photo


8
Feb 14

Just a day of Olympics

This won’t take long. We sat on the sofa and watched television all day. The Yankee loves the Olympics, she does a lot of her research on the topic. And it was nice to just sit down for a while.

Here are a few things to read, though, on your lovely Saturday. Deadspin has a bit on NBC’s selective gatekeeping:

Russia’s anti-gay laws have been a major focus in the lead-up to the Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, and during his address at today’s opening ceremony IOC president Thomas Bach made a strong statement against “any form of discrimination” and in favor of tolerance. Viewers worldwide heard the statement; NBC viewers in the U.S. did not, because the network edited it out.

[…]

This is the second time in two years that NBC has made at least one ill-advised edit from its tape-delayed Olympic opening ceremony broadcast.

They’ve got both versions of the speech, if you are so inclined. NBC, since you want to be well-advised before jumping to your conclusion, says the edits are about programming run time.

Why every child should learn to code:

Anyone can learn to code. In a few hours you can pick up the basic skills and in a few weeks you will be able to build useful applications and websites.

In the last few years, the UK has finally woken up to the importance of coding. Organisations like Young Rewired State, Code Club and Code Academy have led the way, helping young people learn these key skills.

Why is it so vital that we teach our children to code? We are already living in a world dominated by software. Your telephone calls go over software-controlled networks; your television is delivered over the internet; people don’t buy maps anymore, they use the web; we all shop online. The next generation’s world will be even more online and digital. Soon, your house will be controlled with software, some of your medical care will be delivered over the web and your car may even drive itself.

Software is becoming a critical layer of all our lives. It is the language of our world. In the future, not knowing the language of computers will be as challenging as being illiterate or innumerate are today.

I bought new goggles tonight. We have one of those giant sporting goods stores about three miles from home and they stay open late. They had exactly one end cap, hidden at the back of the store, with swimming gear.

I picked up these:

goggles

They are comfortable. They feel like a mask, more than goggles, which will always be a win to me. Tomorrow I’ll give them a try. I’m sure none of the Olympic swimmers and national champions and All Americans we see from time to time would be caught wearing these. And I might get laughed at because these probably aren’t terribly hydrodynamic, but that’s the least of my worries in the water.

And, finally:


7
Feb 14

Check your egg rolls for bugs and the store owner for guns

We’re at Walmart. There are two checkout lines open. And each line has about 20 people in it. One of the two lines is for the Express lane, which is more a state of mind than an indicator of progress or even a goal to which anyone abscribed. Such is your lot in life at Walmart. I’d say late at night, but increasingly, this seems to be the case no matter the time of day you’re there.

So The Yankee goes to the other line, figuring one of us will have to move eventually, because Disney World doesn’t stay stagnant forever, and the winner can call the other person halfway across the store to the other line. By now I’ve made friends with the young couple in front of us. The Yankee’s line starts to move. She waves me over. Our new buddies come to. The girl says to the boy, “They have to be first … ” and he says of course.

About this time two other families slink into that line. And my new friend says “Actually, we’ll be behind them.”

And his date, a charming young woman, says “No we won’t, we’re going in right after him.”

To which I said, “Yep.” So I fell in line behind my wife. This couple fell in line behind me and four people with tons of stuff had to wait because, By Walton, we’d all been there for an interminable amount of time.

Maybe the place was in shock about the massacre in the Valentine’s Day part of the store:

animals

I broke my swimming goggles today. I’m always struggling with them in one way another, fighting the creeping water or exasperated at the slowly accumulating fog. Even if I wanted to swim non-stop I’d be stopped just so I can see. I’m forever closing one eye or both and just guessing. So, somewhere in a bad swim today, I pulled up and pulled on the straps, and broke them.

The nicest thing about the googles was that there was plenty of strap, because this is the kind that allows for a strip of the rubber to go around the bottom and the top of the back of your head. I spent a long time trying to reconfigure them today, finally got it to work, and found that it was no better.

Oh well. It was a lousy swim anyway, even by my poor standards.

This afternoon I had a nice meeting with industrial designer Chris Arnold. We are trying to tease out a few interesting things to explore in the journalism world. This conversation goes on and on, which means there is a need to refine some ideas. But Chris is a long-time Twitter friend, and it is always nice to get to spend more than few moments in passing with thoughtful people.

