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Silicon Alley Insider -
1 hours and 47 minutes ago
pimg class="float_right" src="/~~/f?id=485a9e96796c7a5f00508395maxX=263maxY=159" border="0"
alt="rupertmurdochrobertthomson_7.jpg" title="rupertmurdochrobertthomson_7.jpg" width="263"
height="159" /Is there hope for newspapers after all? The Wall Street Journal's Managing Editor
Robert Thomson says "yes." Why? Because advertisers who tried the Internet are returning to the
safety of dead trees:em/em/p p style="padding-left: 30px;"a
href="http://www.reuters.com/article/Media08/idUSTRE4B34UQ20081204"Reuters/a: [Advertisers] are
seeking to spend money in ways that are proven by decades of experience, said Thomson. "People are
looking for a safe harbor in times of turbulence."/p p style="padding-left: 30px;"Thomson believes
that strongadvertisers are starting to understand that consumers often ignore ads in other media
because they are doing other things at the same time that sap their attention./strongbr /br /With
papers, the ads may be more valuable because they stick around with the printed page. Online,
people get distracted, flipping from page to page, and if they notice ads at all, it is because
they are annoyed by their intrusion.br /br /"The only multi-tasking that you can do while reading a
newspaper is drink a cup of coffee," he said./p pOkay, Robert, but what about the 90% of the paper
that ends up unread in our recycling barrel? How do advertisers know anyone even emsaw/em those
ads? We understand why advertisers are clinging to to the tried and true, but what happens when no
one even reads dead-tree papers anymore?/p pstrongSee Also:/strongbr /a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/11/new-york-times-nyt-now-losing-business-to-wall-street-journal"New
York Times Now Losing Business To Wall Street Journal/abr /a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/7/the-new-wsj-com-more-readers-who-are-less-interested"The
New WSJ.com: More Readers, Who Are Less Interested/a/p pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/z0iPrP01M6RtHtYh9727uNVVQn0/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/z0iPrP01M6RtHtYh9727uNVVQn0/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a
href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?a=TwHWOK3P"img
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src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?d=41"
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height="1" width="1"/

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kottke.org -
1 hours and 52 minutes ago
A photo from Life Magazine of Southdale Shopping Center in Edina, Minnesota after its opening
in 1956.
Southdale was the first mall ever built and still stands
today (I visited many times during my Minneapolis residency). The mall's designer was an
immigrant from Austria, Victor Gruen, who wanted to
bring the community feeling of the European arcade to the suburbs.
Oddly, this most suburban American invention was supposed to evoke a European city centre. Hence
Southdale's density and its atrium, where shoppers were expected to sit and debate over cups of
coffee, just as they do in the Piazza San Marco or the Place Dauphine. Gruen exiled cars, which
he thought noisy and anti-social, to the outside of his mall. Most contemporary critics thought
Gruen had succeeded in bringing urbanity to the suburbs. Southdale was "more like downtown than
downtown itself", claimed the Architectural Record. Another asserted, in a rare example of
journalistic hyperbole that turned out to be absolutely right, that the indoor shopping mall was
henceforth "part of the American way".
Ironically Gruen's creation only served to strengthen the suburban car culture that he despised.
Later in life, Gruen became
disillusioned with malls and their unintended consequences.
He revisited one of his old shopping centers, and saw all the sprawling development around it,
and pronounced himself in "severe emotional shock." Malls, he said, had been disfigured by "the
ugliness and discomfort of the land-wasting seas of parking" around them. Developers were
interested only in profit. "I refuse to pay alimony for those bastard developments," he said in a
speech in London, in 1978. He turned away from his adopted country. He had fixed up a country
house outside of Vienna, and soon he moved back home for good. But what did he find when he got
there? Just south of old Vienna, a mall had been built -- in his anguished words, a "gigantic
shopping machine." It was putting the beloved independent shopkeepers of Vienna out of business.
It was crushing the life of his city. He was devastated. Victor Gruen invented the shopping mall
in order to make America more like Vienna. He ended up making Vienna more like America.

