The Tick in Winter
Grok Headline matches for The Tick in Winter
Tiger, Tick, Tick, Tick
Tiger, Tick, Tick, Tick
04/10/2005 12:20 PM67 days.
That’s the amount of time left in the first half of 2005, Apple’s
promised time frame for release of the next incarnation of Mac OS X.
We all know its name. We all have our favorite features. We've all
made backups of our files in applications in anticipation of a fresh,
clean install. We’ve saved our pennies over the past year and are set
to cheerfully plunk down $129 for a black box with a giant,
slightly-raised, silver "X" on it.
We've all been good little boys and girls. And still, nothing.
Since OS X finally made its way into the hands of eager Mac users,
this is the longest stretch Apple has ever put between versions. And
while Apple hasn't kept many secrets about Tiger’s development, rumor
sites have mostly missed the mark on anything that wasn’t in Steve
Jobs' keynote presentations.
We’ve heard reports of final candidates, gold masters, an April 1
announcement, a 10.4.1 version… and still, the days tick by with nary
a hint from Cupertino.
But we're still in good shape. Microsoft, ever so quietly, has pushed
the release date for Longhorn to October 2006, with May 2006
apparently "non-negotiable" for its release to manufacturing. There's
no doubt that Longhorn will be something special that will change the
face of Windows forever, but the sooner Tiger is released, the sooner
we can start chipping away at Microsoft’s OS stranglehold.
In recent years, Apple has let us down a few times with goals — most
notably with the promise of a 3Ghz Power Mac G5 by June 2004. But
that's not going to happen with Tiger, right?
Dates aside, it seems that Apple hasn't been very good at spinning its
hype machine. To find any mention of the new OS X, you have to dig a
bit on Apple's Web site, and the best that I can tell, if you run out
and buy a Mac mini this afternoon, you’ll have to plunk down an
additional $129 for Tiger sometime within the next 67 days.
It's sad to say, but if Longhorn were this close to production, stores
would be taking pre-orders, commercials would be airing on prime time
TV shows, banners would be flying above CompUSA, and low-flying planes
would be spelling out L-O-N-G-H-O-R-N above area beaches.
In other words, people would know.
Of course, Apple's never been big on advertising OS X, but with the
closest competition still at least a year away, you’d think there
would be some sign that something was brewing at Apple.
I mean, Amazon has done more in the way of promotion than Apple has.
If they are looking to switch people, what better way is there than
hype?
And perhaps a coupon?
tick ... tick ... tick ... tick
tick ... tick ... tick ... tick
03/11/2003 10:45 AMWhile playing a movie on my iBook the player just froze and a
near-silent ticking could be heard… wirrrp … tick …
tick … tick … tick … tick … tick … And
then it skipped through the movie by...
Tick...Tock...
Tick...Tock...
05/24/2004 02:33 PM
P
oeme Symphonique - a piece for 100 metronomes.
The Man Who (Really) Makes Google Tick
The Man Who (Really) Makes Google Tick
05/10/2004 11:28 PMWhat Makes Nick Tick?
What Makes Nick Tick?
05/18/2004 03:02 PMentertaining but fluffy piece on nick denton's blog business
What makes salesforce.com tick
What makes salesforce.com tick
04/13/2005 07:29 PMZDNet Apr 13 2005 11:18PM GMT
Down at the Tick Tock Diner, I Caught Up
With CNN
Down at the Tick Tock Diner, I Caught Up
With CNN
08/31/2004 02:44 AMIn which the demise of the network sky box is confirmed, a conceit of
Americana (the typical diner) is indulged, and subtle differences
appear in how the protests are to be weighed against events at the
convention.
Mobiles tick to atomic time
Mobiles tick to atomic time
08/31/2004 04:43 AMZDNet UK Aug 31 2004 8:47AM GMT
Stocks Tick Up Ahead of Key Intel Report
Stocks Tick Up Ahead of Key Intel Report
12/04/2003 12:00 PMReuters Dec 4 2003 11:12AM ET
Business 2.0 - Magazine Article - What
Makes Nick Tick?
