Life Poster
This is a pretty cool way to get a giant poster of a bunch of photos printed through iPhoto. I think I’m going to do this.
This is a pretty cool way to get a giant poster of a bunch of photos printed through iPhoto. I think I’m going to do this.
At the risk of making a personal-based post (oh no!), I’ve really just got to say that I feel pulled in a thousand different directions at once right now. Hence the lack of posting. That’s what happens when you have too much going on; some things get dropped. So, look forward to new stuff soon, but only if my life’s hecticness lessens a bit.
A depressingly intelligent and measured argument for why Kerry actually won, but how Bush got the crown.
I know I’ve been a little heavy on the song lyrics lately, but No Control just really stands out as pertinent here:
culture was the seed of proliferation
but it has gotten melded into an inharmonic whole
consciousness has plagued us and we can not shake it
though we think we’re in control
questions that besiege us in life
are testament of our helplessness
“there’s no vestige of a beginning,
no prospect of an end”
when we all disintegrate it will all happen again
time is so rock solid in the minds of the hoards but they can’t
explain why it should slip away
history and future are the comforts of
our curiosity but here we are
rooted in the present day
if you came to conquer you’ll be king for a day
but you too will deteriorate and quickly fade away
and believe these words you hear
when you think your path is clear
we have no control
we do not understand
you have no control
you are not in command
I want that for breakfast every day at 67, dammit.
Oh, and a good quote:
I remember Bush as a kind of a butt-boy for the smart people. This was in the late 1970s, when he was in his drunken-fool period. He couldn’t handle liquor. He knew who I was, at that time, because I had a reputation as a writer. I knew he was part of the Bush dynasty. But he was nothing, he offered nothing, and he promised nothing. He had no humour. He was insignificant in every way and consequently I didn’t pay much attention to him. But when he passed out in my bathtub,” Thompson adds, “then I noticed him. I’d been in another room, talking to the bright people. I had to have him taken away.”
…
What immediate message would the Doctor deliver, if he could address the US electorate?
“I would tell them that, if George W Bush wins again, the United States faces utter disaster. That the question facing voters is no longer whether or not George W Bush is a pathetic fascist stooge. The question is whether – Bush having already demonstrated himself to be a fascist stooge – the American people like it that way, and see that as their future.
“If this president is re-elected,” he adds, “we are facing the total death of the American Dream as I know it, and I have spent a lot of time knowing it. I would tell them that if this gang of criminals get in once more, we will be in the position of a family who have sent the Hell’s Angels written invitations to their Thanksgiving party.
“Such a decision represents a serious error of judgment.” Thompson laughs, good-naturedly. “Because certain people never leave. Consequently I would urge them…” He pauses, his voice soft, measured and utterly serious, “to vote out this baffled little creep, on November 2.”
I spent this last weekend at a cabin near Cripple Creek, Colorado, about an hour west of Colorado Springs. In the Central City/Blackhawk tradition, it’s a mining town that has been converted to a gambling one (albeit with all-too-few table games). This in and of itself is unremarkable. We were expecting a relaxing good time.
Saturday evening, we decided to head into town for dinner. My diabetic son had had a snack earlier, so we weren’t in any particular hurry to decide on which place to go, but I was under the impression we were going to go into the closer town of Florissant to get a cheap burger and a beer. I was wrong.
We instead went into Cripple Creek, found a place to park, and we proceeded to follow our hosts and fellow cabin-dwellers down the main street, through a Starbucks, down 2 flights of stairs, and into a restaurant by the name of Winfields. Two of the women we were with were quite a bit ahead of us, and by the time I reaached the bottom of the stairs, they were speaking with an older gentleman in a baseball cap with long gray hair spilling out beneath it. It was my understanding that we had been invited to dine with him and his group of 3, as they’d had a good night at the tables or slots and he felt like sharing it.
We politely declined, and I took the kids to check out the fishtank.
A few minutes later, we were sat at our table and I realized it wasn’t far from our new friends from the bottom of the stairs. Some polite words were exchanged, but I really wasn’t paying attention, what with figuring out who was sitting where, whether the kids should next to eachother, etc.
We ordered drinks, appetizers and dinner. It is at this point that I should mention that this restaurant was relatively pricey, ranging from $15 for chicken dishes with pasta to $33 for Filet Oscar. I said fuck it, I’d lose this money gambling anyway, bring me the $33 dish. My wife figured the same and ordered the Lamb Chops. Between the salad course and the entrees, one of our waitresses started placing champagne flutes in front of every adult’s place setting. We looked up, confused, and asked about why we were getting these.
