cellio: (sleepy-cat)
[personal profile] cellio
Having completed the first pass at digitizing or replacing our folk music on old media (we still need to do some proof-listening), Dani and I are merging our iTunes libraries so this might be easier going forward. Oof. We're up to "S" so far. "T" is big because it includes all the "The"s. Tracking changes (e.g. to tagging) going forward is still going to be a bit of a challenge.

Was Joe Biden president of the US for about 5 minutes today? (We were watching in a conference room at work, and it was several minutes past noon before they got to Obama's swearing-in. So I'm curious.)

In English we say "it's all Greek to me". What do speakers of other languages say? Whom do they implicate? Wonder no more; Language Log has a nice graph of some of these. I admit to being surprised by China's designee.

What if the stop sign were designed by corporations? (link from [livejournal.com profile] filkerdave)

As [livejournal.com profile] dsrtao said, an airline charging a cancellation fee when they rebooked you on a downed flight is near-canonical chutzpah. (Yes, I saw the note that they recanted.)

This story of a mailing list gone wrong (from Microsoft) made me laugh. And sigh, because while I haven't had to deal with quite that level of mess, even 20ish years after mailing lists started to become broadly accessible, there are still an awful lot of people out there who don't behave appropriately.

There's an interesting discussion of filtering and politeness on social networks over on CommYou.

Note to self: if Shalom Hartman Institute is too expensive this summer, the Aleph kallah might be an alternative. It could be good or it could be too esoteric for me; I can't tell from the available information. When they post class descriptions I'll have a better idea. I had a similar concern about NHC but it turned out to be good, so I'm keeping an open mind. Has anyone reading this gone to one of these?

(no subject)

Date: 2009-01-21 07:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dvarin.livejournal.com
That has a circularity problem--you can't swear to respect and uphold the thing you're swearing on, because swearing on it at all has as a precondition that you already respect and uphold it, enough that you are unwilling to stain its honor by lying. Consequently swearing to what you're swearing on is always a no-op: either you already respect it and you swear truly (end result: no change), or you don't and you swear insincerely (end result: no change). The oath is effectively a copy-transfer of respect from the thing you swear on to the thing you swear to--if these are the same then it's pointless.

I'm mostly in favor of not swearing on anything at all, because I think regardless of it all you really have is the person's word anyway.

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