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Brown recommends two books for learning more about the chemistry of cooking: On Food And Cooking by Harold McGee (indigo.ca link, fatbrain link) and Cookwise, by Shirley Corriher (indigo.ca link, fatbrain link).
it's only food. What I mean by that is that it's not anything to be afraid of. The more you understand what you can do with it, the more you will be able to do with it. Don't be afraid to play with it, and don't be afraid to fail. Every good cook I know screws something up! Taste your food, feel your food, think about your food, and then go cook.©
And Tribbles were puppets! Not real animals!! Puppets!!!And when I speak, I never, ever, talk / like / every / word / is / its / own / sentence!
I am Canadian, and I found this link at have browser. ©
Tue
25
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There is an excellent English/French/Inuktitut diction at Living Dictionary. There is a complete explanation of the symbols used to write Inuktitut here, although the symbols themselves were invented in 1894 by a chap by the name of Edmund Peck.
Mon
24
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I'll bet that some enterprising young Canadian producer is developing a Soprano's-like show about a dysfunctional Hells Angel family as we speak. They'll probably get government funding to produce it, too. ©
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Which means I've been working here waaaay too long. Did I mention I'm looking for work? ©
NOTE: IP3000 Digitally Fingerprints logos, images, photographs, MP3s, and other digital media it locates. IP3000 does not keep copies, thumbnails or clips of any of the media it locates. The digital fingerprints that are collected will be used in conjunction with the text data collected to create a comprehensive index for locating websites of interest. Combination text and fingerprint searching is a major new development in the evolution of the web to enhance the effectiveness for Internet users seeking information from your website.
The ip in ip3000 is supposed to stand for internet portal, although I wonder if it's not really for intellectual property; it sounds like this would be a great tool for those seeking to enforce copyrights on the net.
But I'm probably just paranoid, right? ©
Wed
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The problem lies in how Outlook and Outlook Express handles the parsing of the GMT section of the date field in the header of an email. This process is handled by INETCOMM.DLL. Improper bounds checking exists on the token represented by GMT. Therefore, if a malicious user was to send a specially crafted email message containing an unusually long value in the GMT specification, the buffer would be overflowed making arbitrary code execution possible.©...
In Outlook Express, a user would merely have to open a folder containing a malicious email in order to become vulnerable. Outlook users are vulnerable if they preview, read, reply, or forward an offending email. The only exception to exploitation is under Outlook if a user deletes or saves the email to disk.
Mon
17
Jul
Edogawa is the home of the Shinkawa parking garage, and if parking garages were cathedrals, this would be their Notre Dame.©It took four years and $130-million to build. Ultrasonic sensors tell staff which of the 250 spots are filled. Carbon-dioxide monitors ensure that the air is clean. A digital sound system fills the space with pleasant orchestral music. The men's and women's bathrooms are spotless.
To top it all, the whole thing is underwater. To save on land costs, officials dammed and drained a river, drove pilings into its bed, built the garage and then filled the river back up again.
...
But, like the Shinkawa parking garage, many public-works projects are underused.
Take the Akashi Kaikyo bridge that links the city of Kobe to Awaji Island. When it was finished in 1998, it became the world's longest suspension bridge. But it carries no more than 4,000 cars a day, a 10th the number forecast by planners.
Then there is the Aqualine Expressway, the world's longest underwater highway tunnel. It traverses Tokyo Bay and cost $16-billion. Despite amenities that include restaurants, cafes, gift shops and, yes, a parking garage, many motorists shun it because of the high toll: $45 for a 15-minute ride.
Or consider the spectacular new toll highway that runs through Kagoshima prefecture. It, too, is a marvel of engineering skill, but most motorists stay away. The reason: the older highway that runs parallel is free.
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Last month, SOCAN's licensing manager, Gina Pollock, sent a letter to the owners of music stores across the country. Pollock wanted to let them know that the music they play in their stores is, like all other music in this country, licensed to SOCAN by its performers and composers, and that the stores should therefore pay a licensing fee for playing it.©...
