Tuesday, May 23, 2006

My newest web adiction is "The Daily Mumps."  I'm sure there are people out there who just find the site appalling, but it cracks me up.  The author is a father of four who uses "found" photos of his kids to produce what he calls a daily comic.  If he isn't a copy writer in real life he certainly could be.  Highly entertaining stuff.  Sometimes his children morph into evil dictators who want to destroy the world, other times they explain why you have to pick your nose.  Go check it out.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006 11:13:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
 Tuesday, May 09, 2006
The new job has seriously cut into my online reading time.  Those precious opportunities to read up on sports at work have dwindled to less than 15 mintutes in a given day.  So tonight I took some time to try and catch up.  I was hoping to find out how young Marcus did in his big Miami audition, but was pleased to find that two other VaTech players signed free agent contracts shortly following the draft. Jason Murphy, an offensive guard, signed as a free agent with the San Diego Chargers, while defensive lineman Tim Sandidge signed with the St. Louis Rams. This is quite an improvement over last year when we only had 3 guys selected on draft weekend.
Wednesday, May 10, 2006 6:11:40 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
 Saturday, April 29, 2006



At least there is a small bit of goodness in the midst of my crappy weekend....I personally like it when my college team serves as the minor leauge feeder team for my NFL team. Go Hokies.

Update:  The draft is over and it should be noted that my Hokies set a record this year with 9 players drafted!  Three of them went to Carolina and others landed with Seattle, Pittsburgh, Cleavland, Sandiego and Arizona. You have to wonder if you'll one day hear Huuuuuuumes echoing through steeler nation the same way it echoed through Land Stadium.  One more member of last year's team will probably get signed as well as our Character guy, Marcus Vick, was not drafted.  You know someone will take a chance on him...
Sunday, April 30, 2006 12:53:23 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Whomever said When it Rains it Pours really should have won a pulitzer for the statement.  I've been very proud of Lucy's progress in the housebreaking department.  No messes in the house for a week (and only one oops in the last 2 weeks). But now, to top off a really horid week as weeks go, Lucy has decided to eat one of my favorite sandles.  Anyone who knows me know that I break out the sandles as soon as warm weather arrives and live in them until fall.  My favorite work sandles, the cute black flat slip-ons I bought when visiting Atlanta July 4th weekend of 2004, are now ruined.  My spunky little puppy ate right through one of them....boom...

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Saturday, April 29, 2006 9:44:37 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
 Wednesday, April 05, 2006
My budget doesn't let me travel nearly as much as I'd like, but I found this list of money saving travel tips to be an interesting read.  (Thanks to the guys at Daily Gadget for highlighting it for me.) I wouldn't say that all 51 tips are fresh new ideas, but some of them certainly surprised me.  For example, tip no. 2 is "Trash Your Cookies":
Trash your "cookies," small files (stored in your Internet browser) that record the websites you surf—and the transactions you make. Say you go online and purchase a $200 plane ticket from Chicago to Omaha. The next time you visit that site, you could be quoted a higher rate than what's actually available because of your spending history. Avoid this problem by deleting these files each time you log on; detailed instructions can be found under the "Help" option in your browser menu.

As a web developer I accepted long ago that cookies could make my life easier, and I'm not really in the habbit of dumping them very often.  But who thought that companies would use them to bilk you for that extra money?  If you paid $200 last time you'd be willing to pay that again, right?  So why bother letting you take advantage of that $30 off sale they are having.  You have to wonder if other companies do this too?  I guess a good rule of thumb will be always delete your cookies before going out to make an internet purchase.  Of course it they can do it with a cookie they can do it with a database, so we might have to work on our cameleon skills.  Other great tips include Never Accept Food You Didn't Order when eating out (many cafes, especially in Europe, apparently charge you for these "freebies") and Beware of Cover Charges as some bistros overseas will seat you and server you dinner letting you wait until the bill arrives to find out about a 15% cover charge for dining with them.

Check out the article at National Geographic.


