30 Old PC Ads That Will Blow Your Processor
Via Make:.
Happy Anniversary to my own dear mia_mcdavid. Looking forward to many more.
Irish Class, July 12, 2010
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| rogha | choice | /rau/ |
| Níl plean samraidh agam. Tá ag déanamh sé mar téim | I don’t have a summer plan. I am making it up as I go. | [my contribution] |
Methane bubble “doomsday” story debunked.
Via Bad Astronomy, with the note “…this ecological disaster sucks enough without adding hysteria to it.”
Refurbishing Hand Planes
Notes from a presentation by Ralph Truesdell at
Woodcraft of Minneapolis,
July 10, 2010.
From ‘Hollywood Accounting’ Losing In The Courts:
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, under “Hollywood accounting,” ended up with a $167 million “loss,” despite taking in $938 million in revenue.
Via Slashdot
From Be Careful What You Wish For Department: Federal District Court Strikes Down DOMA
Judge Tauro’s attempt to limit federal power through the Tenth Amendment so that it does not interfere with state prerogatives might delight members of the contemporary Tea Party movement (at least if it wasn’t aimed at DOMA), but it should give most Americans pause. The modern state depends heavily on the federal government’s taxing and spending powers for many of the benefits that citizens hold dear, including Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and the newly passed provisions of the Affordable Care Act. These programs have regulatory effects on state family policies just as much as DOMA does. If DOMA’s direct interference with state prerogatives is beyond federal power, then perhaps any or all of these programs are vulnerable– and unconstitutional– to the extent they interfere with state policies regarding family formation as well. Put differently, Judge Tauro has offered a road map to attack a wide range of federal welfare programs, including health care reform. No matter how much they might like the result in this particular case, this is not a road that liberals want to travel.
Via Ann Althouse
Convergence 2010 — Science and the Media
Notes from a panel at Convergence 2010.