
Author: Newley
Hi. I'm Newley Purnell. I cover technology and business for The Wall Street Journal, based in Hong Kong. I use this site to share my stories and often blog about the books I'm reading, tech trends, sports, travel, and our dog Ginger. For updates, get my weekly email newsletter.
WSJ:
In an age of high-tech, real-time gadgetry, it’s the decidedly unsexy ham radio — whose technology has changed little since World War II — that is in high demand in ravaged New Orleans and environs. The Red Cross issued a request for about 500 amateur radio operators — known as “hams” — for the 260 shelters it is erecting in the area. The American Radio Relay League, a national association of ham-radio operators, has been deluged with requests to find people in the region. The U.S. Coast Guard is looking for hams to help with its relief efforts.
(Via Hit & Run.)

Proof that there’s a domain name out there for everyone: ILoveAlpacas.com.
Personally, I prefer capybaras.
Two New Personal Productivity Sites

A couple links to share:
— PocketMod is a really cool (and free) tool for creating customized foldable paper organizers. I’m happy with my PDA for now, but it strikes me that these’d be particularly useful while traveling.
— A new blog to add to the world of GTD/personal productivity/organization: D*I*Y Planner: “Paper, Productivity, and Passion.”
The Long Weekend That Was
My diary for the last five days looks like this. I had Thursday and Friday off of work so it was an extra-long weekend for me.
On Thursday, I took Wendy’s advice and went to see the Hirshhorn Museum’s Visual Music exhibition. Interesting stuff. I was only disappointed that they weren’t playing “Dark Side of the Rainbow.”
Here’s a pick I took of a some swirling lights projected onto a screen:

Then I strolled down to the National Museum of the American Indian. An absolute disappointment. A bunch of crap crammed into a funny-looking building. I couldn’t tell one exhibit from the next — it was as if the building were jammed with relics and dioramas and video displays, turned upside down and shaken about, and then set back down again for visitors to pick through. Talk about cognitive dissonance.
The weather was gorgeous on Friday, so I went out to hike the Billy Goat Trail in Great Falls, Maryland. Nice to get outside. I snapped this pic:

That night I went out with some friends to Local 16. Nice place. But very crowded.
On Saturday I had lunch with my grandmother in Falls Church, VA, and then went to meet my old pal Mike F. for lunch. You’ll recall that Mike has provided commentary on these pages regarding Ecuadorian politics; he and I taught English there, and he recently returned to the States. We hadn’t seen each other in nearly two years (for those of you who don’t know me, Mike’s on the left):

Then, that night, I had the pleasure of going to a neighbor’s BBQ and watching the exceptionally funny “Team America: World Police,” a film I’d been meaning to see for a while. Warning: steer clear of it if you’ve got a problem with graphic scenes depicting marionette sex.
I got to see another great movie — one of a much different ilk — on Sunday night: “Born Into Brothels: Calcutta’s Red Light Kids.” The director, a photographer, gave cameras to prostitutes’ children; the movie’s about the photos they take and their struggle to escape the slum. Worth checking out.
And finally, to cap off a fine weekend, I had the pleasure of dining yesterday at Five Guys, purveyors of the best damned cheeseburgers I’ve ever tasted. Here’s what my meal looked like (click the photo for notes):

