Tired of Typing?

Tired of entering text into your computer the old-fashioned way? Speech-recognition just not working out for you? On-screen keyboards no help?

Try ***Dasher|http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/dasher/***. After you spend a few minutes figuring out how exactly it works, it will blow your mind. It’s almost like playing a video game. But that’s not entirely accurate… you have to see if for yourself.

You might find this program of particular interest if you are unable to use a regular keyboard or pointing device, or if you work with special needs people. Folks who are interested in linguistics and natural language processing might find it fascinating as well.

Found the link through Perl guru extraordinaire ***Simon Cozens|http://blog.simon-cozens.org/6725.html***.

(Warning: It’s probably not a good idea to use this program if you are prone to motion sickness.)

Take the Survey!

Please ***take our survey|http://www.createsurvey.com/c/17069-xHckEX/***! It’s also linked in the top left hand corner of the page. Our free trial is going to expire this Saturday, so I hope to get the results tallied up before then.

It’s just 13 easy-to-answer questions, 12 of which are multiple-choice. Those of you who haven’t taken the survey yet know who you are. 😉

Thank you!

Big Dig Reuse

As Becky and I have driven in and out of Boston the past week, it’s been amazing to see the open spaces where the double-decker bridge used to be. The Big Dig project is really making progress tearing down all of that old stuff, and as the Boston Globe reports this morning, all of that leftover metal ***isn’t just being thrown out|http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2004/04/25/he_could_call_it_his_big_digs/?rss_id=Boston%20Globe%20–%20City%20/%20Region%20News***. Now that would be a sight… 🙂

Law and the Beast

Okay, maybe I’m the last person on the planet to discover this (and, if so, I’m okay with that)… I just found out that my beloved Jerry Orbach, Detective Lenny Briscoe of Law and Order fame, moonlighted as Lumiere, the candlablra of Beauty and the Beast fame.

Going back and listening to Lumiere I can totally hear Lenny. Why did I never know this before? I know that Jerry has a life outside of L&O… He played the Dad in Dirty Dancing and has been in several Broadway musicals and plays. I just never knew he sang “Be Our Guest” in a great French accent. My life will be forever changed for the better. On other articles, if you need accident lawyer near Vancouver, checkout ICBC Car Accident Lawyer Vancouver.

Spam-no-more

I’ve just installed the ***MT-Blacklist|http://www.jayallen.org/projects/mt-blacklist/*** plugin in our ***MovableType|http://www.movabletype.org/*** installation. This should prevent those lovely ads for Cialis, Viagra, etc, from showing up in the comments of blogs hosted on MovableType at prwdot.org. You shouldn’t notice anything different with this new feature, unless you happen to be a spammer. Then, you will notice that your spamalicous comments are DENIED!!! Whoo-hoo!

TV vs. Logic

There is nothing good on TV tonight. Don’t bother searching all 600 channels, I’ve done it for you. Believe me.

Never fear, however. I have found you something better to do. A logic puzzle! These were a favorite of mine in school and I found this one on the web a couple nights ago. It took me about half an hour to solve…but that half hour was between 11:45pm and 12:15am… so you might finish it quicker. Good Luck!

(oh. I’ll post the answer if there is a public outcry for it…)

———-
There are 5 houses in 5 different colours, all in a row. In each house lives a person with a different nationality. The 5 owners drink a certain type of beverage, smoke a certain brand of cigar, and keep a certain pet. No owners have the same pet, smoke the same brand of cigar, or drink the same beverage. The question is:

‘Who owns the fish?’

Hints:

The Brit lives in the red house.

The Swede keeps dogs as pets.

The Dane drinks tea.

The green house is on the immediate left of the white house.

The green homeowner drinks coffee.

The person who smokes Pall Mall rears birds.

The owner of the yellow house smokes Dunhill.

The man living in the center house drinksmilk.

The Norwegian lives in the first house.

The man who smokes Blend lives next to the one who keeps cats.