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linkfilter.net - fresh links -
2 hours and 49 minutes ago
AMONG the significant dates in the history of Kahlúa, the Mexican coffee liqueur, surely
March 6, 1998, rates a mention. nbsp; nbsp; That was the release date of The Big Lebowski, the Coen
Brothers movie about an aging slacker who calls himself the Dude, and who, after a thug urinates on
his prized rug, becomes caught up in a Chandleresque mystery. nbsp; nbsp; Played with slouchy brio
by Jeff Bridges, the Dude’s chief pursuits involve bowling, avoiding work and drinking White
Russians, the sweet cocktail made with vodka, Kahlúa and cream or milk. nbsp; nbsp; The
movie was a flop when it was released, but in the decade since, The Big Lebowski has attracted a
cult following, and as the film’s renown has grown, so has the renown of the White Russian,
or, as the Dude calls them, nbsp; Caucasians.
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Mac Forums - iPod touch -
4 hours and 28 minutes ago
All-
I aquired a dead MacBook that had been the victim of a coffee spill. The interesting thing is that
if I disconnect the power for a week or even a few days, I can boot the system, but within minutes
(or seconds) the system will "die", with no video or drive access, but still has the fans going. If
I try to restart, it will not, unless I remove the battery and power for several days. The longer
the duration of "no power", the longer the system stays on when I do power it up.
So I am guessing that the coffee is shorting something, but BARELY, and over time the charge
dissapates and lets the system come back online.
Since I bought this MacBook for the spare parts (screen mainly), I'm willing to be pretty drastic
and try and clean the logic board, hoping that I can clean up what appears to be a slight
short.
Does anyone have any experience with products designed specifically for cleaning circuit boards,
and using them on a PC or Mac motherboard? I would like to find a spray-on solution that will drive
out any crud (it's apparent that the guy used sugar in his coffee), and the ability to dry
completely (not an oil like WD-40).
I can always attempt to use rubbing alcohol, but I wouldn't mind using a commercial fluid
specifically designed for cleaning circuits. I will most likely remove the entire logic board for
this cleaning project.
Any ideas?
Thanks in advance...

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FFFFOUND! / EVERYONE -
7 hours and 51 minutes ago
pa href=http://ffffound.com/image/26748e589604672ed40f46af45a2d20e6476863bimg
src=http://img.ffffound.com/static-data/assets/6/26748e589604672ed40f46af45a2d20e6476863b_m.jpg
alt=Christoph Niemann - Coffee border=0 width=480 height=480/a/ppvia a
href=http://niemann.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/12/02/coffee/index.htmlhttp://niemann.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/12/02/coffee/index.html/a/p
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Gizmodo -
8 hours and 34 minutes ago
pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/article-1091896-02B07D16000005DC-194_634x476.jpg"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" width="634" height="476" style="display:block;float:none;"
/Yesterday the a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5101552/japanese-sapporo-brews-worlds-first-space-beer"Japanese announced
the first space beer/a. Now the British are claiming the first teddy bear astronauts, who were
photographed in space from a home-made vessel with two digital cameras, a flight computer, GPS, and
radio./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/article-1091896-02B14B2E000005DC-918_634x429.jpg"
class="center" width="634" height="429" style="display:block;float:none;" //p pThe four cuddly
astronauts travelled on board the spacecraft for two hours and nine minutes, reaching the 19 miles
high mark powered by a latex weather ballon made by the Space Flight club at Cambridge University.
They were wearing special suits made by school children, which saved them from freezing at
-63.4º F. No, I'm not kidding. The team was investigating what materials would protect
the furrynauts better./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/article-1091896-02B07CC9000005DC-685_634x450.jpg"
class="center" width="634" height="450" style="display:block;float:none;" //p pIf you haven't
melted by now, you are not human. And NASA, wake up and smell the coffee. We are losing another
space race here. [a
href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1091896/Bears-space-Schoolchildrens-teddies-pictured-19-miles-Earth-strapped-giant-weather-balloon.html?ITO=1490"Daily
Mail/a]/p br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=0dbf8853d33e3d6151e59803dd82b54cp=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=0dbf8853d33e3d6151e59803dd82b54cp=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=0dbf8853d33e3d6151e59803dd82b54c" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=RbTxMv9K"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=120" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=oJkrW8S2"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=41" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=yL8Wcs6Q"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=yL8Wcs6Q" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=X8yfOmnd"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=X8yfOmnd" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~4/hT2glvpjQI8" height="1" width="1"/

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iLounge | All Things iPod, iPhone, iTunes and beyond -
8 hours and 51 minutes ago
Inspired by the iPhone and a previous reader-made iPod coffee table, iLounge readers Tuan Nguyen,
Ken Thomas and their associates have created an iPhone coffee table. According to Nguyen, the table
is “completely made of corrugate and glued together with white glue,” and features
removable, usable coasters built-in. Congrats to Tuan and his friends on their creation
— more pictures of the table and coasters are below. ...
