Jimi Does Dylan
No, not "All Along the Warchtower," but "Like a Rolling Stone."
No, not "All Along the Warchtower," but "Like a Rolling Stone."
Safari doesn't shake hands with this app, but it looks like it would be a nice addition to my toolbar. If you use it, let me know how it works.
On our morning rides, Jeff Wong and I pass one point that has recently been covered with geese resting on their migration south. We've been wondering <I>why here?</I> and <I>Why a "V"?</I>
"Find X?" No problem!
<i>WIRED</i> offers their list of "Best Gadgets and Gizmos on the Planet" in their annual <b>TEST</b> issue, on stands now. But I didn't buy it. Instead, I swiped my girlfriend's copy. While she was mostly interested in reading more great things about her handy-dandy Motorola Q, I, of course, flipped right to the home audio section.
I got a new cell phone recently and have been learning how to take pictures with the camera that's (almost) always with me. No, a phone isn't a very good camera, but the pictures can be surprisingly good if you work within your tool's limitations.
David Halberstam remembers an era when the press wasn't the administration's lapdog. What a great piece of writing.
If you think you know how, it's probably because you don't have problem feet. I have wide feet, which makes it impossible to get comfortable bicycling shoes—which are mostly made on narrow Italian lasts. The wide foot lacing solution on the Dick's Sporting Goods site has been a godsend. I'm sure the other lacing fixes work equally well.
Is it in the genes?
Music is such a big part of musician's lives, but high-quality audio almost never is. Why do you think there are so few classical, jazz, or rock musicians who are audiophiles?