Always enjoy watching the snow removal process here in Montreal. Seems like a sort of large scale mechanical ballet.
@logikdev indeed! Although sort of…
@logikdev indeed! Although sort of pissed at past me for not ordering delivery, I’m hungry now.
Revisiting theme code I wrote…
Revisiting theme code I wrote 3 years ago and finding that it’s reasonably well formatted and documented 😆🙌
@markjaquith Had it happen to…
@markjaquith Had it happen to me a couple weeks ago, Safari was somehow using 41gb of ram, it was weird twitter.com/davekellam/sta…
@sillygrampy @stephdau nope, just really…
@sillygrampy @stephdau nope, just really dense snow. Not a ton, but it’s been sticking to everything and staying.
Snowy view from the back…
Snowy view from the back of the apartment instagram.com/p/waru7AEGBO/
Tagliatelle Alfredo with Caesar salad…
Tagliatelle Alfredo with Caesar salad instagram.com/p/wZ-cpTEGF9/
The Wire in HD
David Simon wrote a piece about The Wire’s conversion to high-definition and a 16:9 aspect ratio. I remember watching the series while it was airing and reading about the intentional preservation of the 4:3 ratio. I just figured we’d never see a widescreen release.
At the last, I’m satisfied what while this new version of The Wire is not, in some specific ways, the film we first made, it has sufficient merit to exist as an alternate version. There are scenes that clearly improve in HD and in the widescreen format. But there are things that are not improved. And even with our best resizing, touchups and maneuver, there are some things that are simply not as good. That’s the inevitability: This new version, after all, exists in an aspect ratio that simply wasn’t intended or serviced by the filmmakers when the camera was rolling and the shot was framed.
Glad to hear that Simon is down with the new treatment (for the most part).
Gangnam Style broke YouTube
PSY’s Gangnam Style video broke YouTube’s view-counter:
We never thought a video would be watched in numbers greater than a 32-bit integer (=2,147,483,647 views), but that was before we met PSY. “Gangnam Style” has been viewed so many times we have to upgrade!
Hover over the counter in PSY’s video to see a little math magic and stay tuned for bigger and bigger numbers on YouTube.
Gmail fixed itself
Earlier this year, Google’s Gmail service fixed itself before the engineers did. From the post-mortem blog post:
Users began seeing these errors on affected services at 11:02 a.m., and at that time our internal monitoring alerted Google’s Site Reliability Team. Engineers were still debugging 12 minutes later when the same system, having automatically cleared the original error, generated a new correct configuration at 11:14 a.m. and began sending it; errors subsided rapidly starting at this time.
Found this sifting through some old bookmarks, hat-tip to Kyle Neath.
The chicken of tomorrow
Apparently, most of the chickens that we eat today are derived from the winners of A&P’s 1948 Chicken of Tomorrow contest. They worked with the USDA to increase the growth of the poultry industry.
It was an alliance with a specific goal: The “development of superior meat-type chickens.” The winning chicken would have broader-breasts, bigger drumsticks, plumper thighs, and above all, more white meat. And they would grow faster, too, so that the consumer would eventually come to depend on the bird as a reliable kitchen staple.
So who won? Arbor Acres White Rocks’ white feathered birds beat the competition in the purebred category, but Red Cornish crosses from the Vantress Hatchery definitely outperformed them. And as it happens, those two breeds would eventually be crossed and become the Arbor Acre breed — whose genetics now dominate poultry farms worldwide.
Makes me think I should make an effort to find places that produce some of the heritage breeds.
I just earned the ‘Beer-giving…
I just earned the ‘Beer-giving (2014)’ badge on @untappd! untp.beer/s/b37259662 #beergiving