Saturday, November 26, 2005 

Via Emma.

Click Here to Visit Furniture Porn!
posted on Saturday, November 26, 2005 7:57:53 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, November 20, 2005 

I'm indifferent to most fantasy books, but I've been a fan of George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series, since I read the first book, A Game of Thrones, in 1997. I read the second book A Clash of Kings, in 1999. The third book A Storm of Swords came out five years ago, and I've been awaiting the fourth book, A Feast for Crows, ever since. After several postponements, it's finally out.

It's an epic tale of love, war, and intrigue. Five Kings are fighting for control, by sword, by guile, and sometimes by magic. Strange creatures are rising in the frozen North, beyond the Wall. Dragons are reappearing in the South. The young Starks, separated by fate and a cruel author, strive in vain to reunite. The Lannisters, mad and bad, seek to dominate.

I'm re-reading the series and rediscovering how good it is. The characters are clearly drawn, the plotting first rate, the writing excellent.

George R.R. Martin is on a book tour of the U.S. and appears at the University of Washington Bookstore on Monday, November 21st, at 7pm.

posted on Sunday, November 20, 2005 11:20:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Friday, November 18, 2005 

Bill Moyers speaking at the 50th anniversary of The Texas Observer:

McCarthyism was a raging plague in the 1950s and the virus rampaged across Texas like tumbleweeds in a wind storm. ... The low point, said Maverick, came when the state Senate passed a bill to remove all books from public libraries which “adversely” reflected on American and Texas history, the family and religion. Even the state teachers association endorsed the bill, in exchange for a pay raise. ...

That was the lay of the land in the 1950s. And Democrats were in charge, remember? That’s right: Texas was a one-party state; Republicans were as scarce in high office as Democrats are today. No matter the players, one-party government is a conspiracy in disguise.

...

Everything President George W. Bush knows, he learned here [in Texas], as the product of a system rigged to assure the political progeny needed to perpetuate itself with minimum interference from the nuisances of liberal democracy. ... With the election of 2000, he and his cohorts arrived in Washington like atheists taking over the Vatican; they had come to run a government they don’t believe in.

posted on Friday, November 18, 2005 8:29:00 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, November 17, 2005 

A year ago, I ran into a problem with Skype squatting on port 80, which I had long forgotten about. Today, I ran into one with Skype squatting on port 443.

I was trying to set up SSL on my Windows Server 2003 dev box. My ultimate goal is to experiment with client certs and server certs for SOAP, but that's a story for another time. I was running into all kinds of strange problems, exacerbated by the relatively strange IIS configuration on my machine.

I tried SslDiag. In hindsight, it pointed me towards the underlying problem, but I couldn't see it at the time. I did a lot of digging around on Google. Eventually, a newsgroup thread on ListenOnlyList gave me CurrPorts, which showed me that Skype was listening on port 443. I suppose netstat -anob, TcpView, or Port Reporter would have told me the same thing, though CurrPorts had the friendliest view. WFetch from the IIS 6 Resource Kit Tools was also useful in looking at raw requests and responses.

posted on Thursday, November 17, 2005 9:18:57 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Tuesday, November 15, 2005 

Last Wednesday night, Emma emailed a dozen of our friends, inviting them to join us for Thanksgiving dinner. One reply arrived the next morning. Then nothing.

By Sunday evening, I had grown exasperated enough to send out a snarky followup:

The courtesy of a belated reply would be appreciated. So far, we've got exactly one RSVP.

It served its purpose. Replies cascaded in. Most, alas, said "no"; they had other plans.

Would that this were an isolated incident. Time and again, I've issued invitations that were not responded to. A simple "yes" or "no" is ideal. A "maybe" is acceptable too, especially if you follow up with a "yes" or a "no".

RSVP is not a meaningless formality. It's a vital planning aid. I need to know ahead of time whether to expect three or thirteen for a dinner party. It's rude and thoughtless to leave me hanging in limbo. If I assume that everyone who's been invited will show up, and cater accordingly, and many of them don't come, I've gone to needless expense and effort. If I guess that only half those invited will turn up, and I underestimate, then I'm embarrassed by not being able to feed my guests properly.

It's almost as big a sin for you to say "yes", then fail to show, without a word of warning.

When the stakes are low, such as a large drinks party, the lack of RSVPs is a minor matter. For a major production, it's inconsiderate at best.

posted on Wednesday, November 16, 2005 3:11:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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The Wild Geese Players of Seattle strike again. This time, we're counterposing William Butler Yeats against Walt Whitman, the Dueling Poets. We're leading off the evening with some real dueling between fencers from the Academia della Spada.

Fri, Nov 18, 8pm
University of Washington Faculty Club

More details here.

posted on Tuesday, November 15, 2005 10:04:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, November 13, 2005 

See what Thunderbird 1.5 RC 1's spelling checker flags as misspelled words.

Seems to be a known bug.

posted on Monday, November 14, 2005 5:50:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, November 12, 2005 

I finally updated my blog to run on dasBlog 1.8. Not too painful. I unzipped the binary distribution, downloaded the content folder from my server to my local drive, ran the provided upgrade utility, and used WinMerge to update the configuration files.

The most obvious change is that I'm using a new theme (skin), which gives the site a very different look. The previous default theme had problems if your browser window was too narrow, due to some hardcoded table sizes (I think).

I also figured out how to post to dasBlog via w.bloggar. I looked for info on configuring w.bloggar a few weeks ago, and couldn't find it then.

Followup: the multiword links in this post are mangled when they appear in a browser. I think this is an issue in dasBlog's XML transforms. Specifically, it only seems to happen when the multiword link contains "dasBlog": ego-surfing, perhaps. Reported as dasBlog bug 1354987.

Followup #2: the problem turned out to be one of the out-of-the box rewriting rules in site.config. Commenting out

  <ContentFilter find="dasBlog" ...
fixed it.

These rules seem to be generally useful. The default configuration allows you to convert several varieties of smilies to graphics:

:-o :-o
:-S :-S
:-D :-D
:'( :'(
;-) ;-)
:-) :-)

as well as Google searches, $g(bush sucks) → bush sucks, and dictionary.com lookups, $d(defenestration) → defenestration. (The preceding examples were escaped by bracketing the first character in the pattern with a <span> tag.)

More details on ContentFilter at the new dasBlog documentation site, dasBlog.info.

posted on Saturday, November 12, 2005 9:23:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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