rednoodlealien and I were commiserating on dreadful street names, in a conversation about the NYC Map Portal. I grew up on Dickie Avenue, named for Dr. Samuel Dickie, head of the National Prohibition Party for twelve years and a Prohibition candidate for Governor of Michigan. Along with John G. Wooley (Wooley Avenue is two blocks away from Dickie Avenue) he founded a national prohibition newspaper.

If you haven’t figured it out already, the neighborhood I grew up (Westerleigh, on Staten Island) in was founded by a temperance group and was once known as Prohibition Park.

And speaking of the old neighborhood, one of the very very few people from my childhood I’m still in touch with pointed me to this page of photos and information about Palmer’s Run, “the brook” of my childhood, complete with a photo of the bridge that we used to cross over to go to the candy store. I’d love to have photos of it all before it was filled in (not, I’m sure, that anyone misses the horrendous flooding that used to follow every rain).

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Maps and Legends

I’ve loved maps since I was a little kid, and there are three fascinating new tools to play with:

  • Amazon’s A9 Yellow Pages service now lets you walk around the neighborhood. They drove GPS-enabled trucks around Manhattan and other cities taking photographs and stashed them all in a database, so when you search for a listing, you see a photo of (some address nearby) the business, and you can “walk” up and down the block. If you search for the Parkside Lounge in Manhttan (where I am playing on Monday night with Kate and Lou) you will see a picture of an intersection, but if you scroll to your left about six images, you’ll see this image of the bar. Mondays are bluegrass night at the Parkside, and always worth checking out.
  • Google is also beta-testing Google Maps which, like everything Google, kicks ass. In particular, the maps are draggable. Try it for directions to Sunny’s Bar in Red Hook, where I’ll be playing on Saturday night, again with Kate and Lou, and you might actually be able to find the place. Sunny’s is worth checking out any Friday or Saturday night.
  • The New York City map portal features the most detailed maps you’ll find anywhere; it not only shows the street location but the actual shape of the building and exactly where it’s located. I’ve been using it frequently since someone posted a note about it to newyorkers a while back. You can overlay locations of subway stations, hospitals, and so on. The only difficulty is that there’s no way (that I can find) to bookmark a location.
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Visited States

OK, I did it:

Next on the list: Mississippi (and Arkansas) if I finally go to the King Biscuit Blues Festival this year, maybe New Mexico, and Missouri if I go to SPAH this year.

My visited-countries map is too pathetic so I’m not going to bother with it.

Create your own visited states map.

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Explain one of these to a backpack screener…

What every well-dressed Musaceae is wearing this season.

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Does Tonka Make a Version Of This?

I just had an eight-year-old “Ohmygodlookatthecoolmachine” moment downtown.

Any guesses what this is?

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Nation-Building As Done By Actual Grownups

In a column headlined “Our Blindness,” Wall Street Journal op-ed columnist Mark Helprin grimly questions our preparedness for handling any of the major challenges facing the U.S. in the 21st century, which he identifies as the rise of China as a world power, the possibility of a global pandemic, and the disgraceful lack of any significant civil defense effort despite plentiful warnings of possible catastrophes, terroristic and otherwise.

And he not only ridicules Bush’s attempt at nation-building in Iraq, he succintly answers the “We did it in Germany and Japan and we can do it in Iraq” argument:

Approximately 150,000 troops occupy Iraq, which has a population of 26 million and shares long open borders with sympathetic Arab and Islamic countries where popular sentiment condemns America. The Iraqi army was dispersed but neither destroyed nor fully disarmed. The country is divided into three armed nations. Its cities are intact.

In contrast, on the day of Germany’s surrender, Eisenhower had three million Americans under his command — 61 divisions, battle hardened. Other Western forces pushed the total to 4.5 million in 93 divisions. And then there were the Russians, who poured 2.5 million troops into the Berlin sector alone. All in all, close to 10 million soldiers had converged upon a demoralized German population of 70 million that had suffered more than four million dead and 10 million wounded, captured, or missing. No sympathizers existed, no friendly borders. The cities had been razed. Germany had been broken, but even after this was clear, more than 700,000 occupation troops remained, with millions close by. The situation in Japan was much the same: a country with a disciplined, homogenous population, no allies, sealed borders, its cities half burnt, more than three million dead, a million wounded, missing, or captured, its revered emperor having capitulated, and nearly half a million troops in occupation. And whereas both Germany and Japan had been democracies in varying degree, Iraq has been ruled by a succession of terrifying autocrats since the beginning of human history.

Helprin, whose novel Winter’s Tale is the reason you can’t easily declare Jack Finney’s Time and Again the best NYC fantasy novel of all time, is a long-standing right-wing contributor to the page, which has been criticizing Bush more harshly than you’d expect for the last year or so.

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LJ Outage

As compensation for the outage, LJ is extending paid subscriptions by two weeks but you have to claim it. Go here: http://www.livejournal.com/misc/claim-2005-01.bml.

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Protected: Now That I Am Dead

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Panix Panic

Panix, perhaps New York City’s oldest Internet service provider (meaning that I don’t think any other company was selling dialup Internet access in NYC in 1991) was largely knocked offline this weekend by a domain-name hijacking. The hijacking meant that mail to panix.com addresses was being redirected to the hijacker’s servers, which seem to have bounced them at first, and then stopped accepting mail altogether.

While several of my domains are hosted at Panix, they were not affected by this, so my email was not affected.

Update: Today’s New York Times had a good story about this incident.

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Journal Live Again

LiveJournal’s outage yesterday seems to have been fixed, but not before prompting an avalanche of adolescent snottiness from the Slashdot crowd.

Perhaps the funniest comment was one that could have applied to the gamers and geeks on Slashdot as well: “Today I went outside. My pupils have never been tinier…”

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