Wednesday, October 27, 2010

damn straight..

The Ten Do's and Don'ts on The Great State of Texas Foods

















Like other states or cities who are very particular about their cuisines, Texas has its own little set of rules when it comes to eating. In Chicago, for example, putting ketchup on a hot dog is slightly worse than trampling on the American flag after setting it on fire using the Eternal Flame from John F. Kennedy's gravesite. And in Germany, putting a slice of orange or lemon into your hefeweizen is akin to ordering a beer and then pissing straight into the mug before drinking it. Refreshing!

read on 


The Houston Press












Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

a great lady passes

most of the remembrances of Barbara Billingsley will, of course, be her work on "Leave It To Beaver", I prefer her twist on the Beav's mom as a multi-lingual airplane passenger.




P.S. did you know Barbara is Peter Billingsley's cousin by marriage?

Monday, October 11, 2010

a little bang

do not try this at home...

Saturday, October 9, 2010

up, up and away...

the 2010 Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta 


Balloon Fiesta from Michael Salisbury on Vimeo.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

all I want for Christmas is...

my own barrel o' whiskey..






















Cask strength, 3 Years Old. unchilfiltered and not coloured. Numbers limited for this baby. Delivery in November 2010
inc. 30 L cask, contents and delivery (mainland England)
Price: £1,200.00

that's about $1900.00 not counting delivery to Texas

and I would certainly let the barrel age for a decade or so....

sure I would...

English Whiskey Co.

Friday, October 1, 2010

why can't Johnny program?

we are losing an innovative edge ...

Amazingly, America - the birthplace of the Internet - is the only developed nation that does not teach programming in its public schools. Sure, some of our schools have elected to offer "computer" classes, but instead of teaching programming, these classes almost invariably teach programs: how to use Microsoft Office, Adobe Photoshop, or any of the other commercial software packages used in the average workplace. We teach our kids how to get jobs in today's marketplace rather than how to innovate for tomorrow's.

Just last year, while researching a book on America's digital illiteracy, I met with the Air Force General then in charge of America's cybercommand. He said he had plenty of new recruits ready and able to operate drones or other virtual fighting machines - but no one capable of programming them, or even interested in learning how. He wasn't even getting recruits who were ready to begin basic programming classes. Meanwhile, he explained to me, colleges in Russia, China, and even Iran were churning out an order of magnitude more programmers than universities in the US. It is only a matter of time, he said - a generation at most - until our military loses its digital superiority.

As we continue to look at programming as a menial skill to be outsourced to developing nations, we will lose our innovative superiority as well. While this may not hurt American corporations capable of sourcing its code from anywhere, it would certainly hurt Americans looking for a skill set to replace our manufacturing jobs.

more

finder kudos to BoingBoing...


you should really read BoingBoing and it would not hurt to read this...

it will piss you off, it will make you think, it will change your world view..