The most recent 20 comments posted to Making Light by Christopher Davis:

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Posted on entry It was twenty years ago today ::: November 10, 2009, 11:50 AM:
I didn't make it to Worldcon in 1990, but my thoughts of the Wall are bookended by two Worldcons: my first, Boston in 1989, shortly before it fell; my most recent, Montreal in 2009.

Along the "Underground City" path between the Delta and the Palais (though at ground level), the Centre du Commerce Mondial has a piece of the Berlin Wall in their atrium.

As I came past it on my way to the hotel, I saw it...thought back to my senior year of college, when so much changed both personally and globally...and realized that only a few months previously I had reached the point where the Berlin Wall had no longer been standing for the majority of my lifetime.

Seeing that in a building called a "World Trade Center", of course, adds an additional historical resonance.
Posted on entry Technically American ::: November 05, 2009, 07:23 PM:
Further to Debbie's #80, Rich Wales has a very good overview of dual nationality in US law.

I've had both US and Irish citizenship for over a decade now; both passports have been renewed since then. For the US passport, I simply included a signed statement affirming that I did not intend to renounce my US citizenship and that I had continued to reside, vote, and pay taxes in the US since that date. (The process I went through didn't require a renunciatory oath, though even if it had the US wouldn't recognize that alone as a renunciation.)

Looking back to Debbie's #38: are there any other EU countries you could more easily get citizenship in? Many of them, including Ireland, allow dual nationality.
Posted on entry Open thread 131 ::: October 26, 2009, 02:20 PM:
albatross (#64): There's the attack on the USS Cole, for example, though security procedures when in port are much more stringent now than they were then.
Posted on entry America ::: October 22, 2009, 12:47 PM:
candle (#8, was #7 before mod release): if the law in Florida truly does require hospitals to ignore legal power of attorney documents then the law is in violation of Art. 1, Sec. 10 of the US Constitution:"No State shall [...] pass any [...] Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts".

Despite what the "social worker" said (scare quotes because I certainly hope that there's a professional code of ethics with some teeth to it that may be applied here), I find it very hard to believe that Florida law could do so.
Posted on entry Open thread 130 ::: October 21, 2009, 03:43 PM:
eric (#807): Indeed. One of my finely-honed sysadmin skills is the ability to very quickly find the details I'm looking for in a man page.

After umpty-mumble years and a similar number of Unix variants, you get really good at checking what version of a utility you have and what arguments it takes.

The classic example is the difference between the Solaris killall and the Linux killall.

For those who haven't encountered the difference: Linux killall takes an argument that's used as a match pattern for processes to kill (killall dhcpd); Solaris killall ignores the argument and kills all the processes it can.

The Linux man page for killall notes: "Be warned that typing killall name may not have the desired effect on non-Linux systems, especially when done by a privileged user." This is an understatement.
Posted on entry Open thread 130 ::: October 05, 2009, 11:02 AM:
abi (#362): there's always the "Mac Box Set" which includes iLife (Garageband et al), iWork (Keynote/Pages/Numbers), and the latest Mac OS X...for about US$11 more than the OS alone would normally be. (Significantly higher this time since 10.6 is US$29, though.)

Once you have Garageband you can create a "ringtone" project which lets you select a 40 sec or less loop, then just use the "Send ringtone to iTunes" menu item.
Posted on entry The Prisoner's Dilemma ::: September 30, 2009, 01:13 PM:
Wesley (#63) notes the Eastern State Penitentiary.

A few years ago I was visiting Philadelphia. To get into Independence Hall I had to submit to metal detectors and bag X-rays. To get near the Liberty Bell I had to submit to metal detectors and bag X-rays. To get into the National Constitution Center I had to submit to a hand search of my bag.

To get into Eastern State Penitentiary, I just had to pay the admission charge and walk in.

Ah, the shrines of freedom.
Posted on entry The Prisoner's Dilemma ::: September 28, 2009, 09:22 PM:
Rob Hansen (#12): maybe they could count as 3/5ths of a person instead....

Massachusetts has amended its constitution to remove rights exactly once. (We managed to avoid doing so WRT same-sex marriage.) In 2000, a vote passed removing the right to vote from prisoners.
Posted on entry September 11 ::: September 12, 2009, 01:01 AM:
Ten years ago, September 11th was a Saturday...and with a cheap weekend fare, a good day to be visiting NYC from Boston. A CityPass meant we had various tickets that we wouldn't necessarily have paid full price for, so we hit a few extra tourist sites that weekend, including the observation decks of both the WTC and Empire State Building.

