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Wednesday, October 4, 2017

A Blast from the Past



The Maxwell House coffee sign dominated the Hoboken, NJ skyline until the '90s. Ever wonder what's there, now?

The one percenters are moving in. The dockside city that Frank Sinatra called home, where Marlon Brando made his bones in the gritty film drama 'On the Waterfront', where the Hudson Tubes (If you're under 50, read PATH) daily shuttles thousands of Jerseyites under the river to Manhattan now can be yours in a spectacular condo complex called Maxwell Place.


For a mere million and a half you can own a one-bedroom, two-bath beauty with an unobstructed view of the Empire State Building. Get a ticket to ride the 14th Street ferry a couple of blocks north and you can be sipping coffee in your Wall Street office while the great unwashed are stilling humping it aboard NJ Transit.


Ain't capitalism grand?


Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Sliced Bread? The story, right here!

On occasion, you may have heard it said of some wonderful gadget, “This is the greatest invention since sliced bread!” This is intended to be both a compliment and a reference to how revolutionary and world-changing the invention is. It’s worth bearing in mind, though, that while people have been slicing bread for eons, pre-sliced, packaged bread has only been available since 1928, when Otto Frederick Rohwedder introduced the world’s first mechanical bread slicer.

At first sales were not spectacular; bakers complained that pre-sliced bread would dry out quickly. Then a slicer-owner figured out how to slice and bag the bread simltaneously and the revolution began. The first national baker to use the slicer was Wonder Bread.

In an amusing afternote, the Toastmaster company had invented a pop-up toaster four years before sliced bread, but sales of manually sliced toast were slow. The pop-up toaster and uniformly sliced bread was a marriage made in heaven. By 1933, only five years after its introduction, American bakeries were turning out more sliced than unsliced bread, and the rest, as they say in the pulps, is history.
(Liberally edited and re-written by JAK from web material.)
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Tuesday, August 1, 2017

My 15-year-old, cobbled-together computer finally gave up the ghost. It's taken me a while to get a replacement, but I finally settled on this puppy. It's taking me some time to get comfortable with it, though; going from Windows 7 to 10 has given me the bends!