Flashy Chipotle

If you’re a big fan of fajita burritos and usability, then Chipotle.com’s overproduced, inaccessible, barely navigable, all-Flash interface must drive you nuts. So, as a public service for Chipotle-eaters in Washington, DC, here are all the direct links you need to know:

Inside the NMAI

Amy and I finally got inside the National Museum of the American Indian last Saturday. Pre-reserved entry passes are no longer required; you just need to line up at the entrance. We got to eat a nice regional sampler of buffalo, juniper salmon, and wild rice, and leisurely strolled around the various exhibits. Some photos here.

IMG_0298 IMG_0310

Swastika Pincushion IMG_0295

I’ll have more reflections on the NMAI soon, after I’ve tried another visit.

New Machine at Work

Boss got me a new workstation last week: Dell P4-3GHz with 1GB of RAM, running on WinXP. I was really expecting WinXP to be a complete nightmare to work with, but thankfully, starting up on it was almost as easy as with Mac OS X 10.2+, and I had our work development environment (Apache 2, PHP 5, CVS, a code editor, and every web browser on the planet) installed and running in less than a day, along with an internal wiki to document the process. Pity we can’t play games in the office; I’ll bet Vice City would run like a dream on this baby.

Red Line Rollback Collision

Collision on the Red Line. An empty train rolled back into a populated one on the Red Line at Woodley Park station. Four people injured, the station and track are a mess, and a large portion of the Red Line is closed.

How do you do that, WMATA? How does an empty train lose power on the track and freely roll down the slope, without braking, back into the the station? What if the train at Woodley Park had not been stopped at the station and had collided while in motion? How many would have died?

This would be disastrous commuting news for me — if I weren’t already avoiding the Metro in favor of walking to and from work.

Update: Post story here, with photo of one train car atop the other.

Looks Like Four More Years

John Kerry concedes. Well, a Bush victory won’t be so bad, despite the lefty doomsayers’ railing. Think of it: now a whole generation of unborn babies will live to be drafted!

But seriously, Aaron and Matt are right: this election went to the conservative social evangelical platform more than anything else, and the much-touted “youth and cellphone users” voter revolution simply did not happen.

Election Day 2004

Lines were slow and disorganized at the polling place today, and I made it almost to the front of the “E-K” queue before having to go the back of the “L-R” queue because its sign was obscured by a badly positioned “S-Z.” After the wait, though, it was smooth sailing: I showed my voter card, got my ballot, connected the arrows with a pencil, slid the ballot into the Optech Eagle with a satisfying beep, got the “I Voted” sticker, and picked up a free apple from a basket provided by the Lutheran Church whose basement served as my polling place.

It just wasn’t right, having to vote for a less-than-resolute, pro-abortion, Roman Catholic liberal; but it seemed far better than voting for a deficit-growing Sun Myung Moon / Pat Robertson endorsee who started a preemptive war based on botched intelligence at the expense of the general war on terror.

Photos from the polling place here.

Joel, The Dane, Rick, Smash, and Kottke voted. Valerie decided not to.

(Thanks to Tim, by the way, for the sticker image, which looks just like the one I got.)

Dome and Moon

IMG_0258

IMG_0276

IMG_0271

These were taken with 13.2mm, f3.8, ISO 400. Anyone have tips on taking photos of the moon with a consumer-level digital camera? I can never get any detail out of it. Or will I need better equipment?

Photos taken with a Canon Powershot A400.