Business 2.0 - Magazine Article - What
Makes Nick Tick?
05/19/2004 01:31 AMWhat Makes Nick Tick? .. Business 2.0
piece
business2.com/b2/web/articles/0,17863,633865,00.html
track this
site | 6 links
Business 2.0 - Magazine Article -
Printable Version - What Makes Nick
Tick?
Business 2.0 - Magazine Article -
Printable Version - What Makes Nick
Tick?
05/20/2004 07:15 PMthe smartest publisher in the blogosphere ..
that's
business2.com/b2/web/articles/print/0,17925,633865,00.html
track
this site | 5 links
Winter Dry
Winter Dry
10/29/2003 12:13 AMmarcus wrote: "I really prefer that to the wet cold they get along the
coast. I remember when I was...
Winter albums
Winter albums
12/29/2003 01:18 AMThe photos from the snow trip a couple of weeks ago are up, sorry for
the delay. Captions are being...
Now is the winter of SCO discontent
Now is the winter of SCO discontent
12/15/2003 10:30 AMWinter nostalgia
Winter nostalgia
03/08/2004 11:03 PMIt is tough to imagine anyone being nostalgic for this past winter
in New England but perhaps this photo of sammies
in the snow will do the trick. It comes to us from
Willie Stromeyer, whom I met as an 8-year-old son of a friend.
He's now married and living in Upstate New York.
I hate winter
I hate winter
01/10/2004 01:37 AMHoly crap, it feels like -31 Celcius out there apparently. I'm
freezing just sitting here. I have my skating clothes...
A Walk in Winter
A Walk in Winter
03/06/2004 01:55 AM
A few photos from a walk on a winter
day.
Alan Burlison always has such nice pictures and stories from his own
walks around
the Peak District that I thought I'd have a go with my urban
landscape. No fields of heather or peat bogs here, but it's home. :)
We took a nice walk around the southern edge of Helsinki and I needed
to finish off a roll of film. We wound up walking out on the ice which
made me nervous even though it appeared to be a very popular Sunday
pastime for quite a few people. Where I come from, only stupid people
who want to die walk out on the invariably thin ice, but Finland's ice
is much thicker so that only a few people manage to fall through each
year. :) It's strange to walk on the ice where in summertime there are
only boats. The abandoned fuel station looked out of place and
abandoned in spite of the people with strollers, with pets, with
friends all wandering on the ice around it. It may be winter here, but
we don't let the cold keep us inside all the time.
Winter Corporation
Winter Corporation
12/13/2003 09:23 AMThe Largest and Most Heavily Used Databases in the World, 2003 .. a
list of humongous databases .. top 10 biggest
databases
wintercorp.com/vldb/2003_TopTen_Survey/TopTenWinners.asptrack
this site | 4 links
Winter Solstice
Winter Solstice
12/09/2003 06:10 PM Are you miffed that Christmas just isn't about Jesus anymore?
Annoyed that is all seems to be about commercialism and spending
money? You Christians can now empathize with the ancient pagans who
were miffed that Christmas just wasn't about
Mithras
anymore. But don't feel bad about
jacki
ng Christmas from them, Mithras jacked it from Apollo, who
borrowed it from the Etruscan god Sol.
winter break
winter break
12/22/2004 01:53 AMRyan and Nolan start their Winter break today, and I have decided
to take a Winter break of my own. I'm dangerously close to getting
burn out, so I'm taking this week off, to spend time with my family.
I'm thinking about maybe doing some geocaching, probably watching some
Return of the King extended edition, and definitely a lot of playing
Magic with Nolan.
I can't believe that there are just eleven days left in 2004, and
for the first time in years I'm not looking back in frustration on the
year that could have been, I'm looking back fondly on the year that
was . . . and excitedly looking toward the year to come.
