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Chilly

Mist looks out the back doors. The steaminess is from the dryer vent in the 14-degree weather. (this post enabled by airblogging.com.)…

Mist looks out the back doors. The steaminess is from the dryer vent in the 14-degree weather.

(this post enabled by airblogging.com.)

Recursive blogging

Randy has released v3.1 of SharpMT, which is the PC client I use for my MT posting — and which, in fact, I’m using for this post. I’m particularly pleased…

Randy has released v3.1 of SharpMT, which is the PC client I use for my MT posting — and which, in fact, I’m using for this post.

I’m particularly pleased that this release includes a bug fix/feature add that I requested — converting some special characters (for em-dashes, curly quotes, etc.) into Unicode HTML entities. MT supports those natively via UTF-8, and such characters can be entered into a blog entry from the normal web screens. But MT’s XML-RPC client just doesn’t handle those characters properly. So SharpMT’s conversion here lets me copy-paste text using those characters directly into the MT post without ending up with a lot of “?” characters showing up in the blog.

Nice stuff.

Operators are standing by!

“So order, today, your copy of ‘Now That’s what I Call Blogging!’ Forty-three top web hits from across the Blogosphere on two compact discs. Includes such classics as: Nobody Likes…

“So order, today, your copy of ‘Now That’s what I Call Blogging!‘ Forty-three top web hits from across the Blogosphere on two compact discs. Includes such classics as:

  • Nobody Likes a Show-Off (Wish I’d Been Published, Too)
  • She Dropped Me From Her Blogroll (I’m Not Her Friend Now)
  • Why I Love My Cat
  • Is Anyone Reading This? (0 Comments)
  • I’M THIRTEEN AND EVEYRTHING SUKCS!!!
  • Might Be Quiet For A while (Hiatus)
  • Meme, Myself And I
  • Don’t Read Kottke (But I Steal His Links)

Please, no C.O.D. Operators are standing by!”

(via Kottke)

Snow Day

Given that the temps today are not supposed to get above the single-digits, and we’re supposed to have still more snow, I have no hesitation about working from home today….

Given that the temps today are not supposed to get above the single-digits, and we’re supposed to have still more snow, I have no hesitation about working from home today. Nor does Margie.

(Especially since I’m supposed to spend most of the day on the phone. Rrg.)

Call me, beep me, if you want to reach me

Kim Possible will be back for a fourth season. Keen. That it resulted in part from a fan campaign to save the show is even more keen. Though — the…

Kim Possible will be back for a fourth season. Keen. That it resulted in part from a fan campaign to save the show is even more keen.

Though — the most recent movie would have served as a great series capper, and it will be interesting to see how they continue on from that point.

UPDATE: Heh. Heh heh heh. KP vs. Sidney Bristow (in her pink wig). Heh.
(via Disney Blog)

An archive by any other name would look as sweet

Been meaning to do this for some time, but only got around to it now. I’ve redone the archives here to use “intelligent”/dirified names. Rather than an individual post with…

Been meaning to do this for some time, but only got around to it now.

I’ve redone the archives here to use “intelligent”/dirified names. Rather than an individual post with the succinct-but-uninformative name of mtarchive/008714.html, you’ll now see something that incorporates the post date and title, e.g., 2005/12/05/lifes_little_le.html.

Note also that I’ve dropped the mtarchive directory, an artifact of when I had static web pages vs. dynamically generated ones.

(Similar, if less drastic, changes have occured with the category and monthly archives.)

Now here’s the cool thing. Dirified names have been around for MT for a long time, but I haven’t used them because I (and presumably others) had all sorts of links to existing posts that would have been obsoleted. But with dynamic publishing, I can have as many different named versions of posts as I want. So if you have an old link to www.hill-kleerup.org/blog/mtarchive/001234.html, it will still be good. The link will still be valid as long as the site endures. But as far as what you’ll see if you come through the pages here, it will be the nicer-looking dirified names (with the same content).

And if you don’t care … well, then, move along, nothing to see here …

Notifications on

Well, after (cough) a few months, I’ve finally updated MT-Notifier with the updated version the author sent me, oh, back in September. Rrg. (And, yes, I’ve updated that version to…

Well, after (cough) a few months, I’ve finally updated MT-Notifier with the updated version the author sent me, oh, back in September. Rrg. (And, yes, I’ve updated that version to the even latest version.)