The man who keeps the horse lives next to the man who smokes Dunhill.

The owner who smokes Bluemaster drinks beer.

The German smokes Prince.

The Norwegian lives next to the blue house.

The man who smokes Blend has a neighbour who drinks water.

Crisis

Sometimes it is good to be a follower. Jennifer read a book and said it was good. So now, months later, I have finally read it.

WithThe Quarterlife Crisis, Alexandra Robbins and Abby Wilner have written a thought provoking book about “The unique challenges of life in your twenties.” They pose the idea that although the ‘midlife crisis’ is well known and accepted in our society there is also a panic crisis that affects people in their 20’s.

It was interesting to read about the causes and effects of this crisis through the stories of college grads who are dealing with post-grad life. These stories give a thorough look at how twentysomethings adjust to life on their own after college. Thier struggles and eventual epiphanies bring to life the sometimes not so easy job of being in your twenties.

I found this book to be interesting in the theoretical sense. As a twentysomething myself I found myself comiserating with many of the ‘case studies’. However, the authors asked alot of questions, but did little in the way of answering them. I also thought that the authors (young, female) could have done a little more to make their book a bit more professional. The language and ‘voice’ of the narrative was often juvenile.

Even with some reservations I would still reccomend reading The Quarterlife Crisis to anyone in their twenties or quickly approaching. It offers another view of the life of a college grad; in sharp contrast to what we see on tv and in the movies.

Let me know what you think about it.

Congratulations Tom!

We would like to congratulate Thomas Lowe for his completion of the ***Boston Marathon|http://www.bostonmarathon.org/*** today! His net time was 4 hours, 8 minutes, 43 seconds, which was excellent considering the humidity, temperatures in the mid-80’s, and the grueling terrain of the 26.2 mile course.

Becky and I had a great time spectating. We got off at the end of the Green Line’s B branch, at the Boston College stop. From there we walked up Commonwealth Ave., to the top of Heartbreak Hill, and then part of the way down the hill. We walked back up to the top of the hill and hung around the “Top of the Hill” line, where all of the news media were parked. It was great fun to cheer on everyone as they reached the top of the last major hill on the course. One guy near us I dubbed “Mister Top-of-the-Hill,” after the creative cheers he came up with for most every runner who went past. For example, to the man with his jersey unzipped all the way down to the waist he called “Come on, Plunging Neckline!” Another runner had an “FBI” t-shirt on, and MTOTH called out “Come on, FBI! Al-Qaeda is just ahead of you!”

We did manage to make visual contact with Tom, after walking back closer to the BC T stop. We saw him just down the hill from the 21 mile marker, gave him some cheers, and got a reaction. Hopefully it helped to motivate him for the five miles he had left to go.

Due to the laboriously slow, error-ridden Green Line (the train we were on was actually “rebooted” once while we were waiting, and before they finally decided to take it out of service), we weren’t able to make it down to the Finish line before Tom arrived. But all in all, it was a very enjoyable experience, and I definitely think it would be fun to attend even if we didn’t know anyone participating.

Just for fun, there is an athlete result search form ***here|http://www.bostonmarathon.org/cfm_Public/2004/pg_RaceAdvanced2004.cfm***. You can type in a city and state, for example, to see if anyone from your home town was participating in the race, and see what their results were. Or you can search by name, age, citizenship, or even their exact ‘Bib Number’ if you have it. Nobody from Mount Vernon, Ohio was participating, but there were two participants from Townsend, Massachusetts. For Jenn, there was one runner from River Vale, NJ. For Michelle, there were 17 runners from Saskatchewan (one from Moose Jaw, which I think is near your seminary). Play along at home – see if you can find a long-lost friend who ran in the marathon!

One last thing – as I have previously mentioned, the digital camera is out of service at the moment. I’ll be sending it in to Canon for repairs, but today we used Becky’s standard 35mm camera to take photos. I hope to have those developed this week, and I should be able to have the photo lab digitize them for me so that they can go up in our online gallery.