Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Buying a Car

Friday, January 19th, 2007

I just bought a new car. It’s a 2005 Kia Spectra5 with 19,000 miles. I have pretty bad credit because of some dumb decisions when I was right out of college.

With that, the credit companies feel free to rake me over the coals. It’s their perogative in the free market, I suppose.

For all the recent chatter about the consumer being empowered by the web and car buying becoming a buyer’s transaction, I still feel like I just got done filming my first movie with Jeff Stryker. What would it take to make car buying as good and easy an experience as buying a book from Amazon?

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Music Meme

Friday, December 15th, 2006

Open iTunes/iPod or Windows Media Player to answer the following.
Go to your library.
Answer, no matter how embarrassing it is.

How many songs? 20,643

Arrange by artist:
First artist: !!!
Last artist: The Zutons

Arrange by song:
First Song: ‘74-’75 - The Connells
Last Song: Zwara - Juno Reactor

Arrange by time:
Shortest Song: Flip Sting - 0:02 - Kill Bill Vol. 1 Soundtrack
Longest Song: A Long Day - 36:30 - The Polyphonic Spree - Beginning Stages Of…

Arrange by album:
First Album: ‘Frisco Mabel Joy - Mickey Newbury
Last Album: Zu & Co. - Zucchero
First song that comes up on shuffle: Twenty Flight Rock - Tiger Army
How many songs come up when you search for “sex”? 88
How many songs come up when you search for “death”? 122
How many songs come up when you search for “love”? 1,058

Arrange by play count:
Which is your most frequently played song? N/A (library just rebuilt, so no data)

Trace Adkins and Troy Gentry Are Going Down

Monday, December 4th, 2006

First, we had Troy Gentry shooting a bear in a cage. Now, Trace Adkins is responsible for at least 2 of the worst songs recorded in country music…of all time. He is now on my official list of people to pick a fight with in Nashville. Sure, both of them would probably kick my ass, but I’ll take a beating if it meant they couldn’t play a guitar for even one day.

Terrible Song #1

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBKFF6WrVpY]

Second, Maybe Worse Song #2

[youtube=http://youtube.com/watch?v=1KUzFGMLMC8]

How can anyone who has a remote understanding of music stand to listen to this?

My First JPG Magazine Submission

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006

I submitted my first image to JPG magazine today. It’s for the “Embrace the Blur” theme. If you aren’t familiar with JPG magazine, you should check it out. It’s a great combination of web content and print magazine.

Lights of London

This is one I submitted in the “Tourist” theme.

The Corner Market

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Our Democracy is At Risk

Friday, November 3rd, 2006

I just watched one of the most powerful documentaries I have ever seen. HBO’s Hacking Democracy details Bev Harris’s attempts to expose the problems with electronic voting machines. It shows how the machines, the software, the procedures, and the business involved with the entire electronic voting process are a gaping hole in our democracy.

Votes are not only not being counted, but are being stolen and discarded. So, not only might the vote you place be ignored, but it may very well be switched and used against you.

This documentary is extremely timely and is not partisan to one party or the other. I HIGHLY recommend you seek it out wherever you can. The future of our country is at stake in a way unlike it has ever been before.

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Say it to Katie: Whither Afghanistan?

Saturday, September 30th, 2006


Click to Play

I was finally inspired to speak up and do a vlog. It took the idea of Steve Garfield and Jeff Jarvis to get me to ask Katie Couric and the world what we we are doing about Afghanistan. I am concerned that Afghanistan and its people are lost in our constant American, perhaps human, need to move on.

Formats available: Windows Media (.wmv), Flash Video (.flv)

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Careers and Goals

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

There’s been a tumult in my life recently. I haven’t written much about it here because it’s extremely personal, but it has distilled itself into a 30-year-old’s search for meaning. Yeah, that cheesy moment where you realize the dreams of your youth are just that and you begin to wonder what you really want to do with your life.

For me, it’s involved a lot of job searching, which personally, is soul-searching. I am willing to move just about anywhere for the right job. One problem I have is that my interests are so varied that a lot of occupations interest me. As a web developer by trade, an educator by heart, and a writer by passion, I find a lot of positive aspects in almost any given position.

Just now, I was looking at ESPN and as someone who loves college football, I thought to myself, “self, that would be a cool place to work.” The trouble or the beauty, depending on your perspective, is that I don’t own a house, don’t have kids, don’t have family where I live, so there are few ties to hold me down. Only the interest and well-being of my wife are at stake. It’s a conundrum with which I find myself wrestling daily.

I wonder why I can’t just be one of those people who goes to the factory every day, does his eight hours of borking widgets and comes home.

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Working at Google

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

Does really, really wanting it count? I hope so, because I applied for a job at Google today. They have some Software Engineer openings in their Atlanta office. I know that my technical skills probably aren’t up to snuff, but I may have some other abilities that interest them.

I’m hoping that my writing ability (about which some of you may be wryly smirking) might prove to be something they find interesting. Combine that with my self-taught technical skill and I might be the perfect person for them to bring in and mold just the way they want.

