I try to follow most of these tips from lifehack.org anyway, but it’s always a good reminder. Especially when life is crazy, as it seems to be frequently anymore. I take myself waaay too seriously.
Category Archives: Ideas (blog)
The morning trawl was quite fruitful this morning
So this morning, as with most mornings, I was reading MacSurfer’s Headline News between application loads,
[Side rant: Windows makes it too easy for me to close an application. On the Mac, if you close most apps’ windows (Safari, or Word for example) the application stays open until you actually quit it. That way, you might load Word once, and you can use it throughout the day without having to wait for the app to reload into memory. You can see the app is still running because the little black arrow’s still below that app in the dock, and there aren’t any annoying windows cluttering up your desktop. Bonus: if it’s an app you use regularly it’s in the Dock anyway, so you’re not even imposing on your dock space. On the PC I can close many applications’ windows without closing the app, but I’m still stuck with a big ugly window – or if I minimize that ugly window I still have the app taking up space in my taskbar. Ugly.]
and happened upon an article on Computer Science on a bog called Call Me Fishmeal, which made me giggle. (Yes, Dad, I have read Moby Dick. No, I still have no interest in watching the movie.) It turns out to be Wil Shipley’s blog, and while I’ve never heard of Wil Shipley, I have heard of Delicious Monster, a Mac developer that’s created Delicious Library, which everyone tells me is the world’s best track-all-these-books-in-your-house software on the world.
Anyway, Wil has a pretty cool blog, and while wandering said blog, I came across TED, which I’d never heard of either.
TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from those three worlds. Since then its scope has become ever broader. The annual conference now brings together the world’s most fascinating thinkers and doers, who are challenged to give the talk of their lives (in 18 minutes). Our mission: Spreading ideas.
Pretty awesome. Especially awesome is the section called Design like you give a damn (which sounds like a good idea to me), where I watched one of what I’m sure will be an awesome assortment of talks about design, this specific one covering everything from Prada’s fancy-schmancy dressing rooms to entrepreneurship in Kenya.
TED’s got a boatload of neat ideas and I suspect I’ll be checking out a lot of new things in the near future. You should check it out too.
[So in a way, Windows’ crappy design lead me to find more on good design. Go figure.]
Building your own WordPress Plugin
This goes into the “I must read it” pile.
Speaking of which, how’s the site working out for y’all? Need anything?
A Home That Heats and Cools Itself
David Pogue this week writes about using southern yellow pine to build houses with their own atmosphere, which, since I live in a house with two very distinct temperature zones, sounds just freakin’ awesome.
Happy Birthday, Squeak.
My little sister is 18 years old today.
Wow.
I totally get that “muh little girl is all growed up” choked up feeling that parents get, now.
Congratulations, kid. You’re good people.
Philadelphia Race for the Cure 2007
Today was the Susan G Koman Race for the Cure benefitting the fight against breast cancer, in Philadelphia. There were 100,000 people there, over 50% of which parcipated in either the 5k race or the 5k walk. My mom, my sister, and I participated in the walk, with an “official” time of 1 hour 22 minutes, but when 50,000 people are on the same path you are, it’s hard to make good time unless you sign up as a runner and I’m not a runner. I’m pretty happy with it.
And I was blown away by the number of people who were there wearing the pink “survivor” shirt — over seven thousand survivors. Less than a month since my aunt’s death, and there were a few times where it was hard. The whole place was filled with so many determined people that it was hard to be angry or sad for very long.
We’re already talking about walking again next year, which means that I need to get into better shape, because Great Strides for the CF Foundation is next weekend (around here, anyway) and there is no way I can do two of these things back-to-back this year… but next year could be a different story.
Babble Thread?
Pour un babbler. Or is it une babbler? Wouldn’t it have been nice to have learned a foreign language reliably at some point in my life?