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Talking to the stonewall in the rain

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Compose your own Bach-inspired tunes with the first ever AI-powered #GoogleDoodle ! 🎼 #BachDoodle https://t.co/Sw5U8k5gXf — Jack Vaughan at TT (@JackVaughanatTT) March 23, 2019 The composition (up above) is a flawed notation based on the tune whistled (directly above). Some of it comes to me genetically from my grandfather by way of my father.

From the Vaults - For Lawrence Ferlinghetti's #100 Birthday

In 2012, Lawrence Ferlinghetti published "Time of Useful Consciousness" which is a remarkable tour de force. Yes, it owes homage to Allen Ginsberg and Ed Sanders (and Walt Whitman and Matthew Arnold and a few others) but this quick history of America adapts what's in the air artfully, like a blues. It might be a career capper, but, on the other hand, 90-plus-year-old L.F. may keep on keeping on. Here on Memorial Day 2013 I read a small portion. It follows a riff on Jack Powers, a major Boston poet and nice poet mentor and guy in the last half of the 20th century (and somewhat thereafter). Ferlingetti resets some earlier poems in new context, but it all flows. He riffs on "Jacks" quite a bit, which is okay with me. - Jack Vaughan

Burke's Law of Technology Assessment

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Writer James Burke has studied how technologies gain traction. His bellwether 1978 TV show (and book), " Connections ," takes one on a fantastic voyage that connects such diverse events as the birth of the Jacquard loom and the computer punch card. Here are some of Burke's rules of innovation. Innovation occurs as the result of deliberate attempts to develop it. The attempt to find one thing leads to the discovery of another. Unrelated developments have a decisive effect on the main event Motives, such as war and religion, may also act as major stimulant to innovation. Accident and unforeseen circumstances play a role innovation Physical and climate conditions play their part. [To that we add economic conditions.] Pasted from < https://web.archive.org/web/20060302165700/http://www.adtmag.com/article.asp?id=7021 >

JavaScript ate my homework

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Looking back - In 2002 it was clear that GUIs had issues. It seemed to open the way for alternatives that took as premise that 'the HTML client is not good enough.' They tended to cache more info on the client and find novel ways to render screens. Companies pursuing the problem included Curl, Droplet, Macromedia, Spotfire and others. What happened? An army of JavaScript developers came up with a plethora of scripts, and frameworks, and created Agile development, REST, and  disrupted the monolithic app server hegemony. https://adtmag.com/articles/2002/11/29/emerging-technology-rich-gui-clients.aspx

An Anthology of Medieval Lyrics - My Poetry Bookshelf

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Will come to this again. The Eternal Note of Sadness. Matthew Arnold pegged it, listening to the Ocean. Willie Nelson too – he said, Listen to what the blues are saying. It is in a lot of Medieval lyricism too. It's there on my book shelf in The Modern Library’s An Anthology of Medieval Lyrics. Edited by Angel Flores.* But let's get to the poem - from the north of France, in the 14th or 15th century, a girl is versifying. Take it away, Christine de Pisan. =~>+*<~= =~>+*<~= =~>+*<~= =~>+*<~= =~>+*<~= =~>+*<~= =~>+*<~= If I’m in church more often now By Christine de Pisan If I’m in church more often now It’s just that I can see her there Fresh as new-opened roses are. Why gossip of it, why endow It with such consequence? Why stare If I’m in church more often now? Where I may go – or when – or how It is to come more near to her. Fools call me fool! It’s whose affair If I’m in church more often now? =~>+*<~= ...

Rover Opportunity Mission Shutdown - Asleep on Mars

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The Ten Bulls of Zen Made Easy - My Poetry Bookshelf

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Looking at the book shelf today, I am going to pull one from earlier in the Moon Traveller transit. Bob Watt has a special place in my space. When Robert Steffens read his poetry at a St Cathernines H.S. guest lecture, it connected what Dylan was doing with what we were living in (Wisconsin). And things began to open up from there. I'd say the poems are best when read, and they arent unlike a droll comedian's monologue. The important thing about his poetry was that, like a 3-chord Velvet Underground song, it beckoned you to try it yourself. He called himself of the school of Inferior Poetry. Kind of like Punk Rock. I did a write up on Bob's passing (we'd kind of gotten to know him enough to say 'hi' on the street later in Milwaukee, and Madison), and that tribute is located here . To emphasize the Everyman Angle of Watt - Jeff De Mark tells the story of working as a substitute English teacher at Eureka high in the early 90s the teacher once gave me a week to...