President Obama visited the West Village the other day. Apparently blogger Hi-Fi Bri lives on the same street as Anna Wintour, who hosted the president for dinner. So Bri has done a write-up about being in lockdown, including some photos, starting here and continuing in subsequent entries. Neato.
My New Mac
I’m writing this on my new iMac, which arrived today, Thursday. (It’s after midnight as I type this.) I ordered it online on Tuesday, but I had to call Apple customer service to fix a payment issue, and after it was resolved, the customer service rep bumped my order up to two-day shipping. For two days I tracked its progress online, waiting for it to arrive… and here it is.
I’m psyched. It’s pretty nifty. Especially compared to my seven-year-old PC. After I unpacked it and set it up on my desk, the first thing I thought was, Jesus, this thing is huge. It’s a 21.5-inch widescreen, compared to the 15-inch 4:3 monitor I’ve used since 2003.
I’m not completely new to Macs. In 1999-2000, I worked at a small company for 10 months where my work computer was a Mac. It must have had OS 8 or OS 9. I didn’t particularly like it. I thought Windows 95/98 looked sleeker, and I was completely unfamiliar with how Macs worked. But I’ve always thought OS X was a lot prettier.
So now I’ve got my own Mac! There are a few things I’m getting used to:
One, the green “maximize” button doesn’t do the same thing as the maximize button does in Windows; it doesn’t fill the whole screen but maximizes to as much space as the program needs. Or so I’ve read. I can’t quite figure out exactly what it’s going to do before I click it, especially when I click it a second time.
Two, if you close a window, the program doesn’t actually shut down unless you make it “quit.” It’s weird to see a menu in the top left corner for a program I thought was closed.
And three, I don’t yet fully have a handle on how to install programs that I’ve downloaded.
But I’m slowly figuring things out, and I’ll figure that stuff out too. This evening I bought Switching to the Mac, by David Pogue, because it’s convenient to have a book by my side to look stuff up instead of having to Google things.
One other thing of note: I have an external hard drive, so it was easy to copy all my personal files from my old PC onto my Mac. And I realized that I’ve been copying some of these files from computer to computer for years. I have a folder called “College papers and letters,” and the “Date Modified” on the earliest of those files is from October 1991. Holy crap. I wrote my college papers with WordPerfect 5.1, but I think I found a way to read them on my PC, so there must be some way to open them.
I’m looking forward to playing around with this thing. I know it’s just a computer, but really, it feels like a more enjoyable experience than a PC. I’ve promised Matt that I’m not going to turn into a crazy Mac person — but for a while I may be experiencing the zeal of a convert.
So, that’s that. This is gonna be fun.
Mac: Ordered
I did it.
I ordered a Mac.
I’d been thinking about it for a while, but it seemed like they were getting close to releasing new ones, so I decided to wait. Apple announced the new ones this morning, so I had no more excuses to dither.
It still took me forever to get up the courage to press the Order button. Then I finally decided what the hell, just do it. So I did it.
I bought a Mac.
Subway Spotting
Spotted on the 1 train going north from 42nd Street this evening: Ann Harada, best known for the role of Christmas Eve in Avenue Q. Then we saw her recognize someone sitting across from her, and it turned out to be Kate Baldwin, most recently known for playing the female lead in the Broadway revival of Finian’s Rainbow.
They said hello to each other.
I love New York sometimes.
Dems, Attack!
I love this letter in the NY Times today:
To the Editor:
The Sherrod affair has unfortunately confirmed my suspicion of the Obama administration: it has no backbone.
The administration seems not to realize that American politics is a contact sport, not a cerebral exercise. An attack demands an immediate counterattack. Smearing Shirley Sherrod was an attack; firing her was not a counterattack, it was a misguided attempt at damage control.
The Democratic position on virtually every issue (including, or especially, the economy) is far stronger than the opposition’s, but the administration’s defense of its policies is tepid at best.
The Sherrod affair shows that the right keeps on attacking, even when it is wrong, and the left keeps on retreating, even when it is right. For this Democratic president and this Democratic Congress, this is not a formula for success.
Charles T. Grant
Minneapolis, July 22, 2010
A++++.
My Girlfriend Who Lives in Canada
Tomorrow morning I’m going to Banff, Alberta, Canada, for a business conference. (I can’t help but think of Avenue Q when I think of Alberta.) I fly into Calgary via Houston. Why Houston? No fricking clue. I’m flying south to go north. (On the way back I fly through Minneapolis, which will be much better.) Then once in Calgary, I take a two-hour airport shuttle to the hotel in Banff.
So it will be a long journey… but it should be beautiful once I get there. I wish Matt could come with me, but it’s one of his busier times of the year and he can’t get away.
I’ll miss him, even if it’s only for a few days.
Carte Goodwin
“The Sheen is Gone.”
There’s a stunning article in yesterday’s New York Times: “American Dream Is Elusive for New Generation.” From the headline, you think you’re going to get a heartfelt story about young people struggling to get by. But no:
After breakfast, his parents left for their jobs, and Scott Nicholson, alone in the house in this comfortable suburb west of Boston, went to his laptop in the living room. He had placed it on a small table that his mother had used for a vase of flowers until her unemployed son found himself reluctantly stuck at home.
The daily routine seldom varied. Mr. Nicholson, 24, a graduate of Colgate University, winner of a dean’s award for academic excellence, spent his mornings searching corporate Web sites for suitable job openings. When he found one, he mailed off a résumé and cover letter — four or five a week, week after week.
Over the last five months, only one job materialized. After several interviews, the Hanover Insurance Group in nearby Worcester offered to hire him as an associate claims adjuster, at $40,000 a year. But even before the formal offer, Mr. Nicholson had decided not to take the job.
Rather than waste early years in dead-end work, he reasoned, he would hold out for a corporate position that would draw on his college training and put him, as he sees it, on the bottom rungs of a career ladder.
Wow. Just wow. Sense of entitlement much?
It gets worse:
Scott Nicholson almost sidestepped the recession. His plan was to become a Marine Corps second lieutenant. He had spent the summer after his freshman year in “platoon leader†training. Last fall he passed the physical for officer training, and was told to report on Jan. 16.
If all had gone well, he would have emerged in 10 weeks as a second lieutenant, committed to a four-year enlistment. “I could have made a career out of the Marines,†Scott said, “and if I had come out in four years, I would have been incredibly prepared for the workplace.â€
It was not to be. In early January, a Marine Corps doctor noticed that he had suffered from childhood asthma. He was washed out. “They finally told me I could reapply if I wanted to,†Scott said. “But the sheen was gone.â€
“The sheen was gone.” Seriously? You decided against the Marines because “the sheen was gone”? Oh, Mary.
The article is baffling. “American Dream Is Elusive for New Generation”? Who titled this piece? Cry me a river. You get a job offer and you turn it down because you think it’s not good enough for you?
I really hope this piece was designed to go viral from disgusted readers passing it on to other people. Because if it’s not that… no. That’s really the only possibility. Right? The New York Times can’t be that out of touch. Could it?
I was reading the article and felt nothing but scorn for the guy. But then I decided to try and empathize. Not sympathize, but empathize. Is it necessarily his fault that he has the sense of entitlement he does? Or was he just raised that way? Twenty-four is adulthood, but not necessarily maturity. And it’s really none of my business what kind of job this guy takes.
Still… I think he’s going to regret being interviewed for a long, long time.
And after reading that article in concert with this one, I really wanted to throw things at my computer monitor this morning.
New iPhone
So… I gave in and got the new iPhone tonight. A few hours ago I wasn’t even planning on it, but then the opportunity fell into my lap, and now my new phone is on my desk, syncing with iTunes.
A friend/co-worker of Matt had reserved new iPhones a couple of weeks ago at two different places: a Best Buy and an Apple Store. Best Buy got a new batch a couple of days ago and contacted him, so he went there over the weekend and picked up his new phone.
Then today the Apple Store contacted him to let him know that his reserved phone there was ready to be picked up. He no longer needed a new one, and he thought that I might want one, so he emailed me late this afternoon and asked if I wanted to go there with him and buy the phone.
I decided… what the hell. Despite my annoyances and qualms and my protestation that I didn’t really need one (and I don’t)… I gave in and said sure.