Merry, Happy, Joy, and Peace everyone.
Especially Peace.
Cold Winter
Cold Winter
06/22/2005 01:56 AM
I got another free product in the mail the other day to review
— a PS2 game called Cold
Winter.
It was rated M (for Mature), but I'm not much of a gamer so I
enlisted my 10-year-old son to play it with me.
It's something of an espionage adventure that starts in a Chinese
prison. You are Andrew Sterling, disavowed secret agent of some kind,
and you have to fight your way out. I gather there's a lot more after
that, but we never found out (keep reading).
Cold Winter earned its M rating: in one of the first cut scenes,
Sterling gets tortured and has his finger bent back until it breaks
(yes, it's as bad as it sounds). Thoughout the rest of the game, when
he's holding a pistol so you can see his hands on the screen, he
flexes his left hand as if it's still stiff from the break however
many months ago. And when you get shot, there's a lot blood.
And...chunks. And then there's the guy who gets killed sitting on the
toilet, and just kind of slumps there. It's not elegant.
Anyway, the storyline didn't hold our interest so much, so we quit
that and just went to two-player mode — you know, Capture the
Flag and all that. It turns out that Cold Winter is a pretty good
first person shooter.
It tends toward the realistic side of combat, rather than the
cinematic. There are a lot of weapons to pick from, and they have
realistic touches: you run really slow while carrying the rocket
launcher (tough to do much but camp), and if you fire anything more
than a short burst from the MP5, the recoil kicks it
up so you're shooting at nothing but air. The controls are good and,
before long, we were running around blowing each other to smithereens
for a couple of hours.
The gas grenades are the best part. You can lob one and seal off
an area with poison gas. Your opponent can only wait until it
dissipates enough to make a run through it (though I'm willing to bet
there's a gas mask in the game somewhere — we were two busy
killing each other to bother looking).
If you get exposed to gas, your vision starts getting blurry and
you may go down for the count, which makes you pretty picky as to
whether you should risk making a run for it. (In fact, you can get
shot in this game, but not die right away — you limp away from a
fire fight only to lose too much blood and go down around the corner
or something.)
There's a poetic joy to trapping your opponent in some alley with a
cloud of poisonous gas, then just firing rocket after rocket blindly
into the cloud until he comes stumbling out.
Later, as we were cycling through the game options to play, we
found an interesting one called "Headmatch." It's like the flag-based
games where you get a point for every second or so you're holding the
flag. Except there's no flag. It's the "decapitated head of an
unknown man." Seriously.
When you start a headmatch, first you have to find the head, which
could be anywhere. So me and the boy are running around the rooftops
of some Morrocan
town, looking for a decapitated head, which was pretty funny,
actually.
He finds it first and yells, "I've got the head! I've got the
head!" I tell him to wait so I can come over to look at it. Then I
tell him to turn around so my guy can crouch down and look under it
while he holds it aloft by its hair.
Then, suddenly, it hit me: I'm the worst parent ever.
Winter Weather
Winter Weather
03/13/2003 10:16 AMVermont is locked deep in the grasp of winter. This December, the
Conneticut River Valley received about three feet of snow (quite
remarkable in these days of global warming). The snow has
reflected
sunlight back into space, causing the temperature to drop far
below our
winter average. But this Saturday, the weather got
seriously
cold.
Winter Gear From REI
Winter Gear From REI
09/03/2004 09:43 PMG4 Tech TV Sep 4 2004 1:12AM GMT
Keeps you warm in winter
Keeps you warm in winter
07/14/2004 10:40 PM
The American Merkin Company. (NSFW) Handcrafting merkins for
over 150 years!
Has your last wax or razor encounter left you a little too exposed for
the nude beaches of SXM? Are you getting on in years and finding that
thinning hair leaves you a bit embarrassed? Why not try a merkin!
Great for both females AND males!
