31 August 2010

Posting to Google from NetNewsWire

NetNewsWire, a superb free RSS reader for the Mac, syncs with Google Reader but doesn’t have a built-in way to share news items. I installed this AppleScript and used the Keyboard System Preference to set its keyboard shortcut to ⌥⌘S. That command normally invokes NetNewsWire’s “Add to Clippings” key, which I think really should be tied to Google Reader’s share feature. I also added “activate” before the last line of the script to bring Safari to the front when I share an item.

30 August 2010

Top 10 Lost Technologies

The world has never been more technologically advanced than it is now, but that doesn’t mean that some things haven’t been lost along the way. Many of the technologies, inventions, and manufacturing processes of antiquity have simply disappeared with the passage of time, while others are still not fully understood by modern day scientists. Some have since been rediscovered (indoor plumbing, road building), but many of the more mysterious lost technologies have gone on to become the stuff of legend. Here are ten famous examples.

Top 10 Lost Technologies

11 August 2010

All Six Volumes of Scott Pilgrim Hit the iPad, iPhone

Robot6 reports on the new standalone app.

The smaller manga size works perfectly on the iPad. I only got into Scott Pilgrim recently, in time for the last volume to come out, and it’s very fun.

10 August 2010

God's Number is 20

With about 35 CPU-years of idle computer time donated by Google, a team of researchers has essentially solved every position of the Rubik’s Cube, and shown that no position requires more than twenty moves.

Cube20

How Star Trek artists imagined the iPad... 23 years ago

To understand the thinking that lead to the design of the Star Trek PADD, we spoke to some of the people involved in production of ST:TNG (as well as other Star Trek TV series and films), including Michael Okuda, Denise Okuda, and Doug Drexler.

Ars Technica

06 August 2010

Sally Draper's 45s

When Don Draper asks his secretary to buy his daughter some Beatles 45s, here’s what she likely picked up for Christmas 1964:

  • “I Feel Fine”/”She’s a Woman” came out November 27 of that year.
  • “A Hard Day’s Night”/”Things We Said Today”, July 10, 1964.
  • “Can’t Buy Me Love”/”You Can’t Do That”, March 20, 1964.

All are semi-early Beatles releases. The band was still in its early mod period, sporting what the early 60s would think of as long hair but would seem very short come St. Pepper’s full-on hippie look. They wouldn’t start experimenting with different sounds until “Rain” and Revolver in 1966.

The band was pumping out three records a year, and early on their single releases were not collected on the subsequent LPs, so there was a lot to keep up with for the early Beatles fan. Capitol Records, which distributed the band in the US, compiled the albums differently than the UK releases. With Help! in 1965 the releases started to sync up, but in 1964, if Sally had any LPs, she would have had titles like Meet the Beatles!, The Beatles’ Second Album, and Something New. A Hard Day’s Night came out with the film’s release in the late summer but had a slightly different track listing than the UK. Beatles ’65 was the most recent LP Sally could have gotten for Christmas that year, having hit the shelves on December 15.

23 July 2010

Kier Dullea on 2001

“You’ve just been offered the lead in Stanley Kubrick’s next film.”

Kier Dullea on 2001

22 July 2010

Staff Writer Todd Levin on the End of Conan O'Brien's Tonight Show

The next afternoon we had another staff meeting, presided over by a very different Conan. Yesterday’s Conan was an immovable object. Today’s Conan looked drained. He entered the studio unceremoniously, dressed in a leather jacket and baseball hat—like someone getting ready to leave—then slumped into the guest couch and fixed his gaze on the far wall as he addressed us, never really making eye contact. It was a sight that shook your faith a little, like seeing your dad on crutches.

GQ

Doctor Who on Netflix

Netflix has four seasons of Doctor Who available on its Instant Queue streaming, except for three specials that they only have on DVD. To watch everything in the right order:

  1. Watch the first three seasons.
  2. After season three, you’ll need to watch the Christmas special “Voyage of the Damned” on DVD, then season four.
  3. After season four, watch “The Next Doctor” and “Planet of the Dead” on Instant Queue, then get the DVDs for “The Waters of Mars” and “The End of Time”.

Then, while you’re waiting for season five to come out (it’s airing now), you can watch three streaming seasons of spin-off Torchwood. The other spin-off, The Sarah Jane Adventures, isn’t available for streaming as of now.

I’m woefully late to the party on Doctor Who. It definitely has some cheesy sci-fi stuff in there that you’ll either love or have to get past, but when it’s on, it’s absolutely fantastic. I think it’s very well served by the BBC’s shorter season length. US series like Flashforward suffer from having to fill twenty-something episodes. Doctor Who, with only thirteen episodes, can have a few one-off shows and slowly build it’s season-long story without too much filler.

Update 12/16/10: All of the specials are now streaming. Here’s more info on classic Who.

14 July 2010

A Brief History of The Knight and Squire

That sounds awesome, and not just because Cornell’s idea of a “realistic take on British super-heroics” involves Dracula shooting vampires at England from his castle on the moon before getting into his magic space pirate ship.

A Brief History of The Knight and Squire