Sigh. Now I need a vacation.
Ecuadorian Soup in The New Yorker
In the rare instances when news from Ecuador trickles into the American media, it usually involves strife: another democratically-elected president outsted, indigenous protesters railing against oil companies, etc.
So you can imagine my surprise when my grandmother* recently handed me this week’s New Yorker magazine and said “hey, there’s an article about Ecuador in here.” What’s more, if you have even limited experience with Ecuadorian cuisine, you’ll understand the improbability of this particular article appearing in their annual food issue. And, in one last counter-intutitive twist, the piece actually speaks favorably about the vittles at latitude zero.
The article’s by Calvin Trillin and it’s called “Speaking of Soup.” It’s funny and poignant: Trillin traveled to Cuenca, Ecuador (the city in which I lived for a year) to brush up on his Spanish and undertake a quest to consume numerous bowls of the traditional Ecuadorian soup called fanesca (a dish which, it pains me to say, I’m sure I’ve eaten but simply cannot remember).
Again, the article’s great, but here’re some passages that rang hollow for me:
…All the vegetables and spices required—corn, for instance, and fava beans and a couple of kinds of squash—grow in the area, and some of them apparently don’t make it as far as Guayaquil, which is only thirty minutes away by air. That may be because the distribution system seems to consist largely of indigenous women who come to the market from the countryside, many of them in the bright-colored flared skirts and high-crowned panama hats that can make even a small woman of some years look rather, well, zippy.
(Emphasis mine.) I have to take issue with this last sentence. I’m afraid what we’re seeing from Trillin is a bit of travel writing romanticization. Indigenous women in Ecuador are largely destitute and over-worked and often in ill-health. I have never seen an older indigenous woman look anything close to “zippy,” no matter how colorful her dress.
Also, there’s this:
…We also had long conversations about humitas, which have some resemblance to tamales. Instead of being dough around some central element like pork or chicken, though, humitas are the same all the way through—an astonishingly light concoction of fresh young corn that is ground and mixed with eggs and cheese and butter and anise and a bit of sugar.
Trillin must have tasted humitas that were an order of magnitude better than any of the sort that I ever ingested.
I have particularly vivid memories of a student of mine who once made me a bundle of humitas; she gave them to me after class and I ate them before getting on a five-hour bus ride. They did not settle well. I cut my journey short, checked into a hotel in Loja, and was subsequently wracked by vomiting and diarrhea for twelve long hours.
I ran out of water to drink and, bleary-eyed and weak-legged, made my way out into the street the next morning to find some refreshments. Not half a block from the hotel, a young girl on a fire escape above me dumped a bucket of water on my head. (Ecuadorians douse each other with water in the weeks preceeding carnaval.)
Long story short, when I think of humitas, the words “an astonishingly light concoction of fresh young corn that is ground and mixed with eggs and cheese and butter and anise and a bit of sugar” do not exactly come to mind.
That said, feel like making your own fanesca (the soup Trillin raves about)? Here’s a recipe. And if you’re a Spanish reader, here’s one from an Ecuadorian newspaper.
[*My eighty-five-year-old grandmother, Rosina, lives here in the DC area; I often go see her and we have lunch together. She gives me her old Econmist and New Yorker issues which, because she’s a news junkie and has a lot of time on her hands, she usually devours the same day they arrive in the mail. Not only is she more well-versed in current events than anyone I know, but she also pays her bills online is an avid emailer. In short, she kicks ass.]
…one more thing: here’re some pics of the sky outside my office window yesterday afternoon. And yes, I have been communing with my inner Ansel Adams of late.

I won’t be posting anything here until after Labor Day. I leave you with these links:
— Things have gone from awful to unbelievably horrible in New Orleans. You can donate to the American Red Cross here.
— Remember the woman who snapped the cameraphone pic of the NY subway perv? Well, he turned himself in. As I said before, citizen journalism at its finest. (Via James Poling.)
— Not only have the folks at The Onion re-designed the site, but they’ve also posted the entire contents of their archives, stretching back to 1996. I’m happy to say the classic “Nation in Love with Girl From Record Store” has thus been resurrected for public viewing.
— And from the newley.com comment file, Taiwan expert Michael Turton explains why hurricanes are called typhoons in Asia. And an anonymous reader says the Iraq war was a good idea and I simply need to “move on.”
Hasta Tuesday, mis amigos.
Stampede in Iraq: 648 Dead
Good God.
At least 648 people were killed in a stampede on a bridge Wednesday when panic engulfed a Shiite religious procession amid rumors that a suicide bomber was about to attack, officials said. It was the single biggest confirmed loss of life in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion.
Scores jumped or were pushed to their deaths into the Tigris River, while others were crushed in the crowd. Most of the dead were women and children, Interior Ministry spokesman Lt. Col. Adnan Abdul-Rahman said.
Tensions already had been running high in the procession in Baghdad’s heavily Shiite Kazimiyah district because of a mortar attack two hours earlier against the shrine where the marchers were heading. The shrine was about a mile from the bridge.
New Taiwan Typhoon
Why are hurricanes in Asia called typhoons? Got me. Nomenclature aside, a big hurricane typhoon hurri-phoon is about to lash Formosa. BBC:
Schools and other public buildings in several areas of Taiwan, including the capital, were closed on Wednesday in advance of a powerful typhoon.
Typhoon Talim is scheduled to hit the northern, eastern and central parts of the island early on Thursday.
The government has told citizens to stay away from coastal areas amid concern over possible flash floods and landslides.
Meanwhile, in related natural disaster news, the scene Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi is very, very bad.
UPDATE: Here’re some amazing photos from New Orleans.
