I will be live-twittering tonight's election results.

Boston, mid autumn
As I wrote four years ago: If you are informed and have an opinion, please vote. Laziness is not an excuse. Although voting for Ralph Nader is.
A blog on economics, technology, and wolves
I will be live-twittering tonight's election results.

As I wrote four years ago: If you are informed and have an opinion, please vote. Laziness is not an excuse. Although voting for Ralph Nader is.
Posted
9:00 AM
The Economist endorses Senator Obama for President.
The why is summed up in part by the endorsement—"if only the real John McCain had been running"—and in part by last week's Conservatives for Obama, so-called Obamacon:
The biggest brigade in the Obamacon army consists of libertarians, furious with Mr Bush’s big-government conservatism, worried about his commitment to an open-ended "war on terror," and disgusted by his cavalier way with civil rights.
Of course, the endorsement should be no surprise. The Economist has a history of endorsing the other party: Governor Reagan in 1980, Governor Clinton in 1992, Senator Dole in 1996, Governor Bush in 2000, and Senator Kerry in 2004.
With this heady endorsement, the Illinois senator might just win.
Posted
4:00 PM
Via my coworkers at the Android Developers Blog: Android is now open source.
Android is the first free, open source, and fully customizable mobile platform. Android offers a full stack: an operating system, middleware, and key mobile applications. It also contains a rich set of APIs that allows third-party developers to develop great applications.
Across my career, I am most proud of Android—as a platform, as a family of phones, and as a catalyst for change in an otherwise closed industry. But the most exciting part is what's next. Download the SDK and start hacking.
Posted
11:30 AM
Download the Android SDK 1.0 release 1.
Walt Mossberg: "The first real competitor to the iPhone ... the software is slick ... the G1 is a powerful, versatile device."
But the sui generis: Android is open to developers, open to consumers, and open to handset manufacturers. Cannot wait to see what's next.
Posted
12:00 PM
The Journal has a great primer on this morning's compromise bailout bill.
Do read the article, but the gist is this: The Treasury will initially have $250b, and up to $700b, to buy either directly or via auction bad loans and assets from financial institutions, in return for warrants for equity. Compromise language includes disincentives for high CEO pay, additional congressional oversight, and a surprising requirement for the president "to submit a legislative proposal to seek reimbursement from the financial institutions that participated" if the value of the purchased assets yields a net loss.
The best analogy I can come up with to describe the crisis is the lemon problem, exasperated by mark to market accounting: Balance sheets are full of mortgage-backed or otherwise related assets, the popping of the housing bubble resulted in a revaluation of these assets, and capitalization requirements are driving banks to liquidate the assets. Enter the lemon market. Is the bank selling the assets because it needs cashflow, or because the assets are full of subprime contagion? Is this the firm's best or worst assets? The information asymmetry has snowballed to the point of credit market implosion. Thus the government's first solution, improving lending opportunities. When that was found insufficient, as the last few weeks have witnessed, we enter this second round, where the government actually buys the troubled assets.
It is hard to comprehend how dire this situation is as the economy still "feels" okay. Gas prices might be high, but unemployment is not at 30%. Yet while the societal ramifications are not as bad, the financial conditions are worse than those that kicked off The Great Depression.
Posted
12:00 PM
If you are not reading my food blog, Food Tastes Good, you are missing out on recipes such as …





If not the actual dishes, at least the pictures are ambrosial.
Posted
9:00 AM
The greatest Wondermark ever, if not the greatest thing, ever:
Slightly switching gears, David Leonhardt on Obamonics in the Times.
And, in case you missed it, we released version 0.9 of the Android SDK. Its dreamy.
Posted
2:00 PM
Via Google's Open Source Blog, this Google-sponsored project to study Linux I/O scheduler behavior is quite interesting, yielding unexpected results—for example, deadline is actually best for some workloads and CFS, while ideal for others, has awful worst-case performance.
Curious about I/O schedulers? Check out chapter 13 in my favorite kernel book. Want to optimize your code's file I/O and understand scheduling from the perspective of user-space? Read chapter 4 in my favorite system programming book.
Posted
10:30 AM
Hat tip to loyal reader for making me a billionaire:

Somewhat unrelated, Amazon is running a special this month wherein you can try Amazon Prime Free for One Month—in other words, get a month of gratis two-day shipping. US only, unfortunately.
Posted
10:00 AM
Zimbabwe introduces $100 billion banknotes, each valued at one US dollar.
In all seriousness, for posterity, I would love to get one or two of these new bills. If anyone can help, I will pay handsomely.
Posted
3:20 PM