Month: June 2007

Perfect Rice

The pressure makes it possible to boil the water in the cooker at a higher temperature, thus making for fatter, shinier and sweeter grains of rice. The air-sucking filter creates a vacuum causing the rice to absorb water more quickly while it soaks.

2022-01-23:

The World’s Best Rice comes in a sturdy, gold-embossed box containing 6 slender packages. Sold for ¥10800 for 840 grams, it’s 30x more expensive than what you’d pay at a supermarket in Japan. The Guinness World Records named it the priciest rice on the planet in 2016. Japan’s rice milling and processing giant Toyo Rice Corporation, which sells the product mainly to well-to-do customers in Japan, the United States, and Singapore, commands the princely sum by blending several of the top-placed finalists chosen by judges in a blind tasting of the International Contest on Rice Taste Evaluation, the country’s most prestigious rice competition, which takes place each November. The winning batches are stored in temperature-controlled rooms for at least 6 months before the kernels are milled to remove the tawny outer bran—but never the ultrathin umami layer around the starchy core. You simply won’t find better-tasting short-grain white rice anywhere.

Finance Spam

On April 14, 2007, I signed up for an AmeriTrade account using an e-mail address consisting of 16 random alphanumeric characters, which I never gave to anyone else. On May 15, I started receiving pump-and-dump stock spams sent to that email address. I was hardly the first person to discover that this happens. Almost all of the top hits in a Google search for “ameritrade spam” are from people with the same story: they used a unique address for each service that they sign up with, so they could tell if any company ever leaked their address to a spammer, and the address they gave to AmeriTrade started getting stock spam.”

ameritrade has an insider selling email addresses. they need a SOX audit

Locative Lies

The Next Web Conference was held in Amsterdam last Friday. The organizers had a last minute speaker back-out: Plazes CEO Felix Petersen emailed them the day before the conference to say that he couldn’t make it because they were dealing with bugs on their new product, and that his “9 month old daughter has become sick.” The problem, though, is that Peterson didn’t stay home to work on their product and take care of his daughter. He was actually attending a competing conference, Reboot, in Copenhagen. How was this discovered? The Next Web guys used Petersen’s own Plazes, a service which shows where users are at any given time.

the awesomeness, it doesn’t stop!