Year: 2005

  • Word of the Weekend: “kerfuffle”

    Kerfuffle. It’s funny how some words bubble up from the collective subconscious and you hear and read the word more and more around you. Since Memorial Day it seems as if more of the world around me is Kerfuffled or being subject to Kerfuffling.

  • Birf-day Weekend

    Tyler called me on Saturday and told me to look in the drawer under my sock drawer where Izumi and the kids had stashed a birthday card for me before I left. He was so excited to tell me about the suprise and it was so sweet to have something from them to kick off the weekend.

    Thank you Mie, Dav, Doug, Brian, Emily and everyone else who spent time with me through the weekend. It was fun! Mie was in full moblog mode and documented everything down to each tiny detail. Dinner in North Beach, the band we saw at El Rio in the Mission, a visit to the Scrap House, the Alameda Antique Fair, and our visit to Lucky Juju’s Pinball Palace. Old friends from Tokyo, Brian and Emily joined us later on Sunday for a drive up to Tilden Park and dinner at Zachary’s Pizza on Solano Avenue. I should have more of these Birthday things, good for the soul they are!

  • Birthday

    6882261_28da01ea5c.jpg

    Let’s tag this one as “Current Affairs” as my 39th birthday is something that only happens once, (today) and will no longer be relevant tomorrow. Thirty-nine seems such a ho-hum number, like watching the white number reel tick over on an odemeter before the next significant digit rolls in, a little excitement and anticipation because it’s almost 40 but, it’s not.

    Since having kids, my birthdays have no longer really been important as I choose to celebrate each year’s passing with each of my children’s birthdays. It’s much more fun to celebrate someone turning six or making it to first grade which is so much more significant than adding another year onto 38 which seems so totally mundane in comparison.

    After finishing up some chores around the house I’ll head into the city to visit with Mie and Dav so we can see the Scraphouse and then they’re going to take me out to dinner and a concert which I haven’t done in a while. Hopefully this change in routine will snap me out of the rut I’ve been in. I think it all has to do with not having Izumi and the kids around to crack me out of my one track mind which has been so totally focused on work. I do love my job and all but without family to distract, I tend to zone in on what needs to be done (which I should know is a bottomless pit).

    It should get better. It’s the weekend, the weather’s glorious, I ate breakfast out on the back patio with the birds chirping in the garden (I need to mow that lawn) and I’m no longer on the losing end of a poker game (I think I only won two hands last night, pitiful!).

  • Scraphouse

    Scraphouse

    In the grand tradition of the DIY spirit and in celebration of World Environment Day, a group of designers, builders, and professional “obtainers” are building a house on the lawn in front of San Francisco city hall out of things they scrounged over the past six weeks. The house opened to the public today and will be taken down on June 6th and recycled.

    Scraphouse website

    Slideshow

  • Contagious Media Showdown

    There’s lots of slick sites here, all looking to catch that hook that will bring the fame and fortune (ok, well mostly fame). Maybe my standards are more base as the execution is totally crude (think of a circa-1988 Geocities website) but my personal favorite features a lanky masked man as an unlikely hero dancing to cell phone ringtones. My vote for the Contagious Media Showdown is for the

    RingToneDancer!

  • Star Wars Easter Egg Hunt

    I haven’t had a chance to see the new Star Wars film yet but when I do, I’ll be on the lookout for these hidden gems.

  • Syndication Monkeys Gone Mad

    It was inevitable. Richard MacManus posts his thoughts on vendors that are taking the publish & subscribe model of RSS and turning it around to sell an automated way to republish RSS feeds and "create" content on their clients’ sites. They position RSS as a quick way to harness other people’s original work for easy profits.

    To their defense, one of the vendors responds to another MacManus posting, "It is up to our clients to follow any applicable laws for use of the materials." but the fact of the matter is that the technology is in place to spawn thousands of automatically updating sites with no other purpose than to juice a search engine ranking around a particular topic. One could argue that this is the Topix model but you don’t see them getting sued by the media sites that they crawl. In fact, they were acquired.

    Why? Topix did a very good job of aggregating their feeds in a way that was respectful of the source (posting excerpts and not full text) and ended up being a source of traffic for the sites they republished. They struck the right balance between the simple re-purposing of other people’s content and adding value with editorial selection, proper citation & linking.

    We have at our disposal very powerful tools to harness and republish the collective writings of the world at large. We should all strive to use this power selectively as a way to highlight the best of what we see around us. Add thoughtful and original insights to the conversation and you will be rewarded. Use these tools blindly as a way to make a quick buck and you will be panned for what you are – an organ grinder of the digital age.

  • TypePad Enhancements

    Everything TypePad gives a taste of some of the cool new features coming down the pike for all you TypePad users out there. Comment & TrackBack Moderation, TypeKey Integration, and the ability (this one’s for you Buzz!) to select the format of TypePad’s comment notification email messages.

  • Boeing’s Flight Test Blog

    Ever wonder what it’s like to beta-test a major airline? Boeing takes the wraps off of their latest blog which will give a rare, inside view of the their new 777-200LR Worldliner aircraft as it runs (flies?) through the paces towards certification.

    This blog, or journal, is going to change that. Now we have a way,
    through the Web, to give you a first-hand look at the flight test
    process. And we’re going to let the people who do the actual work tell
    you about it in their own words. We’re hoping to give you a sense of
    what it’s like in the factory, on the flightline, and in the cockpit.
    We’ll also include photos, videos and other interesting stuff to help
    tell the story.