Anyway, the good news is that notifications on a per-post basis can now be subscribed to.

The bad news is that, well, I managed to lose old notifications in the process (my fault, not the upgrade fault), so anything you were previously subscribed to, you’re now not. Sorry about that. Though, since Notify hasn’t been working here for a few months anyway, I assume it hasn’t been a terrible hardship.

But I won’t be quitting my day job

In November, I earned about $9 from click-thrus on the Google Ads here at DDtB. I’m rather astonished at the amount (that it’s so large) — that was about 50…

In November, I earned about $9 from click-thrus on the Google Ads here at DDtB.

I’m rather astonished at the amount (that it’s so large) — that was about 50 clicks.

Total income for the year (and, yes, Google reports it to the Feds) is around $25. Since I only actually get a check when the total hits $100, I haven’t had a chance to splurge as of yet.

Some folks, not surpsingly, make more.

Oh What A Good Boy Am I

It’s December. That means it’s officially No Buying Stuff For Myself Month. Folks in Margie’s family who buy things for themselves during December get lumps of coal. So far I’ve…

It’s December. That means it’s officially No Buying Stuff For Myself Month. Folks in Margie’s family who buy things for themselves during December get lumps of coal.

So far I’ve managed to redesignate one CD I wanted as being for Katherine (and Christmas) instead, and have refrained on another occasion to purchase some photographic accessories that I’d like, instead referring Margie to them as possible gifts.

I feel particularly virtuous over this.

X3 Trailer online

Here. Angel and Beast, at least, make appearances. Magneto is back, this time in California. Professor X is good at speechifying. Angsty goodness with Cyclops. And, yeah, that appears to…

Here.

Angel and Beast, at least, make appearances.

Magneto is back, this time in California. Professor X is good at speechifying.

Angsty goodness with Cyclops.

And, yeah, that appears to be Phoenix in there, too.

Not much actually new to see here (except Angel and Beast, and one presumed Magneto attack). But I suspect it will still be fun.

(via Les)

Life’s little lessons

When I was taking Katherine to gymnastics class on Saturday, they were having a rather nice crafts fair at Goodson Rec Center. It was, alas, a very hectic day already,…

When I was taking Katherine to gymnastics class on Saturday, they were having a rather nice crafts fair at Goodson Rec Center. It was, alas, a very hectic day already, so I didn’t get to go through the whole thing. Nonetheless, picked up some Christmas goodies for family members (with Katherine’s help).

She was actually very good while there, keeping her hands off, keeping within sight, etc. At one point, though, she was a couple of booths over, and was calling, “Daddy, Daddy! You have to see this!”

I indicated to her that shouting across the room wasn’t a polite thing to do, and that I’d be through checking out from the booth I was at in just a minute.

When I got over there, I found she had fixated on a set of hand-made quilts with stuffed animals wrapped up in them. Since she has neither a shortage of quilts nor of stuffed animals, I opined that such a purchase would not be forthcoming.

The booth was manned by an older couple, and clearly Katherine had been talking up a storm with them, because when she became a bit crestfallen, the lady asked her which of the animals she liked.

She pointed at the beanie baby of a tabby cat.

“Here you go, love. You can have it.”

I told the lady that she really didn’t need to do that, but she insisted. It was very nice of her, and Katherine gave her a thank you and a hug and carried the little kitty around with her the rest of the weekend.

It was at that point that the lesson began. Because at the next booth I stopped at (to buy something), Katherine started telling the gent there all about nice lady who had given her the kitty-cat after Daddy had said that they didn’t need the quilt.

At which point I really was mortified, because I was sure that the guy would think that Katherine was telling him this, not as a cute story, but to suggest he might want to give her some of his wares. Fortunately, he seemed to miss that cue.

I suggested to Katherine that she didn’t need to tell everyone the story. But not a minute later, she was at the booth across the aisle, starting in with the lady over there. I pulled her back over, and told her very quietly that she really shouldn’t tell that story to other people there at the craft fair, because they would think that she wanted them to give her something, too.

