Nigritude Ultramarine

Get Anil an iPod: Nigritude Ultramarine. He'd link to your crazy Google contest.

ISBNs + 3

According to John Udell, ISBNs are changing from 10 to 13 characters in 2005. (I have a bunch of code based on 10-character ISBNs that I'll need to update.) More info.

dog pics

Matt posted a couple pictures of Luna: one at rest, one at full speed. When she gets excited she runs in big loops around the yard at top speed. She really needs animals to herd, but she'll have to get by with frisbees.

Moon Picture / Hacks Book

I took some photos of the moon tonight:

moon photo

I had help with the exposure settings from Hack #96: Shoot The Moon in Digital Photography Hacks. I know I'm biased because I put together a book in the Hacks series, but I really found this book entertaining and useful (read most of it tonight). Unlike most Hacks books it has full color, glossy pages and is filled with illustrations. I don't know if it's because I'm used to the Hacks format—or because I'm the target market—but I feel like I got more practical advice from this photography book than any other I own. I wish there would have been more web/photography stuff (EXIF parsing, programatic resizing, etc.) but I realize this is a book for photographers, not coders.

I'm not happy with this level of detail in the photo, and I'd like to get an adapter so I can hook my camera to my telescope. I want to see craters in my moon photos. (Here's a picture of the moon I took in 2002 by holding my camera up to the telescope eyepiece. The adapter should work better.)

Bigha blog

A local Corvallis company Bigha (makers of high quality recumbent bikes) just started a weblog: The Bigha Blog. Every business should do this. Ernest put the weblog together, and he posted about a hike at Silver Falls we went on a week ago. You may remember him from this photo where he's probably not thinking about bikes and weblogs.

And at The Bigha Blog I found a link to a satisfied customer talking about his experience with the company on his weblog. It pays to be nice to weblog authors—they post the good and the bad for the world to read.

Extreme Ironing

I'm not sure why I feel the need to pass this on, but Extreme Ironing. [via WordSpy]

Brooke Wilberger Missing

Corvallis is in the news right now because a woman was abducted sometime Monday—just across from the OSU campus. Her name is Brook Wilberger. If you're in the area, please take a look at her picture--it can't hurt having everyone keeping an eye out for her. Here's the most recent story in the paper: The search intensifies. There are signs with her picture up all over town, and remote news trucks at Reser Stadium. This is the first violent crime to happen since I've lived here.

Silver Falls Photos

I went for a hike with some friends along the "Trail of Ten Falls" at Silver Falls State Park on Saturday. The best part was being able to hike behind some of the falls. Here are a bunch of photos:

Silver Falls Photos (click for more)
more >>

Matt got a great, misty running-water effect in this photo of South Falls on his site. I was pushing my camera's exposure time in manual mode, but I still didn't get as nice an effect as that. I think a neutral density filter may help.

Early Adopters at Amazon

Amazon has a new feature updated their feature called Early Adopter Products. I'm not sure how it works exactly, but the site says they're "analyzing purchase patterns" and I think they're trying to see what's bubbling up to the top before it's on the top sales lists. It seems like this could only work if you analyzed the buying patterns of certain people who were flagged as early adopters. How do you know when something is being purchased by trend-setters rather than just having an initial burst of sales after being released? (For example, several books in the Early Adopter Computer Books list don't strike me as books that are being purchased by what I consider early adopters.) I'll be disappointed if it turns out to be just another way to highlight new products. In any case, it's a cool concept and I'll be keeping on eye on it to see if it's useful.

Lo-Fi Amazon Hack

In Amazon Hacks, I show how you can use Amazon Web Services to create a WAP version of your Wish List so you can always have it with you on your cell phone. (Handy for remembering movies you want to rent, CDs you want to buy, etc.) Merlin has a lo-fi version of this hack, and all you need is a wishlist, a printer, and a pocket—Tip: Amazon wishlist to go.

A Scanner Darkly

Good insider news at boing2. Linklater is making a film adaptation of Philip K. Dick's A Scanner Darkly. It sounds like it's going to be faithful to the book. w00t.

Oregon Primary

Today is primary voting day in Oregon, and I'll be watching the Benton County stats: Returns and Turnout. In Oregon everyone votes by mail (or at a dropsite) which is very convenient—so why the low turnout?
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