Mathieu has written a fantastic little bit of code that allows you to categorize your Radio posts from email.
City That Does Not Sleep: "... flesh exists. Kisses tie our mouths in a thicket of new veins, and whoever his pain pains will feel that pain forever..." - Federico García Lorca
Shelly Powers has reworked Bill Gates's email on security. The original is here, and here's Shelly's.
"Amplitudes from 40-70 are considered normal for human conversation... A giraffe produces a sound at 14Hz, and we cannot hear it or feel it because the amplitude is 40dB, it is quiet." from View from the Heart.
Discover: A powered exoskeleton could transform the average joe into a supersoldier.
"Yesterday I ordered a stroller online, from a Yahoo store. Wondering a bit how long shipping will take, but not willing to pay extra. Today I get a phone call: 'Our store is just a few blocks away, is there someone home now so I can deliver it?'. Othe internet nobody knows you're standing right behind them. Or, more to the point, they don't care. At first." from Web-Seitz.
Shermer's Last Law: "Moore's Law of computer power doubling every 18 months or so is now approaching a year. Ray Kurzweil, in his book The Age of Spiritual Machines, calculates that there have been 32 doublings since World War II and that the singularity point--the point at which total computational power will rise to levels so far beyond anything that we can imagine that it will appear nearly infinite and thus be indistinguishable from omniscience--may be upon us as early as 2050."
Affidavit in Support of a Criminal Complaint and an Arrest Warrant: United States of America vs. John Philip Walker Lindh.
X-Files is ending, thank goodness. They jumped the shark when Duchovny left.
Number Portability: "Millions of fed-up cell phone users think about dumping their carriers every year but then abandon the thought--largely because switching carriers also means changing their mobile phone numbers. It's a frustrating obstacle that was supposed to have been eliminated 2 1/2 years ago under a 1996 federal mandate requiring cell phone companies to allow customers to keep their phone numbers regardless of which carrier they used."