|
TechNewsWorld -
13 hours and 38 minutes ago

You see them on tables in coffee shops, under the arms of college students and on the laps of
travelers waiting for a flight. Called "netbooks" or "mini-notebooks," these small, lightweight and
relatively affordable computers are one of the hottest tech toys of the year. Popularized by Asus
Eee PCs, which start at $269, netbooks are designed for basic tasks -- Web surfing, e-mail and word
processing. That's just fine for some folks. These sleek WiFi-enabled computers are usually limited
in capacity, and to keep costs down, often ship with the open source Linux operating system.
|
MacUpdate - Mac OS X -
13 hours and 39 minutes ago
NetworkLocation 3.0.4
NetworkLocation... Setup locations to represent the different environments in
your life. Customize your Mac to suit each location, and let NetworkLocation do the rest. Use
actions to change system settings or set things in motion; launch applications or scripts,
connect to servers, toggle Airport and Bluetooth power, and many more.
Step into a coffee shop and NetworkLocation goes to work. Using wifi, connected devices, ethernet
and now the Wi-Fi Positioning System from Skyhook Wireless, itÂ’s a sure thing.
ThereÂ’s no end to the number of configurations you can setup. You can even extend
NetworkLocation with scripts, plugins, or write your own plugin with our free development kit.
WHAT'S NEWVersion 3.0.4:
- Crasher bug fixed
- AutoLocate bug fixed
REQUIREMENTSMac OS X 10.5 or later.
DEVELOPER Centrix.ca
DOWNLOADS6627
DOWNLOAD NOW
(3.6 MB)
More information
|
Planet Ubuntu -
13 hours and 56 minutes ago
img class=face src=http://planet.ubuntu.com/heads/jono.png alt= pWhat an exciting week of events
ahead!/p pFirstly, I will be attending a href=http://fosscamp.org/FossCamp/a from the em5th - 6th
December/em. There a variety of upstreams meet together in a number of free form sessions to
discuss anything and everything about how we work together. Everyone is welcome, so if you can pop
along to the Google offices at em1400 Crittenden Lane, Mountain View, CA 94043/em do come and say
hello. img src=http://www.jonobacon.org/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif alt=:)
class=wp-smiley / /p pNext up, and taking place at the same venue all next week (8th - 12th
December) will be our a href=https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDSJauntyUbuntu Developer Summit/a. Over 200
of us will be gathering together to design, discuss and plan our next version of Ubuntu: version
9.04, the Jaunty Jackalope./p pUDS is always the highlight of my travel calendar. Five days of
sessions spread across seven tracks, every day chock full of brainstorming sessions on a range of
topics and planning their implementation. Each track focuses on different elements of the Ubuntu
platform and community, and I run the rather unsurprisingly titled emCommunity Track/em. In our
track we will be discussing all manner of governance, process, initiative, collaboration and
participation issues. The track will touch on a variety of aspects of our community including MOTU,
LoCo Teams, Hall Of Fame, Harvest, Councils, Upstreams, ubuntu.com and more. It is going to be an
exhilarating week of discussion; I am chomping at the bit to get started./p pBut UDS is way more
than just sessions. It is about people. UDS brings together a fascinating, inspiring and indelibly
social group. There is a fantastic atmosphere at UDS and a very real sense of community. We work
hard to try and make UDS feel as welcoming and open to ideas and discussion as we can. It is an
opportunity to re-affiirm old friendships and make new ones. Every day we not only work hard
together, but we play hard too. Anyone who has been to a UDS will be well aware of just how
physically draining it can be: long days full of discussion and long evenings of socialising make
for a pretty tiring week. I think my coffee intake increases as the week progresses. img
src=http://www.jonobacon.org/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif alt=:) class=wp-smiley / /p
pI am particularly excited about this UDS. I am not only excited at the group who we know are
coming (many of which we sponsored), but I think Jaunty offers so much opportunity across all
Ubuntu editions. This is going to be an important release in the Ubuntu story. Everyone is welcome
to be a part of it, and everyone is welcome at UDS. img
src=http://www.jonobacon.org/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif alt=:) class=wp-smiley / /p
pSee you there folks!/p

|
craigslist | women seeking men in amsterdam -
22 hours and 28 minutes ago
In town now from the States and looking for someone to chill with in the coffee shops. My friends
are jet lagged and want to stay in. My only way of sending u a photo is via myspace.com
unfortunately, so, hopefully u will have an account. I am not spam, I promise. If u send me a pic i
will respond with the link to my page. So! If anyone feels like meeting somebody new and joining me
for a smoke please respond...
