My name is Jimmy
but my friends just call me
‘the hideous penguin boy.’
Tim Burton, The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories
My name is Jimmy
but my friends just call me
‘the hideous penguin boy.’
Tim Burton, The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories
Aaron is going to get himself in trouble.
Say, why doesn’t [that satirical site named for a vegetable] appear at Don’t Link To Us yet? (I don’t see a way to submit it there, which probably answers my question.) Then again, I suppose if we’ve got a tear-free
onion, a link-free one is just the next logical step.
I put Dayna Manning‘s CD back into my car player today, and was struck by how quickly her songs had become not just familiar, but comfortable, as if I’d been listening to them for years. Oddly, most of the (few) other groups I’ve had that experience with have been ones I’ve only discovered recently: Sirens, The Great Uncles of the Revolution, and the exception that continues to prove every rule, Lenni Jabour and The Third Floor.
I’ve also decided that when it comes to recent music, objective genres such as jazz, rock, folk, country, etc. mean very little. The closest general term I can come up with is fusion
, which has its own semantics in the biz. Really, there are only two very subjective categories that matter, and they’re ones that can’t be easily defined: stuff I like and stuff I don’t.
I don’t particularly like Macs (remnants of my Amiga days, mostly), but this retro hack could get me to switch just out of sheer geekitude. [via Dive Into Mark]
Also from Mark’s entry is Clay Risen’s editorial on branding. I think life insurance company Clarica (formerly The Mutual Group) beats any of his examples–not only did they adopt a meaningless name, they flaunt it with their Clarity
ads, where their insurance agents explain seemingly incomprehensible things like hoedown calls, opera, and popular music. I think I need one of those brilliant minds to explain to me just how Clarica
means insurance… the name sounds like a brand of contact lenses.
I’m looking for an RSS aggregator.
I’ve been using HotSheet recently, until I discovered it can’t handle Dive Into Mark‘s RSS 2.0 feed. (There’s no report when a feed fails to load–why have a log file if you’re not going to log to it?–so it took quite a while to determine where the problem lay.) Peerkat can’t handle 2.0 either; at least it reports the number of “bad” feeds, but it doesn’t give a reason–it’s wrong anyway, because if there’s any feed that’s going to be valid, it’s Mark’s. (I’ve also decided, based on the debugging experience I had with it, that I hate reading Python code.)
Amphetadesk does nice things, like conditional HTTP GET, but doesn’t do a lot of the nice things the others will, such as interleave items from different feeds, distinguish old items, limit their displayed length or allow them to be deleted. (Some of these are in the TODO list, but they’re not scheduled for a particular release. Speaking of which, there hasn’t been a release for several months now.)
Straw looks the most promising, but I haven’t upgraded to GNOME 2.0 yet so it’s out for now. Lots of Python, so again I won’t be much of a contributor. I do like that the release changelog is available in RSS (although HotSheet can’t handle RSS 0.94 either, so that feed goes into Amphetadesk too). The time to upgrade may be coming soon, and I will admit to having set a precedent–I replaced my DVD player because I couldn’t watch a certain movie.
You’re older than you’ve ever been
And now you’re even older
And now you’re even older
And now you’re even older
You’re older than you’ve ever been
And now you’re even older
And now you’re older still.
Garry Trudeau, Doonesbury
Frame 1 ZIPPER'S BUDDY What's that? ZIPPER Today's blog entry. Frame 2 ZIPPER'S BUDDY Get out--you have a web log? ZIPPER Yup. My daily take on what's going on in the world! Frame 3 ZIPPER'S BUDDY Wow... that's impressive, dude. I had no idea... Frame 4 ZIPPER'S BUDDY Wait, don't you have to have something to say? ZIPPER A common misconception.
Mom? Dad? I’m moving back home.
There’s something about baseball and AM radio that fits so well…. The world is civilized once again…at least for another six innings.