I’m not mad…just curious…

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So there is this whole thing going around the world of the internet regarding privacy and security agencies and level of access to information that is supposed to be classified. What is classified information? I wonder. This Snoeden chartacter jas really turnied the IT world on its head. Or has her? I mean…The technology created by the military and by hackers themselved to become IT consultatns and whatnot should theoritically be able to be hacked. i think. I mean it doesnt matter much

Says blah blah blah:

“This is a dirty little secret that’s being revealed,” said Robert Bigman, a former chief information security officer at the Central Intelligence Agency. “When you log on with a root account, it doesn’t know if you’re staff employee or a contract employee. It just knows you’re root. You’re known as a superuser. You have all privileges.”

What the NSA is saying or rather what everyone in this industry is saying is that they have given people

June 22: Pete Escovedo at Silo’s

The Partridge Family, the Jackson 5 and, heck, even the Brady Bunch. These bands, whether real or fake, proved that forming a family band was the way to go—and still is, according to legendary Latin jazz percussionist Pete Escovedo and his family-member-comprised orchestra. California natives, Pete’s older and younger brothers have performed with the orchestra at different times. The group reached stardom with Carlos Santana in the late ’60s, and now, Pete works with his sons and daughter, longtime Prince collaborator Sheila E., to keep the family tradition alive. The gang’s all there on Saturday, June 22, at Silo’s. 530 Main St., Napa. $30—$40. 7pm and 9:30pm. 707.251.5833.

June 22: Pete Escovedo at Silo’s

The Partridge Family, the Jackson 5 and, heck, even the Brady Bunch. These bands, whether real or fake, proved that forming a family band was the way to go—and still is, according to legendary Latin jazz percussionist Pete Escovedo and his family-member-comprised orchestra. California natives, Pete’s older and younger brothers have performed with the orchestra at different times. The group reached stardom with Carlos Santana in the late ’60s, and now, Pete works with his sons and daughter, longtime Prince collaborator Sheila E., to keep the family tradition alive. The gang’s all there on Saturday, June 22, at Silo’s. 530 Main St., Napa. $30—$40. 7pm and 9:30pm. 707.251.5833.

Media Moguls’ Money Machine

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As a full-time reporter for most publications in the North Bay, with the possible exception of the Press Democrat whose reporters are union, you make between $28,000 and $35,000 a year.

Extended Play: What’s the deal with private utilities?

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Our news story this week dives into the world of private utility Cal Water, which, in Dillon Beach, charges around four times the going rate of the neighboring public utility.

Recently the excellent Grist.org looked at some of the bigger picture issues alluded to by our article.

Local Happenings with Healthcare Reform

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Healthcare, and everything associated with it, is arguably one of the more important issues facing the American people today. It is a social and an economic issue—the fewer people who have coverage the more the cost to the “system” as a whole. Whether you are in support of so-called “Obamacare,” or want things to change in a different way, it’s pretty clear there are many flaws in the current system.

And constantly, every day, it seems, there is a law that changes or hospital consolidation which changes the way healthcare is delivered.

The North Bay Business Journal recently published a story on Covered California, the “state’s online health exchange established under the Affordable Care Act,” written by Dan Verel, health care reporter at the Business Journal.

Verel’s story includes information about the local impact of this rollout of the Affordable Care Act. The Press Democrat also published a story by Judy Lin of the Associated Press which didn’t include any localized information or analysis on the topic.

Also in healthcare news, and related to the Affordable Care Act, last month Alexander Valley Regional Medical Center applied to become a federally qualified health center, which, according to a Business Journal story, “if approved, would allow Sonoma County’s only certified rural health clinic to receive significantly better reimbursement rates and more operating revenue.”

Also of note, Verihealth, Petaluma-based ambulance company, was recently acquired by Falck, a global ambulance company based in Denmark. Falk USA CEO Boo Heffner was quoted as saying of Verihealth: “We view them as a springboard, if you will, into larger markets in Northern California.”

It’s also yet another sign of the consolidation taking place in the health care sector, spurred largely by the Affordable Care Act and the economic realities that are impacting companies — from physician groups to blood banks to ambulance companies — large and small, wrote Verel./blockquote>

To me, these stories reek of relevancy to the local community. The Associated Press wire service is certainly a fine place to pick up news, but with something as big as a roll-out of healthcare reform, it seems logical and apt to get a local angle on the story. The Business Journal’s audience is comprised mostly of business leaders. I am sure the rest of the community would benefit from broader coverage by the other guys in town.

