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Music & Performance

  • Madeleine Peyroux - J'ai Deux Amours

    J'ai Deux Amours
    Madeleine Peyroux: Careless Love

    This cover of an old Josephine Baker classic is beautifully rendered. Stopped me in my tracks while walking through an old furniture store in San Francisco with the rain and cold outside. Your mileage on the rest of the CD might vary, but this one's worth the price.

  • Kevin Burke - Paris Nights

    Paris Nights
    Kevin Burke: Across the Black River

    A Master Fiddler in his prime. Had a chance to see him at the Sebastopol Celtic Festival. Such a smooth and accomplished style - Listen to the Long Set or Paris Nights and you'll see what sets him apart.

  • Various Artists (Lydia Mendoza) - Amor Bonito

    Amor Bonito
    Various Artists (Lydia Mendoza): Tejano Roots: The Women (1946-1970)

    In memory of a singer that had the same impact on me as Edith Piaf when I first heard her on an Arhoolie Records compilation of Tejano (music from the Texas-Mexico area). I adore her song Amor Bonito. Rest in peace...

  • Susana Seivane - Sabelina

    Sabelina
    Susana Seivane: Susana Seivane

    Music from Galecia - part of Spain with Celtic music influences. These are not your moody highland bagpipes (love those too) - think peppier, uptempo, energetic music. The tune Sabelina (an original composition) rivals the best Cuban beats for getting your feet moving. If you've ever rocked out to The Old Blind Dogs or Lunasa at a live concert - you will love this. http://www.susanaseivane.com/

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Modelling the Computer of the (near) Future

I get a little irritated at the iPhone/iTouch being pointed to as the model device/computer of the (near) future.  Having traveled the world a few years ago with just a BlackBerry RIM device (no laptop), I can happily report that it serves far better as a model than the iPhone.  The far future clearly has some elements of body-computer integration not widely seen today that neither device models today.  I have both devices and assert that the RIM is a better base for the future computer.

I travel enough to know and understand that it will be a while under we really have ubiquitous connectivity (recent newspaper article points out that Fiber connectivity to homes may stall at 13% in the US).  To me, the ideal device starts with the classical BlackBerry RIM design and adds elements of the iPhone.  In a world that still has large patches where connectivity and bandwidth are scarce and precious, a device that makes smart use of bandwidth for critical communication is far more important than a compelling (but still flawed) user interface.  The Touch interface also has some significant shortcomings -  requiring sight based gestures (you need to look at the device) and  requiring multiple steps for what should be single click access.

Here's my view of my ideal near term portable computer:

  • Hip holster form factor
  • Flash based high-density storage with a pluggable SD card for sneakernet data transfer (at 30Gb, its a real laptop replacement)
  • RIM style messaging (no polling, messages arrive in the background with low bandwidth usage and works even in low connectivity areas)
  • Ability to dock device to run keyboard and monitor and full browser/VPN capabilities - I run a desktop tower at work and often will VPN into that machine to run high compute/connectivity requirement tasks.  Perhaps the ideal computer replaces that but I'd be happy to have a window into my home/office computer.
  • Some range/choice of analog controls - I remain a fan of the analog click-wheel on the original blackberries which made sight free control possible.  I think current device design has really neglected the clever use of button based controls to accelerate common tasks.
  • Ability to span and operate over the best connectivity available (WiFi, 3G, GPRS, etc.
  • Full day operation, handcrank recharge (or movement driven constant recharge)

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Current Reading

  • John Kenneth Galbraith: A Short History of Financial Euphoria (Whittle)

    John Kenneth Galbraith: A Short History of Financial Euphoria (Whittle)
    Dusted off this one from my library (an old Penguin imprint). Acquired some 30 years ago, last read around 1999. Still good as ever - short and to the point. Consider "Extraordinary Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" for an alternate. (****)

  • Rodney Frost: Making Mad Toys & Mechanical Marvels in Wood

    Rodney Frost: Making Mad Toys & Mechanical Marvels in Wood
    One of my collection on automata/kinetic scuplture/toys. Frost's work isn't as inspired as Paul Spooner but he's taken great pains to document kinetic toys and in this volume illustrates beautifully how to put some nifty kinetic toys/automata. Given the weather and my outdoor workshop, it'll be summer before I can experiment with some of the ideas but the sketches and designs will have to suffice till then. (***)

  • Edward Hopper: Edward Hopper: A Journal of His Work

    Edward Hopper: Edward Hopper: A Journal of His Work
    One of my favorite artists and an old birthday gift that leaf through in quiet times. Quite instructive to see the process behind the master works in the sketches, the study, the notes and the deft hand that captures the essence. Reminds me of the journals in the Picasso Museum in Paris (reams and reams of them) that show how genius is really 99% perspiration. (****)

  • Karen Armstrong: The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions

    Karen Armstrong: The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions
    Not perfect, but an illuminating book on a pivotal period in human history and the development of ideas that hold promise for our future.

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