Then again, I may never hear from them. I’ll certainly post here if something should happen.

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A Plan to Destroy America

Saturday, July 15th, 2006

This deserves reprinting. It’s a speech written by former governor of Colorado Richard D. Lamm. According to snopes.com, the author of the book Mexifornia is misidentified by Lamm and should be Victor Davis Hanson.

I Have a Plan to Destroy America
Richard D. Lamm

I have a secret plan to destroy America. If you believe, as many do, that America is too smug, too white bread, too self-satisfied, too rich, lets destroy America. It is not that hard to do. History shows that nations are more fragile than their citizens think. No nation in history has survived the ravages of time. Arnold Toynbee observed that all great civilizations rise and they all fall, and that “an autopsy of history would show that all great nations commit suicide.” here is my plan:

I. We must first make America a bilingual-bicultural country. History shows, in my opinion, that no nation can survive the tension, conflict, and antagonism of two competing languages and cultures. It is a blessing for an individual to be bilingual; it is a curse for a society to be bilingual. One scholar, Seymour Martin Lipset, put it this way:
The histories of bilingual and bicultural societies that do not assimilate are histories of turmoil, tension, and tragedy. Canada, Belgium, Malaysia, Lebanon-all face crises of national existence in which minorities press for autonomy, if not independence. Pakistan and Cyprus have divided. Nigeria suppressed an ethnic rebellion. France faces difficulties with its Basques, Bretons, and Corsicans.
II. I would then invent “multiculturalism” and encourage immigrants to maintain their own culture. I would make it an article of belief that all cultures are equal: that there are no cultural differences that are important. I would declare it an article of faith that the black and Hispanic dropout rate is only due to prejudice and discrimination by the majority. Every other explanation is out-of-bounds.

III. We can make the United States a “Hispanic Quebec” without much effort. The key is to celebrate diversity rather than unity. As Benjamin Schwarz said in the Atlantic Monthly recently:
…the apparent success of our own multiethnic and multicultural experiment might have been achieved not by tolerance but by hegemony. Without the dominance that once dictated ethnocentrically, and what it meant to be an American, we are left with only tolerance and pluralism to hold us together.
I would encourage all immigrants to keep their own language and culture. I would replace the melting pot metaphor with a salad bowl metaphor. It is important to insure that we have various cultural sub-groups living in America reinforcing their differences rather than Americans, emphasizing their similarities.

IV. Having done all this, I would make our fastest growing demographic group the least educated - I would add a second underclass, unassimilated, undereducated, and antagonistic to our population. I would have this second underclass have a 50% drop out rate from school.

V. I would then get the big foundations and big business to give these efforts lots of money. I would invest in ethnic identity, and I would establish the cult of victimology. I would get all minorities to think their lack of success was all the fault of the majority - I would start a grievance industry blaming all minority failure on the majority population.

VI. I would establish dual citizenship and promote divided loyalties. I would “celebrate diversity.” “Diversity” is a wonderfully seductive word. It stresses differences rather than commonalities. Diverse people worldwide are mostly engaged in hating each other-that is, when they are not killing each other. A diverse,” peaceful, or stable society is against most historical precedent. People undervalue the unity it takes to keep a nation together, and we can take advantage of this myopia. Look at the ancient Greeks. Dorf’s World History tells us:
The Greeks believed that they belonged to the same race; they possessed a common language and literature; and they worshiped the same gods. All Greece took part in the Olympic Games in honor of Zeus and all Greeks venerated the shrine of Apollo at Delphi. A common enemy, Persia, threatened their liberty. Yet, all of these bonds together were not strong enough to overcome two factors . . . (local patriotism and geographical conditions that nurtured political divisions . . .)
If we can put the emphasis on the “pluribus,” instead of the “unum,” we can balkanize America as surely as Kosovo.

VII. Then i would place all these subjects off limits - make it taboo to talk about. I would find a word similar to “heretic” in the 16th century - that stopped discussion and paralyzed thinking. Words like “racist”, “xenophobe” that halts argument and conversation.

Having made America a bilingual-bicultural country, having established multiculturalism, having the large foundations fund the doctrine of “victimology”, I would next make it impossible to enforce our immigration laws. I would develop a mantra - “that because immigration has been good for America, it must always be good.” I would make every individual immigrant sympatric and ignore the cumulative impact.

VIII. Lastly, I would censor Victor Hanson Davis’s book Mexifornia — this book is dangerous — it exposes my plan to destroy America. So please, please — if you feel that America deserves to be destroyed — please, please — don’t buy this book! This guy is on to my plan.
“The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum.” — Noam Chomsky, American linguist and us media and foreign policy critic.

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3D Logic Puzzle

Wednesday, June 28th, 2006

A nice puzzle which asks you to connect colored blocks around a 3D cube. It looks like a Rubik’s Cube but works differently. 30 levels of challenge. It uses a cookie to save your progress if you click the Exit link.

This will waste a good hour or so of your time. I got stuck on level 16 and took a break. The other levels were pretty easy for me.

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