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Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream

Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream: A Day in the Life of Your Body
Jennifer Ackerman takes you through a day starting with a detailed description of waking in the morning and finishing with just as detailed a description of going to sleep in the evening. Throughout she mixes obsrevations, quips, and the reports of scientific studies to keep the reader interested and entertained. Here’s an example: “It’s true the brain is good at processing sound while we sleep; that’s why we buy audible alarm clocks. We don’t buy odor alarms for equally good reason. Though some people swear they are aroused form deep sleep by the putrid stink of skunk or the heady aroma of percolating coffee, a new study suggests otherwise: Scientists at Brown University documented a complete failure of response during all but the earliest phase of sleep to powerful odors such as peppermint and the distinctly noxious pyridine, a component of coal tar often used as a herbicide for firewood. Don’t count on the nose as a sentinel system, say the researchers: “Human olfaction is not reliably capable of alerting a sleeper.”

References to the effects of time of day on what we do, what we can accomplish, and even on our reactions to medicines – chronotherapy, are throughout the text. The science is well documented and blended with familiar, common occurrences. This was a pleasure to read.

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Lists at Listable and PDF to Word convertor

beech tree in rain, home, Falmouth, Virginia, US

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Papers to read and PsychFest links for 2009-03-12

beech tree in rain, home, Falmouth, Virginia, US

  • So, I was thinking about this and trying to not to get too glum. I realized that instead of complaining, I could help by pointing to some papers which are easily available online and which (to me at least) point to some of the most interesting ideas about software. To me, these are classic papers which contain deep “things you oughta know” about code – the material you work with.
  • Trippy buzz bands such as the Wooden Ships, Dead Meadow and A Place to Bury Strangers join the aforementioned locals and dozens more, including Sky Sunlight Saxon of legendary Los Angeles garage rock titans the Seeds. Not too shabby for a festival that’s only on its second year.
  • Ah, if only every post-millennial goth band could sound like NYC’s A Place To Bury Strangers. These guys bring the darkness but back it up with a claustrophobi-noise-noir that hasn’t really been explored since we lost Ian Curtis and Bauhaus drifted away. Sure, everyone dogs the trappings of goth but APTBS really digs into the darkness in a fresh and less cliched way. They headline a festival of sorts at Radio Room in Austin Sunday night.
  • The fest is not, however, an exercise in flower-power nostalgia: indeed, this year’s lineup is a cross-reference of pretty much every modern sound that could possibly fall under the “psychedelic” banner, throwing together the blown-out futurism of Brooklyn’s A Place To Bury Strangers, the drug-mellowed West Coast fuzz of The Warlocks and Dead Meadow, the classic Vietnam-flashback drone of Wooden Shjips and The Black Angels, the synth freakness of Houston’s Indian Jewelry, and the jangly reverberations of Austin’s own The Strange Boys into one altogether intimidating package.
  • Sun(But that’s the Lord’s Day?):Psych Fest 2 with A Place to Bury Strangers (11:30pm), The Warlocks (10pm), The Strange Boys (9pm), Asteroid #4 (Philadelphia, 8pm), Forever Changes (Austin, 7pm), The Vandelles (NYC, 6pm),
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Java links for 2009-03-11; singleton, lazy versus eager instantiation

beech tree in rain, home, Falmouth, Virginia, US
Object Oriented analysis and design class will be discussing the singleton pattern today

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A Place to Bury Strangers upcoming gig in Ireland

creek reflection, home, Falmouth, Virginia, US

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A Place to Bury Strangers links for 2009-03-08

creek reflection, home, Falmouth, Virginia, US

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A Place to Bury Strangers at NYU, Skype and wiretaps links for 2009-03-07

fennel, home, Falmouth, Virginia, US

Recipes – Tapenade, Cranberry Chutney 2009-03-06

lilacs, home, Falmouth, Virginia, US

We were having some friends over for dinner and looked for some recipes for an appetizer (the tapenade) and some cranberry chutney to go with dinner. The tapenade recipe was really good although the polenta was not quite firm enough. We ended up using the first recipe for the cranberry chutney although I’m thinking of trying some of the others.

