2008 May 28, 11:03
sequelguy posted a photo:
Shooting supplies sign has a teddy bear with a machine gun. "Mandall's Shooting Supplies"
street arizona sign gun teddybear scottsdale sarahsphoto 2008 May 28, 11:02
sequelguy posted a photo:
A cowboy welcomes us to historic downtown Scottsdale: "Welcome to Old Town Scottsdale"
street arizona sign cowboy scottsdale welcome sarahsphoto 2008 May 28, 11:02
sequelguy posted a photo:
Behind the main building of the Westin Kierland resort is a man made mini-lake with a large statue of someone holding a gold ring in the middle.
arizona lake water statue hotel scottsdale goldring westinkierlandresort 2008 May 28, 11:02
sequelguy posted a photo:
Kierland Commons shopping center next to the resort had fancy shops, hummers and golf carts.
arizona sarah parking scottsdale golfcart kierlandcommons 2008 May 28, 3:27A WWI poster with a fallen plane and the text "consider the possible consequences if you are careless in your work". I feel like this should go up in Eric's office.
poster purchase wwi propaganda 2008 May 18, 6:45
While re-reading Cryptonomicon I thought
about what kind of information I'm leaking by posting links on Delicious. At work I don't post any Intranet websites for fear of revealing anything but I wondered if not posting would reveal
anything. For instance, if I'm particularly busy at work might I post less indicating something about the state of the things I work on? I got an archive of my Delicious posts via the Delicious API
and then ran it through a tool I made to create a couple of tables which I've graphed on Many Eyes
I've graphed my posts per week and with red lines I've marked IE7 and IE8 releases as stated by Wikipedia. As you can see, there doesn't seem to be much of a pattern so I suppose my concerns
we're unfounded. I use it for both work and non-work purposes and my use of Delicious isn't that consistent so I don't think it would be easy to find a pattern like I was thinking about. Perhaps if
many people from my project used Delicious and that data could be compared together it might be easier.
For fun I looked at my
posts per day of week which starts off strong on Mondays and decreases as the
week goes on, and my
posts per hour of day. It looks like I mostly post around lunch and on the extremes I've
only posted very late at night twice at 4am:
converting media for the Zune, and
Penn's archive of articles. In the morning at 7am I've posted only once:
document
introducing SGML.
manyeyes graph cryptonomicon delicious