03
Apr 06

Good birthday weekend

I had a really nice birthday despite the fact that I’m officially 29 years old. I didn’t get up to or into any trouble. It was a sedate and laid back, just right for someone approaching 30. The older I get the more I appreciate the little things like phone calls from family and friends. I got a few gifts from Jody including some nice clothes I am in dire need of. She has learned that dark colors are good for guys with burgeoning pot bellies.

Friday started off with our HR manager (who was born 2 days before me) bringing some cupcakes and a birthday card signed by everyone in the office. That was a nice surprise. I always like seeing what different people say and how they write since you rarely see anyone’s handwriting anymore now that we have email and instant messaging, ad nauseum.

Saturday I didn’t do anything much other than hang out with Jody at the library while she worked the reference desk. I like to go there and read the business periodicals like Business Week and the Wall Street Journal. It keeps me from buying them myself and it always gives me a lot of good ideas about what companies to follow and invest in as well as experience and advice from people who have started successful companies. One day, I would like to start a business and grow it into something nationwide. Freelancing just doesn’t scale very well since I can only take on as much work as I can handle myself. After Jody got off work, we went and saw “V for Vendetta”. I thought it was pretty good, although heavy-handed and cheesy.

Sunday we went over to my Aunt’s house to drop off a birthday card for my cousin who has the same birthday. It also allowed us to visit with my grandparents who were passing through Dallas in their RV on the way back from one of their jobs with the Volunteer Christian Builders. Since they’ve retired they travel around the Texas and surrounding states building churches and living on the road. They really love to do it. We weren’t able to stay very long since we had to meet Jody’s brother and sister-in-law back at the house to go to the Mavericks game. The game was a lot of fun, especially since Dallas won. I haven’t been to a basketball game since I was a kid, so I was comparing the experience with when I used to go to see the San Antonio Spurs with my dad and brother so long ago. As Jody pointed out, everything looks so much smaller in real life than on tv.


30
Mar 06

Like KVM, but not

When I was at NCSoft, a bunch of those guys had multiple machines running using the same keyboard and mouse. They used this application called Synergy to do it. I took note in case I ever had multiple computers again. Today I set it up to control my pc and mac mini at work. Normally, you would do this with a KVM switch, but this does it without all that. Nice!


30
Mar 06

tex avery cartoon

I found a few old cartoon shorts on Google Video. Good stuff. They don’t make them like this anymore.

GoogleVideo: Tex Avery Cartoon – Bad Luck Blackie – 7min. Genius.

GoogleVideo: Merry Melodies: “A Day at the Zoo” (1939)

GoogleVideo: Tex Avery – Red Hot Riding Hood


28
Mar 06

Feed the old guy his early birthday cake

Feed the old guy his early birthday cake Jim, Cathy, Scott, and Gloria at Rudy's BBQ The view from my apartment balcony Self-pic with little brother


28
Mar 06

asides

The Future of Credit Cards – Earning virtual currency for spending in the real world & other world bridging


27
Mar 06

Yupsters, grups, Peter Pans, etc.

There’s something in this article that rankles my humbug nature, Up With Grups. Maybe it’s the undignified me-tooism of 40-something music enthusiasts desperate to hold on to their cultural relevance in a world of youth fluff. Let it go. Embrace elderhood and maturity, and maybe even growth.

“All of the really good music right now has absolutely precise parallels to the best music of the eighties, from Franz Ferdinand to Interpol to Death Cab—anything you can name,” says Michael Hirschorn, the 42-year-old executive vice-president of original programming and production at VH1. “Plus, the 20-year-olds are all listening to the Cure and New Order anyway. It’s created a kind of mass confusion. I was at the Coachella festival last year, and the groups people were most stoked about were Gang of Four and New Order.” No wonder Grups like today’s indie music: It sounds exactly like the indie music of their youth. Which, as it happens, is what kids today like, too, which is why today’s new music all sounds like it’s twenty years old. And thus the culture grinds to a halt, in a screech of guitar feedback.

As a result, says Hirschorn, “some of the older parents I know who have teenagers claim that there’s no generation gap anymore. They say they get along perfectly with their kids. They listen to the same music. To me, that seems somewhat laughable. But I do remember when I was young, trying to explain the Beatles to my dad, and he didn’t even know who they were. I don’t think that’s possible today.”

Something about that is sad, like an older woman who dresses in revealing outfits and belly button jewelry. It’s an attitude of denial. Being on the outside and wanting back in.

I think there is something essentially “youthful” about making and enjoying music. That’s an attractive aspect to it. Like many major artistic achievements, great music is most often produced by young people. When we’re young do we live in a mental world of greater artistic feeling? I have this theory that when you’re in that period of adolescence from puberty to your early twenties, your brain is elastic and emotional, having not been fully constructed into a more or less rigid framework of habits and processes. We do know that the adolescent brain is structurally different from adult brains. This accounts for much of the high risk behavior we associate with youth. Maybe this mental state makes music and art more personally impactful and significant than at any other time in your life. Why else do we feel a particular affinity for the music of our youth? I’m just thinking out loud here. Maybe there are no rigid boundaries between young and old, but should we differentiate somehow?

I’ve always appreciated the ceremonies in other cultures that attend the transition into adulthood. Then you have some cultural expectation of behavior. There are rules and guidelines as to what you need to do. In our culture, we no longer have a real concept of what is expected of the individual. It is too ad hoc, too amorphous… for me. At least in a world of rules you have the enjoyment of defying convention and expressing your individuality. But, what happens when expressing your individuality is something everyone does?


27
Mar 06

asides

Seven Career Killers: “Procrastination is an ingrained habit,” Nemko says, “but if you don’t kick it pretty quick, you’re going to find yourself on the corporate slow track.”

Moving on up

Click Fraud Gets Smarter: “One of Boser’s biggest challenges is putting a finger on exactly how widespread the practice is. Some search consultants say click fraud accounts for upwards of 20% of all traffic, and may generate more than $1 billion in dubious sales a year. Others say those stats vastly overstate the problem. “


23
Mar 06

first blood, soul

first blood, soul … “if you step, to fb…”

PayPal Goes Mobile! Send money securely, anytime, from wherever you are. You don’t need cash or a check – just your phone.


22
Mar 06

refresh, dallas

Refresh Dallas Meeting Thursday, March 23, 2006 (7:00 PM – 9:00 PM) “Rails: Diving into the Rabbit Hole” “Refresh is a community of designers and developers working to refresh the creative, technical and professional aspects of new media endeavors in the Dallas area.”