Where
Do You Want to Eat Today?
The mighty Microsoft Corporation, best
known for bloated software (and even more bloated earnings), has
long strayed from its software roots. The company has long
hawked hardware (mice, keyboards and joysticks), news (MSNBC,
Slate) and even toys.
But now the company is entering an entirely new business:
Restaurants. The company plans to open Expedia-branded cafes in
airports across the country, where weary business travelers can
presumably get - who knows? - "Where-Do-You-Want-To-Go
Soufflé," "Ice Cream of Death" or maybe even a
"Warm Boot Salad."
Geek
Supplies
If
you're a geek - and if you're reading this newsletter, chances
are pretty good - you'll want to check out Think
Geek, a nerd-supplies catalog. You can buy caffeinated
products, nerdy t-shirts, electronic gadgets, wacky cubicle
toys, mugs, hats, stickers, books, poster and other unnecessary
stuff for people who spend too much time with computers.
Something
in the Water
Water-quality researchers wanted to track the flow of
caffeine into Puget Sound to discover where sewage - which is
laced with caffeine-rich Seattle urine - was entering the water.
But they gave up on the idea when they discovered that the
entire Sound is one massive espresso. You see, Seattle's
coffee-selling street vendors, which are everywhere in the
Emerald City, dump unused coffee into the gutters at the end of
the day. That coffee flows into the sewers and, eventually, into
the Sound. There's so much caffeine already in the local water
that the urine caffeine didn't even register.
Cool Shorts
A Japanese clothing maker called
Mizuno Corporation has created a new line of underwear made from
high-tech fabric called "vinyl alcohol" that keeps
your crotch 1 degree cooler than cotton.
The
Radio of Tomorrow
In
the future, you'll be able to receive any radio station in the
world from anywhere, all over the Internet. Your car
"radio," for example, will download tunes you choose,
or download streaming radio stations in real time through your
car's antenna. The widespread adoption of Internet radio on
non-PC devices won't exist for three or four years. But if you
can't wait, $100 will buy you a radio that plays any of 800
radio stations. It's called the SonicBox
iM Remote Tuner. You plug a wireless gadget into your
PC's USB port, and the box gets the stations from your PC's
Internet connection. It picks up not just music, but news and
even police scanners. Users report that the setup is
unnecessarily complex, but for hardcore music fans, it's a
pretty good idea.
The Web
the Way it Used to Be
Web browsers keep getting better, and
the design of web pages keeps getting more graphical and
attractive, for the most part. But the web hasn't always been so
pretty. In the early days, graphics were few, and web browsers
limited. If you weren't there - or don't remember - take a walk
down memory lane with a web site called Deja
Vu. The site simulates old browsers, so you can check
out your favorite sites as they would have looked in the days of
yore.
Master
of Gore's Domain
A 20-year-old
college student named David Jackson registered the Internet
domain name http://www.gorelieberman.com
- five months ago (he just had a good feeling about the then
unlikely vice-presidential possibility). The Democratic Party
probably would have paid thousands for it. But Jackson sold it
to him for the price he paid: $70.
Department
of Transportation Department
A Seattle engineer has built the ultimate geek boat. It's a
small trimaran packed with gadgets: a speech-enabled PC,
cell-and-satellite phone, ham radio, computerized navigational
equipment and a solar-powered thruster that can be operated by
remote control - it even has wheels so it doesn't need a
trailer. The boat is being built by an adventurer/geek/inventor
named Steven Roberts', who plans to start sailing the thing next
year. You can keep track of the whole project at the Microship
web site.
Weird
Web Site of the Week
If you like graves, you'll love the "Find
a Grave" web site. Search from among 2.5 million
graves by name, location, "claim to fame," and death
dates. You can also get information about the body inside, and
even see a picture of the tombstone.
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