I’ve been using Safari more often and am surprised to find no option for alphabetizing bookmarks. But James Howard’s free utility Sortosaurus does the trick. Sortosaurus works with various versions of Safari and OS X. Thank you, James!
(Found via MacRumors)
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Alphabetizing Safari bookmarks
By Michael Leddy at 2:44 PM comments: 0
The F word (Find)
According to Dan Russell, a “search anthropologist” at Google, ninety percent of people don’t know how to use Control+F or Command+F to find text in a document or on a webpage. Read all about it:
Alexis Madrigal, Crazy: 90 Percent of People Don’t Know How to Use CTRL+F (Atlantic, via Boing Boing)
I’ve observed that many digital naïfs don’t know that Find makes it much easier to make one’s way through a piece of writing. Digital naïfs: my name for digital natives who are “in the dark, or at least in dimly-lit rooms, when it comes to digital technology.” More in this post.
[In a document, on a webpage: that’s an interesting distinction, no? The document being a repository, and the page being a visual field, even when it’s scrolling out of view.]
By Michael Leddy at 8:54 AM comments: 1
Friday, August 19, 2011
Dangling appostives of the Times
In today’s New York Times:
A critic of conventional wisdom and an amateur musician, Dr. Schipper’s work focused on improving efficiency in energy use and transportation.Do you see what’s wrong? Claire Cook’s Line by Line: How to Edit Your Own Writing (1985) has a good explanation.
By Michael Leddy at 9:01 AM comments: 20
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Photographer David Plowden
Photographer David Plowden, on riding the last regular-service steam engine in New England:
“When I watched the gauge drop to zero, I realized that the era was over, and I realized very quickly that I had not only been photographing the end of the locomotive but I’d been photographing the profound change that was occurring in America. And I thought to myself, Plowden, you better get out there and photograph the other things that you remember so well as a young person, because they’re not gonna be here. And that’s what I’ve spent my life doing.”Plowden and his photographs are the focus of an episode of The Story, Disappearing America (American Public Media). There’s a website devoted to his work.
*
October 16, 2013: I just discovered that this episode of The Story is no longer available.
[Thanks, Elaine, for pointing me to this podcast.]
By Michael Leddy at 11:00 AM comments: 0
The Grapes of Wrath, 2011
BBC economics editor Paul Mason rented a car and retraced the Joad family’s journey. He tells the story in words and a short film.
By Michael Leddy at 10:58 AM comments: 0
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Pi Recordings
Nate Chinen on the story of Pi Recordings:
Avant-garde jazz is notoriously marginalized music, and the afflictions now plaguing the recording industry are well known. But through a selective release schedule, a careful eye on the budget, a thoughtful approach to promotion and, crucially, a sense of cultivation and commitment to its artists, Pi has not only survived but has also managed to thrive.I have a half-dozen Pi albums, every one terrific. Small labels are the only future for almost all the music I care about.
Despite the Odds, a Jazz Label Finds a Way to Thrive (New York Times)
A related post
Abrams, Lewis, Mitchell: The Trio (Pi recording artists)
By Michael Leddy at 2:46 PM comments: 2
Dream jobs
[Lunch was a tuna-salad sandwich, fries, and lettuce and tomato. Fries made in the oven, with a small amount of oil. Margaret Mason wrote No One Cares What You Had for Lunch: 100 Ideas for Your Blog (2006).]
By Michael Leddy at 2:13 PM comments: 0
“RAISE GIANT FROGS”
“Get ready now for next spawn” somehow sounds to my ears like horrorshow, not easy work-at-home business. And if you’re wondering: yes, you’ll have to kill and dress those giant frogs before dropping what’s left of them in the mailbox. Aiiieee.
The American Frog Canning Company’s booklet on raising frogs is available in fascimile. In addition to raising, it covers catching, grading, killing, dressing, and shipping. Aiiieee.
Also from Popular Mechanics
Alkalize with Alka-Seltzer
“HOT PIANO”
“MONEY MAKING FORMULAS”
A mystery EXchange name
“Radios, it is”
[Yes, I’ve eaten frog legs. They tasted, of course, like chicken.]
By Michael Leddy at 9:14 AM comments: 3
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Robert Duncan on language
Robert Duncan, speaking at a memorial for fellow poet Louis Zukofsky, December 1978:
“I in no way believe that there is such a thing as ‘just language,’ any more than there is ‘just footprints.’ I mean, it is human life that prints itself everywhere in it and that’s what we read when we’re really reading.”
Quoted in Mark Scroggins, The Poem of a Life: A Biography of Louis Zukofsky (Berkeley: Shoemaker Hoard, 2007).
By Michael Leddy at 9:11 AM comments: 0