Winter Depression
Winter Depression
02/07/2005 01:55 AMWinter Depression
1) Jan. 24
called worst day of year
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/i
d/6847012/
2) Winter Darkness, Season
Depression
h
ttp://my.webmd.com/content/Article/52/50396.htm?pagenumber=3
3) Shed light on SAD to ease winter blues
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2005-01-28-winter-blues_x.htm
a>
4) Ask the Doctor: Clinical
Chronobiology
http://chaos.cpmc.columbia.edu/nyspi/askthedr/for_
Pt/question4.asp?Departments=sad
5) Norway: A
natural research laboratory
http://www.sv.uit
.no/seksjon/psyk/wd-norw.htm
6) Society for Light
Treatment and Biological Rhythms
http://www.websciences.org/sl
tbr/
7) Psychology Today: Seasonal Affective
Disorder
http://cms.p
sychologytoday.com/conditions/sad.html
A U.K.
psychologist has developed a complex mathematical formula using seven
variables to predict winter's emotional low point. The good news is
the worst day of the year was last week; nonetheless, seasonal
depression remains a problem for many. The first link (1) is to an
article about the equation worked out by Dr. Cliff Arnall, who
specializes in seasonal disorders at the University of Cardiff, Wales.
The second link is to a WebMD page (2) about winter depression, often
referred to as Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD). The next link (3) is
to a recent news story about the results of a five-year study that
found, rather than antidepressant drug therapy or air ionizers, light
box therapy is the best remedy for the seasonal condition. The fourth
link is to a set of Frequently Asked Questions (4) about SAD offered
by Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City. The fifth
link, to the Winter Depression Research Group at the University of
Tromso in Norway(5), explains why Norway is a natural SAD research
laboratory. The next link is to a international portal site (6)
maintained by medical professionals and researchers in the field of
light therapy and biological rhythms. The final webpage(7), from
Psychology Today, compares the symptoms of winter depression with
summer depression.[From The NSDL Scout Report for the Life Sciences,
Copyright Internet Scout Project 1994-2005.
http://scout.wisc.edu/]
Shark Tank: Enough With Winter Already!
Shark Tank: Enough With Winter Already!
03/22/2005 03:47 PMEnvironmental sensor goes off on Monday at 8:25 a.m.: water in the
computer room. But when help arrives, no water is to be seen.
Wednesday, it happens again -- and again, no water. Maybe it's a bad
sensor?
Premiership set for winter break
Premiership set for winter break
01/28/2004 06:39 PMPremier League chairmen vote in favour of introducing a winter break
next season.
Bad winter 'threatens gas supply'
Bad winter 'threatens gas supply'
06/23/2004 08:52 PMGas supplies in the UK have little spare capacity and could be
threatened if there was an extreme winter, peers warn.
Ah, Midwest Winter Weather
Ah, Midwest Winter Weather
12/24/2004 12:37 PMAs Josh notes, there's a lot of snow 'round these parts. My sister
just headed back outside to shovel her driveway. Last night (after it
took way to long to get here from the airport) I joked that I should
have bought them a snow blower for giftmas. Except that I really
wasn't joking. I think she's given up on the idea of shoveling the
whole thing, instead concentrating on making two large "stripes" where
the tires meet the driveway....
Random winter photos
Random winter photos
04/09/2004 04:12 PM
I had a bunch of photos that didn't really have a theme or a home so
I put them together in a random winter 2004 photo
collection.
There is also a new craneporn
gallery since I can't seem to stop taking pictures of cranes now that
Paul craneporn Mison got me
hooked. :)
A Winter Garden in Spring
A Winter Garden in Spring
04/17/2004 04:41 PM
A few photos from a trip to the Helsinki
Winter Garden just before Easter. The garden is enclosed in a
Victorian era greenhouse and hosts quite a nice succulent room, palm
room and room for various seasonal plants. Easter brings little baby
chicks to the Win
ter Garden that little kids press their faces up to the glass to
watch intently as they cheep and hop around. Tulips and daffodils also
add a splash of colour to the landscape inside the green canopy. It's
free to visit during its rather limited hours of operation and the
outdoor garden is beautiful during the summer when the flowers are in
bloom. It reminds me a lot of the Jewel
Box, an art deco conservatory, and Tower Grove
Park, a Victorian walking park, in St. Louis quite a bit since
they were all built during a time that building public gardens for all
people to enjoy was popular. I still miss living next to Tower Grove
Park as it was one of the most beautiful spots in the city.
