Joe Maller.com

Botanical Botanic

Brooklyn Botanic Garden
The New York (Bronx) Botanical Garden

The New York Botanical Garden was founded by the the Torrey Botanical Club and Nathaniel Lord and Elizabeth Britton in 1891, though the history seems to be in dispute. The garden was primarily a scientific and educational catalog, “a place of agreeable public resort” was its secondary purpose. The Torrey Botanical Club also contributed to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s Herbarium in 1897.

But I still have no idea why one is Botanical and the other Botanic.


Links for May 13, 2005


Jury Duty

I like to be on time, but the court seem to have built in a significant amount of time for people who aren’t. Roll call on day two wasn’t for 20 minutes after the set time. Men are overwhelmingly worse at arriving on time. Day one started with a insanely banal 30 minute Important Video with Ed Bradley! and Dianne Sawyer! filmed at least 10 years ago. I remembered this video from my third-previous jury call, probably 1995 or 96, the one where I read all 576 pages of Hesse’s Magister Ludi: The Glass Bead Game and was dismissed from a jury because I thought I’d met the defendant’s husband at a gallery opening in Orange County sometime around 1990. That was also the time I got to spend all of my wait time in a room at 60 Centre St., which is a far more inspired and inspiring building than the utilitarian box-world of 110 Centre St. 60 Centre is the building where they film Law & Order’s courtroom scenes.

The best day to be called seems to be Thursday. I’ve lucked into a Thursday call my last two summonses. Nothing ever seems to happen on Fridays and twice they’ve let the entire pool go home after two days. There were somewhere around four jury pools called on Thursday, none on Friday. We all sat around until 12:50pm, at which point they let everyone go with credit for two full days served and at least two years before our next summons.

If at all possible, get a seat in the main room. In the side rooms, you need to stand and go to the door every time there’s a call. In the main room, all I needed to do was take out my earphones for a minute whenever they spoke on the microphone. Far less disruptive. There were plugs along the wall, I was on time so I grabbed one up front.

The bathrooms are unpleasant, so I tried to drink as little as possible. One very strong coffee with sugar on my way out of the house held me until lunch. Chinatown is right behind the courts, and it would be a shame to eat anywhere else when that close. On Thursday I went to my favorite hole-in-the-ground Vietnamese place (it’s in a basement) for a light curry over rice, shrimp summer rolls and a Cafe su da (the strongest, best iced coffee I’ve ever had). All were excellent, I skipped the Phö because I was trying to keep liquid intake at a minimum.

When leaving the courthouse, always take the stairs if you are able. The elevators are overcrowded and slow. I’m fast, but without trying I made it down three floors before the elevator had finished loading (there’s a tv monitor showing elevator locations).

Don’t bring a cellphone with a camera. Security will make you check it at the front desk and the line to retrieve those phones looked to be a longer wait than my subway ride and walk home. I heard people complaining about the camera ban (people are always complaining, especially at jury duty), but that rule was in place long before cell phones had cameras.

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link: May 13, 2005 10:17 pm
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Links for May 11, 2005


Unsilent Wall Street

Sounds amazing:

I wanted to tell you about an unusual boombox event which will take place in broad daylight, 12 noon on Wednesday June 1st.
I’ve long had a yen to serenade Wall Street the way we do the Village with Unsilent Night. This year we will get to do it as part of the parade inaugurating the annual River to River Festival. We will start at Chase Plaza (Pine and William Street) a little after 12 noon, going through the canyons of the financial district and winding up at the South Street Seaport, where there will be an unruly harmony of accordions, ukuleles, bagpipes and marching bands colliding at the end of the parade.

I think it will be amazing sounding fun and I really need folks to help carry my boomboxes or bring some of their own. As always, the more we have the more awesome it will sound.

If you are into it, please contact me

thanks,

Phil Kline


Mbox files and Mail.app in 10.4

One of the big under-the-hood changes to Mail.app in 10.4 is that messages are no longer in mbox files, this allows Spotlight to index individual messages without having to first parse out the contents of the entire mailbox. Despite being unused, the old mbox files are often still on the drive, which means that most everyone’s mail is now taking up almost twice as much space as it did with 10.3. (my mail folder went from 1.4 to 2.8 gigs). If installing Tiger devoured a lot of hard drive space, that might account for a significant portion of where it went.

After an Archive & Install upgrade, my ~/Library/Mail directory still has folders labeled *.mbox, but those folders each now contain a “Messages” directories which holds thousands of numbered *.emix files. Those mostly appear to be plain text files each containing one message. There is a small glob of XML plist data attached to the end of each file, as well an integer at the top of the file. The first integer is the message’s character/byte count from the end of the integer to the beginning of the XML data.

In theory, a fairly simple shell script could glom everything together into a standard mbox. Not sure how processor intensive that would be, but the steps to reassemble the data would be trivial. At very least Apple’s decision to move away from the mbox format can be easily reversed with no data loss.

Not much has been written about this, but I found this MacOS X Hints mbox thread which confirms what I’m seeing:

I used to be able to use mutt or pine to view the mbox mailboxes in ~/Library/Mail/<account>/<box>/mbox . In 10.4 these are still present, but appear not to be updated any more. The up to date emails are in ~/Library/Mail/<account>/<box>/Messages/*.emlx which I believe is required for spotlight to be able to index messages – it only indexes file-based entities, not subportions of files.

Because Carbon Copy Cloner doesn’t work with 10.4 yet, I can’t comfortably back up my drive and experiment with deleting the old mboxes. It seems like it should be safe to remove all mbox files and associated files, nothing outside the Messages directories has been modified since I upgraded to 10.4. If anyone has more information, please leave a comment.

(While reading a little background on the mbox format, I found the original RFC for email as a text file. The W3c also has an HTML version of RFC822, partially converted by (sir) Tim Berners-Lee. It’s fun to encounter raw history like that.)

Update I posted a simple command to delete unused Mbox files.


Runaway Widgets

While everyone’s rightly worrying about Dashboard and widget security issues, I’ve found a more immediately annoying problem — widgets that run processes while hidden. If a widget appears in Activity Viewer repeatedly sucking up CPU while hidden, it’s gone. I noticed this because one (extra geeky) binary clock was constantly using 8-20% of my cpu cycles while invisible. Hula girl has been known to run off on her own as well.

Sidenote: Clocks in Dashboard are a waste of screen space. Yes I have Hula Girl and the Butterfly, but no clocks.



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