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A Place to Bury Strangers sign with Mute

lilacs, home, Falmouth, Virginia, USHere are several links to the announcement of APTBS signing with Mute

  • The self-titled, self-released debut album from Brooklyn effects-pedal abusers A Place to Bury Strangers took bits and pieces from any number of 80s-vintage noise-pop heroes: Hissing drum machine rattles from Cabaret Voltaire, morose pop hooks from Depeche Mode, slithery raunch from Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, layered guitar scree from Sonic Youth. And now that they’ve signed with Mute Records, APTBS will release their second album on the same label where those bands recorded some or all of their best work. (Sonic Youth were on the Mute-affiliated Blast First, not Mute itself, but still. Living the dream!)
  • New York ear-destroyers A Place to Bury Strangers have announced that they will release their upcoming sophomore album with Mute, as well as future records. Mute is home to a lot of the bigger named noise experimenters (say Liars, for instance) so it’s a logical fit for the band to sign with that label.
    (tags: aptbs mute)
  • Experimental rockers A Place To Bury Strangers have just signed with one of the oldest independent labels around, Mute Records. Mute has a reputation for fostering experimental musicians, signing such artists such as Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and Depeche Mode.
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  • Irish rockers U2 showed up for their second performance in a weeklong residency on the Late Show with David Letterman last night. This time Bono and the boys performed “Magnificent,” another cut from No Line on the Horizon. The Edge allegedly used some FX pedals made by uber-hip Brooklynites Death by Audio on this album, but he simply cranks out the classic U2 guitar sound on “Magnificent.”
  • New York’s A Place To Bury Strangers have signed to EMI’s Mute. The label will release the band’s second album, which they are working on right now.
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  • A Place To Bury Strangers has been gaining traction since their infamous CMJ show in 2007, when the NYPD came and shut the gig down. Their loud, ferocious style earned them a nod from Brit rag NME as well, naming them one of the top ten bands of SXSW in 2008. Their reputation as pedal gurus stems from frontman and guitarist Oliver Ackermann, who also builds and sells guitar pedals on his website, deathbyaudio.net.
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  • Just when our ADD-rattled brains were starting to get all fuzzy about A Place to Bury Strangers, the noisy drone mongers have popped in with an update. According to the band, the Brooklynites are switching labels, announcing their yet untitled sophomore effort will be out via their new home of Mute Records, the label behind such celeb acts as Depeche Mode, Nick Cave and Liars.
    (tags: aptbs mute)
  • (Mute) A Place To Bury Strangers have signed a worldwide deal with UK based record label, Mute. On Friday April 17, the band will appear at the 2009 Coachella Music Festival in Indio, CA.
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  • Those of you who read my review of A Place to Bury Stranger’s show at Skully’s this past summer will know that I’ve got a thing for this noise-rock trio. So, I was very happy to hear that the group just got signed to Mute Records; a very appropriate label considering its past releases from bands such as Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr. The group is currently working on their second album and have a pretty extensive European tour scheduled as well as a spot on the Coachella lineup in April. I’m definitely looking forward to hearing how much louder this group can get.
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  • The Village Voice calls them “pedal whiz kids,” which should come as no surprise as Ackermann builds custom guitar pedals (see deathbyaudio.net). Rounding out the band are Jono Mofo on bass and the relentless drumming of Jay Space. A Place To Bury Strangers does not so much play songs as allow them to pour out. They write songs about longing, heartbreak and confusion and play them extremely well at a passionately loud volume.
    (tags: aptbs mute)
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A pear and an apple, closely

Looking at some fruit on our table made me want to photograph them. After several shots it seemd that up close worked best, although I must admit I get a little squeamish looking at the close up of the pear. Click on the image and let me know if it affects you the same way.

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