Greasemonkey. Inserting, say, <b>Click here</b> is as simple as document.getElementById('spot').innerHTML = <b>Click here</b>. However, inserting a <script> node requires:

 var scr = document.createElement('script');
scr.type = 'text/javascript';
scr.text = 'createLink(' + p1 + ', ' + p2 + ', ' + p3 + ');';
document.getElementById('spot').appendChild(scr);

Greasemonkey will definitely become part of my repertoire.

posted on Thursday, October 11, 2007 7:05:48 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, October 04, 2007 

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Title: Pro JavaScript Techniques
Author: John Resig
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Apress
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 1590597273
Pages: 347
Keywords: programming, javascript
Reading period: 16 September-4 October, 2007

At Cozi.com, we use the jQuery JavaScript library to do all kinds of complex and wonderful DHTML and Ajax tricks in our web client. Extremely powerful, very elegant: I commend it to your attention.

John Resig is the lead developer on the jQuery team. This book is not about jQuery, though if you work your way through it, you'll be well equipped to understand the jQuery source code.

This book covers modern JavaScript techniques, in particular, object-oriented JavaScript, unobtrusive DOM manipulation, Ajax, and cross-browser warts. It covers a lot of ground and shows the underpinnings of many of the popular JavaScript libraries that power Web 2.0 sites, showing uses of jQuery, Scriptaculous, Dojo, Prototype, and more. His examples are clean and well-chosen.

It's a good book and I learned a great deal from it. It's not as good a book as it could have been. The editing is sloppy and there are too many typos. Resig fails to follow Strunk's dictum, omit needless words: the writing is clumsy and wordy. Inline <code> should be typeset in a distinct font in a programming book. Finally, no one should talk about consuming JSON without mentioning browser security.

posted on Friday, October 05, 2007 6:17:59 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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My little brother, Mark Reilly aka the Alien Resident, successfully defended his doctoral dissertation on Tuesday and may now be addressed as "Dr. Reilly."

He studied part-time at the European Graduate School in New York City, while juggling several jobs. His doctorate is in Media and Communications and the topic was Propaganda of the Dead: Terrorism and Revolution, which he picked before 9/11.

He is only the second PhD in the family. My uncle Pat Deasy was the first.

Congratulations, Mark!

posted on Friday, October 05, 2007 5:50:18 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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About a year ago, I posted a link to some silly cat pictures. I just found the motherlode.

http://icanhascheezburger.files.wordpress.com/2007/09/128340438109062500whyihaztohol.jpg

posted on Friday, October 05, 2007 5:46:25 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, September 30, 2007 

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Title: Smiley's People
Author: John le Carré
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Scribner
Copyright: 1979
ISBN: 0743455800
Pages: 439
Keywords: spy, thriller
Reading period: 23-29 September, 2007

Smiley's People is the last book in le Carré's Karla Trilogy, begun in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and continued in The Honourable Schoolboy.

George Smiley is called back from retirement when one of his former contacts, a Russian general turned emigré, is found murdered. Working alone and exercising his considerable tradecraft, Smiley discovers a fatal chink in the armor of his old adversary, Karla, the Russian spymaster. He gets the go-ahead to execute a sting, which will ultimately lead to Karla's defection.

Once again, le Carré crafts a subtle and compelling novel. Smiley may be drab and self-effacing, yet he has a keen insight into his "people" -- his former colleagues and agents -- when he calls upon them to help him uncover why the General was murdered. Smiley lives in a dark world of moral ambiguity, where blackmail and treachery are the norm. To force Karla's defection, Smiley must use Karla's despised methods, trading on Karla's love for his daughter. This leaves him with the taste of ashes in his mouth at the moment of his final victory.

Highly recommended.

posted on Sunday, September 30, 2007 9:38:34 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, September 26, 2007 

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I was just watching the Colbert Report and Sam Waterston was on, touting Unity08. Except that both he and Colbert kept pronouncing it as Unity-oh-Eight dot com, not Unity-zero-Eight dot com. I knew what they meant of course, but I decided to see what was at Unityo8. Naturally, they don't own the domain, despite having existed for more than a year. Such incompetence.

As for their third-way platform, I expect that they would act as a spoiler, most likely splitting the Democratic vote, as Nader (cursed be his name) did in 2000. Their list of sponsors is quite suspect too. Irregular Times lists a number of problems with Unity08.

posted on Thursday, September 27, 2007 6:50:27 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, September 24, 2007 

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Cozi is hiring. We have positions for Developers and Web Developers.