So tonight Matt’s friend and I went down to the Apple store and I bought it using his reservation. They didn’t care that one of us had the reservation and the other one of us was buying the phone.
And now it’s syncing up.
I guess a little materialism now and then isn’t a bad thing.
102 Degrees
Happy 25th Anniversary, Back to the Future
I couldn’t let today go by without pointing this out.
Today is the 25th anniversary of the theatrical release of Back to the Future, my favorite movie of all time.
Here’s the original New York Times review, from 25 years ago today, July 3, 1985.
A few days ago, Universal Studios announced that they’ll be releasing the trilogy on Blu-Ray this fall — on October 26, 2010, the 25th anniversary of the day in 1985 that Marty McFly goes back in time.
I saw the movie twice during the summer of 1985, and since then I’ve seen it more times than I can count. I can recite almost every line of the movie in its proper intonation.
Sam: Ho ho ho, look at it roll! Now we can watch Jackie Gleason while we eat!
Lorraine: It’s our first television set. Dad just picked it up today… do you have a television?
Marty: Well, yeah, you know, we have… two of them.
Milton: Wow, you must be rich!
Stella: Oh honey, he’s teasing you, nobody has two television sets.
(Ralph Kramden appears on the TV screen in his space costume.)
Marty: Hey, hey, I’ve seen this one, I’ve seen this one! This is a classic! This is where Ralph dresses up as the man from space.
Milton: What do you mean you’ve seen this? It’s brand new.
Marty: Yeah well, I saw it on a… rerun.
Milton: What’s a rerun?
(pause)
Marty: You’ll find out.
Thanks to Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale and Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd and Alan Silvestri and everyone else for creating something I’ll enjoy for the rest of my life.
How to Make Decisions
Maybe I’ll Get a Mac
It has been more than seven years since I last bought a new computer, so I’ve been looking at new ones. And I’m seriously thinking about getting a Mac.
My Dell has worked fine since 2003, but I’m not sure I want another one, especially after reading about all the problems they’ve been having for the last few years. And most megaseller PCs (Dell, HP, etc.) seem to get their parts from the same place. So I started thinking… hmm. Maybe a Mac this time.
I’ve thought about buying a Mac in the past, but I wasn’t sure I could get used to it. This time, though, I might just do it. Even if I bought a new PC I’d have to get used to a new operating system (Windows 7, instead of my current XP).
I went to an Apple Store yesterday and tried out a 21.5-inch iMac, and… my god, they’re so big. Maybe they just seem big because I have a 15-inch non-widescreen monitor right now, but… wow. Macs are enormous.
Also, MacRumors.com recommends not buying an iMac right now because there might be new ones “soon,” but I don’t know how reliable that is. Anyone have any idea?
Voyager 2 at 12,000
Yesterday was the 12,000th day of Voyager 2’s journey through space.
In its honor, here’s a beautiful piece about it that was written last month.
[via]
Blog Problem
For some reason my blog home page is automatically redirecting to a recent blog entry instead of the front page. I’m not sure why… I’ll try to figure it out.
(Update: I seem to have fixed it. I found this WordPress support post. Looks like WordPress 3.0 and one of my plugins didn’t play well together. I followed these instructions:
1. Go to Redirection > Options
2. Set URL Monitoring to “Don’t Monitor” and Update your changes.
3. Go to Groups > Modified posts and remove any that have been applied to the home page
Looks like that worked.)
Working the Pride Parade
I’ll be working at the New York City Gay Pride Parade tomorrow. (OK, technically, it’s a march.) Members of my chorus will be helping direct parade traffic at intersections. I’ve never volunteered at the parade before, although I did march one year.
One of the chorus members who has helped with parade traffic in the past said, “You don’t know the meaning of power until you hold up your hand to tell Chuck Schumer to stop walking and he stops.”
Me, I have this fear that I’m going to cause a big pedestrian pileup. I imagine myself realizing too late that I’m supposed to stop traffic, so I quickly hold up my hand and cause a row of high-heeled drag queens to fall over like dominoes, the last one knocking over a big barrel of lube that spills its contents and causes a group of Speedo-wearing rollerskaters to slip and slide and knock over more people, etc. etc.
