Monkinetic Weblog

XVI Edition, September 2025

More Navigation

Entries for #to

← first ← previous page 8 of 9 next → last →


writing a feature technical spec as POD in the unit test file that demonstrates the feature's feasibility #tdd #elegance #tooclever


re @gravity wow, I'm the cranky new guy, eh #heykidsgetoffmylawn


wow, removing 1MM+ files takes forever, even with rm -fr #toomanyfiles


@gruber a web server @splorp could have only dreamed of back in the day #newton


installing #tiptop /cc @btrott


"I can't wait to see you start building with all this" -- my wife re: the 48lbs of #lego #musictomyears


ugh. Monday. Morning #twothingsthathategreattogether


1kg of dead cow in the fridge, potatos about to go under the knife, cauliflower trembling on the corner #crueltofood


Item on a family friend's Christmas todo list: "blow up the gingerbread house #crowningmomentofawesome #betterwithexplosives /cc @seanmctex


getting my trippy danceradioglobal groove on this morning #trance #techno #musictoreviewcodeby


R.E.M. - Accelerate - Track by Track

accelerate---track-by-track tags: "" tp_commentcount: "0" tp_favoritecount: "0" tp_urlid: 6a010534988cd3970b0120a55ce9a5970b


R.E.M. is sounding like a band again, instead of Whiny Michael and the Stipes.

I bought R.E.M.'s new album last week, and I've been listening to it on and off since then, and I'm starting to develop some thoughts. For better or for worse, I tend to examine each new R.E.M. album in the light of how does this album build on / relate to what has gone before, and how does it explore new territory? I'm happy to say that for me, Accelerate does both with vigor.

Living Well Is the Best Revenge (3:12)

Out of the door loud, fast. Sets the tone for the album. Companion tune to New Test Leper from New Adventures In HiFi, barking back at a media that, in the end, doesn't really matter. Bonus points for the return of Mike Mills to background vocals (or at elast to appropriate volumes), and for Mike and Peter for a return to Document-quality rock-n-roll. R.E.M. is sounding like a band again, instead of Whiny Michael and the Stipes. - 4 Stars

Man-Sized Wreath (2:32)

I can't quite get a grip on Man-Sized Wreath. Not sure if it's the lyrics or the tune, but while I can already sing along to most of the lyrics (it's catchy!) I can't tell you why. Yet. - 2 Stars

Supernatural Superserious (3:24)

First single, very hooky. Really fun to listen to. Companion tune to Nightswimming from Automatic For The People. Michael sings to the lamenting youth from Nightswimming, assuring that it doesn't last. - 4 Stars

Hollow Man (2:39)

I love Hollow Man. Following tender mostly-acoustic verses, the chorus winds up and rings out like a 70's sitcom theme (in a good way) then comes to a satisfyingly noisy spinout at the end. Some excellent Murmurs-era guitar work from Peter Buck (still looking for the specific song I'm thinking of). - 4 Stars

Houston (2:05)

Lovely, dirty organ that sounds like it was resurrected from a swamp, or from a flooded church (a true New Orleans Instrumental?). Also, includes an echo of the acoustic riff from Try Not To Breathe. - 3 Stars

Accelerate (3:34)

Michael's invoking cartoons ("where's the cartoon escape hatch for me"), which had me thinking of the Dr. Seuss references in The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight, but it comes amid a fast, full-of-fuzz song that conveys the fear, urgency, and tension in the lyric. - 3 Stars

Until the Day Is Done (4:09)

This is another one that's growing on me. Followup to Ignoreland from Automatic For The People and would fit nicely on that album right after it. Another politically-flavored song, but is lamenting after the angry protest of Ignoreland. - 3 Stars

Mr. Richards (3:46)

Mr. Richards is a slow, loping, admonishment (beat-down? ) of the title character (who at one point I thought was referring to Michael Richards, of Sienfeld fame, but now I'm not so sure). - 3 Stars

Sing for the Submarine (4:51)

A weird song that is really growing on me, and (IMO) references several 3 R.E.M. songs from the past:

Horse to Water (2:18)

You're only as big as your battles

  • 2 Stars

I'm Gonna DJ (2:08)

Somehow reminds me of 1995's [Revolution](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_Movie_(video) but without the cool "La La La"s. I suspect it might take the place of The End Of The World As We Know It as a show-closer, but I hope not. - 3 Stars


Photoshopping Photoshop

According to Adobe:


DW to stop blogging?

He says he'll stop. Will he, or is this another "no one is inviting me to conferences about things I invented. I'm going to take my blog and go home"?


Duh!

Dave writes about what I've always thought was a good idea but have a serious reason to care about now: we want to be able to subscribe to audio content feeds via something like RSS and get it downloaded directly to our iPods. I'd love to be able to have |NetNewsWire| automatically add any .mp3 enclosures to a special playlist in iTunes.


ObjCBrowser

Fascinating new development environment for building Objective-C Cocoa apps, called ObjCBrowser, based on a SmallTalk IDE. By Joe Osborn. (Thanks Mike!)


Edit This Statement

Dave says:


Building on the Absurd

Doc Searls re Eldred:

We don't turn around a pervasive mentality, anchored in conceptual metaphors older than most oaks, in one court calendar, one congressional term, or perhaps even one decade.


Information Navigation


History of the tilde

[via dive into mark] > I don't want to talk about corporate politics. I want to talk about the tilde. (link)


The Name Game

Mark Pilgrim has posted a (exhaustive as far as I can tell) history of the battle over RSS.

← first ← previous page 8 of 9 next → last →