Damn, I’m sexy.
A one-second clip of me at the bar of ‘inoteca is approximately 29 seconds into NY1’s story on Restaurants: Singles
The view from my apartment can be stunning. Even though I have lived here for almost two years, the sudden changes in the weather sometimes amaze me. These photos were taken in a span of under 15 minutes. Even though the snow storm appeared to verge on a blizzard, none of the snow stuck to the ground. There were no signs of the snow storm other than a damp ground less than five minutes after the storm ended.
The Manhattan Bridge:
The Brooklyn Bridge:
Several blogs have noted that Tom Dowdy passed away this past weekend. Tom was a software engineer at Apple; he worked on products like QuickTime and iTunes. In his spare time, he wrote Darkside of the Macintosh. It was a very well-written and free screen saver for Macs prior to OS X. Tom took a 12-week course at the Culinary Institute of America in 1998; his journal, Life at the Other CIA, is still a lot of fun to read.
I’ve referred to Tom’s Butter Pig blog before. I always enjoyed reading him, and I’m sad that we never got to meet.
TripIt is a site that allows you to track your travel planning. The cool part of the site is that it is easy to add your travel plans to your profile. When you receive an email confirmation from the airline, hotel, or reservation site, you just forward it to plans@tripit.com. It sees that you have sent the mail and adds it to your itinerary. When I was traveling a lot for work, this would have been tremendously helpful. I frequently made plans through a number of different vendors and this site would have allowed me to easily consolidate all of the information. As an added bonus, you can choose to easily share your calendar with friends, coworkers, and family members.
[Found from a link on Joel On Software.]
Last week, I wrote about the Mike McConnell profile in The New Yorker. In the profile, Ed Giorgio characterized security and privacy as a zero-sum game. This week, Bruce Schneier wrote an eloquent rebuttal to Giorgio’s assertion. Schneier’s thesis is concisely stated: “The debate isn’t security versus privacy. It’s liberty versus control.” His points are on the money, and I wish more people in the United States heeded his words.
[Schneier’s essay was also posted to wired.com.]
Today, a seal was spotted in the Hudson River off of West 79th Street. More information is available at the CityRoom blog. I wish I could have seen it.
The January 22nd issue of The New Yorker (last week) has an in-depth profile by Lawrence Wright on the Director of National Intelligence, Mike McConnell. All executive-branch intelligence departments report to McConnell in one way or another. “The Spymaster” discusses many topics including: the use of torture, defending the U.S. infrastructure against cyber-attacks from foreign countries, FISA, security screening, the state of IT in our intelligence agencies, and the balance of privacy versus spying. I was not able to find an online version, but it is worth picking up a copy at your local newsstand or visiting the library. (If you decide to read this issue, also check out article on the MySpace hoax and subsequent suicide.
Some quotes from the McConnell profile include:
- The fantasy worlds that Disney creates have a surprising amount in common with the ideal universe envisaged by the intelligence community[…]
- [McConnell said] “If the 9/11 perpetrators had focussed on a single U.S. bank through cyber-attack and it had been successful, it would have an order-of-magnitude greater impact on the U.S. economy”
- [Ed Giorgio, a security consultant who ran both the code-breaking and code-making departments at the N.S.A., said] “There are forty thousand Chinese hackers who are collecting intelligence off U.S. information systems[…] We should never get into a hacking war with the Chinese.”
- [On the definition of waterboarding as torture] The reason that he couldn’t be more specific, McConnell said, is that “if it ever is determined to be torture, there will be a huge penalty to be paid for anyone engaging in it.”
- [On being asked if Al Qaeda was America’s greatest threat] “No, no, no, not at all” [McConnell] said. “Terrorism can kill a lot of people, but it can’t fundamentally challenge the ability of the nation to exist.”
Wright also briefly discusses his own experience of being tapped by the U.S. government and visited by the FBI. McConnell’s response, while noncommittal, is quite interesting.
The article is 18 pages and required reading for anyone interested in U.S. policies regarding spying and privacy, and the agencies responsible for implementing those policies. It’s thought provoking and provides valuable insights into the man most responsible for spying in the world.
I originally submitted this to Slashdot, but they didn’t run the piece. Today they ran a one paragraph story on a one screen response on arstechnica.com to a single quote from the 18-page New Yorker article. Not surprisingly, The New Yorker article is better than either the Slashdot or ArsTechnica pieces. It has better writing, more sources, a higher quality of analysis, and a broader scope.
[Update: included link to article abstract. Thanks, Faisal!]
I turned 34 today. It feels a lot like turning 33, except much warmer. (The expected high today is 56 degrees Fahrenheit.)
I’ve said it before, but I think it bears repeating: Apple is just as “evil” as Microsoft, just not as successful.
From the parody blog site, The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs comes the following four posts:
- I’m weighing an offer from Apple
- So now Apple is all pissed off
- First carrot, now stick
- I’m feeling a little bit better now
[Link via /.]
Just a reminder that Menu for Hope 4 ends tomorrow! Tickets are only $10 each, and you can enter as many times as you want. There are great prizes, it’s for a good cause, and it’s a good time of year to give (for both religious and tax reasons).