Moonlight Brewing + Spoonbar = BFF 4ever

beer.jpg

Spoonbar is a wonderful restaurant on its own. The place is beautiful and the food just as pleasing. The bar is highly acclaimed and it has a great reputation. So, why take a chance with pop-up dinners when the day-to-day operations are seemingly solid enough on their own? Because Spoonbar is not just about subsisting at a high level, it’s about taking risks and pushing the boundaries to celebrate the culinary nirvana that is the North Bay.

Upon arrival at the Moonlight Brewing popup dinner April 25, Spoonbar’s mixologist Daniel Sorentino served up a cocktail made with Death and Taxes beer, Genever gin, housemaid ginger beer, molasses, allspice and lactic acid. The best thing about this was the use of appropriate, large cubes of ice. It was an experiment, a risk, and though it worked well enough, I was expecting something more smooth and refreshing like the beer it was based upon. This cocktail was instead full of strong flavors with a warm profile, but the surprise and innovation was appreciated.

Course 1

  • Course 1

The first course, paired with Moonlight flagship Death and Taxes black lager, was outstanding. Caroway foccacia sandwiches with pork saucisson and dill made up fingerling grilled cheese-like sandwiches. My only wish for this course is that it there was more of it. The toasted grains played well with the flavors of the beer and the richness was cut by the refreshing taste and carbonation of the lager.

Course 2

  • Course 2

Second course was a mix of potatoes with preserved lemon and sorrel paired with Misspent Youth. The sweetness of the citrus brought out the best of the pale ale, and it seemed as though this dinner would just get better and better.

Third course reintroduced meat to the menu with wage beef tartare, red jalapeño and a puffed rice cracker paired with Twist of Fate bitter ale. The style of beer doesn’t always accurately describe the taste of Moonlight’s brews. This “bitter” was more of a rich amber ale, which was a great choice with the rich, sweet raw beef. The red, sweet jalapeño contributed to the sweetness with a touch of heat, and the cracker played up the beer’s hop flavor. Could it get any better than this?

The main entree was slow roasted duck with ramps and sunchokes. This was paired with Points North, which tasted like an American schwarzbier (because, I found out later, it is). This dark brew is thick and rich, notes of fruits like prunes and red wine grapes. It went well enough with the duck, but it seemed that the pairings had plateaued with the previous course. Again, the food was superb, but I would have loved another slice of succulent duck.

Course 4

  • Course 4

Dessert wound up being the most filling course, and the most intriguing pairing. A butterscotch tart with coffee ice cream and baked meringue replaced the advertised menu item of tobacco ice cream and macaroon. However much I was looking forward to being able to have said I tasted tobacco ice cream, coffee flavor made a fine substitute, probably more suited to my taste, anyway. This was paired with Uncle Ollie, an unhooked beer flavored primarily with cedar. I was under the impression that beer was not beer without hops. Not true. The flavor is that of a grassy meadow, possibly the hay fever inducing scent of a horse stable. This didn’t taste like traditional beer, and does not seem like a beer that would appeal to many on its own. But paired with sweets like this made the most unlikely delicious combination. It sang the tune of balance. Like wine, which can have “desirable” notes of a grassy meadow, old sneakers or wet dog, this beer was not unpleasant but extremely unique. It’s a flavor that will be remembered for decades after only one taste.

Spoonbar proved once again that it is one of the better restaurants in Sonoma County, not just an over-hyped, overpriced Friday night reservation destination. Events like this should fill up fast in the future, and not just for fans of the hard-to-get beer.

Happy 153rd Birthday, Recorded Sound!

All lovers of vinyl need to check this out. It’s the audio of the earliest known gramophone recording, which is the grandfather of the modern vinyl record. Sure, Thomas Edison had his canisters in the 1870s, but Emile Berliner invented the flat version in 1887. In the prequel to Betamax vs. VHS and HD DVD vs. Blu-Ray, Berliner’s gramophone disc dominated the recording industry and Edison’s neat little vertical audio cans remain only as footnotes in audio history.

The cool thing about this recording is not that the record itself has survived since 1890, but that it doesn’t actually exist. There are no known physical copies. So how does one hear audio from something that doesn’t exist? The Media Preservation Initiative at Indiana University, Bloomington, had found a way to take the photographs of the physical specimens from reference books and advertisements of the time and recreate the audio from those records. The result is discernable audio recordings of speech, song and voice recorded as a test from the inventor to a friend. Pretty amazing to think this was all done before the invention of the automobile (1881)!

