The home page and original site for the Famous Grazing Blogs

There are more than a dozen Famous Grazing Blogs residing on the cybersphere. Some are dormant and some very active. They all link back here to the Granddaddy of our blogs, founding in May of 2004.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

17:47 Tomorrow

Mogli passes up a walk in the grass

Image by sgtret via Flickr

It isn’t quite winter yet. That begins tomorrow at 17:47 UTC. (That’s 5:47 PM in London.)

However, it would appear Winter decided to send a calling card prior to arriving. I look out the second story window of my office down onto the driveway where my car should be parked and see a pile of snow with an antennae protruding from it like a sapling freshly broken from the soil.

To avoid going out to clear the two or so feet of snow atop the car, I thought it would be a good time to make a long neglected blog entry.

If you look out of the other side of the house you can see the relatively useless swimming pool. To this day, I do not understand the logic of having a swimming pool in northern New England.&; They cost a fortune to run and are good for three months, max.


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Saturday, December 12, 2009

At Eight PM Last Night

In my youth I had an image of where I would be so many decades later, meaning at my age now. I saw myself sitting in a high backed easy chair, by a fire, across from the missus, reading a good book.

That vision came to me last night as I sat at my laptop in one room, reading Twitter on Brizzly. The missus was downstairs in her home office reading the New York Times while my son was at his desk, on his Apple reading heaven-knows-what.

This is not the image from the past because none of these things, laptops, NYT.com or Apple Computers, existed back then. Okay, way back then.

So, young people, as you sit and envision where you’ll be and what you will be doing in forty or fifty years, fahgetaboutit! It doesn’t exist yet.

Enjoy the now and the stuff that makes the now, time.
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Posted via web from grazing's posterous

At Eight PM Last Night

And Then I Rest

Image by sgtret via Flickr

In my youth I had an image of where I would be so many decades later, meaning at my age now.  I saw myself sitting in a high backed easy chair, by a fire, across from the missus, reading a good book.

That vision came to me last night as I sat at my laptop in one room, reading Twitter on Brizzly. The missus was downstairs in her home office reading the New York Times while my son was at his desk, on his Apple reading heaven-knows-what.

This is not the image from the past because none of these things, laptops, NYT.com or Apple Computers existed back then.  Okay, way back then.

So, young people, as you sit and envision where you’ll be and what you will be doing in forty or fifty years, fahgetaboutit! It doesn’t exist yet.

Enjoy the now and the stuff that makes the now, time.
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Friday, December 11, 2009

A Burglary Happened

A friend was burgled last night.  Everyone is asking what was taken.  What was taken was a feeling of security, a feeling that the walls and doors protect you from the wolves and weather.

This happened to me many years ago.  They took a cheap desk radio because there really was nothing else of value in the apartment.  The radio had no sale value but was taken to justify the break-in.  I invested in locks and gates and a steel bar contraption called a "Fox Lock." 

Then I did what was really the only solution, I moved.  Right after my bike was taken.  They left the lock and chain, but must have cut the cross bar on the bike to take it. 

To my friend, how soon before you move??
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Sunday, December 06, 2009

ScribeFire has been updated

ScribeFire has been updated to version 3.42 as a fix to a  security threat and enhance its interaction with Zemanta
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Saturday, December 05, 2009

I Thought Posting to Posterous Automatically

I may not have is set up correctly, but I thought Posterous automatically sent the information loaded in the email to the other linked locations, such as Twitter and Blogger. It would appear not.

Here in New England there was a report of possible snow tonight into tomorrow morning. I have to give a speech at 1000 tomorrow. I can make it there whatever the weather, but certainly, if the snow does fall, will expect a smaller audience.


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Bought Back by Neil Gaiman

Image representing Posterous as depicted in Cr...Image via CrunchBase


Neil posted a test message on his regular blog to show he could post to his blog using Posterous.


Leo Laporte recently did something of a similar nature to show a picture of Pomegranates.

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Friday, November 27, 2009

The Infrared Turkey

We visited the sister's house for Thanksgiving dinner this year.

Her husband is quite the scientist when it comes to cooking. The bird on the right was cooked using "infrared."

Honestly, I have no idea of the method, but from the looks of it, blow torches may've been involved. This matters not because this was a most delectable feast.

When I have time, I will google it and see if there something in our kitchen, kiln, back yard or laboratory that can duplicate this process.

For now, on the day after Thanksgiving, it is time to ponder and digest.

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Sunday, November 15, 2009

If you give a homeowner a dumpster

If you are a parent, you probably have read the children's book, If You Give a Mouse a Cookie.

We need to replace a damaged front door, frame and all.  For that purpose we rented a dumpster.  The door was fixed in a few days but we have the dumpster until Monday.

If you give a homeowner a dumpster, it is amazing how much stuff you suddenly feel needs to be expelled from the house.  Stuff you thought you were "storing" for future use.

