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Four Things

I don’t usually do this sort of stuff, but Mike at nomadic_audio hit me with the Four Things thing… (As did Aaron)

Four jobs I’ve had in my life:

  1. Dish Washer
  2. Serigrapher
  3. Digital Media Specialist
  4. Corporate Lackey

Four movies I can watch over and over:

  1. Lord of the Rings (all of them!)
  2. Star Wars (almost all of them…)
  3. The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie
  4. Office Space

Four TV shows I love to watch:

  1. Seinfeld
  2. Futurama
  3. Arrested Development
  4. Curb Your Enthusiasm

Four places I’ve been on vacation:

  1. Wisconsin
  2. Maryland/Delaware
  3. “Down South”
  4. “Out East”

Four of my favorite dishes:

  1. Pizza
  2. Burritos
  3. Egg and Cheese Bagel
  4. Cookies

Four websites I visit daily:

  1. del.icio.us
  2. Google
  3. Wikipedia
  4. RasterWeb!

Four places I would rather be right now:

  1. Hawaii
  2. New Zealand
  3. Outside
  4. Somewhere else…

Four bloggers I am tagging:

  1. Chris
  2. Mike
  3. Drew
  4. Czeltic Girl

Damn, that took a while…

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Olympics + Blog = No Way

I don’t think I’ve admitted this, but I really enjoy the Olympics. I generally do not like most professional sports because I think most professional athletes are overpaid cry-babies and criminals. (The exception is surfing, which is the classic battle of man (or woman) versus nature!) Anyway…

Those control-freaks at the Olympics once again are banning the participants from blogging.

I’m still not sure what they are afraid of…

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Naming del.icio.us

Did you ever wonder how del.icio.us got it’s name?

Joshua explains it:

When .us became available, I wrote a quick script to figure out the shortest prefixes that would allow me to generate the most number of names:

$ grep us$ /usr/dict/words | sed 's/.*\(....\)\(us\)$/\1.\2/' | sort  | uniq -c | sort -n | tail
    6 aceo.us
    6 mino.us
    7 ario.us
    7 onio.us
    7 urio.us
    8 aneo.us
    8 orio.us
   10 itio.us
   14 icio.us
   18 acio.us

I’ve used /usr/dict/words in the past to find strange and unique words. I’ll really have to remember to do that more often…

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Digg This Paper

We’re all familiar with digg, the web site that lets the readers “digg” or vote on stories, which then get top billing on the front page… Well, check this out:
Wisconsin paper lets its readers choose news:

The Wisconsin State Journal allows readers to go on its Web site every weekday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and vote for their favorite out of five story ideas. Barring late-breaking news, the winning story typically will appear on Page 1 the next day.

Interesting, hmmm?

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Visionary Devs

I know open-source is all about scratching the itch, submitting patches, and being open about things, but sometimes I feel like the devs in charge of certain projects aren’t visionary enough. Meaning, they don’t see the coming trends and what will be important in 6 months and poo-poo things that aren’t of concern today.

Maybe that’s ok, but I like to think that I’m as bleeding-edge as the next geek, and when projects hold back what you want to do, or others see no value in it, all you can really do is hack at your own copy of the code, maybe submit a patch, and hope people catch on in the future… Sure there are plugins and extensions, but sometimes you need changes to the core, or to things that no one else would ever think needs a change. Change… Change…

I used to accuse Microsoft of developing things in a half-assed way just so they could add it to the checklist and say “Yup, we got that feature!” but on occasion I think some open-source projects are doing that too. Users also tend to get in the habit of working around things that aren’t quite right, and not complaining about it, but just “get used to it” and eventually become blind to it, thinking “that’s how it works” even if the usability is poor and the users suffer.

Don’t get me wrong, I believe open-source is the way to go, and how software should be written, but sometimes I just feel like some of the leaders need to be more risk-takers in looking to the future.

Of course we sometimes see people who are visionary, but have a hard time convincing others that there needs to be code to realise the vision, so, well, let’s just say when everything lines up right, good things can happen. We need more good things happening…