"If it wasn't for record stores, there'd be no industry at all," said Laurence Marks, owner of Abba-Zappa in Toronto. "Here I am, struggling to make a buck. So they get 50 bucks from my store, who's it going to go to? Some guy on Queen Street with an independent CD out? No. It's going to go to Neil Young." The licence would cost Marks $50 a year for his small, used-CD store.
Wed
12
Jul
Critical thinking means that you can, so to speak, see your glasses. You can look at the world, or you can back up and look at the framework of concepts and assumptions and practices *through* which you look at the world. Every such framework edits the world in some way; every such framework has its biases. And no matter how carefully you think you define your words, most of your framework of concepts and assumptions and practices for looking at the world will be inherited from a long disciplinary and cultural tradition. If you can't see your glasses then you will have tunnel vision your whole life. Yet you probably won't even notice, because your ways of looking at the world also define what counts as success, as progress, as a research result, and so on. Not that critical thinking makes you omniscient: you're still wearing glasses even when you're looking at your glasses. This (and not any sort of silly idealism) is what Derrida means when he says that a text has no outside. But through scholarship and analysis you can do a lot better than just stumbling along with the glasses you got in school.©
I have a vision for the web I'd like to help build, one that remains open to all and is a marketplace for ideas as well as products, and I'm going to find a company that will let me. ©
Tue
11
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Mon
10
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''My mission is to bring down multinational media conglomerates,'' says Low, who feels cheated out of the enormous Pop-Up Video profits by Viacom, a not untypical sentiment for a first-time success in the television business. ''If you want to effect social change, you need to have the access.''©
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Merzbox, as it's called, is a 50- (that's five-oh) CD retrospective encased in latex rubber that retails for $500 or more and includes a CD-ROM, T-shirt, stickers, circular postcards and a commemorative coin dubbed a Merzdallion. By the way: the CDs aren't numbered. To know what you're hearing, you have to match the psychedelic designs on the discs against partial reproductions in the accompanying 132-page hardcover book. It doesn't get any more Emerson, Lake and Palmer than this.
This is insane, of course. And I'd love to own it. ©
Wed
05
Jul
I know all this because we're participating in the pilot project too. ©
Broadcasting in French and Swahili, government radio from Kinshasa and a privately operated station known as "Voice of the Patriot" have injected the chilling vocabulary of genocide into Congo's conflict.©"People must bring a machete, a spear, an arrow, a hoe, spades, rakes, nails, truncheons, electric irons, barbed wire, stones ... in order, dear listeners, to kill the Rwandan Tutsi," one declares.
Another urges patriotic Congolese to: "Jump on the people with the long noses, those who are tall and slim and want to dominate us."
"Wake up," the broadcast warns, "be aware of our destiny so as to defeat the enemy. From today onwards, you will detect enemies and massacre them without mercy."
Yet another identifies Tutsis as "a virus, a mosquito, filth which must be crushed."
Tue
04
Jul
When General Juan Peron, during his first stint as Argentina's dictator, decided to take his revenge on the writer Jorge Luis Borges who had refused to take an oath of allegiance to the General, he removed Borges from his position in a small municipal library and appointed him poultry inspector at a local market. Borges resigned and, at a dinner given to him by some friends, he pronounced these words: "Dictatorships foster oppression, dictatorships foster servility, dictatorships foster cruelty; more abominable is the fact that they foster stupidity . . . To fight against these sad monotonies is one of the writer's many duties."©
The anger, the rage, the hurt and the cold loneliness that separate you from your family, friends and society's normal daily routine are so powerful that the option of destroying yourself is both real and attractive. That is what happened last Monday night. It appears, it grows, it invades and it overpowers you. In my current state of therapy, which continues to show very positive results, control mechanisms have not yet matured to always be on top of this battle. My doctors and I are still building my prosthesis that will establish the level of serenity and productivity I yearn so much for.©
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It'll also do stupid things like letting you search for and, the and a. I'll fix that shortly. ©