We're a small Web 2.0 startup, based in the Smith Tower in downtown Seattle. Our Cozi Central product is groupware for families: it helps parents manage their own and their kids' schedules, shopping lists, and reminders, from computers, PDAs, and mobile phones.

If you're interested, let me know.

Update: we have some non-developer positions too.

posted on Monday, September 24, 2007 8:36:06 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, September 23, 2007 

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Title: Waxwings
Author: Jonathan Raban
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Pantheon
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0375410082
Pages: 282
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 17-23 September, 2007

Tom Janeway lives in Seattle with his wife Beth and their four-year-old son, Finn. Tom is a middle-aged Englishman who teaches writing at the University of Washington; Beth, somewhat younger, is an editor at GetAShack.com. It's 1999 and the DotCom boom is raging. Chick is an illegal immigrant from China, with a raging entrepreneurial streak, who ends up wandering in and out of Tom's life.

Tom is perceptive enough to be an occasional commentator on NPR's All Things Considered, yet oblivious to the problems in his marriage, and he's flabbergasted when Beth leaves him. Worse still, through being in the wrong place at the wrong time, he becomes a person of interest in the abduction of a child, and he becomes a pariah when it's mentioned in a Stranger article.

Raban brings DotCom Seattle to life, against a backdrop of the WTO riots, the cancellation of the millenial New Year's celebration after the arrest of a bomber at Port Angeles, and other events that had slipped my mind.

Surprisingly few novels (to my knowledge) have attempted to capture the computer culture of Seattle. Only Douglas Coupland's Microserfs and Daniel Oran's so-so Ulterior Motive come to mind.

Tom is likeable and decent, yet exasperating in his obliviousness. Beth, Finn, and Chick are all strongly realized characters.

Entertaining and perceptive, and one of the better novels set in Seattle.

posted on Monday, September 24, 2007 3:26:19 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, September 16, 2007 

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This year is the 21st anniversary of the Northwest AIDS Walk. A whole generation has passed. Twenty years ago, AIDS was a gay man's disease and a death sentence. The Reagan administration was just beginning to acknowledge the existence of AIDS, half a decade after it had first been recognized and thousands had died.

AIDS is still a serious problem, but the development of antiretroviral drugs a decade ago means that people with HIV are living longer, healthier lives than before. More than 1 million Americans are now living with HIV/AIDS: 9,000 of them in King County. 40,000 people are infected every year, and most new infections are among African-Americans. The U.S. is getting off relatively lightly: about one-quarter of the adults in southern Africa have HIV!

The Lifelong AIDS Alliance provides a variety of services to those living with HIV/AIDS in Washington State. LLAA cooks more than 100,000 fresh meals each year, provides case management for 946 people, assists 800 people with housing resources, packs 30,000 grocery bags, and distributes condoms and safe-sex information to high-risk populations.

I've walked in the AIDS Walk every year since 1992 and I've raised thousands of dollars for AIDS. Please help me raise money again for this year's walk on Saturday, September 29th. I aim to raise at least $1000.

You can sponsor me by going to http://www.georgevreilly.com/aidswalk.

I thank you, the Lifelong AIDS Alliance thanks you, and the people you'll be helping thank you.

Note: Emma and I are having a fundraising barbecue on Sunday 23rd September. Email me for more details.

posted on Monday, September 17, 2007 2:09:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Title: To the Power of Three
Author: Laura Lippman
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: William Morrow
Copyright: 2005
ISBN: 0060506725
Pages: 434
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 16 September, 2007

Days before graduation, a shooting takes place in the girls' bathroom at a suburban Maryland high school. The popular, pretty Kat is dead; the athletic Josie was shot in the foot; and the drama star and shooter, Perri, is comatose after shooting herself in the head. The three girls had been inseparable since third grade, though Perri and Kat had fallen out the previous summer. What happened? What led Perri to such an act?

Lippman builds a compelling story, weaving together the aftermath and the events leading up to the shooting. She captures the grief and bemusement of the survivors, each with their own selfish perspective, as they struggle to find meaning in the shooting. Her grasp of the mores and currents within a contemporary high school seems pitch perfect to me.

I said in my review of No Good Deeds that I thought Lippman was losing her enthusiasm for her Tess Monaghan series. This book has no such failing.

Highly recommended.

posted on Monday, September 17, 2007 12:04:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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