Towse: views from the hill

July 21, 2007

View from the top

Filed under: food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 3:56 pm

Went to the Bankers Club 20th annual lobster feed last night as part of AIWF-NorCal last night.

We gathered for before-dinner drinks at the bar with incredible views to the south and then moved into the dining room. We’d grabbed seats next to the west windows for dinner when we arrived and were glad we did.

The food was not to die for. The hors d’oeuvres reminded me of the finger food you’d get at the Club and, at dinner, the lobster was “presented,” i.e. broiled, cut in half, put back in the shell, herbed bread crumbs on top yadadoo and not the fresh boiled crack-those-shells lobster I’d been expecting from the cutesie plastic lobster bibs they had at each chair. I prefer my lobster straight with melted butter and not all gussied up. I know others disagree with me. Before the lobster we had steamed mussels with an excellent broth and Caesar salad. The lobster came with potatoes and cobbed corn. Dessert was strawberry shortcake.

The wines were good. We’d brought a Husch chardonnay we’d picked up at the winery back in mid-May. Others brought others. AIWF brought some from the cellar.

The views from the 52d floor as the sun set over the Golden Gate were absolutely fantastic.

Become a member of the Bankers Club and you can enjoy the view whenever you’d like. Or you can opt for the less pricey choice and have dinner at the Carnelian Room, which is what the Bankers Club rooms become in the evening.

July 20, 2007

Update: 2007 San Francisco Idea House

A green bird told me that Sunset Magazine has postponed the opening of the San Francisco Idea House to an unspecified time

No word at the Sunset Magazine site as to when the house will open.

“Check back often,” they say.

Websites as graphs

Filed under: app,blog,webstuff — Towse @ 12:13 am

Pretty, eh? That’s the blog in living color. I could swear I’d done this before, a year or more back, but I can’t find it, if I did indeed do it, so I’ve done it again.

Aharef provides the applet. You provide the Web page you want him to graph. He ‘xplains it all here and also shows some mega sites and how they look with the app: cnn.com, apple.com &c.

Color code:
blue: for links (the A tag)
red: for tables (TABLE, TR and TD tags)
green: for the DIV tag
violet: for images (the IMG tag)
yellow: for forms (FORM, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT and OPTION tags)
orange: for linebreaks and blockquotes (BR, P, and BLOCKQUOTE tags)
black: the HTML tag, the root node
gray: all other tags

Flickr has a collection of pics.

Nice.

July 19, 2007

Visuwords™ online graphical dictionary

Filed under: URL,wordstuff — Towse @ 9:51 pm

Visuwords™ online graphical dictionary

Visuwords™ online graphical dictionary — Look up words to find their meanings and associations with other words and concepts. Produce diagrams reminiscent of a neural net. Learn how words associate.

Enter words into the search box to look them up or double-click a node to expand the tree. Click and drag the background to pan around and use the mouse wheel to zoom. Hover over nodes to see the definition and click and drag individual nodes to move them around to help clarify connections.

* It’s a dictionary! It’s a thesaurus!
* Great for writers, journalists, students, teachers, and artists.
* The online dictionary is available wherever there’s an internet connection.
* No membership required.

Visuwords™ uses Princeton University’s WordNet, an opensource database built by University students and language researchers. Combined with a visualization tool and user interface built from a combination of modern web technologies, Visuwords™ is available as a free resource to all patrons of the web.

I popped in “errata” and … nada. “brigadoon” … nada.

I popped in “graffiti” and made two connections.

… then I popped in “giant”

How fun is this?

“literature”

And “encomium” begets “panegyrist” and “prosody” begets “hypercatalectic.”

Fun!

Ambient Intimacy and disambiguity

Filed under: blog,design — Towse @ 9:35 pm

Whilst off looking for a description/definition of Ambient Intimacy, I came across Leisa Reichelt’s blog: disambiguity.

Just reading disambiguity makes my brain feel polished and shiny.

Book Collecting

Filed under: books — Towse @ 8:54 pm

A delightful collection of Book Collecting information from a former antiquarian bookseller, DJ McAdam.

Be sure to read DJ McAdam’s essay Things Found in Books and check out his literature links.

DJMcAdam’s site promises hours of exploration. …

The City of San Francisco STREETS LITTER AUDIT 2007

Filed under: causes,environmentalism,politics,San Francisco — Towse @ 7:18 pm

The City of San Francisco STREETS LITTER AUDIT 2007 [PDF]

The first ever audit of the City’s litter problems. Released a couple weeks ago. Some interesting findings.

Note: “large” litter — items over 4 sq in. “small litter” — items under 4 sq in. Litter was categorized into eight-four sub-categories.