She agreed, and then noted how pretty some of the stuff at the table was we were at, and maybe if she told them how much she liked it —

Which was, in point of fact, exactly what I was afraid they were going to think, except it turned out to be with (as innocuous as it was) with justification. So I told her, in no uncertain terms, that making that sort of hint was very impolite, and she should only tell the story to her family and friends, not to people in stores.

She seemed to understand, and didn’t repeat it again until, oh, three seconds after we arrived home.

Heh.

It’s funny. Katherine is a very charming girl (if I do say so myself), and her good humor and desire to chat with folks almost always gets a positive response from adults. But we do have to be careful that she doesn’t get the wrong idea from that — or, worse, that she gets the correct idea, and begins to assume that it’s her due, that all adults will give her stuff if she plays the cute little girl, and that she’s somehow entitled to whatever they have.

I can recall a couple of embarrassing instances from my own childhood where I made a similar mistake, and had to have it explained to me that folks being generous is always their choice, not my entitlement. I’d rather Katherine learn that lesson early, and that she learn it correctly.

I’m too sexy for my name …

Fun site — a “sexy name decoder” that turns your name into … well, something like this. You can even get t-shirts made (if you have the ego for it)….

Fun site — a “sexy name decoder” that turns your name into … well, something like this.

You can even get t-shirts made (if you have the ego for it).

(MARGIE is “Minx Adeptly Rendering Gratification and Intense Embraces.” Which … yeah. 🙂 )

Java Jive Dissected

How coffee affects the brain, as told by MRI scans. “The group all showed activation of the working memory part of the brain,” Koppelstätter explains. “But those who received caffeine…

How coffee affects the brain, as told by MRI scans.

“The group all showed activation of the working memory part of the brain,” Koppelstätter explains. “But those who received caffeine had significantly greater activation in parts of the prefrontal lobe, known as the anterior cingulate and the anterior cingulate gyrus. These areas are involved in ‘executive memory’, attention, concentration, planning and monitoring.”

“This type of memory is used when, for example, you look up a telephone number in a book and then mentally store it before dialling,” he adds.

(via GeekPress)

Happy Birthday, Dad!

And thanks….

And thanks.

Airblogging, MoBlogging, whatever

A request for suggestions here, folks. I’m finding the (free, but unsupported) airblogging.com site to be too flaky for normal use. About 1 out of 5 messages never make it…

A request for suggestions here, folks.

I’m finding the (free, but unsupported) airblogging.com site to be too flaky for normal use. About 1 out of 5 messages never make it to my blog (with no clue why), and that seems to be getting worse.

I am looking for a mechanism to allow me to post photos from my Treo cell phone (Cingular) to my Movable Type blog.

I am not interested in hosting the pictures elsewhere (in particular at Flickr). And I’d rather avoid running something on my server if I could avoid it. I’d prefer something like, well, airblogging.com.

I’ve been researching via Google, but don’t have any good answers yet.

More trouble than it’s worth

I believe most conventional studies of typing speed and keyboard use would confirm that “your” is actually faster to type than “u’r” — not to mention being grammatically correct and…

I believe most conventional studies of typing speed and keyboard use would confirm that “your” is actually faster to type than “u’r” — not to mention being grammatically correct and easier to read.

I’m just saying.

Christmas Watch 2005!

Yes, it’s time to update where we are on Christmas prep for the year: GIFTS: Helped Katherine pick out some gifts for the family at the Goodson craft fair on…

Yes, it’s time to update where we are on Christmas prep for the year:

  • GIFTS: Helped Katherine pick out some gifts for the family at the Goodson craft fair on Saturday. Got my Secret Santa gift for — the person I am Secret Santa for. Margie and I both did some catalog sorting. Status: okay
  • CARDS: Christmas cards have been bought (but not stamps). Holiday letter is not done. Twelfth Night date has been set but invites are not done yet. Address list has not undergone preliminary review. Status: okay

  • DECORATIONS: Halloween/Thanksgiving are down. Boxes of Christmas stuff are upstairs. Tree is up, though one string of lights is not working. Still significant decorating to do, though Katherine is doing a good job of reminding us. Since we have folks coming over next weekend for Game Day, I believe, that gives us a nice deadline to focus us on the task at hand. Status: best

  • TRAVEL: Reservations are made. Days when I’m in the office are planned. House sitter engaged. We’re golden. Status: best

This has been an update from Christmas Watch 2005!