Wednesday, April 05, 2006 7:30:31 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
 Thursday, March 30, 2006
In the early days of my career I got to work with artsy types, pr folks and writers.  Once I started making money the crowd changed to mostly geeks, often in their 40s.  I have nothing against geeks, and at my core I probably am one, but I've always rejected participation in truely geeky activities. I've never worn a pocket protector, I've never programmed my own calculator, and never written my own operating system. I've also failed to participate in the most essential "geek" undertaking of all, building my own PC.  I enjoy computers, really.  I've used them for work and play since I was 7.  But I've never felt like I've done anything that comes remotely close to needing a custom built pc.  Sure, maybe you can save a few bucks if you really source your parts, but buying the OS liscense trades off with that savings, and you never really have the benefit of a warrenty and those shiny labels that actually tell you what your computer has inside. Partly because of this I've never viewed a PC as art or a conversation piece. This week that changed. 

In his web stumblings a friend came upon a page called "Case Mod" at Neetorama. The first image on this site is the beautiful Moo Cow Moo pc pictured here. That's right, that pretty Holstein is a PC.  The creator of this magnificent conversation piece has complete instructions on his website and action shots detailing various parts of the construction process.  Yes, this appeals to my inner farmgirl, but more than anything it reminds me of a favorite childhood toy.  Other kids had Sit -N- Spin and Legos, I had diecast tractors and one very cool plastic cow.  This cow came equiped with a bendable neck that you could push down into a water trough.  At that point you would pump the tail up and down just like an old well pump.  When Bessie was full her head popped up and she would moo.  Then came the real fun of milking Bessie the plastic cow.  Their were even little white tablets you could use to make sure the water that went in came out looking like milk.  Bessie was a childhood favorite and I really see no reason why bringing her back as a PC would be a horrible idea.
Thursday, March 30, 2006 9:58:01 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
 Tuesday, March 21, 2006
A 300-page indictment detailing more than 1,000 allegations of election fraud was returned in February by a grand jury investigating the coal-mining town of Appalachia, Va., following reports of absentee-ballot bribery by two town officials. Prosecutors accused candidates' operatives of offering the locals such goodies as beer, moonshine and cigarettes and, in one case, a supply of pork rinds. [Roanoke Times, 3-3-06]

Who knew buying votes was so inexpensive?  I'm not from the town of Appalachia, they are a bit northwest of my village, but saddly it could probably happen in many rural appalachain communities.  When dad first got into local politics the thing that surprised me most was the number of people (neighbors, friends, business associates) who told us they registered just to vote for him.  These weren't young people new to voting, these were middle-aged men and women who had reached their 40s without ever visiting the polling place.  Would a pack of cigarettes and a bag of pork rinds have been enough for them to register and vote for someone else?  As far as I know we never tried bribing anyone to register or vote.  The guy who inspected our migrant worker housing each spring?  I don't know that he was bribed, but he never left without a fresh supply of homebrew and we never had any violations. Wonder if he would have been as happy with the junk food?

Tuesday, March 21, 2006 6:59:05 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
 Tuesday, March 07, 2006
This morning a friend was kind enough to turn me on to YouTube.  Despite the enthusiasm of several friends I just hadn't gotten into the online video craze.  Sure, they are sometimes interesting, but is it ever really worth digging through the crap to get to the good content. I don't know that YouTube is different, but I like being able to:
  • Search for Videos by their "Tag." A tag is a keyword, and I've found "Humor" and "Comedy" to return excellent results. I found entire ComedyCentral specials from Stephen Lynch, Adam Ferrara and Ron White.
  • When you watch the video you are given a list of related movies, ala Amazon. People who liked this movie also liked... The other videos typically have the same Tags or submitters.
  • The search feature actually works.  I did a search for "Family Guy" and it returned a 2345 videos, and almost all of them were Family Guy episodes.  The exceptions were personal videos that members had titled Family Guy.
  • Any member can upload videos, of just about anything that isn't "illicit." They have video blogs and sections of family videos.  I don't particularly care to go around watching videos of other people kid's throwing their food.  But if my sister uploaded videos of my nephew playing with all the toys I bought him....well that I'd watch.
  • They have an API.  I don't know that I'll bother doing anything with it given that I'm not much of a videographer.  But if I had a video camera and kids I'm sure I'd cover this site with videos conveniently hosted for free over at YouTube.
Of course, with the good comes the questionable.  These videos are uploaded by members.  I somehow doubt those 2345 Family Guy listings are there with the permision of Fox. Because the people who capture and upload these are not professionals there are quality considerations.  I've enjoyed listening to the stand-up comedy while working on other things, but I don't know that watching the videos would entirely thrill me. Finally the download stream of videos still isn't where I'd like it to be.  Most of the videos I loaded played with no hitch. But occasionally there is lag and you watch a video at a greater speed than it is downloaded.  Then you have to stop and wait for the video to catch up.  This is especially frustrating mid-joke.

