Hoboken

Of late, I have been having some real doozies among the annals of dreams. I am considering just dreamblogging, as what happens with my eyes shut is clearly of greater interest than that which occupies my days:

In a multilevel ramshackle building, possibly the former barn of an early twentieth-century factory-farming concern, a number of commercial concerns are ensconced, including a down-home Americana reinterpretation of a Swiss eatery, serving Swiss food with reasonable acuity and a pleasant “howdy, y’all” sensibility. In the extensive, cluttered checkout cowchute, i am pleased to note numerous items of genuine Swiss provenance such as generally-unavailable models of Victorinox knife and Suchard chocolate powder. To my disapproval and frustration, there is no irradiated milk available. In revenge, i steal a jackknife, and make my way to a higher floor, where a family, long friends of mine, has a rummage shop.

The family patriarch, ailing, has withered to a shadow of his former self, a wizened figure with enormous parchment skull atop the body of what might be taken for that of a starving infant. As i converse with one of the ancient’s offspring, I am handed the feather-light mortal vessel, whereupon I am left alone with the elderly being. Naturally, the living skeleton ceases to be living moments later,and as I hold the corpse, the feather-light flesh and bones begin to flake away in my hands as I seek a resting site for the fragile remnant.

In so doing, I find a cigar box containing items I had attempted to husband through my life from earliest childhood, including such objects as a faux piece-of-eight obtained in the early seventies while visiting Florida, the mummified remains of a crab plucked from the beach at Mazatlan, a tooth lost at age eight, and the like. The box had gone missing (in my dream) while in the care of the family whose deceased progenitor I now held.

Upset, but of an inclination to let bygones be bygones, I finally locate my acquaintance and attempt to deliver my burden to him, whereupon the dessicated corpse crumbles into fine, very thin flakes. I catch the skull as it descends. As it crumbles in my hand I am left holding only the upper portion, roughly from the eye-sockets’ midpoint up. Turning the delicate cup over, I note the floral profusion of complex, papery bone membranes we each carry in our sinuses. I hand the remnant to my acquaintance.

He thanks me with exaggerated gravity and takes a voracious, satisfied bite out of the fragment of bone. Crunching through the clean-breaking material, more delicate than eggshell, he then insists that I must join him. Together we crunch our way through the remains of his father, as tasty as potato chips or fried chicken.

Then I woke up.

More recently, Jon Stewart chauffeured me and my wife amusingly about Hoboken while deferring my repeated blandishments concerning the importance of appearing as a guest on The Daily Show. Apparently, we’re old school chums or something. I just hope he never hears about the grandpa-eating thing.

Too early, too late, what good's the money if you ain't got the time

I was looking at the rumor that Palm will release Q4 Cingular-only EDGE-enabled Treos this fall, and came across a forum post claiming that Cingular salesbots are noting that the release has been pulled. However, now I can’t find it and there are numerous posts on a multiplicity of sources claiming a European release date of September 12 followed by an October release in the US.

So I turned to solving the problem of direct keyboard access to the Mini, our current media center box. Ideally, I want a compact bluetooth keyboard with an integrated pointing device. Compact(!) bluetooth keyboards abound, but none that I noted included a pointing device (although the ever-forward-thinking FrogPadders are apparently thinking about it).

However, two integrated multi-port USB-slash-bluetooth hubs are available, in theory. Unfortunately the $19.99 DTech hub appears to be safely ensconced in containers at sea, whilst the considerably more attractive (in a borg-y way) MSI hub, retailing at $89 but street-cheaper looks to be in stock here and there.

Alas, this still fails to solve my preferred mouselesscouchpotatohoodness (how does that work in the German?). Additionally, I note in fora reaction about the USB-slash-bluetooth hubs, there’s clearly a market for a Bluetooth USB hub, wherein one might pair the widget and hang one’s devices (est qu’il-y-a’n accent? Je n’sais pas) USB off the CPU sans wiring to the boîte.

Net result: Thrift and desire, one. Profligacy and entitlement, zero.

Service!

This week I have been exploring Google’s own-domain web-apps (email and more!) and looking into the interesting Amazon aStore beta. To set up an aStore, you must first obtain an Amazon affliate ID, for which you may apply here.

I have a project in the kitchen which is likely to make use of the aStore app, and i deem it to be timely!