We watched the live-on-tape Opening Ceremonies with friends at a party. Some people dressed up as their favored nations. I think we all told each other we were Canadians. One woman wore a ushanka, with the standard Soviet pin, and she did so without irony. There were artists there, so they were thrilled with the constructivism, which was neat to see. One of the art historians there was a woman at the party from Belarus, and she got to hear her national anthem and gave us some context for some things.

I promised myself I’d limit the number of things I said about the Opening Ceremonies, so I’ve limited it to the above and just a few tweets:

The two overly annoying phrases that NBC developed for their embarrassing coverage: “This is highly idealized” and “pivotal experiment.” I’m not sure whether they were talking about the Soviet era or themselves.

Things to read … because this part of the daily post is always pivotal, even when it is quick.

You can admit it, you can’t wait until these become ubiquitous: Cruise Ship’s 80-Inch ‘Virtual Balconies’ Livestream the High Seas

The kindness of strangers always awes us: Snow can’t stop the Southeast’s largest kidney transplant chain at UAB

This is a regrettable portmanteau, but a fine read: Rise of the Platishers

A record month here, the coldest in a generation: The Alabama Climate Report

The Snowden era of journalism:

Snowden has prompted a free-for-all among journalists itching to tell America’s surveillance secrets, an important generational shift as the nation faces years of growing debate about privacy in an increasingly wired world. The litany of stories come not just from the handful of reporters with access to the former NSA contractor’s treasure-trove of documents but also from competitors eagerly searching for scoops to move the dial on what has become one of the biggest stories of the decade.

“For years … it was like the number of articles to come out on NSA you could count on the fingers on one hand,” said James Bamford, who has written four books on government surveillance. “Now it’s almost impossible to keep up.”

“What we’ve seen with the Snowden revelations is the impact that putting documents out there really has,” added Siobhan Gorman, a national security reporter for The Wall Street Journal, during a recent panel discussion hosted by Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism and the Reporter’s Committee for Freedom of the Press.

I’ve been thinking about this for a while. For example: You can have a robot vacuuming your floor, not unlike the Jetsons. That’s existed for some time now. But no one really wanted a Roomba until you saw it as DJ Roomba on Parks and Recreation. Anyway: Technology? We haven’t seen anything yet.

Headline of the day: Birmingham restaurant owner accused of shooting at customer who complained of bug in egg roll.

Let’s not eat there.


5
Feb 14

Field tripping

I took a class on a field trip today. This is the class that takes three or four each term, which is one of my favorite classes, mostly, I think, because of the field trips.

So here we are in the conference room at Intermark Group in downtown Birmingham, where the students learned a bit about the day in a life of PR practitioners, advertising reps and creatives.

Intermark

They give us a quick walking tour, offices, cubicles, a server room, some of their edit bays — they have a full service production studio in their building — and the famous camper:

Intermark

They bought it online, restored it, had it installed and now all of their clients try to have their meetings in there. One of the dozens of neat touches you’ll find in a shop full of out-of-the-box thinkers.

Things to read … because sometimes you have to stay in your box.

Here are three quick ones to frighten you:

Retailers warn Congress that more cyberattacks are looming

Bankers want retailers to bear the costs of data breaches

Cyberattacks are on the rise. And health-care data is the biggest target

Who wants to go back to stamps and checks?

What can make audio go viral? NPR experiments with building earworms for social media:

So why doesn’t audio go viral? It’s not because shareable audio doesn’t exist — it does. If you’re an audio listener, you’ve probably heard something amazing, surprising, or funny that you really wanted to share. But in many cases, there are boundaries that prevent shareable audio clips from spreading.

When we started experimenting around audio and social, we identified three hurdles.

It is a shame, really, because audio can work as such a focusing agent, or an atmospheric agent, or a telling agent. There’s something inherently compelling about really good audio — recognizing and capturing it is an art unto itself — but if you’re discussing the nebulous “go viral” as a goal then you are talking about online. And, usually, if you can record audio you can record video. And, of course, in video sometimes the audio is lowered, or removed, or just overwhelmed by what the eyeballs see.