But wait, there’s more.

These are not the first recording ever made, nor are they the first reproduced sound. Edison’s invention was the first to reproduce the sound audibly, and he actually figured out how to record it in his own way 17 years later. But it was Claire de la Lune, an 18th Century French folk song, which Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville sang slowly into a vibrating diaphragm, that changed music forever. The long tube transferred the sound via hog’s bristle and a piece of a feather into waveforms. There’s smoke and a rotating barrel and a hand crank involved. Though the phonautograph was a complicated and temperamental device (well, maybe not compared to an iPod in a Wifi dead zone), audio could now be captured. And in 2011, a mere 151 years later, archivists found a way to play it back. The recording was made on April 9, 1860 (before the American Civil War)—marking the birth of recorded sound.

Telephones, speakers, microphones—everything we know about audio today—is based on Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville’s hog’s bristle and feather recording device. From one audio engineer to another, thanks, brother!

The Stoned Lady Blogging on Healdsburg Patch is the Greatest Thing You’ll Read All Day

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A new milestone in local community journalism has been achieved over at Healdsburg Patch with the incredible blog post “I’m Stoned When I Can’t Connect My Bluetooth Keyboard,” written by one Cathy Gumina Odom.

Odom is using medical marijuana for pain of various sources, and

EXTENDED PLAY: California’s niftiest bowling signs

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Nothing says “Come drink a clearish wheat beer and put on ridiculous shoes” like a bowling alley sign. In honor of this week’s feature, here’s a roundup of California’s most dated, divey, billboard-sized icons of a time gone by.

I’m not mad…just curious…

So there is this whole thing going around the world of the internet regarding privacy and security agencies and level of access to information that is supposed to be classified. What is classified information? I wonder. This Snoeden chartacter jas really turnied the IT world on its head. Or has her? I mean...The technology created by the military and...

June 22: Pete Escovedo at Silo’s

The Partridge Family, the Jackson 5 and, heck, even the Brady Bunch. These bands, whether real or fake, proved that forming a family band was the way to go—and still is, according to legendary Latin jazz percussionist Pete Escovedo and his family-member-comprised orchestra. California natives, Pete’s older and younger brothers have performed with the orchestra at different times. The...

June 22: Pete Escovedo at Silo’s

The Partridge Family, the Jackson 5 and, heck, even the Brady Bunch. These bands, whether real or fake, proved that forming a family band was the way to go—and still is, according to legendary Latin jazz percussionist Pete Escovedo and his family-member-comprised orchestra. California natives, Pete’s older and younger brothers have performed with the orchestra at different times. The...

Media Moguls’ Money Machine

As a full-time reporter for most publications in the North Bay, with the possible exception of the Press Democrat whose reporters are union, you make between $28,000 and $35,000 a year.

Extended Play: What’s the deal with private utilities?

Our news story this week dives into the world of private utility Cal Water, which, in Dillon Beach, charges around four times the going rate of the neighboring public utility. Recently the excellent Grist.org looked at some of the bigger picture issues alluded to by our article.

Local Happenings with Healthcare Reform

Lots of things happening in the North Bay with Obamacare

Moonlight Brewing + Spoonbar = BFF 4ever

Windsor brewery with cult following impresses at Healdsburg popup dinner

Happy 153rd Birthday, Recorded Sound!

All lovers of vinyl need to check this out. It’s the audio of the earliest known gramophone recording, which is the grandfather of the modern vinyl record. Sure, Thomas Edison had his canisters in the 1870s, but Emile Berliner invented the flat version in 1887. In the prequel to Betamax vs. VHS and HD DVD vs. Blu-Ray, Berliner’s gramophone...

The Stoned Lady Blogging on Healdsburg Patch is the Greatest Thing You’ll Read All Day

A new milestone in local community journalism has been achieved over at Healdsburg Patch with the incredible blog post "I'm Stoned When I Can't Connect My Bluetooth Keyboard," written by one Cathy Gumina Odom. Odom is using medical marijuana for pain of various sources, and

EXTENDED PLAY: California’s niftiest bowling signs

Nothing says "Come drink a clearish wheat beer and put on ridiculous shoes" like a bowling alley sign. In honor of this week's feature, here's a roundup of California's most dated, divey, billboard-sized icons of a time gone by.
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