For some odd reason, Rob from podCast 411 thought interviewing me would be a good idea…
If for some strange reason, you think he may have been right, see, I mean hear, the interview here.
For some odd reason, Rob from podCast 411 thought interviewing me would be a good idea…
If for some strange reason, you think he may have been right, see, I mean hear, the interview here.
I guess there was a tornado in Wisconsin last week. I missed it, and luckily, it missed me…
I was pretty much offline, or too involved in my own projects to hear about it, and since I don’t generally watch the news, or local TV stations, I was clueless. This is actually one of the things that sometimes bothers me about being so in control of the media I consume. I mean, a major disaster happens in the state I live in (granted, not real close to where I live) and I don’t know about it for days. Obviously if it was big enough news, I’d probably hear it, but still… It’s strange.
On the same front, I’ve noticed that when people say “Have you seen that commercial where…” very often I haven’t, as most of the television I am watching is pre-recorded, and I’m skipping the commercials. (Plus I tend to watch Cartoon Network and IFC more than anything else.)
Is this something we need to worry about in the brave new world of We Are The Media?
On a “citizen’s journalism” note, is this bit from a news story on the tornado:
A witness captured the Stoughton tornado on his camera phone.
Hooray for that. I wonder if it made it to Flickr or mefeedia though…
Of course, true to the Wisconsin spirit, it takes more than a little weather to put a damper on things:
The tornado tore the roof off the country club, said the club’s executive chef, Lenny Peaslee. As the storm approached, golfers started coming off the course, and about 40 people huddled in the basement and waited, he said.
“We were … hiding behind the bar,” Peaslee said. “We had beer, anyway.”
We wish you well in these troubled times, citizens of Stoughton Wisconsin…
“So, two syndication formats walk into a bar…”
No really… The RSS Version 3 Homepage. Hmm, checking calendar… Not April 1st… Didn’t we already do RSS 3.0? I think that now makes 10 different versions of RSS. Sounds good to me!
I think Matt summed it up well:
heh. Good luck with that.
I had to file this under syndication+humor… sigh…
I got a letter from my auto insurance company about the renewal of my policy. I was a bit worried because it did not reflect the policy changes I’ve been making (trying to make) in the last few months. When I called them, they explained that the letter may have been printed before the policy changes were made. How far in advanced do they print those things? Don’t they want to send you accurate and up-to-date data?
So, I wasn’t too worried since the whole reason they sent the letter was to confirm all of this, but then they asked if my employer was The Corporation, which worried me a bit since I left The Corporation five years ago. They did have the correct work phone number though. They then asked about the home address I had about seven years ago, when I first started the policy, even though they sent the letter to my last address, not my most current.
I’m going to try my best to avoid any sort of auto mishap, because I get the feeling if anything happens, my auto insurance company will somehow not be able to verify I even exist.
Lesson for the day: Data maintenace is hard.
Hmmm, I had considered going with the title “A few days late and 8 million short…”
Sorry, what I meant to say is, congrats to Adam for the one year anniversary of The Daily Source Code…
The “few days late” is reference to Audio Experiment #1, which was the first RasterWeb! Audio from 2004-08-18. Less than two weeks after that, renko was released…
As for the “8 million” that’s um, a reference to how many podcasts there are now, just one year later.
(You’re welcome.)