“They’ve ordered you a bottle of champagne,” the waitress responds, with a slight smile and nod in the direction of our apparently new-found friends.
We were flattered, of course, and tried to decline. No dice. The husband of one of my mother’s friends decided that since we were being treated so well, that we’d return the favor and instead of a simple thank-you, we should toast him and his group for “new friends and good neighbors.” Not the kind of thing I’d normally do on my own, but I’ve only had complimentary champagne once in my life, and that was by the hotel on my wedding night when we both were under-age. I have very little experience in toasting people.
So we all stood up, walked the short distance to our benefactor’s table, and toasted them for their generosity and kindness.
“The world needs more people like you,” he said. “People need to show eachother more hospitality. This is going to make me cry,” he said.
We then exchanged some glass clinks and kind words, and returned to our table and meal. The rest of dinner was pleasant and delicious. When the checks arrived, I was a little perturbed at our portion of the check, some $120 worth. No big deal, again, I would have lost it at the tables anyway.
As I reached into my wife’s purse for our cash, the bill mysteriously disappeared from my hands. I looked up, astonished. “He’s got it. It’s taken care of,” the waitress said.
Huh?
“He has many points and comps from the casino upstairs, and he’s taking care of your bill for you.” All 6 of us were floored. What? Someone taking care of our meal? Easily a $200 bill? Sure enough, we didn’t pay a dime toward our food, only toward the tip. I asked to buy them a round of drinks. “It wouldn’t matter, he’d only get them comped anyway,” was the response.
We thanked him profusely, and starting getting engaged with a recently-arrived member of their party, a man clearly Native American and clearly very proud of his culture, sporting 2 long braids and strong Native American facial features. Upon learning that a few of the people in our group work at a school named “Cherokee Trail” in Denver, he opened up to us that he’d worked at Denver’s East High School in Native American studies and as a counselor for the NA kids there. My mother, ever the diplomat, asked him where he was from. “Santa Clara pueblo in New Mexico,” he responded. My mom replied “My sister’s husband is from Cochiti.” Which happens to be a few miles from Santa Clara. And he’s got an aunt in Cochiti. We’ve probably attended a ceremony with her.
Suffice it say, we had a long conversation and a wonderful evening. Sometimes when you’re too tired to be nice to people you don’t know, maybe it’s best to be nice anyway. You never know what might happen.
I’m totally getting this for my son, when he’s old enough to check his own levels and understand them.
GLUCOBOY is a glucose meter that can be inserted into a Nintendo GAMEBOY. The product operates independent of the video game system but downloads video game programs that are contained within its circuitry into the GAMEBOY as a reward for maintaining good blood sugar control.
I was pronounced “hot” by one of my son’s friend’s mothers today when dropping him off at school. Awesome. Mostly because I wasn’t wearing the ever-present hat. Still awesome.
So, you’ll notice that there are iTunes ads on our site now. Yeah, I know, but the thing is, I can customize them so that you don’t see the Kelly Clarkson and LL Cool J ads. So hey, if you were gonna buy that Exclusive Interpol Pre-Release Track anyway, why not do it through us? We get a shiny nickel every time you do.
Last year, Digital Lifestyles’ CEO Kent Savage got his son Cameron, 16, and seven of the boy’s friends together and polled them about how they interacted with computers and the Internet.
One brand name that resonated was Apple Computer Inc., which has struck gold with its iPod music players and iTunes download service. But the teens said their parents resisted buying Apple computers because they don’t run Windows, the platform most people are familiar with.
So Savage decided to “Apple-ize the PC industry.
How does adding pink fur around the keyboard make it like a Mac? iPods are ‘gold” because the experience is flawless and unlike anything else. Stick pink fur or leopard print on a PC and it’s still a weaksauce PC. And don’t even get me started on a “professionally-written” piece ending a sentence with “with.” Grrr.
But the quintessential point in the article is the following:
Later the prototype went to focus groups nationwide, and now the hip-e is ready for release in November. Orders are being taken now, including at displays in malls where pop star Ashlee Simpson is performing.
Ah.. that’s it. Fans of Britney Spears copycat Jessica Simpson’s SISTER are the target audience; an audience clearly lacking in the headspace department. If they like Ashlee Simpson because she’s a copy of a copy then maybe they will buy a psuedo-copy of a Mac.
Apparently, my Colorstrology color is Pastel Lavender. The description fits me to a T, but damn if that’s really a terrible color that I hate. What’s your Colorstrology color?