But I’m sure it’ll be fine.
Doe v. Reed
The Supreme Court issued a fascinating decision this morning in connection with the marriage equality movement. It pits Justice Scalia against the anti-gay folks, and I’m not totally sure which side I agree with here.
Last year, in Washington State, the governor signed a same-sex domestic partnership bill into law. In response, a group called Protect Marriage Washington tried to get an initiative onto the ballot to repeal the law. They managed to get enough signatures to do so. In response to that, a coalition of groups sued under the state’s Public Records Act to learn the names of everyone who signed the petition.
Protect Marriage Washington argued that this would be a violation of the First Amendment rights of everyone who signed the petition, because it would have a chilling effect on speech. They argued that if you can’t sign a petition without staying anonymous, this will discourage people from signing petitions and thereby their free speech rights will be curtailed. They also argued that in this particular instance, the signers of the petition were subject to threats from gay-rights people.
This morning, the Court, in Doe v. Reed, ruled that there is no blanket right to anonymity if you sign a petition. But they refrained from ruling on the particular circumstances of this case; they kicked back to the lower court the issue of whether there’s a legitimate threat against the petition signers that would necessitate keeping their identities secret.
Chief Justice Roberts wrote the majority opinion, which was 6-3, although the lineup is a little splintered. Only Justice Thomas dissented completely, arguing that the First Amendment in all cases protects the anonymity of petition signers.
Scalia’s concurrence is the most interesting, though. He argues that there is no protection of anonymity regardless of whether there are threats; he examines American history and finds that there is not even a First Amendment right to a secret ballot in an ordinary election, because until the late 19th century, most states didn’t have secret ballots, and the secret ballot was instituted not because of First Amendment concerns, but in order to minimize election fraud.
The highlight of his concurrence is at the end:
There are laws against threats and intimidation; and harsh criticism, short of unlawful action, is a price our people have traditionally been willing to pay for self-governance. Requiring people to stand up in public for their political acts fosters civic courage, without which democracy is doomed. For my part, I do not look forward to a society which, thanks to the Supreme Court, campaigns anonymously… and even exercises the direct democracy of initiative and referendum hidden from public scrutiny and protected from the accountability of criticism. This does not resemble the Home of the Brave.
He’s basically saying to the anti-equality people: don’t be such wimps. Have the courage to argue your opinions in public.
And I kind of respect that.
I’m still not sure if I agree whether petition signers should have the right to their anonymity. I think I’d say, no, except in certain circumstances, such as someone signing a petition for racial equality in the South during the 1960s, in a time and place where there was a history and demonstrated threat of racial violence.
And I don’t like the idea that you can sign a petition to take away someone’s rights and then turn around and falsely complain that you’re subject to the threat of violence for doing so.
Finally, it’s interesting to read this decision alongside the Court’s January ruling that the Prop 8 trial in California shouldn’t be broadcast because it could cause “irreparable harm” to the anti-equality side’s witnesses.
It’s always funny to me that lots of anti-gay people make fun of gay men for being sissies and yet cower in fear of physical harm from them.
New York Times Theater ABCs: In Color! With Logos!
I opened the Arts & Leisure section of the Sunday New York Times this morning — as a subscriber I get it in advance — and for the first time, the alphabetical theater listings had color logos for most of the shows, instead of just the usual plaintext show titles:
(Click on the above for the complete image.)
I wonder if the shows are paying for this perk, because there are a few shows in the ABCs that are missing logos.
Lost Finale: Musical Analysis
Here’s a musical analysis of the Lost finale — a cue by cue examination of the music Michael Giacchino wrote for the final episode.
Warning: it’s about 80 minutes long. But at the beginning and the end you can listen to the extended musical cues that opened and closed the episode.
Sharron Angle Runs Away
Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle of Nevada, who is running against Harry Reid, gives non-answers to a reporter’s questions and then walks away as he follows her. Video at the link.
I wish more local reporters were like this.
No matter how ridiculous a Senate candidate this woman is, she scares me. I don’t have much faith in the intelligence of voters these days, even in a state that voted for Obama in 2008.