The view from the World Trade Center's observation deck on September 11, 1999 looked something like this.

The next day, the view from the Empire State Building's deck looking south.

That's the New York City I want to remember in September.
Posted on entry Oh No Lev Grossman No ::: September 08, 2009, 02:18 PM:
OtterB (#604): of course not!

If you have that many books there's no bare wall space, and who wants to get their books all bloody?
Posted on entry Open thread 128 ::: August 26, 2009, 01:18 AM:
P J Evans (#798): Then there's the most likely apocryphal story of the soldiers recently transferred to Germany. They go out for a drive, get lost, and call back to the post for help.

"We're lost. How do we get back?"

"Where are you?"

"We're on Einbahnstrasse in the town of Ausfahrt."

(Bar Jnl Fgerrg va gur gbja bs Rkvg.)
Posted on entry Touching back to principles ::: August 23, 2009, 06:56 PM:
Michael I (#134): King Bhumibol was, incidentally, born in the US (though I don't think anyone has asked him to show his birth certificate, there being a distinct lack of "birthers" in Thailand).
Posted on entry Open thread 128 ::: August 23, 2009, 04:38 PM:
KeithS (#672): The Return of Captain Invincible was in 1983, was not (TTBOMK) ever a Broadway musical, and is definitely a musical.

In fact, it's a musical superhero movie, with Alan Arkin in the lead role (and Christopher Lee as the supervillain, because, well, Christopher Lee.)

It's utterly cracktastic, and I should bring a copy to the next Fluorospherian Gathering just to see the look on everyone's faces....
Posted on entry Papier-blogging le Congrès Mondial ::: August 21, 2009, 01:06 PM:
These are wonderful! For the panels I attended, they're great reminders; for the ones I missed, great summations. Thanks. (I'm also flattered that I managed to get a quote in, given how much good stuff Jo and Robert had to say during that panel.)
Posted on entry Making Lumiere: The Changelog ::: August 19, 2009, 04:30 PM:
As I belatedly catch up on this thread...

Andrew Plotkin (#96): The sad part is that I picked the 1805 flight so that if something happened, I'd have a backup option in the 2000 flight!

I did, as my LJ entries noted, get a chance to continue the convention at the Holiday Inn, in a small way. (Before my flight was cancelled, I saw ML's own Kathryn from Sunnyvale as she headed off to her own flight, which apparently did depart....)
Posted on entry Montreal by train ::: August 03, 2009, 12:01 PM:
Since I'm flying up, I am probably not going to have as much room for game-bringing as I'd like. At this point my tentative priorities are Race for the Galaxy (with both expansions), and Battlestar Galactica (if I have room, or can get someone who's driving up from Boston to play courier for me). I'm definitely bringing Wizard, because there's always room for Wizard.

(Any requests? A partial list is on BGG.)
Posted on entry Our Worldcon schedule ::: July 28, 2009, 10:06 PM:
Patrick (#96): Teresa [...] rates Montreal as significantly less challenging than [...] Boston

It'd have to be; as Cally says, they have street signs in Montreal!
Posted on entry Our Worldcon schedule ::: July 27, 2009, 02:13 PM:
Chris Quinones (#9): If only we could get Mike Ford to attend the Krugman/Stross discussion.
Posted on entry Our Worldcon schedule ::: July 27, 2009, 12:44 PM:
I'm really looking forward[1] to Worldcon; there's so much good stuff on the schedule.

[1] (Overused pun carefully not made.)
Posted on entry Do you own your data? ::: July 24, 2009, 04:54 PM:
Patrick has it nailed in #14: this stuff is way too complicated right now, unless you're willing to stay within a single walled garden (like the Kindle), and that's hurting everyone. The nearest equivalent to the MP3 format seems to be ePub, inasmuch as that's the direction that the various reader software and hardware seems to be moving in...yet it's far from universally supported the way MP3 is on pretty much any media player from the cheapest no-names up to high-end iPods.

The eBabel problem (as the TeleRead blog folks call it) is only made worse by DRM, of course.

Ken Brown (#15): I've seen a Bluetooth "virtual keyboard" that projects a keyboard image onto a flat surface. The key-feel is obviously nonexistent (and the CNET review was not exactly complimentary), but at least it'd fit in a pocket when you weren't using it. (Also, the iPhone/iPod touch don't have Bluetooth keyboard drivers yet.)

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