“So, one day I got the most exquisite piece of fresh rib-eye at the grocer, then I called my best Hindi friend over for a cookout.”
For some reason, after reading Owen Winkler speaking truth to Apple, the above line just came up in my head. Then again, Owen wasn’t really belligerent nor purposefully offensive in writing about how Ipods don’t work the way Windows users expect them to in the Windows environment, as well as a few key interface issues like in-song seek control. However, his post is so like lancing the proverbial sacred cow.
Most PC users already know how to perform a folder drill-down, and a Windows-Explorer–based manipulation of mobile audio player files. Most know how to do this from plenty of experience working with flash drives and digital cameras. When I had to manage an Ipod Shuffle for a while, using iTunes on a computer with a gigabyte and a half of RAM (still slowed the computer down to a crawl), I damn near felt like throwing it at the wall.
Interestingly enough when my friend let me use his Creative Zen Vision:M, I found it remarkable. I’ve always wanted one, even though I don’t have room for all the songs, until I think about how I can put in DivX/XviD avi files that play natively without a snag. Oh, yum. Porn on the go.
October 23 2006, 22:29 | Filed under: Tech | 1 Comment |
I believe that every person who chooses the title of “blogger,” or for that matter, anyone who decides to self-publish online under any other title conceivable has a responsibility to himself and his readers to produce material that has what I would call additive value. While I am not the sole judge of this—not by the longest shot ever—it is still within my right to have an opinion to declare flat out when I like a blog and when I find a blog to be junk.
And when your own dad calls you out on your blog about how your current writing is basically less becoming of what you did when you were in the seventh grade, I feel comfortable in such company in saying that a blog post like the one linked to and the blog in general adds to the general white noise level of the many, many blogs out there now.
By contrast, every writer out there will find a niche audience who will stay loyal readers. That’s well and good: one man’s junk is another’s treasure. However, we all reap what we sow and we will always be responsible for the lawns that we tend. I have avoided some blogs’ comments sections for the grave fact that they have done nothing but make cesspools out of every comment thread. But in some cases—like this—it’s hard to expect much when the blog itself doesn’t promote it.
But what would you expect out of a blog called “Hillary Clinton Farts” anyway?
UPDATE (2006-10-26): And so I grab the plunged dagger and twist: Big party foul, sonny Jim. See, while it is our responsibilities to tend to the gardens we keep, it’s also considered rude blogger ettiquette to delete and revise without notification things that have been written and linked to. ‘Coz when I send my peeps over, they won’t see what I’m talking about and that would embarass me. So for the benefit of all my twenty or so readers, here’s the screenshot of both my pingback and daddy-Joe’s spanking.
October 17 2006, 21:59 | Filed under: Politics | No Comments |

The sunset as seen from Preston, MD
Around the end of July my friend and I went to visit yet another friend who lives in Preston, MD. If there were any mountains in the area one could accurately call the area “the boonies,” but in a less literal sense, sure: it was the boonies over there. The beautful thing about a region like the Eastern Shore of Maryland is that it’s far detached from both suburban and urban sprawl: there my Verizon cellular service didn’t amount to shit, we’re talking miles to the next convenience store and while the homes from a front view were still close by—this isn’t Smallville, Kansas—there was plenty of land from behind to appreciate.
The best part about the Eastern Shore’s topography is its flatness. I was blessed with one of the best sunsets I have ever witnessed in years, which I share with you today. I don’t get sunsets like this where I live: too many gentle hills that put trees far above the horizon. This sight is uncommon for me; one day I would like to live where I can enjoy a view like this almost everyday.
(Give this photo some flickr love by visiting its flickr page. Yes. Pad my pageviews on flickr. I’m bad like that.)
October 11 2006, 22:32 | Filed under: Living fine,Photography | 2 Comments |
I initally named my new design as “Moonlit Beach,” which, while appropriate on a descriptive level, seems to be too simplistic for a name.
I needed a new background for the photos that I plan to more often showcase on this site. Comments are, as always, welcome.
October 10 2006, 20:48 | Filed under: CSS and Design | 4 Comments |
At the suggestion of Meryl, I checked out the first two episodes of NBC’s Heroes.
In the simplest words possible: Oh, my Lord. I’m taking a shine to Ali Larter’s character, Niki, with the Evil Twin Guardian Devil watching over her, and dear me, is that Milo Ventimiglia, teen trouble from Gilmore Girls playing the Amazing Flying Peter Petrelli? I barely recognized him in his role.
Is this going the be show that unseats Battlestar Galactica as the best science-fiction series? I would say that if it doesn’t beat BSG it will come close; having set the stage for at least half of a season—if not for all of the first—I could see immediately where the show can go. This show won’t be anywhere it is by the second episode without the immense failure of last year’s sci-fi attempt by NBC, Suface. It borrows more than a few pages from that show, from the air of mystery that pervaded the exposition, to the “powers that be” that are investigating these unknowns, even down to the comprehensive recaps from the same deep voice that told us all about the adventure of Miles, Laura and Rich.
Culturally speaking, is network-viewing America ready to deal with a show like this? While the ratings say “yes,” the strong human element that asks everyone the question, “what would you do,” would be the wave that carries the show to shore.
October 4 2006, 23:41 | Filed under: TV and Film | 2 Comments |
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