Take note of this, it will be huge. Amazon Lays Foundation for Giant Video Advertising Business:

Amazon is shedding a little more light on where it hopes to take its ad business. It is announcing that it has inked a deal with video ad company FreeWheel to provide the technology for Amazon to build out its video advertising business.

FreeWheel is essentially responsible for putting the right video ads in front of the right Amazon customers.

In short: Get ready for a lot more video ads on Amazon video content.

Get ready to buy in pre-roll, buying from more directions in Kindle and buying, buying, buying everywhere.

Still don’t think your packages are being delivered by drones, despite 60 Minutes’ breathless efforts.

The first thing you have to know about this one is that the headline and the story don’t play well together. The US will build regional ‘hubs’ to combat the impacts of climate change

The Obama administration is pushing ahead with its vow to mitigate the effects of climate change. Today, the US government announced plans to create seven “climate hubs” that will offer information and resources to communities in rural regions across the country.

Specific details on the hubs are slim for now, but each one will be tailored to a specific region’s climate-related challenges — such as water shortages, forest fires, pests, or floods. The hubs, which will be overseen by the US Department of Agriculture, are largely zeroing in on farming and ranching. In a statement, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack noted that the hubs will help ensure that “agricultural leaders have the modern technologies and tools they need to adapt and succeed in the face of a changing climate.”

The first question I have: Why not just use the existing Extension infrastructure? They are in place. They have a wide array of experts. They are already networked into the local farming and ranching communities and so on. The answer to that question would be telling.

Just enjoy the comments. NBC News’ Richard Engel: My Computers, Cellphone Were Hacked ‘Almost Immediately’ In Sochi. Also, there are plenty of things about this that don’t make sense yet, but do enjoy the comments.

Two posts on the multimedia blog today:

I did not know half of these Google Doc tips

GoPro moves you, moves themselves

And I think that will be enough for a cold Wednesday. Here’s to a warm weekend coming your way.


30
Jan 14

The little thaw

It wasn’t a big freeze, so the thaw couldn’t be that big either. You don’t need a big freeze to cause big problems, though. So, as I assured my grandmother, I was staying put. I had no need to be anywhere until things got warm and dry. Everything dried up yesterday. We crossed back over above freezing today.

At lunch, the outside world was starting to look like this again:

tree

There were four squirrels wrestling and playing and fighting in that tree. You can see a few of them in that shot if you look long enough.

I stuck around the office until just after 4 p.m. The roads were dry. The first intersection on my way to the interstate, a crossing of two four lane roads that had apparently looked like a war zone, was fine.

When I got to the interstate I found all of the local media setting up on the overpass. Tonight’s story: traffic.

satellite truck

From the entrance of the interstate, to the next interchange, which is about seven miles, I counted 43 abandoned cars.

satellite truck

The thing of that is that most of that seven mile stretch includes a high wall at the median. You have no way of knowing how many cars are sitting over there, waiting for their owners, people desperate enough to walk in snow and ice two days earlier.

What a week.


29
Jan 14

Socked in

quad

Day two — The campus is closed again today. Above is the quad, as seen from the cafeteria, which is functioning on full cylinders — breakfast, lunch and dinner. They were wiped out at dinner last night, but those people are unfazed. Whatever kudos they receive will hardly be enough.

Until late today no one could get on or off campus if they wanted to. Even making the turn to campus from the road, and vice versa, is a dangerous proposition. At this point you can do it carefully, but the concern would be the condition of the roads between here and where you are trying to go. In most cases, the answer is not good.

Some enterprising students were taking the two mile icy hike from here to the Target down the street, borrowing shopping carts and pushing them back to campus. I think they were doing this so they would have a story with which to annoy their future grandchildren.

I heard a student yesterday say he’s never had a snow day. He’s from California. A young lady was ecstatic yesterday that it snowed on her birthday. There’s an older gentleman, a really sweet guy, stuck here with a serious history of heart and blood pressure problems. He told me last night he had six aspirin. We also have a nursing school, a pharmacy school here, several nurses are on call and a lot of faculty and staff. He was still in fine spirits and in fine shape when I saw him this afternoon. He was about to go home.

