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Pay the Devil

 out of 5 stars
2006-03-07

by: Van Morrison



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Hymns to the Silence

 out of 5 stars
1991-09-24

by: Van Morrison


Described aptly in the liner notes as a 'panoramic view of where he's been and where he's going,' this ...


Live at the Grand Opera House Belfast

 out of 5 stars
2008-07-01

by: Van Morrison


Album DescriptionReissue of the 1984 album Live at the Grand Opera House Belfast which is the second live album ...
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Into the Music

 out of 5 stars
1990-06-15

by: Van Morrison


essential recordingThis 1979 release marked both a restoration of Van Morrison's full arsenal of powers as writer, performer, ...
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Back on Top

 out of 5 stars
2008-01-29

by: Van Morrison


Back on Top kicks off on an unpromising note with a generic blues shuffle, 'Goin' Down Geneva,' that belies ...
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Inarticulate Speech of the Heart

 out of 5 stars
2008-07-08

by: Van Morrison


Album DescriptionUnavailable in the U.S.! 2008 digitally remastered and expanded edition of this album from the Rock icon featuring ...
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Saint Dominic's Preview

 out of 5 stars
1997-06-03

by: Van Morrison


essential recordingConceived in the wake of his bucolic classics, Moondance and Tupelo Honey, 1972's Saint Dominic's Preview sustains ...
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Down the Road

 out of 5 stars
2002-05-14

by: Van Morrison


essential recordingConceived in the wake of his bucolic classics, Moondance and Tupelo Honey, 1972's Saint Dominic's Preview sustains ...


The Skiffle Sessions: Live in Belfast 1998

 out of 5 stars
2000-01-25

by: Van Morrison, Lonnie Donegan, Chris Barber


Van Morrison often comes across as brusque and gloomy, which is hardly a bad thing. Indeed, one would be ...


Beautiful Vision

 out of 5 stars
1990-10-25

by: Van Morrison


Van Morrison often comes across as brusque and gloomy, which is hardly a bad thing. Indeed, one would be ...
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US President George W Bush warns the US economy is at a "critical moment" after his bail-out plan was defeated.

Broadcom adds Skyhook positioning to portfolio: Broadcom already has a variety of tools for allowing its chips to determine position quickly, including a ground-based system that tracks GPS satellite positions and uses this to feed out data over cell and other networks to provide assisted GPS, where a GPS receiver doesn't have to find satellites, just lock onto signals where it's told the satellites are located. Adding Skyhook means that Wi-Fi can be used as another variable in quickly providing a fix on coordinates, especially in locales where GPS signals penetrate weakly, such as urban canyons.

mobilebb_logo.gifGSM Association creates laptop brand for mobile broadband: The GSMA will offer a Mobile Broadband sticker for laptops that includes cell chips and software that allow an immediate network connection. Sixteen firms have signed on, including Dell, Lenovo, Qualcomm, and Microsoft. I've been of the mind for some time that buying a laptop with a cellular modem built in is a waste of money, as you are typically committed to that vendor and technology for the life of the laptop, even if speeds improve or you don't like the service. Buying a USB dongle, ExpressCard, or PC Card allows greater portability of the service among computers, and more flexibility for upgrade. Further, with a given cell carrier, you can get a subsidized adapter; despite how they try to hide it in pricing, a laptop with a cell modem essentially costs the same as the laptop without plus the full multi-hundred-dollar true cost of the modem.

GigaOm on bandwidth caps: A must-read on how carriers and service providers are making a poor choice and risking alienating their customers in mass numbers by imposing short-sighted caps on bandwidth use that affect far from the heaviest users of these networks. "Today, it targets heavy users, while tomorrow it will affect all users," concludes the paper, written by Muayyad Al-Chalabi, an analyst and former Bell Labs researcher.

Rice University, HP work on dead zone prediction: Researchers have determined that they can make a small number of measurements and predict real-world performance of outdoor Wi-Fi to a decent degree. I've read the paper, and while it's awfully technical, there are valuable techniques likely to be incorporated into future planning and simulation products.


Basic antivirus and antispyware protection for Windows available to download for free.

"Why don't you write me a poem that will prepare me for your death?" Hayden Carruth's wife, thirty years his junior, asked him. He did so, and it became one of his most popular poems. Carruth, who celebrated his 87th birthday last month died last night at his home in Munnsville New York. Carruth was the winner of the the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for his poetry collection Scrambled Eggs and Whiskey. He edited Poetry magazine from 1949-1950 and was a poetry editor at Harpers.
A few more news pieces: Lives of a Poet (U of Chicago), a book review and more bio at the New York Times, additional bio information at the birthdays of poets blog.

A few more poems: Carruth describing and then reading a poem he rote about Raymond Carver in May of this year, Of Distress Being Humiliated by the Classical Chinese Poets, The Cows at Night, The Afterlife: Letter to Stephen Dobyns II, and my favorite On Being Asked To Write A Poem Against The War In Vietnam (more)

An excerpt from the U Chicago link
Carruth, whose grandfather wrote speeches for Eugene Debs, calls himself an “old-line anarchist” and a “rural communist with a small c.” On this day he grumbles about President Bush. In 1998 he declined an invitation to the Clinton White House for a celebration of American poetry, explaining in a letter that “it would seem the greatest hypocrisy for an honest American poet to be present on such an occasion at the seat of the power which has not only neglected but abused the interests of poets and their readers continually, to say nothing of many other administratively dispensable segments of the population.” He has long resisted the notion that politics—or anything else—doesn’t belong in poetry. His poems are democratic in the broadest sense, siding with the weak against the powerful, oppressed against oppressor. His sympathies extend even to despised creatures like rats and car salesmen. “I’ve always felt sorry for the rats,” he says.

Sometimes less is more. In the spirit of the '64k intros' I've been seeing how far I can push JavaFX with a minimum of code. Now I throw down the gauntlet -- does anyone else want to join me in the quest for the ultimate 'cheap thrill'?!?





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