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Later items

If I have time, I'll read these articles today: Hanselman's Newsletter of Wonderful Things, which is actually just his version of this kind of link round-up; Cranky Flier on American Airlines fare changes following the merger; The Daily WTF's CodeSOD of the Day; Now that Windows Azure SQL Database has launched page compression, a review of best practices around the technology; and Confirmation that the meterological winter ending last Friday was the third coldest and third snowiest in recroded history....

Dawn in Crimea

   David Braverman 
PoliticsWorld Politics
The sun rises in the Crimean Peninsula in just over an hour, at 6:16 local time. A rumor circulating earlier today was that Russian commanders occupying the region had threatened to attack unless the Ukrainian military surrendered by 0300 UTC this evening—20 minutes ago. The Russian navy has denied this. We'll see. Russia, of course, has the power to take and hold the peninsula, and it seems to have support from a sizable portion of Crimean residents. But at what cost? Again, we'll see. One thing is...

Must be spring

   David Braverman 
ChicagoWeather
The third-worst winter in history ended (meteorologically) on Friday. And yet we woke up this morning to more snow and an overnight low of -19°C. Even better, today I have to drive out to Suburbistan for a meeting. In the snow. Both ways. Uphill. The meeting is in about two hours, so I guess I should get going now...
I'm David Braverman, this is my blog, and Parker is my 7½-year-old mutt. I last updated this About... page in September 2011, more than 1,300 posts back, so it's time for a refresh. The Daily Parker is about: Parker, my dog, whom I adopted on 1 September 2006. Politics. I'm a moderate-lefty by international standards, which makes me a radical left-winger in today's United States. The weather. I've operated a weather website for more than 13 years. That site deals with raw data and objective...

4,000

   David Braverman 
BlogsWork
This is the Daily Parker's 4,000th post of the modern era. Since 13 November 2005 (3,030 days ago), I've posted 4,000 bits of flotsam, jetsam, and other things considered debris in some circles. Four thousand entries ago: George W. Bush was almost a year into his second term and Barack Obama was the junior U.S. Senator from Illinois; Molly Ivins was still alive and kicking; Our wars in Afghanistan and Iraq had stagnated; Facebook was less than two years old but more than a year from general...
Security guru Bruce Schneier wonders if the iOS security flaw recently reported was deliberate: Last October, I speculated on the best ways to go about designing and implementing a software backdoor. I suggested three characteristics of a good backdoor: low chance of discovery, high deniability if discovered, and minimal conspiracy to implement. The critical iOS vulnerability that Apple patched last week is an excellent example. Look at the code. What caused the vulnerability is a single line of code: a...
I shouldn't have done it, but I just smacked someone down on Facebook. The exchange started when a college friend posted this photo (click for full size): You will recall that Connecticut passed a firearms law about a year ago in response to the horrific mass-murder of children at Newtown in December 2012. Connecticut's law prohibits certain assault weapons and larger magazines in an effort to make it harder to kill 26 children with one weapon at one sitting. I happen to think this law doesn't go far...
Mother Jones' Climate Desk takes a look at the (actually scientific) argument between climatologists Jennifer Francis and Kevin Trenberth over whether the mid-latitude jet stream is changing permanently, making winters more intense: Jennifer Francis, of Rutgers University, has advanced an influential theory suggesting that winters like this one may be growing more likely to occur. The hypothesis is that by rapidly melting the Arctic, global warming is slowing down the fast-moving river of air far above...
The Economist on Ukraine: While politicians in Kiev are scared to mention federalisation because of its separatist undertones, in reality it is already happening. The biggest danger for Ukraine’s integrity is not federalisation, but that Russian interferes and exploits it. That could involve an attempt to annex Crimea, carelessly given to Soviet Ukraine by Nikita Khrushchev in 1954. Over the weekend 20,000 people were out on the streets in Crimea, welcoming back riot police from Kiev as heroes. Russian...
Who can blame him? People using iOS and Android have millions of apps to choose from. It's worse than just having too many apps: Nothing terrifies me more than an app with no moral conscience in the desperate pursuit of revenue that has full access to everything on my phone: contacts, address book, pictures, email, auth tokens, you name it. I'm not excited by the prospect of installing an app on my phone these days. It's more like a vague sense of impending dread, with my finger shakily hovering over...

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