> Life is like biryani. You move the good stuff towards you & you push the weird shit to the side.  

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November 29, 2024 -- 6:46 PM
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go back to maingo to old version

March 05, 2013 -- 4:46 PM
posted by Par

Sharp turn back to the trivial now -- specifically the Oilers and their recent trade. I'm of two minds on this: i) this is a stupid trade, and ii) maybe this means one step closer to the end of the Tambellini era in Edmonton. Re: how stupid this trade is, Tyler Dellow says it best:

Giving away a pick for the sort of player who is available for nothing but money in the off-season because you screwed up your assessment of your team is aggravating as a fan of that team. It’s all the more aggravating when the deficiency that’s being corrected (a lack of toughness) is one that’s debatable at best, both in terms of its existence and in term of it mattering. This will be particularly true if, five years from now, Brown is gone and the Leafs have some contributor in the lineup who the Oilers could make use of.

I'm still of the feeling that when the Oilers' luck turns around and if they're able to get healthy again (are we missing Horcoff yet?), they'd be able to fight for a playoff spot. Trades like this and the talk that they need more unskilled muscle in the lineup in order to win discourage me from that hope.

March 05, 2013 -- 4:41 PM
posted by Par

Thanks to everyone for the kind words (here and elsewhere) regarding our friend, Alan. It's a stark reminder of how important it is to live in the present, and to appreciate the people in your lives.

In that vein, if it hasn't been apparent from me, I want to thank all of you for being such an important part of my life. I hope I'm better able to express that in the future than I have in the past.

March 03, 2013 -- 5:09 PM
posted by Beck

That is terribly sad, Par.

March 02, 2013 -- 7:29 PM
posted by Par

On a sad note, one of Nadeesha's good friends for many years -- a recent PhD graduate, husband, father of a three-year-old boy and a two-year-old girl, and a model of a kind, decent, wonderful human being if ever there was one -- tragically passed away in a car accident last week. Obviously it's hit his family tremendously hard, and it's a shocking reminder of how precious life is.

I only met him a few times and regret that I could not have gotten to know him better. As may be familiar to all of you, he was a down-to-earth, passionate, nerdy type of person that was easy-going and unpretentious. I've no doubt that he would have gotten along famously with all of you.

On behalf of his family, in this difficult time, I'd ask that you consider donating to his children's trust fund. I know you all don't know him, but it would mean much to us.

http://www.alandesilva.org/

March 02, 2013 -- 7:11 PM
posted by Par

As evidence by previous animated GIFs, I'm really liking Nail Yakupov. (There may be an element of wanting him to succeed and stick it to the anti-Russian bias in the media.) It's hard to pick favorites with the young guys on the team right now, but Yakupov's catching up to Hall in my book. This quote in a recent interview really helps:

AO: Earlier this season you managed to score two almost identical goals on the Kings and Coyotes, swatting the puck in out of mid-air. Is it something you work on at practices?

NY: Well, we do have a table tennis set up in our locker-room. We play it every day. Perhaps, I learned something from there? (laughs) I don’t know, really. It just sort of happened. I just really wanted to score so I skated in the slot, because, basically, that’s where the most goals come from. And then I just calculated the trajectory of the puck and scored.

Awesome.

March 01, 2013 -- 8:49 PM
posted by Al

I assume the motorcycle is a Triumph Bonneville?

March 01, 2013 -- 2:15 PM
posted by Par

February 24, 2013 -- 12:32 PM
posted by Par

Your Sunday read: The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food :

On Page 83 of the report, a thin blue line represents the amount of Dr Pepper flavoring needed to generate maximum appeal. The line is shaped like an upside-down U, just like the bliss-point curve that Moskowitz studied 30 years earlier in his Army lab. And at the top of the arc, there is not a single sweet spot but instead a sweet range, within which “bliss” was achievable. This meant that Cadbury could edge back on its key ingredient, the sugary Dr Pepper syrup, without falling out of the range and losing the bliss. Instead of using 2 milliliters of the flavoring, for instance, they could use 1.69 milliliters and achieve the same effect. The potential savings is merely a few percentage points, and it won’t mean much to individual consumers who are counting calories or grams of sugar. But for Dr Pepper, it adds up to colossal savings. “That looks like nothing,” Reisner said. “But it’s a lot of money. A lot of money. Millions.”

The soda that emerged from all of Moskowitz’s variations became known as Cherry Vanilla Dr Pepper, and it proved successful beyond anything Cadbury imagined. In 2008, Cadbury split off its soft-drinks business, which included Snapple and 7-Up. The Dr Pepper Snapple Group has since been valued in excess of $11 billion.

February 24, 2013 -- 11:08 AM
posted by alison

Watch this all the way to the end. It's awkward and painful, but oh so funny...

I love the dialogue at the end of the clip.

February 21, 2013 -- 2:50 PM
posted by alison

Nothing spells fun like realizing that "maybe I don't want to do that job, even if it does sound kind-of cool". ... SIGH. WTF should I do with my life?

... but I'm still going to apply.


That dog valentine is awesome.

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