A
|
Boing Boing -
23 hours and 31 minutes ago
Daniel Carter, creative director of MAKE and CRAFT magazines, told me about illustrator Christoph
Niemann's remarkable coffee-on-napkin drawings. When I was 21 I worked as an intern at a magazine.
The art director and I would brew a gigantic pot of coffee around 9 a.m. to help us get through the
day. The pot would simmer in the coffeemaker, and through evaporation the coffee strengthened
noticeably at lunchtime. In the evening hours, the remaining coffee had turned to a black
concoction with a stinging smell and tar-like taste. We endured it without flinching. Christoph
Niemann's coffee-on-napkin drawings...br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=6132277b20ebaafd1dc3b6153b8dcfc9p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=6132277b20ebaafd1dc3b6153b8dcfc9p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=6132277b20ebaafd1dc3b6153b8dcfc9" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/
|
Techdirt -
1 days ago
Monster Cable is a href="http://www.techdirt.com/search.php?site=#038;q=monster+cable"famously
litigious/a over its trademark -- suing just about ianyone/i who uses the name "Monster" as a part
of their corporate offering. Most of these lawsuits are bogus -- as trademark only covers the
specific areas of business you're in, and doesn't give you complete control over the name. Thus, if
you make a a href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20080722/1513011763.shtml"salt lick/a for deer
called Monster Deer Block, you shouldn't have to worry about a lawsuit from Monster Cable... but
you'd still get one, as pretty much everyone from the TV show Monster Garage to the Boston Red Sox
(for the "Monster seats" on top of the "Green Monster" wall in left field) have found out. br /br /
Earlier this year, the company went after a small mini-golf operation in California called a
href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20080515/1940111131.shtml"Monster Mini Golf/a, which we
doubted anyone would confuse with the cable makers. Apparently, that wasn't the only Monster Mini
Golf that Monster's lawyers were busy hassling. a href="http://addic.tv"Chris Collett/a alerts us
to the fact that a Rhode Island based Monster Mini Golf is a
href="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem#038;item=250335844365" target="_new"also facing
a lawsuit, and asking for help/a. But, there's an interesting twist here. The company is pleading
it's case a href="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem#038;item=250335844365"
target="_new"on eBay/a, and asking people to contribute to its defense fund via eBay. I'm not sure
if this goes against eBay's terms of service, though I hope it doesn't: blockquotei BUT...one man
is destined to crush what we have built. He is the founder of Monster Cable Inc. (a company that
makes Audio cables) and he's suing us for "Trademark Infringement". br /br / In a nutshell,
trademark infringement is based solely on "Likelihood of Confusion", or essentially, "could the
average consumer be confused between the two?". The answer is no, as decided by the Patent and
Trademark Office when they granted our trademarks, but Monster Cable Inc filed an opposition
against that decision, and sued us. br /br / To this day, this one man has opposed approx 400
companies...and it doesn't look like he EVER intends to stop. This is the true meaning of Corporate
Bully. br /br / Their tactic is to run the smaller companies out of money, and force them into a
settlement where they surrender their name to Monster Cable Inc, who then licenses it back to them
for a fee. Yes, so then we would be paying him for a concept and business we created and have
worked very hard for! It is essentially extortion, but sadly, it is cheaper than going to trial,
which can be crippling to small businesses like ours. br /br / Unlike the 414 companies he has
forced into settlement by bleeding them dry.... we have decided to continue on and fight the good
fight. We have chosen to stand up for anyone who has ever been bullied, picked on, abused, or
otherwise forced into an unfair or unjust situation by a bigger, stronger, (or in this case,
richer) opponent. br /br / Each small business that was forced to sign over their name is one more
brick in the massive Monster Cable Inc wall, held together by the blood of those crushed beneath
their corporate wheels. It is very very sad. br /br / So far our legal fees are well over $100,000.
