Flickr View All » Katie and AesopRiding the Millennium Force at Cedar PointParisian BreakfastThe David Crosby WaiterErin at the Refuge des FondusThe Cafe from AmélieSix and a Half Years Later at the Tour EiffelA Really Cool Taxidermy Shop on Rue de BacOpen Windows at the Musée RodinSometimes You Need a PastramiSince 5755We'll Travel in Tubes at the Centre Pompidou

links for 2008-04-11

links for 2008-04-08

links for 2008-04-03

links for 2008-04-02

links for 2008-03-25

links for 2008-03-20

links for 2008-03-18

links for 2008-03-13

links for 2008-03-10

links for 2008-03-07

Does Numbers Make Charts Like This?

I’m in the process of upgrading my first-generation Core Duo Macbook, which is getting a little long-in-the-tooth. So this afternoon I visited Apple.com and I took a little time to review the specs of the newly released models.

I eventually came across the following bar chart, which is accessible as a pop-up from this page. It compares my current notebook (coincidentally) with the one I intend to purchase.

Deceptive Macbook Chart

At first glance, it was obvious that something wasn’t quite right. The percentages listed inside the blue bars don’t even remotely correspond to the visual length of those bars relative to the baseline bar at the bottom. It isn’t even close.

I took a screenshot and did some measuring in Photoshop with the ruler tool. The baseline bar is 216 pixels wide. The bars above it are 357, 362, 382, and 417 pixels wide, respectively. That would yield rounded percentages of 65%, 68%, 77%, and 93%.

I assume the numbers are correct and Apple is just being deceptive to make the performance gains look more impressive. In any case, who wants to join a class-action suit?

Annoying Crime Drama Cliché #218

Erin and I watched the premiere of New Amsterdam last night. Apparently the suits in development at FOX figured they needed their own immortal undead detective to compete with Moonlight. The pilot was entertaining enough to merit a season pass on the TiVo, despite the writers’ willingness to slip into the same tired clichés employed by most network crime dramas.

Why is it that whenever a female detective or police officer is introduced as a character, it’s somehow important to mention that her father was also a cop? Worse still, this fact is always brought to our attention with the same clumsy dialog:

Crusty Old Male Officer: I knew your dad in the (INSERT PRECINCT NUMBER HERE). He was a great cop.

Female Detective: Thanks.

Good thing that writers’ strike ended, so we can get more of this.

links for 2008-03-05

links for 2008-03-03

links for 2008-03-02

links for 2008-02-23

  • “At some point in our technological past we perfected word processing. Every feature since then seems to have subtracted from the experience. Do yourself a favor and look into some single-purpose, ‘underpowered,’ and self-limiting tech.”

links for 2008-02-22

links for 2008-02-21

links for 2008-02-17

  • This cool little Flash game requires you to perceive each level from two different perspectives in order to advance.

links for 2008-02-14