105 sites were audited in April. Average of thirty-six “large” litter items per site. “Small” litter clocked in at an average 23 items/site.

“Non-branded paper napkins and paper towels” were 13% of total litter. Of “branded” printed material litter, MUNI tickets and transfers were a significant factor.

Miscellaneous plastic litter accounted for 9% of total litter and 20% of “large” litter items.

The study compares San Francisco’s litter to litter audits for other cities dated 2002-2006. On average, 27% of San Francisco ‘s litter is printed & fiber material (paper, cardboard, books, &c.) while the average in other large cities over the past five years hovers around 19%. Why?

On a positive note, San Francisco has less “small” litter than other large cities and is about on par with Toronto which has been focusing on litter for several years. “Small” litter clocked in at an average 23 items/site and included bottle caps, straws, gum, busted sporks, cigarette butts, &c.

When they broke down the type of small litter (wouldn’t you have loved to have been one of the auditors?), they found that chewing gum was 39.5% of the small litter, small glass was 29.7% and cigarette butts were 5.6%. Comparing this to Toronto’s audit last year, Toronto had 21 “small” items per site of which 30.9% was chewing gum, 15.4% small glass, and 14.8% cigarette butts.

Maybe we just don’t smoke as much …

I found an interesting note on page 33/Bag Litter Summary. Bag litter (paper and plastic, retail and non-retail) accounted for 4.45% of total litter. Retail plastic bags account for 0.6% of total litter. Now, plastic bags are not good for the garbage equipment and they’re not good for the gulls and they aren’t good for the environment in the long run but why cantcha just say that that is why you want to ban them from this fair city? Why all the nonsense about what a litter menace they are?

I don’t know what Gav plans to do with the study. Gav has pledged to reduce litter by 50% over the next five years and it’s interesting to have a notch marked so that we can see whether efforts to combat litter are working.

I’d like to encourage everyone whether they live in this fair ville or in a bucolic ville in Iowa to pick up at least one piece of orphaned trash a day and dispose of it properly.

We were out to dinner with neighbors a couple Fridays back. On the way to the restaurant, T. started picking up papers that were blowing on the sidewalk. Hot jam, I thought. Someone else picks up litter. We walked down the hill to Nua, collecting papers along the way, which we then tossed into a City trash bin before reaching the restaurant. (And remembered to wash our hands before dinner!)

On a similar if-it-bugs-you-do-something-about-it, we bumped into Aaron Peskin, our fearless President of the Board of Supervisors, on the steps last Saturday as we headed out to dinner. He was scrubbing (with an earth-friendly cleanser), removing graffiti that some yog-for-brain had tagged on the wall of 1360 Montgomery as you head down the Filbert Steps.

“Bless you,” I said. “That really bothered me but I hadn’t got my act together enough to come out here and scrub.”

“Bothered me too,” he said. “Tagging begets more tagging, so it had to go.”

Make the Earth a cleaner place.

No harm. It was missing ‘the part on top that goes boom.’

Filed under: news,woowoo — Towse @ 6:14 pm

Missile found in Florida junk yard
Thursday, July 19, 2007

“If you left a surface-to-air missile lying around in a scrapyard in Florida, then some people would like a word with you.

“Authorities say that the Patriot missile was discovered lying in a scrap metal yard in Ybor City, Tampa, which is on the west coast of The State of Never-Ending Weirdness.”

[...]

Missile found in Florida junk yard

Monte Carlo by the Bay

Filed under: San Francisco — Towse @ 3:07 pm

Article in the Economist: San Francisco’s half-recovery | City in a bottle.

Hadn’t realized we were such conformists: “And tourists are not the only reason restaurants are full. Michael Covarrubias, a San Francisco property developer, says many expensive flats have been bought by people in their late fifties who have grown tired of the suburbs and no longer need worry about schools.”

Well, I hadn’t grown tired of the suburbs (I still miss my dirt), but the gent I live with had always intended to move back once the kids were off to college and the transplanting was no surprise.

“Monte Carlo” by the Bay? Doesn’t have the same ring as Herb Caen’s “Baghdad by the Bay,” but Baghdad by the Bay evokes a different image these days than it did back then.

Interview with Elizabeth George

Filed under: books,people,writing — Towse @ 1:36 am

Interview with Elizabeth George in the June 2007 WRITER Magazine. [Caution: PDF!]

[snippet]

You talk a great deal about the craft of writing. What do you mean?

It’s important for beginning writers to learn the craft, the basics, of writing. You can’t teach somebody to be a creative artist, to have talent or passion, but you can teach somebody craft. Whether they can apply it in an artistic fashion, well, that’s in the hands of the gods. But they can certainly learn what the craft of writing is.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress