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It is 9.3.1.


But it's strange that the page says that PostgreSQL includes support for ‘JSON’ data type and two JSON functions

In PG 9.2 there were only two json functions[1], but 9.3 introduced more[2]

[1]http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.2/static/functions-json.htm... [2]http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/static/functions-json.htm...


Apple is apparently already approving releases built against the iOS 7 SDK, so it may indeed be an iOS 7 app already.

David Smith (FeedWrangler, and a bunch of other things) has had an iOS 7 update approved too: https://twitter.com/_DavidSmith/status/378147860774395905


This is just blatantly untrue. Take a look at Pulitzer Prizes for Investigative Journalism since 2003 (http://www.pulitzer.org/bycat/Investigative-Reporting):

* The New York Times

* The Blade (Toledo, OH)

* Willamette Week (Portland, OR)

* The Washington Post

* The Birmingham (AL) News

* The Chicago Tribune

* The New York Times

* The New York Times

* ProPublica

* Philadelphia Daily News

* Sarasota Herald Tribune

* The Seattle Times

* The Associated Press

* The New York Times

If that's not a diverse group of news organizations, I don't know what it.

That also doesn't include things like the Walter Reed Army Medical center scandal (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Reed_Army_Medical_Center...), because it falls under the Public Service category: http://www.pulitzer.org/bycat/Public-Service.


How many of those stories would cause the reader to question core assumptions about the legitimacy of the US Government?

Corporate, local, and state-level corruption are all small potatoes fare that is used (along with sensational stories with little actually news content) as a tool to help the orgs pretend to be doing real journalism.

Notably, the NY Times was complicit in the propaganda effort to overthrow Saddam Hussein.


Let me get this straight.

Any investigative journalism that does not directly address what you believe to the most important topic (the legitimacy of the US government) is automatically not actual investigative journalism. Not only that, anything that does not address your favorite championed cause is automatically "small potatoes" that is in fact part of the conspiracy for journalists all over the country to fool everyone into believing real journalism is occurring.

Are you seriously leveling this claim?

In other news, all sci-fi TV shows are in fact not actual sci-fi TV shows because they aren't Firefly.


When he first took office, George W. Bush thinned the herd of the White House press core. He broke the tradition of seasoned reporters getting access and replaced it with selective access based on his personal like/dislike of individual reporters.

This has had a chilling effect on de-facto press freedom in DC. In the meantime we've seen utterly shocking things go largely unreported b/c topics are generally verboten and the press instead focuses on less consequential issues.

In comparison to the stuff that is not getting significant press, the smaller stuff is largely irrelevant to the lives of most Americans.

There are great reporters who write about everything from local sports to local corporate corruption, but the high quality of their work should not shield the major players from accountability for utterly failing in their major moral and professional duty.


Marco.org actually isn't on Tumblr anymore--he uses Second Crack, a blogging engine he wrote himself. Read more here: http://www.marco.org/secondcrack


Your absolutely right! I totally missed this switch and was blaming Tumblr for this problem. I'll update the post on my blog! Thanks wvanwazer!


I'm hoping this will fix some of that: http://www.holovaty.com/writing/back-to-django/


Me too! Adrian and Jacob have both spread their wings beyond Django and now that EveryBlock is doing well it's nice that Adrian can turn some of his attention back to the community. Some clear official direction can go a long way.


I thought so too, but it's $9.99 a month for 50 GBs, which is more than iTunes Match gives you, and comparable with services like Rdio and Spotify.


I'm just wondering if it's actually cheaper though. iTunes Match is $24.99 per year, remember.

However, iTunes Match isn't everyone's cup of tea (and odds are, not available in their country. It isn't in mine).


And $99 yearly. iTunes Match is only $25 yearly, it's not billed monthly.

Furthermore, iTunes Match limits at 25,000 songs. At 256kbps, thats roughly 175GB.


But iTunes Match is US-only for now.


I did the "dropbox referral via google adwords + $100 coupon" so I now have 10GB free on dropbox. It's an (albeit sneaky) alternative to the monthly $10.


It should. But if you're still having trouble, I found using this will always work for me:

sudo ARCHFLAGS="-arch i386 -arch x86_64" CC=/usr/bin/gcc-4.2 pip install


Yeah, I think I finally found that tip after trying quite a number of things.

And hooray, lxml and PIL both appear to have installed successfully on Lion + Xcode 4.1.


With or without the ARCHFLAGS tip?


Both worked for me with a sudo pip install after downloading Xcode from the MAS.


Awesome tool, but just a heads up: I tried searching for "C" and "C++", and it gave me the exact same line each time.


There's no paywall at the Washington Post...


No, but you need to create an account to keep reading. Annoying, at any rate.


That's odd, I just clicked "next page" to read the rest and I don't have an account there.


Also, "Read Experts" doesn't really make sense. You need another word at the end. Perhaps "Read Expert Predictions" or "Learn from Experts."


You are right. We are working on a new page and we need to improve the wording.


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