{{myquote|A government that promises free lollipops will fulfill that pledge by stealing candy from babies.}}
Archives for August 2009
Philosophy of Retreat
{{myquote|It’s said ‘If you’re being run out of town, you should jump in front and call it a parade’; sure, you get to carry the biggest stick, but you’ve made it easier for your enemies to stab you in the back.}}
Secure E-mail for Kids
My daughter is able to read enough words now that the idea of email is appealing to her. She likes the idea of writing to and hearing back from her grandparents. Being an independent sort (I wonder where she gets that from,) she wants to do it through her own account.
Not wanting to subject her to spam and unwanted email solicitations, I started researching email programs for children and teens. What I found were a number of programs and services that fit in one or more of these camps:
- Outdated and no longer supported.
- Not available for download
- $40 or more for purchase
- $4/month or more for service.
I liked many of the features of the web-based services, including the screening of email and even kid-friendly graphic user interfaces. But I didn’t want my girl to have an address at “kidsafemail.com” or anything like that. So here is my system.
For Want of a Dash
{{myquote|The lowly hyphen is never more important than to the man who re-sent the terms for the position he wants to re-sign.}}
Headlines, ripped straight from the Razr
From today’s New York Times:
Twitter has been described many ways. At its best, it has been called a revolutionary political tool and a low-cost marketing machine. At its worst, it has been dubbed a waste of time.
Now, two researchers are calling it a hedonimeter, a device that measures happiness.
Peter Sheridan Dodds and Christopher M. Danforth, a pair of statisticians from the University of Vermont, are hoping to harness the stream of messages flowing through the popular micro-blogging platform at any given moment to read public opinion and sentiment in real-time.
Sounds a bit similar in concept to a piece I wrote two years ago.
Yes, the application was an April Fools’ joke, but the concept isn’t.

