Archive for September, 2011

Amazon Silk

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Amazon just announced a whole boatload of new Kindles and the lineup is quite impressive. There’s the really small Kindle, Kindle Touch, Kindle Fire (Android tablet), Kindle Ring (a phone), Kindle Tube (a tv), and of course Kindle Grill (a toaster) *. Yet of all the things they mentioned, the one that really stood out to me was the new Silk browser.

Should I Hate My Job? New Poll Says Yes

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In a recent poll about most hated jobs, Director of Information Technology topped the list. That’s right, IT Directors hate their jobs more than anyone else. More than garbage collectors, executioners, telemarketers, investment bankers, S&P employees, elected politicians, unelected politicians, network executives, and network executive assistants.

Yet Another Painting

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I recently completed another painting and thought it would be fun to share how it evolved.

Database Source Control Revisited

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A while back I blogged about strategies for putting your database artifacts under source control. At the time, I thought that a schema synchronization approach (implemented by Visual Studio Database project) was the way to go. Among other things, it seemed more DBA friendly.

My Old Sketches: Surrealism

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Here are some more sketches from my old sketchbook. This set is primarily surrealistic (or, as some might say, creepy). For some odd reason, there seems to be a surprisingly large number of meat related sketches. Enjoy!

Eliminating the Mortgage Deduction

There’s been a lot of talk lately about eliminating the mortgage deduction. Reactions to this idea range from “this will end us all” to “eh” and people tend to use all kinds of underhanded tactics (i.e. statistics) to prove their point.

Distraction Free Writing

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Writing on a computer is an inherently distracting experience. Words you type have to constantly compete for your eye share against all kinds of menus, toolbars, windows, popups, tray icons, and so on. With so much going on, it’s often difficult to write more than five words before launching into a major reformatting expedition.