Something to do with π

Posted by marshall Tue, 28 Feb 2006 13:50:00 GMT

There was an advertisement some years ago for Taco Bell with the tagline, "Make a run for the border." This was presumably intended to suggest the Mexican inspiration for their menu, but I expect most people silently added something like, "And if you can't make it that far, there's always Taco Bell."

Taco Bell and I have been spending some time apart over the past couple of years, largely because right across the street sits El Pollo Loco, home of the Grilled Fiesta Burrito. But lately I've been finding myself drawn to it again. I blame television. My friend Lee has gotten me and some other friends watching "Beauty and the Geek", a show where beer spokesmodels assemble computers and guys who track monkeys with lasers redecorate rooms with such lovable touches as messages on the wall that recall The Shining. The commercial breaks on this fine specimen of entertainment have featured the Crunchwrap Supreme, which sports the exact same few ingredients as every other Taco Bell menu item, yet is hailed as an "innovation in taste." On one night of weakness (as if watching Ashton-Kutcher-produced reality TV on the WB wasn't enough), this item looked startlingly good to me. And so it began.

As can be expected, the Crunchwrap Supreme wasn't anywhere near as good as the commercial made it look, but it reminded me that I really did like going to Taco Bell once upon a time. It also introduced me to the Caramel Apple Empanada, which, like most of the Bell's creations, shares little in common with its namesake, but is rather enjoyable if you take it for what it is. It reminds me somewhat of the old fried apple pies at McDonald's. I recently was seized with a craving for those things, and in my madness I came across a web site that cataloged the remaining McDonald's locations that carried the fried wonders. One of them was the Wal-Mart in Rancho Cucamonga. Imagine, all this time, I was a mere half hour away from oil-soaked apple goodness! But alas, sad news awaited me when I arrived at said Wal-Mart last night: on February 1st, the McDonald's there "went corporate" and switched to the accursed baked variety. I very nearly wept openly. Wal-Mart disappoints again.

So, for now, my apple-filled fried fast food fix will have to be satisfied at Taco Bell. Should I be glad for the ultimately disappointing commercial? Should I abandon the quest for the classic golden arches fried pie? Should I continue pondering what separates a Double Decker Taco from a Crunchwrap in terms of taste innovation? I'd ask for comments, but I know I'd just get invitations to poker sites in return. Lousy spammers. I hope you're happy you've ruined the internet. Well, no I don't. I hope your business fails and your buildings get crushed by burning trees but you escape unscathed to lead a better life because I really don't mean you any personal harm. I just wish those spamming energies went into something more productive, like cataloging the McDonald's restaurants that still sell apple danishes for breakfast. I seem to recall them being similar to the Sara Lee danishes, and nobody doesn't like those.

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Hope for the Treo

Posted by marshall Thu, 23 Feb 2006 11:03:00 GMT

I was going to title this, "Palm OS is Dead, Long Live the 'Access Linux Platform'", but then I discovered that someone already used it. Ah well.

As expected, ACCESS has killed off Palm OS Cobalt, destroying all hopes that I once had of owning a Treo with an advanced Palm OS. But it turns out that what they're replacing it with inspires far more hope than Cobalt ever did. ACCESS has announced the ACCESS Linux Platform (ALP), which boasts the following among its many promised features:

  • Full standard Linux kernel
  • User interface library based on GTK+
  • "MAX" application framework built from the ground up for smartphones
  • Modular GStreamer media framework
  • Embedded SQLite database engine
  • ACCESS NetFront browser
  • Messaging and telephony software from PalmSource
  • Runs existing (well-written) Palm OS applications unchanged

This answers just about every complaint that I had about the Treo. The Linux-based OS means the Treo will finally gain desperately needed stability and full multitasking. The new designed-for-smartphone application framework means that the five-way navigator will no longer be a second-class input citizen, and the support for softkeys should eliminate the button confusion on the Treo (which, after spending some confusion-free time with S60 lately, I am attributing to the lack of a solid "Back" button). And full Bluetooth 2.0 support is being built in, right from the beginning.

On top of all these "fixes", the new platform further improves upon the many things I liked about the Treo. The compatibility with Palm OS applications means that a huge library of existing software will be immediately available, while the use of GTK+ for new applications will encourage Linux programmers to apply their existing knowledge to creating new software. I'm hoping that the implementation of the PalmSource messaging system means that the Treo's excellent SMS "chat" view will be carried over. And then there's the built-in media framework, the SQLite engine (same as is bundled with OS X), and the improved browser (NetFront is widely regarded as one of the best browsers available for handhelds). All in all, a very promising platform.

The trouble, of course, is that it's still just promised. They're saying it will be out around the end of the year -- I guess that's just the happenin' time for OS releases, with Leopard and Vista scheduled for release around then as well -- but even if they make that self-imposed deadline, Palm never showed much interest in Cobalt, and it remains to be seen if this new platform winds up in a future Treo. If it does, it's probably still two years away.

But oh...an ALP-based Treo with a GoForce, an internal antenna, a P990-style jog wheel, built-in wi-fi, and a 4 MP camera...it's all more than doable by that time. What a wonderful dream.

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