A lot of people are still trying to get there. At Samford, the university, like many places, is on day two of housing people who just happened to be in the area. There is a huge Facebook group with the aim of the entire region trying to help stranded motorists. Some of the stories are disconcerting: seriously ill people without their medication, people without jackets, people with no gas and dead phones, people who hadn’t eaten in 12 or more hours, people walking home for miles and plenty of “Come get me!” pleas.

There are some truly scary stories. Five are dead and at least 23 injured in the region. There are bad car accidents, labor pains on the side of the road and missing people. More than 11,000 students had to spend the night in their schools — where teachers were troopers. People slept last night in drug stores and in the cars and in hotel lobbies, strangers and wherever they could get. One good samaritan disappeared for hours. They found him badly hurt, but alive, in a snowy ravine. Seems he is diabetic and they think he may have become disoriented, fell in and hurt himself. Now he’s in critical condition.

Clearly, this is serious. A fair amount of it is unavoidable, so there will be municipal finger pointing and audiences immediately and cruelly blamed the meteorologists. Quite a few people’s experiences would have at least been less uncomfortable if only they’d prepared for the eventuality. Suggesting this is somehow verboten, but more of us would do well to realize our own personal responsibility.

Happily, there are great stories of neighbors helping neighbors, and strangers helping strangers. We pat ourselves on the back when we hear those stories. Like this one, so far the best story of the year: Doctor walks six miles in snow to perform life-saving brain surgery. The simpler things — we can’t all be brain surgeons, the good spirited, good natured, decent, neighborly, lend a hand thing happens every time something bad happens, of course. We’re all better for it, of course. It probably happens faster with the current communication infrastructure. Like so many other things, social media has changed what we can do.

While everything in the metro is a mess, Samford has been fortunate. Hard work and good cheer have won the day. There will be a lot of pats on the back and thank yous to share. The people working here are incredible. I hope the students notice that, too.

We have power and food and hot water and heat and life is good. Everyone is a little more tired than they were yesterday, but there are plenty of smiles. It is a special place even on fine spring days, but give the people here a small obstacle and their quality shows even brighter.

Oh, you’re here for the pictures? Fair enough. Here are a few from last night, when the hills on campus were too icy to even walk on:

This is Hodges Chapel:

Hodges Chapel

Here’s Frank Park Samford Hall, the administration building:

Samford Hall

Across the way is the McWhorter School of Pharmacy:

McWhorter Pharmacy

The Harwell Goodwin Davis Library, and Centennial Walk:

Davis Library

The A. Hamilton Reid Chapel:

Reid Chapel

Those were last night, and these are from today. Here’s Reid Chapel again:

Reid Chapel

The frozen fountain in Ben Brown Plaza. I was standing on the ice to take this picture:

quad

I was not standing on the ice to take that picture. But these students did:

quad

quad

quad

There’s a great shot of a young lady earlier this month when the fountain was frozen solid, she gave it the perfect ice skater’s pose. I met her last night and she showed me the picture again. I’d already seen it online, declared the shot’s inherent awesomeness and she says “He’s got one better.” I’m thinking that’s not possible. Her friend pulls out his phone and he shows me a shot where they’d taken a park bench and put it on the fountain ice, and he’s sprawled out on the bench taking a nap. His shot might have been better. Sadly, and happily, the fountain isn’t freezing that much this time.

There have been at least two students and one professor skiing on the quad. Not that you need skis. But how often do you get the opportunity to do that? (The professor had her skis in her office, it seems.)

quad

Part of the Crimson staff, brainstorming story ideas. Zach, on the left, is the editor-in-chief. Clayton, in the foreground is the sports editor. Megan is a Samford alumna and last year’s features editor for the Crimson. She works just down the street at Southern Living, now, and had to walk to campus because of Snowmageddon.

Crimson

These guys are the unsung heroes on campus. He and his colleagues were working before noon on Tuesday and have scarcely stopped since then. They are why the sidewalks and the most of the campus roads are in pretty decent shape.

quad

They won’t get enough credit for it, which is a shame. But when you hear people trying to explain to snowbound students
that campus is much better off than the city at large, they are why.