If you are bored and want a good laugh, check it out for yourself. YouTube.com

Tuesday, March 07, 2006 5:51:07 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Monday, March 06, 2006
Everybody, meet  Lucy!  Jeff and I had talked about getting a puppy for a while.  The ongoing debate: he wanted a beagle and I wanted a Cocker Spaniel.  We'd take turns sending each other photos of puppies we found on PetFinder.org.  Last Wednesday Jeff found lucy.  She and her brother  had a Beagle mommy and a  Cocker Spaniel daddy. It just sounded like she was destined to be ours.  Her shelter was in Greenville Tennessee so on Sunday we took a road trip to pick her up.  So far she is a great puppy.  No accidents in the car, and none of that wimpering wining nonsense.  She is very fluffy and solid black.  There aren't any of those typical Cocker Spaniel curls in her coat yet and her tounge  has black spots.  I've never had a Cocker Spaniel before so I hope this is normal.   I thought those black tounges were just for Chow-Chows.

We made a few stops on the way home for Lucy to practice her outside potty routine.  So far no accidents, but we'll see what's she does while I'm at work today.  She definately likes the back yard and she loves Jeff. 
These two are going to be play buddies. So far her favorite things are jumping in a pile of clothes and throwing mulch.  She will stay at my house most nights and Jeff's house on the other nights. Here's to puppy training.
Monday, March 06, 2006 5:19:26 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
 Thursday, March 02, 2006
The NFL owners and the player's association have ceased discussions, period. I don't think its that big a deal this year.  Yes, lots of good players will suddenly be free agents and have problems getting good jobs. Welcome to the real world.  But what about next year? 2008 and beyond?

Interesting things I've learned from the talking heads today:

  • A typical business spends less than 30% of their revenue on player salariers.  The rest goes to overhead,R&D, marketing and even shareholders. The NFL players are asking for 60% of their team's revenue. They expect owners to pay for their overhead, transportation, and stadium costs with the other 40%.
  • If their is no salary cap then their will also be no draft.  I don't really understand why this is the case, but John Clayton writes:

    Too bad the NFL could lose the draft in a couple of years if the collective bargaining agreement runs out. There might be a combine, but NFL teams will have to treat all college eligible players like free agents. That's a story for another time. 

    The draft has taken itself to new hype levels in recent years.  Not as big as the superbowl, but I do think its nearing March Madness proportions.  All those draft experts could be without anything to do.  All that coverage on the networks and in the media....gone.
  • Almost half of the current NFL owners have never experienced labor strife or a strike.  Reports are that privately he has said that those owners might need that experience before they would understand why flexibility is good and why work stopages are bad.
  • What happens with those TV contracts if there is a lockout or a strike?  The product wont be as valuable to the networks when play resumes afterward and you know the league will have to sacrafice part of the loot they are due in order to make ammends for that.
  • Tom Condon (one of those big agenst with lots of clients) speculates that this could mean that a lot of rookies just wont get signed this year.  Certainly some teams (like Washington) might be stuck relying on rookies, but most teams will be uncertain on how to structure a contract for a rookie when no one knows if they will be playing or what the salary ranges will be in 2 years.
Maybe this is just a sign that I should invest lest time and passion into football. 
Thursday, March 02, 2006 8:12:55 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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