The Case for the Empire | The Weekly Standard
january 2010 by keithly
And an arrogant royalist Swiss guard, at that. With one or two notable exceptions, the Jedi we meet in Star Wars are full of themselves. They ignore the counsel of others (often with terrible consequences), and seem honestly to believe that they are at the center of the universe. When the chief Jedi record-keeper is asked in "Attack of the Clones" about a planet she has never heard of, she replies that if it's not in the Jedi archives, it doesn't exist. (The planet in question does exist, again, with terrible consequences.)
politics
film
humor
geek
starwars
january 2010 by keithly
Inconsolata
june 2009 by keithly
Somehow I don't have this bookmarked already.
Inconsolata is my first serious original font release. It is a monospace font, designed for code listings and the like, in print. There are a great many "programmer fonts," designed primarily for use on the screen, but in most cases do not have the attention to detail for high resolution rendering.
typography
opensource
geek
Inconsolata is my first serious original font release. It is a monospace font, designed for code listings and the like, in print. There are a great many "programmer fonts," designed primarily for use on the screen, but in most cases do not have the attention to detail for high resolution rendering.
june 2009 by keithly
Welcome to Postbox
june 2009 by keithly
A better way to work with email messages and content
Postbox offers powerful new ways to find, use, and view email messages and content, organize your work life, and get stuff done.
For Windows and Macintosh
email
geek
Postbox offers powerful new ways to find, use, and view email messages and content, organize your work life, and get stuff done.
For Windows and Macintosh
june 2009 by keithly
Lifehacker - Lifehacker Pack 2009: Our List of Essential Free Windows Downloads - Lifehacker Pack 2009
june 2009 by keithly
Lifehacker Pack 2009: Our List of Essential Free Windows Downloads
geek
june 2009 by keithly
Tact Filters
september 2007 by keithly
I came up with this idea several years ago in a conversation with a friend at MIT, who was regularly finding herself upset by other people who worked in her lab. The analogy worked so well in helping her to understand her co-workers that I decided to write it up and put it on the web. I've gotten quite a few email messages since then from other people who have also found it helpful.
technology
culture
geek
september 2007 by keithly
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