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Blogging

This is a first post with Dan Schimpf’s MacJournal to see how it works as a blogging tool. In theory I can blog the same content to both bogger and livejournal from one source. Thanks to Dan Schimpf for writing this tool, and to Anthony Coco for pointing it out to me. One of the trick things for me is to get out of the habit of writing embedded HTML tags on the fly (too many years at this).

One of the advantages to the web based tools (blogger, livejournal), is that no matter where you are, you can see all your posts and tweak the content. I people who use only one machine for all their blogging do not need this feature, but I bounce around between several machines, so I am not sure that MacJournal, or WordPress will suit my needs as well as the web based tools. Though this MacJournal is interesting as a electronic note taker too.

Web Site Design

Saady Khan has an informative post over at Spicing it up!!! 😀 – The Rain Machine that lists many ways you can update your own blog’s template and design. Thanks Saady!

I added an Atom stream/feed to my blog, and submitted it to the LeftyBlogs web log index hoping to see a little more traffic.

I have to figure out how to automatically, or at least more easily, put content into my sidebar – modifying the template at blogger every time is a PITA (pain in the arse). I really like the book and music lists I see at tsuredzuregusa and Liberal Rage, and I need to figure out how to get the Search field into my design such that viewers can search my blog easily. Blogger offers a great NavBar with search, but I don’t like what the NavBar does to my site’s appearance, so I want it inside the sidebar of my blog.

Pointless Fun

Saw a link to this on John Evans’ blog, a web based map that generates a list of the places in the world, or in the country that you have been to so far…

state map with visited states colored in red

world map with visited countries colored in red

Europe map with visited countries colored in red

Create your own visited country map if you like, interesting and fun, but quite misleading because it colors the whole state or country red, even if you’ve only been to one or two places in that state or country. For example, a brief stop in Anchorage is my only visit to Alaska, but the whole state is colored in red as if I’d travelled extensively throughout Alaska.

Politics

Folks, we have until April 14th, 2006 to file in the State of Virginia to be considered a candidate for U.S. Congress in the 2006 general election. So far, according to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, no one has filed (yet) to run against incumbent Republican Frank Wolf in the 10th district. Will someone please step forward? I am volunteering to work in your campaign.

Seriously folks, the race over in the 11th district is already hot enough to have three candidates with campaign websites (at least, I did not spend long looking):

There are even three challengers to Jo Ann Davis (incumbent Republican) over in the 1st district, though none have websites up yet:

    Shawn O’Donnell (challenging Democrat)
    Marvin Pixton III (challenging Independent Greens)
    Carl Stephen Wolfe II (challenging Democrat)

So why have we no one challenging Mr Wolf in the 10th? He voted to cut veterans benefits. He’s been in office since 1981, and is a member of the House Appropriations Committee. He steadfastly refuses to participate in the NPAT survey, and does not respond to letters from voting citizens in his district (me). At least his voting record is a matter of public record, and he cannot hide from that.

Sources:
www.politics1.com
dccc.org

Computers

I know I am engaging in post-mortem equine floggery, but Rob Pegoraro over at the Washington Post agrees with what techies have been telling the computer shopping public for several years now: choose a Mac over a PC as your home computer. The nice thing about Mr Pegoraro’s article, is that he’s a much better writer than most of us techies, and he sums it all up very succinctly when he says it is no longer a case of “why should I buy a Mac over a Windows PC?” but that it is now a case of “why should I buy Windows at all since it is so insecure, so unstable, and after years of patches it remains insecure?” – Bravo.

Mr. Pegararo also gets points for mentioning the Sony decision to include what is essentially a trojan horse rootkit on some of their new audio/music CDs, a format previously thought safe from viruses and malware – and true ISO 9660 Audio CDs are, but Sony/BMG/Epic/Columbia music CDs are no longer standards compliant.

Dance

Erci and I spent yesterday and last night at the Fall Showcase and Medalist Ball put on by the Arthur Murray studio we’ve gone to since May of 1996. As usual, the event was very well run and the dancing was more beautiful than usual. Erci and I piled on the Tango routines for this event, she did Argentine Tango with her teacher, Dan Calle, and I did a Tango routine with her and did it again with our teacher, Lenora Shea. Erci’s routine with Dan looked amazing, I am sometimes a wee bit jealous of their connection, which Dan jokes is his goal. I have not seen how we looked as a couple, but the our routine felt good to perform.

Consumer Rights

More fallout from the Sony/Columbia/Epic/BMG XCP rootkit exlpoit is detailed on Wired (first time I’ve read Wired in a while). Yikes, the after-effects of such a stupid corporate blunder, compounded by so many people running their MS Windows systems effectively wide open (no security to speak of), are turning out to be huge. Hopefully there is a very real cost from all this that is billed to First4Internet, Sony, and Microsoft. BoingBoing has a nice map of the spread of the infection here.

If you want to find out the impact to yourself, the EFF has a great quick page describing which CDs are infected. Basically only CDs made after March of 2005 have any chance, and apparently only a few of them.

Environment

Erci went ahead and ordered a Prius, she has details at In my Field of Paper Flowers. She chose red, which we expect to be a bit darker than the one in this picture:

Activism

So it is nearly a week since the election and I am still thrilled to have taken an active role in it. The hours of work, the challenge of doing things I never thought I’d like doing, and the pain in the wallet of political contributions are all worth it! In exchange you get to feel connected, you learn enormously, you have a little more faith in our strange American democracy, and you meet some of the most amazing people. You certainly are not left at home or work furiously clicking the refresh/reload button on your browser trying to get the latest campaign updates (because you are already in a precinct helping count the votes). I recommend highly that everyone get involved!

As part of my goal to stay involved, I went and checked out the Sunday Supper Club over in Fauquier County last night. They are a non-partisan group of socially aware and active people concerned about their region. They have a pot-luck supper once a month in Warrenton (usually the 2nd Sunday). At this pot-luck supper, they usually have discussion about various activities, sometimes a guest speaker (they’ve had guests from all parties, and candidate announcements), and typically a movie or documentary is run with more discussion about that. Last night the group heard the announcement of Shawn O’Donnell (co-author of “Rebuilding The Democratic Party From The Grassroots“) who is running for U.S. Congress in Virginia’s 1st District. We also watched “Wal-mart – The High Cost of Low Price” (though Erci and I had to go home before it was over). It was a lot of fun, and lots of people shared their pet projects. We will be calling our congressman about the Department of Peace as a result of last night’s meeting.

Regardless of your political leanings, go out and get involved. Make a difference. Make your presence felt while you are still around.

Site Design and Veteran’s Day

I continue to wrack up a debt to my good friend Anthony who added more graphical elements and design suggestions for me.

My niece, Christina, is now publishing poetry and blogging via blogger – she’s doing it anonymously for the moment. It has been a really nice visit with my Mom, her beau Ralph, and the nieces visiting from Rome and Camden, New York. I spent veteran’s day thinking of several veterans I have met, but mostly of Harvey Yuh, who was a supervisor of mine when I was stationed at Hickam AFB, Hawaii, packing parachutes for Harvey, who had been in some firefights in Vietnam and told me how terrifying it was. Thank you, Harvey, for revealing to my mind some of the true horrors of war.