July, 2010


21
Jul 10

My cardboard kingdom

Boxes, we have them.

“The irony is that for years the collection was just left in cardboard boxes. It’s only when they rather conscientiously dusted it off and launched this rather impressive exhibition that the whole issue has resurfaced again.”

I spent another afternoon in the garage today, cleaning and straightening and trying to tell myself that it wasn’t in vain, that I wasn’t wasting my time. I’ve lately become very interested in time. In another day or two, I figure, I’ll do something about it.

That’s the afternoon scene in the living room, above. We live in and around cardboard just now, and will for another week or so. On the one hand I’m glad we’ve started the packing process so early. Things have a tendency to creep up on you. Something happens that slows you down. It is good to be prepared. On the other hand, I’ll be sick of seeing cardboard by the time the big day rolls around.

Anyway. In the garage I’ve found a few interesting things. I have  one more box of old paperwork to go through, hopefully it can all be shredded, burned by a blast furnace and then reduced to its chemical components by an exciting new enzymatic process I discovered on late night television. Before that happens, though, I must go through every scrap of paper to determine the likelihood of needing a power bill from 2001. (Not likely.)

But still, you never know what exciting information might be in that bill. Some future generation might gawk in awe and wonder at power consumption rates from the turn of the century. “And grok that wacky font, space cowboy!” Because this is how future generations will talk about the things that have been resting in my storage system for all those years.

But then you think about the things they won’t understand, or, worse, even care about.  I found a paper from one of the classes from my master’s degree. It was titled “Campaign Homophily: Earning a Voter’s Perception of Similarity.” I just Googled an old paper I wrote, the height of vanity. Happily no one else has yet to use that eye-catching, page-turning title.

I don’t remember much about writing that particular paper — it has been about five years, or a lifetime, whichever comes first. I also discovered a little slip of paper from elementary school, this one I vaguely recall. It was a day when football players from Alabama visited our school to talk about studying hard, saying no to drugs and making good grades. I got all of their autographs.

As football players go it was a good group, Derrick Thomas and Keith McCants were the biggest stars, a murder’s row of defenders no one wanted to face. Thomas became a terror in the NFL, of course, died far too young and was posthumously inducted into the football Hall of Fame last year. McCants’ presence is now painfully ironic. He’s been arrested on five drug-related charges in the last two years. Another guy, Trent Patterson, is working as an athletic trainer near his home in Syracuse and was featured on The Biggest Loser two years ago. Two of the other signatures are from common names, so Google only lets us guess where they are today.

I’ve never given away a Hall of Famer’s autograph before, but an acquaintance claimed it for scrapbooking purposes, so I’ll stick it in an envelope and send a 20-year-old scrap of paper to someone who will glue it into a book. And then, someone in her family will stumble across it in 40 years and wonder why it has been in a cardboard box all this long.

The circle of life continues. I should continue more of it to donations or the garbage, but you just never know.

That quote? It is from British explorer Hugh Thomson, discussing early-20th-century Yale expeditions to Machu Picchu. Do you know how few worthwhile quotes on cardboard there are?


20
Jul 10

Garage, Day Two

More cleaning, whittled the garage chore down to one box. Brian and Elizabeth came over as I finished up. Elizabeth retreated to the air conditioning while Brian played with my phone as I finished the last box of the day.

I mean he could have helped.

Now there’s just one big pile of papers to pour through. Should they be saved? Should they be shredded? Can they be thrown away? That’s the box I’m dreading.

Brian did help. He set up a few things on my iPhone. He downloaded a flashlight app — which I’ve yet to figure out — reworked my Email set up and synchronized my calendars. I firmly believe you should find a guy who’s better with technical things than you are, flatter him, give him the occasional meal and volunteer to chauffeur him around if he needs a driver. It pays off.

They had dinner with us tonight. The girls watched the first two Eclipse movies and — because I’ve watched them, and Brian took my advice not to — he and I visited the dollar theater.

We watched Iron Man 2. It was good. Action, explosions, comedy. I think I’m spoiled by the latest iterations of Batman, though. There almost seem to be too many jokes here, but that’s Iron Man and a wry Robert Downey. Meanwhile, like Samuel L. Jackson’s role? He’s going to do it eight more times.

One of those will, of course, be in the 2012 Avengers, Many a comic book fan will be happy about that. Given the absence of subtly with which they discussed it in Iron Man it will be beyond ridiculous how much publicity and interest that film could stir.

We also watched A-Team which was, honestly, a lot better than I expected it to be. I haven’t checked yet, but they might have set a record for explosions per reel (non-John Woo division). Murdock was great, Quinton Jackson was a serviceable Baracus — though Mr. T could still play the role. Face was fine. I couldn’t get based Liam Neeson, but I always have that problem with him. It seems that the theme here is that planning is hard. Hannibal thinks, but only because no one else can, and he’s a bit troubled to have to make the effort. Ultimately the moral to the story, aimed at 10-year-old boys, is to understand the virtues of contingency planning. That’s a good lesson for kids to have.

