Well, actually, it suggests that, by wearing a helmet when I cycle, I give motorists the feeling I'm invulnerable.
Plep points us toward this gallery of Penn prints at the National Gallery. Amazing how much detail you get in this analog format—go ahead, enlarge 'em and see.
These days have been long. Longer than usual, in fact. That's right:
Longer than usual.
Impossible, you say? A day is a day, you say? Not so, I say. These days have been long, and they're getting even longer. Let me tell you what I mean. I just now looked at my clock. It reads 7:18. At this time yesterday, it was a little before midnight. I swear.
How does that happen?
We've been stressed. The lump in our throat says so. The knot in our stomach and the crink in our neck confirm it. With producing the Buyer's Guide, shipping the November issue, preparing…
Fred von Lohmann, senior intellectual property attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and our hero, sends along this link to the Center for Democracy and Technology's (CDT) thoughtful guidelines to how electronics product reviewers should evaluate digital rights management (DRM) issues.
It's obvious why I'm interested in it, but why am I linking to it? So you can review the reviewers, of course. Any review that endorses a product that requires cripple-ware and doesn't tell consumers how that will affect the is a bad review. People can see the shiny carcasses and pretty…
Jeff Wong alerted me to the furor among artists over what is known as "The Blue Girl Infringement," which involves a piece of proposed bad law called the Orphan Works Act.
Brad Holland at Illustrators' Partnership lays the situation out clearly and includes links to the original Blue Girl art and its infringing advertisement (which has a gratuitous tonearm image, which makes it almost relevant to Stereophilia). Holland also posts a sample letter to Congress should you want to take action. (And you should do it quickly, because the bill's sponsors are attempting an end run around the…
Here's a handy site for travelers: TravelPost.com has a chart listing all the US airports with WiFi, complete with their rates and terminal locations. (Some airports do it right and offer free access to their hostages, er, guests.)
Bookmark this one for your pre-travel checklist.
Stereophila Bogging will be light for the next three days, while I am blogging CEDIA. I'll try to get some stuff up here and I will definitely be cat blogging on Friday, having spent the better part of yesterday afternoon following Huck and Bagheera around, camera in hand.
There are very many high-end audio websites out there. I know this because I've spent all day working on our "Audio Manufacturers on the Web" directory, which may be published in our 2007 Buyer's Guide.
I've got this 45-page Word document which lists every audio manufacturer's website we've come across, from 47 Laboratory to ZVOX Audio. I know: I'm sure we've missed someone. But, believe me: It wasn't on purpose. I copy a manufacturer's URL into a browser and fly to that site in order to answer two big questions:
1. Does the site still exist?
2. Does it really belong…
Paul Quincey said it, not me.
I want to be secure when I fly, but many of the new restrictions strike me as absurd. I was forced to check my rolling carry-on yesterday because it "was larger than a computer bag." Great. I had visions of arriving at CEDIA sans computer or camera.