(And counting) and will likely reach $250,000 when all is said and done. No wonder why 400
companies have waived the white flag!! 250K is the cost of "Winning"!! We need your help, we cannot
afford to do it alone. Wondering if this is real or not...just google Monster Mini Golf and Cable.
Or visit audioholics web site and you will also read about many other cases there as well. br /br /
What we are selling is a "Piece" of our legal defense and a small slice of Justice to you for $1.
Yep, just a buck....and as Sally Struthers once said, that's less than a cup of coffee! Geez...at
Starbucks, it wouldn't even buy you that! br /br / In return for your gracious purchase, you will
receive a heartfelt "Thank You" from us and the knowledge that you have helped defeat a corporate
bully who has been abusing the legal system for years! And, if you print your paypal receipt and
take it to any Monster Mini Golf location, we'll take $2 Off a round of Mini Golf! (that's double
your money back! Reg price for 18 holes is between $5.50-$7.50) /i/blockquote This is interesting,
as I hadn't heard that Monster Cable was apparently iselling/i the Monster name back to people it
bullied. That's even more obnoxious -- and a clear abuse of trademark law. Also, it's been a while
since we've seen companies using a href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20031218/101247.shtml"eBay
auctions for PR/a, so maybe that's making a comeback. Either way, if you want to help stop one of
the biggest trademark bullies out there, maybe try to buy a share of the legal defenses, and hope
eBay doesn't take the auction down.br /br /a
href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20081203/1332043008.shtml"Permalink/a | a
href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20081203/1332043008.shtml#comments"Comments/a | a
href="http://techdirt.com/article.php?sid=20081203/1332043008op=sharethis"Email This Story/abr / br
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src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=8d99090b556f8667c4475f241988bb29" style="display:
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Boing Boing -
1 days and 5 hours ago
This is one of the baddest-ass gift ideas I've seen yet this holiday season. So, you may recall an
earlier Boing Boing blog post about the Periodic Table rendered in lenticular 3D photographs....
Theodore Gray has been making the ultimate periodic table, a one-of-a-kind wooden table with real
samples that sits in his office. For the rest of us who don’t visit his office he has he has
created an incredible (and very tastefully designed) photographic poster "after four years of
collecting and photographing samples of all the chemical elements, months of struggling to select
the very best example of each one." Mr. Gray is producing those posters still, and they're vivid
and lovely. But he's also offering a custom banner service so you can print out a name (yours, that
of your loved one, or your beloved blog, whatever) in photographic elements. Ours is above. Also,
he's just begun offering a really cool puzzle with the same imagery, and a deck of index cards --
unlike other "elements" card decks, this one has perfectly square cards with all the info about
that element on the back. You can reassemble them to make the periodic table. I've seen all of this
stuff, it's sitting in the Boing Boing tv office right now, and it's beautifully printed, packaged,
and presented. I'm going to buy a bunch for holiday prezzies. Previously: Periodic table of
condiments - Boing Boing Periodic Table in haiku - Boing Boing The dinner table of the elements -
Boing Boing Periodic Table of Videos: elements as short YouTube episodes ... Periodic Table
Printmaking Project - Boing Boing Periodic table of comic book elements - Boing Boing Periodic
Coffee Table - Boing Boing Periodic table jewelry - Boing Boing Periodic table rendered in photos,
and in wood - Boing Boing...br style="clear: both;"/ a
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Global Voices Online -
1 days and 9 hours ago
The Patriot
Missive blog advises how to live with terrorism. “So take note from Israelis who
are surrounded by enemies on three corners… Do you know what they do? They go eat at a
nice restaurant. Or have coffee with friends… In all honesty, Israelis have it a lot worse
than we do but they’ve learned an important lesson about fighting terrorism: Don’t be
afraid to live.”
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