Month: July 2005

Scott goes off on Dave.

Dave takes the full brunt of Scott’s acerbic Cornish wit in this one. I’ve used Frontier since the mid-90s and its cousin Radio Userland since it was in beta. RU still drives this site. I don’t listen to Morning Coffee Notes at all. I sampled a few and decided it wasn’t what I wanted to spend my time listening to. I prefer my cup of Dave in text format; it’s easier to skim. Personally I find it worth sorting through the lumps of coal to find the occasional gem. On the “lost music” episode that Scott talked about, it’s helpful…

Say pooh to Irish.

This funny letter appeared in the Irish Independent. You have to register to view it on their website; I hope they don’t mind me reprinting it, minus the writer’s name: Sir – In the last week new notices have appeared in the local parks and they are all in Irish. They refer to dogs fouling the park – I know this because they contain a drawing of a dog doing his bit (added to by some local wags in case you miss the point). My Leaving Cert Irish couldn’t make head nor tail of the script. Has Dublin now become…

Terror Hits London.

I’ve been following developments on TV. They showed a map of the underground train stations hit, and one of them is a station that I am supposed to travel through on my way to Sheffield next month.

Wired: How Do You Say Computer in Hawaiian?

My goodness, 10 years has passed since this article was first published in Wired. Boy, do I feel old now. The work that is described in this article laid the foundation for everything that we’ve done with Hawaiian and technology since. Reading the article again has brought back some fond memories. Thank God Connie didn’t take any pictures for the article. Wait, I think she did but they weren’t published with the article. Whew! Wired was the magazine for geeks in those days, and the article brought us a lot of recognition and offers of kōkua (help).

NahenaheNet Podcast #004 goes online.

This one features the music of my friend Tom Conway and his band Gypsy Pacific. It talks about the approaching release deadline for the 2006 Grammy Awards, and the trials and tribulations of my buddy Kenneth Makuakāne as he upgraded his Macintosh to OS X 10.4. If you do digital audio recording on your Mac, check out the podcast before upgrading!

Tá Blag an Imill ag Podchraoladh!

I think this means Imeall’s blog now has a podcast. I really need to get my Irish studies rolling again, there’s just so little time left over after everything else I have going on. I could pick out about a half-dozen non-English words in the podcast. What a magnificent language. Must strive to do better!

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