Pay me now, or pay me later

The advantage of monitoring one’s work e-mail from home is that there is a smaller bundle of goodies to go through first thing Monday. God willing. I’ve actually been trying…

The advantage of monitoring one’s work e-mail from home is that there is a smaller bundle of goodies to go through first thing Monday.

God willing.

I’ve actually been trying an alternative for monitoring office mail. There are four options I’ve found, though I’ve only used the first three before:

  • Outlook Native: VPN into the company and fire off Outlook.
    Pro: Full-blown mail functionality and response.
    Con: VPN connection is subject to glitches and has maximum-length timer. Outlook is a resource hog. VPN connection blocks me from my local network (for printing), not to mention CoH.

  • Outlook Web Access: Micro$oft’s web viewer for Outlook, visible for our company across the Web.
    Pro: Just a browser window (albeit IE). Calendar access, etc.
    Con: Doesn’t update folder mail counts well, requiring intervention to make sure I’m seeing everything. Kludgy web interface. Slow to use, very difficult (slow) to view history.

  • Forward key mail to home: Set up a rule to forward mail from my boss to my home account.
    Pro: Minimum intervention on my part. Catches things that I at least need to pay a little attention to. Home e-mail (Thunderbird) is always up.
    Con: Misses anything not following the rules. Most follow-ups require going into Options 1 or 2.

  • IMAP via Thunderbird: Use Thunderbird to access our IMAP mail server. Subscribe to the key folders I need to track.
    Pro: Thunderbird is always up. Solid mail client power. All key e-mail received.
    Con: Possibly miss stuff that routes to non-subscribed folders; have to update subscriptions if I modify my mail setup. IMAP folder subscriptions do not automatically update, as far as I can tell, requiring manual intervention (click on folder), which is annoying.

That last bit in #4 was part of what was bugging me this weekend. Otherwise, it worked perfect, and I was able to track some office problems near-normally with just my normal home e-mail client. Supposedly Thunderbird should do that, though, so I need to figure out where the problem is.

The weather outside, etc.

It’s been pretty cold here in Denver for the last week or so — daytime temps in the mid-30s, nighttime temps much lower. It snowed last week, and much of…

It’s been pretty cold here in Denver for the last week or so — daytime temps in the mid-30s, nighttime temps much lower. It snowed last week, and much of it is still on the ground, though the roads are dry.

Driving in this morning, there was a lot of high gusty winds and blowing snow on C-470 starting around 285 and lasting all the way to I-70. Like, “blow signs over and cause a lot of car swerving and see that accident on the other side of the freeway?” kind of gusty winds. That added a nice little frisson to the morning commute. 🙂

The Wrathful Dispersion Controversy

To me it seems grossly unfair that while schools busily teach concepts of modern archaeo-linguistics, talking about “Indo-European” languages and the “evolution” of French from Latin, the quite plausible concept…

To me it seems grossly unfair that while schools busily teach concepts of modern archaeo-linguistics, talking about “Indo-European” languages and the “evolution” of French from Latin, the quite plausible concept of Wrathful Dispersion is suppressed in our schools.

The opponents of Wrathful Dispersion maintain that it is really just Babelism, rechristened so that it might fly under the radar of those who insist that religion has no place in the state-funded classroom. Babelism was clearly rooted in the Judeo-Christian story of the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11: 1–9); it held that the whole array of modern languages was created by God at a single stroke, for the immediate purpose of disrupting humanity’s hubristic attempt to build a tower that would reach to heaven: “Let us go down,” God says to Himself, “and there confound their language, that they may not understand one another’s speech.” Wrathful Dispersion is couched in more cautiously neutral language; rather than tying linguistic diversity to a specific biblical event, it merely argues that the differences among modern languages are too perverse to have arisen spontaneously, and must therefore be the work of some wrathful (and powerful) disperser who deliberately set out to accomplish a confusion of tongues.

For the sake of equal time and “teaching the controversy,” shouldn’t we be making sure our children know all the different viewpoints out there?