I am not troubled by the film and how it treated the original because I have no illusions about what the show was.  Everything held together fairly well until the bad guy delivered an RPG through a barge. That was just a bit much. But otherwise, it was a reasonable summer flick. Surely worth the dollar for the ticket.

For both movies, watch through the end of the credits. We caught them because we were trying to help people find things on the floor of the theater. I still can’t use that flashlight app.

Even more pressing: the girls are going to watch the third Eclipse movie this weekend. I need to find something to do as an excuse to avoid it. Any ideas?


19
Jul 10

Now appearing in the garage

Finally made it into the garage project. I said last August I’d do this. I’ve intended to do it from time to time in between. To be fair, other things have happened along the way. I meant to do it last week, but didn’t feel well. (I’m getting better. Now I merely sound stuffy and can’t breathe as much as I like. I like to breathe.)

So I made it into the garage, which has made a nice storage space. Of course it was 95 degrees out as I did this. The box fan wasn’t really getting the job done.

But I threw away three big garbage bags and a box full of things. I donated an entire car full of items to the Salvation Army. I sweated a lot. There are about four more boxes to go through, but this was a day of progress. Needed one of those.

In an unrelated adventure, I managed to explode the garbage bax with kitty litter in it. I felt like a thief when I was sweeping up the trail, covering my tracks as it were. I felt like an idiot when I realized I leaked some of it into the trunk of my car. Something else to clean up.

In journalism news the spin you see coming out of this story will require a complete and utter divorce from reality and credulity:

(V)isits to The Times of London and The Sunday Times’ Websites have dropped by 66% since parent company News International put those sites behind paywalls on July 2.

Information, it seems, wants to be free.  So now we’ll join former boss Jeff Jarvis, mid-explanation:

But that is based on the assumption that content is a consumable, a scarcity that drains the more it is read. Of course, it isn’t. Content is, instead, a magnet that can create relationships of value; whether that happens is up to the creator of the content and the quality of service and relevance is gives. That, dare I repeat it, is the basis of the link economy.

But note the verb that started off the paragraph above: should. Readers who read more should pay more. This is the product of journalism’s sense of entitlement.

Jarvis concluded, in this January post, that the “risks (of paywalls) are great and grave.” Why? The change, Jarvis answers:

(W)ill have me make a new economic decision every time I want to read a story: Is this unique content I will get only here (there is a good deal of that) or is this commodity information I can get elsewhere (BBC, Reuters, Washington Post, Politico, TechCrunch…). The Times then restricts our relationship and it is in that relationship that it has to find value.

Publishers, if they wanted to make money online, missed the window by a little more than a decade. There’s a hope that apps will flip the model back in their favor, but there also be someone in the app stores (or whatever surpasses them) willing to spread news or sports or entertainment for free?

Jarvis talks about that, too. Peter-Paul Koch touches on the economics.

My thoughts and research are typically more geared to the journalism side rather than the business aspects, but these are important considerations throughout the industry. I’ll let you know when I have all of the answers.

Maybe the spies know. Here’s Wired’s read on the much anticipated Washington Post spy database collection:

It includes a searchable database cataloging what an estimated 854,000 employees and legions of contractors are apparently up to. Users can now to see just how much money these government agencies are spending and where those top secret contractors are located.

Check out the Post’s nine-page list of agencies and contractors involved in air and satellite observations, for instance. No wonder it scares the crap out of official Washington: It’s bound to provoke all sorts of questions — both from taxpayers wondering where their money goes and from U.S. adversaries looking to penetrate America’s spy complex.

But this piece is about much more than dollars.

Go read it over there. I’ve talked about spies enough for one day already.

Hope you had a great, kitty-litter free, Monday today and a great Tuesday waiting for you!


18
Jul 10

AT&T Day (The iPhone is lovely)

Today was AT&T day. Most readers are already sympathetic. The rest nod knowingly.

Oh, but you do not know.

So The Yankee, who is wonderful and kind and awesome, decided to get me an iPhone. They arrived yesterday, we visited the Apple store today.

Only, and this will surprise you, what we were told last week by one talented and helpful AT&T phone representative was something entirely different from what we discovered today. Seems I’m eligible for an upgrade, but she’s not. So while The Yankee talked to AT&T, I chatted with the Apple store employees.

I learned where all the hipsters eat.

So the problem, we were told, would resolve itself if we visited an actual AT&T store. Having had that particular joyful experience in the past I had the sneaking suspicion that wouldn’t be the case, but you may as well try.

We drove down the street. We had a late lunch. The AT&T store opened, we met the manager who’s second item in the corporate protocol — and this is my favorite part — is to call an AT&T phone rep. Meanwhile, have a look at the AT&T talking points. You aren’t supposed to see this paperwork or, one presumes, the typos contained therein:

ATTFail

The manager couldn’t figure it out. So he’s going to call his boss tomorrow. We went back to the Apple store, where we found one of my former students who works there. She got my phone, set me up, extended the hold on The Yankee’s phone and we had a nice visit.

And while she didn’t get one, today, I got mine. And it is very pretty.

