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April 29, 2007

The symphonic fruit

I cooked up a pound of yellow eye beans from Rancho Gordo this afternoon. Very simple, just some carrot, onion, celery, and garlic cooked in some olive oil, followed by the beans, their soaking water, bay leaf, and some more water to cover for pot liquor. That was it. Simmered them a couple hours, and it might be the best soup I have ever tasted. I added a little salt after the beans were done, and then all it needed was a little hot sauce. Woke the whole thing right up, and it was so rich and delicious. Then L made another soup - she cooked some spinach stalks in olive oil and garlic, wanded them with some bean stock, and added some whole beans. Amazing. The beans are incredible. Great rich flavor and creamy texture. If you're used to 59 cent sacks of beans from the supermarket, you owe it to yourself to splurge on these beans and see how good they can really be. They cost more than the supermarket beans to be sure, but they're still ridiculously cheap. I just ordered five more pounds.

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April 26, 2007

Unreliable narrators

The changing role of the source (Scripting News):

The new reality for all publications is that their sources can go direct. It's just like every other activity that the Internet touches, disintermediation happens.
Except, of course, technologists.
This is a much bigger story than they were aiming for -- it's the still unwritten story of the blogosphere. Wired has a chance to get this scoop that has been out there for the getting for more than ten years, even though, ironically, I wrote much of the story myself, when I was at HotWired -- before leaving, to bootstrap blogging.
For even more irony, here's the best argument against sources going direct I've yet seen. When you think about this, the real complaint here is that reporters have the temerity to not just simply agree with his self-assessment. A lot of this is typical "do you know who I am?" self-aggrandizement. The real problem with interviews is that you're not completely in control of the message at all times and might make a mistake. Jarvis bemoans this possible situation as the "gotcha" moment, which he promptly sets up a convenient straw man in a struggle between ambushing journalists and the bloogersphere's noble quest for pure, sparkling "information." What I see it as is the disintermediation of "pay no attention to that man behind the curtain."

Furthermore, what does this say about a culture which recently got its shorts into a wad about "owning your own words?" There's really no more immediate way to own your own words than to say them face to face with another human being. Electronic forms of media allow too many opportunities for tampering. If I am a reporter and send you email questions, I have no way of knowing whether what I get back from you was actually written by you. Oh, sure it, can come from your email address, but I have no way of knowing you actually wrote it. If it's on your blog, same thing. Even worse, you can delete at will from your blog with no accountablity at all. Meatworld, sometimes called "real life", is much messier, as it always has been. It's impossible, but improbable, to fake a phone interview, but pretty well nigh impossible to fake a face-to-face interview.

I think it's a great idea to post unedited recordings of interviews, and important archivally; but this whole "email me the questions and I'll get back to you at some point" thing is just nothing more than arrogance.

It's the same complaint that the powerful have always had about the press: they don't just repeat what I say. They ask pesky difficult questions I don't want to answer. They put me on the spot.

Oh it's a great big circle, it is.

Circle jerk, maybe. Deal with it.

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April 17, 2007

mean so-called adults.org

From my RSS reader this afternoon, in the Scripting News feed (I won't dignify this with a link:)

I got an email from Doc Searls about the phones that the students at Virginia Tech used to record what happened yesterday on their campus.

"From what I gather so far (and info is incomplete), most of the cell phones in use by students at Virginia Tech, and the system they used as well (much more feature-rich than phones provided by big carriers, and user-programmable to boot) were provided by a company in New York run by my friend Rodger Desai. The company is http://ravewireless.com/">Rave Wireless. I think what they're doing is critically important: helping the users help themselves and each other. And using this tragedy to create the phone systems we want, rather than what the carriers are willing to give us."

Every time I think that there is a limit to the lows the blog triumphalists will stoop to in order to continue their little chat about marketing, I get proven wrong.

The quote above is from the RSS feed of Scripting News earlier this day. And it says what you think it does.

That the significance of the Virginia Tech tragedy, the worst school shooting in American history, eclipsing even Columbine; no, the worst shooting rampage in American history, is that

THEIR DYING GIVES US LEVERAGE WITH THE CELL PHONE CARRIERS.

Maybe we can "use" this tragedy to that end.

Well, at least he disclosed his relationship to the conversationalist primed to benefit from this tragedy this time.

Incidentally, you can tell they know they've stepped in it this time, since this entry has been conveniently redacted from Scripting News. I made sure to follow best practices and preserve a screen shot.

Callow thoughtlessness does not begin to describe this.

I'm sure Doc will have more about this.
Undoubtedly.

April 6, 2007

Trendy is as trendy does


The Ethicurean: Chew the right thing. » Blog Archive » Digest: What to eat, green tea bandwagon, pet food poison still MIA

“Yoga in a bottle”: Green tea is Americans’ new favorite nutraceutical, and marketers are working overtime synthesizing it, super-sizing it, and turning it into both snack and diet food. Basically, U.S. consumers are idiots, trotting after the latest health fad

Yeah, we know:

Princeton dining halls have switched to grass-fed hamburgers (Daily Princetonian)

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April 4, 2007

That free case is on its way

Try Wellness if you don't want to cook for your pet -- megnut.com:

The recent dog and cat food scare has people cooking food for their pets at home because of safety concerns. I totally understand this desire, as a cat owner, but I don't have the time. I'm relieved I've been using Wellness Cat Food for my kitty for several years now. Wellness products haven't been affected by the recall because they don't use wheat gluten. If you're concerned about your pet's food, and don't have time to cook for them, check out Wellness. The wet cat food doesn't even smell gross! And that's saying something.

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