Winter Break for Web Site
Winter Break for Web Site
12/22/2004 01:47 AMLJ Web site on hiatus this week.
Winter approaches in Alaska
Winter approaches in Alaska
12/17/2004 06:36 PMA friend in Alaska sent this email in response to a postcard from
warm sunny Greece:
"So, you are there...and... well...we are here... in the snow,
sleet, rain, pestilence, fog, and darkness. What more can be
said? The dogs are howling, the bears are hibernating, and we
are hunkered in our camp, slowly cooking cassoulet while riding out
the storm. In fact, it has been so bad here that one of our
local judges, Sam Adams, age 47, died of a heart attack while on a
moose hunt a week ago, and he had to stay put with his hunting party
for a few days before the clouds could clear and the plane could
land. Can you imagine being one of the guys around the fire,
wondering whether to put cards in Sam's hand, or look for another
moose, etc."
Winter blast causes problems
Winter blast causes problems
01/28/2004 03:36 PMParts of Scotland are hit by ice and snow resulting in school closures
and transport disruption.
Winter Wonderland Icons 1.0
Winter Wonderland Icons 1.0
12/23/2003 04:29 PMIconic symbols of the holiday season.
Ah, Copenhagen in the depths of winter
Ah, Copenhagen in the depths of winter
01/01/2004 01:30 PMWell, class materials are in, tickets are bought, and I'm off to
Copenhagen for NordU in a few weeks. (I get in on the 25th, and leave
on the 29th, with the class the afternoon of the 28th) Should be
interesting to wander around Copenhagen for a few days, too--I've
never been there. (Anyone with recommendations as to what to do, feel
free to let fly...)...
Winter holidays in Russia.
Winter holidays in Russia.
12/22/2003 10:06 PMIn Russia, winter holidays are celebrated somewhat differently than in
the United States and most of the West. Although the underlying
substance of the winter holidays -- presents, trees, family
gatherings -- is the same, it corresponds to different holidays and
customs. This results from a blend of Russian national tradition,
the influence of Eastern Orthodox heritage and of course, Soviet
secularisation. There is a lot more to be said about this than is
actually practical, so I would like to focus on two axial aspects
that sit comfortably within my sphere of knowledge: New Year and the
custom of giving presents. The latter topic is a little more
editorial than encyclopedic, but please bear with me. Also, please
understand that none of this information is in any way
"authoritative." I tell you all this as a Russian immigrant, not as a
cultural anthropologist or otherwise a person bearing any
credentials or officialdom.
Preparing for the Winter Garden
Preparing for the Winter Garden
10/29/2003 12:10 AMElliot Coleman is a farmer and gardener on the coast of Maine. He
wrote
Four-Season
Harvest, a lovely and remarkable book about year-round
gardening in
snowy climates. (You definitely want to
look at
the drawings.) Even in the middle of January, he's harvesting
fresh salad greens and sweet carrots from old-fashioned cold
frames.
Coleman relies on low-tech solar heating and cold-tolerant
vegetables.
Winter Storm Reaches From Kan. to S.C.
(AP)
Winter Storm Reaches From Kan. to S.C.
(AP)
01/25/2004 08:44 PMAP - Winter storms dumped freezing rain, sleet and snow from the
Plains to the East Coast on Sunday, making traveling treacherous along
ice-slicked roads.
Grok Description matches for The Tick in Winter
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The Tick in Winter