So far I’ve added bookmarks. I considered consolidating my laptop bookmarks and my cell phone bookmarks, but then I looked at what I have on my machine’s browser and realized I don’t need any of those things on my phone. On my previous phone I used Opera, so I had to pull bookmarks from that browser, which stores them in a proprietary file. It is called an adr file which, as you may know, stands for Opera Address Book. What you might also realize is that the good people at Opera don’t understand how acronyms work.

I liked the Opera browser on my Q, which is Windows based, and will be only a little sad to see it go. Safari on the iPhone works very well, at least off of the home WiFi network. I looked for a Firefox app in the store, but there’s only a non-browser browser available, which seems a bit too complicated for me at this point.

So instead, after I added all of my bookmarks. Somewhere I found directions to sync this through iTunes, but that platform and I don’t get along very well yet. So I did it the old fashioned way. I built a page with all the links I need — library search pages, the local Craigslist, school schedules, football schedules, cafeteria menus, E-bay, Digg, XM schedules, movie theaters and airline site — and then uploaded it to my server. Then I clicked each link and added them manually, all neatly categorized and, unfortunately, not alphabetized. One needs these things to be neatly organized, but that isn’t happening. Let’s see what Google has to say about that.

Oh, click, hold, drag. With a little effort — I accidentally deleted one link and moved some a bit too far, so link juggling was required — I now have a neatly organized bookmark list.

Which allows me to move on to applications. Facebook, Twitter, Boxcar, Grocery IQ, RedLaser, Dictionary, Wikipanion and a level (by Stanley) all made it on the phone for free.

So, if you need me, I’ll be able to share details on my social sites about the UPC codes of coupons for synonyms found on Wikipedia and, also, updates on whether they are crooked.

While I did all of this The Yankee went back to the AT&T store, this time armed with paperwork, to demonstrate her upgrade eligibility. We were comparing notes: she’s been with AT&T for the better part of a decade and had maybe three phones, I’ve been with AT&T before it was AT&T, (before it was Cingular, back when it was Bellsouth) for 15 years. I’ve never had a significant or unreasonable problem with the  service in all of that time. Since they turned into AT&T in 2007 I, like many people, have found the human element of the company to be more than lacking.

But the iPhone is fancy. And now I must figure out how to change the background. I have a picture on my site I thought I’d use, but you can’t save it directly from the server on the iPhone. I successfully made a shortcut to the URL, but that does not a background make. So I turn to Google again, which tells me I must 1.) Save the picture 2.) Put it in iTunes 3.) Sync iTunes and my iPhone 4.) Be frustrated with that for a while 5.) On the sixth attempt figure it out and 6.) Realize I put the confounded picture in the wrong place.

But I finally I made it work. Looks nice, too:

The Yankee in Savannah

Took that on our first trip to Savannah five years ago. We got married there, not far from that spot, actually, last year.

The black and white looks striking as the phone background — and the screen on the iPhone is beautiful. Give it a try.


17
Jul 10

Sickly Saturday

So this has become a weird little setback. As the day has worn on I’ve become convinced this is a sinus thing. That’s not unusual. The summertime arrival is unusual. That it manifested as fatigue for two days prior to the sinus part is unusual. But the “I can’t breathe” part started tonight. And the medicine started this evening too.

This is progress, actually. At least I know what to medicate against. The last several days of weary fatigue have been frustrating. Oh, sure, sometimes I have energy. And then, later, I’ll need to sit down, like I’ve done something strenuous.

I haven’t done anything especially strenuous in the last few days.

American Express is trying a new appeal: Buy something, please!

Only 300 people or so have watched that video, because it is a television commercial for a credit card company. In the description beneath the video American Express links to a site where you can “find out what other owners are doing to run their businesses better.” The answer seems to be “not buying anything on credit.”

Amex has lost a third of their stock value since last July. Not to worry, credit card companies are too plastic to fail.

Check out these pictures. This is from the film crew that taped our skating adventure on Thursday. They’re traveling across the country over a 40 day shoot to make a documentary on autism:

If there ever was a story about the heart of America, it’s found in families and individuals affected by autism.

Like so many people say about America, they say these folks have their best days behind them. You can hear those in authority saying that their situation is hopeless and to redefine what is “normal.” Many parents see a system that is corrupt or inept and lose hope while their support systems crumble and they’re forced to go it alone. Yet, some decide to rise above the fray. What drives them? Who are these people? How are they changing their communities?

Recorded in the original languages of it’s citizens, the film weaves a broad net across the spectrum of American life in all its faiths, disparities, colors, and cultures. It’s a story about the best days still lying ahead for our nation, the families, and the People who give America it’s heart.

Now read that part about the skating again, “It was great to see so many kids coming out of their shells with the skateboarding. Some kids even said some of their first words on boards.”

They were taping kids being taught by professional skaters, who were giving their free time on a hot, muggy day patiently pushing kids around the local skate park. It was a great scene. And since we’re in the background of the stills, maybe we’ll make the background of the documentary, too.

Wendy came by this evening for burritos. That was about the extent of my exertion today. One day, soon, I’ll recover. The Yankee already thinks I’m goldbricking.