All the chairs with the broken this and that, the boxes with half used this and that, the pumps that used to work and all of the other stuff that people asked if they could put there, but are no longer around to bring it away.

There is still room in the box and it is only Sunday.  Hmmmm.

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Sunday, November 01, 2009

On This Day of the Dead

A photo taken of Battleship Cove in 2007.

Image via Wikipedia

This is the day we remember those who have left us over the past year.

We have Memorial Day and Veterans Day and Pearl Harbor Day and September 11 to remember the monumental tragedies of war and terror. Today we remember the people around us, who lived and died living what some call the normal life.

We visited Battleship Cove in Fall River, Massachusetts yesterday.  There are monuments to that same Pearl Harbor Day, to the Cuban Missile Crisis and to September 11th as well. 

What I found most touching were the looped videos being played at each station showing interviews of those who once sat in the same chair when the ships were in harms way.

Whether these people are alive now or dead, these videos serve as their ghosts. 

They don’t speak of heroism, but of their daily attempt to to live normal lives while on a ship where over two thousand men slept stacked deck to overhead and side by side with a volume of explosive death whose job it was for them to deliver to other people who too were attempting to maintain their normal lives living on similar vessels or crunched into lava tunnels defending islands they were commanded to steal only a few years earlier.

When we visited the Alamo, as we walked around the quite church surrounded by highways and warehouses; we saw the room where Jim Bowie was bayoneted. I wondered then how a modern war interview with combatants from both sides would have played. Did the Mexicans see this as a pursuit of terrorists from another country? Did the Texicans see this as their struggle to break free from a greater military power determined to crush the spirit of freedom they so recently won from what they saw as another dictatorial foreign invader?

What would videos of the normal people on both sides, thrust into this short usurpation/revolution say? Would they complain of the close quarters, the long walks, the noise of the cannon, the poor cooking skills on both sides?

Then I think of a the forlorn picture of a Pakistani musician in Boston.com’s recent Big Picture spread of the current conflict.  When you look at that sad and confused face, was he thinking of lines of battle, strategy for the supremacy of one mode of living over another?  Or was he thinking of the seven children that he needs to feed, of the instruments he needed to earn a living left behind, of the gigs he would miss?

While all of this continues, I hope we can still maintain this illusion of living normal lives.  It is the only way to survive.

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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

FamousGrazing.com Back in the Fold.

We let the famousgrazing.com domain name drift back out into the available name pool for a year or so.  When it finally came out of the snarled web of the previous host, we were able to recapture it and settle it down in the tried and true Hurricane Katrina surviving Directnic.com.  

We will admit pulling a name or two from them over the years in search of bargains and flashy features, but we learned out lesson.  All new names, if there will be any, will be registered through them.

FamousGrazing.com is now pointing toward the latest addition to the Famous Grazing blogs hosted at SquareSpace.com - Aptly named "Famous Grazing."

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Saturday, October 10, 2009

Tried Ping in January

Some of the drifting famous grazing blogs were given hope by Ping.fm in January. I posted an entry then in the Xanga blog at http://ping.fm/4frro Still trying...

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Alternative Blog Posting Methods - Posterous

blogged: http://ping.fm/OQqZN - Ping.FM??

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x-Pollinate, Ping.fm and Posterous

We have been trying to get xPollinate to send blog entries to Posterous and Vox. Our last try didn't work. Now we're trying to do the same from withing Ping.fm

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Rising Early on a Saturday Twixt Seasons

Weathered Phone Pole

It was almost a year ago when I took this photo in Croton-on-Hudson, NY.  The weather was the same, but the country certainly wasn’t.

On that day the ascendant party in power was full of hope and the defeated party was licking the wounds of a sounding defeat.

On this day it feels like 1859 and 1932 combined with the hysterical talking head of the media feeding on the paranoiac or just worrisome feelings of the mob. In both of the years mentioned, journalist did the same touting the people in power were going to bring about the ruin of the nation by not following the policies of the defeated party, the party, when in power, was the real cause of the awful state of things.

It’s like handing a man a half-full bucket of water, pushing him into a burning building and blaming the destruction of the structure on his inability to save it with the water in the bucket.

The prize recently announced in Norway is a reward for despite having been handed that bucket, and that wave of incredibly biased media mumble-jumbo, the man can still smile and say lets build a new, better house on the ruins.   

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Thursday, October 08, 2009

Before We Start Posting in October

The local governing agencies have established new rule regarding the behavior of bloggers.

“No more Wild West” was one of the comments that drew out attention.

Over the Office Door

We will be reviewing this information.  At the time, being not affiliated much with anyone, we need to review our commenting policy to make sure it is with in the guidelines of the  the whims of the powers that be.

Stand by.

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Sunday, September 20, 2009

The New Theme Means a Lot

When I saw the RSS feed from Posterous introducing the new themes, I went right to it and changed the grazing theme to green
.  
It makes sense to me.

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

It Still Takes a Few Days

I watched the second plain hit.  I remember thinking "what kind of idiot would fly that close to take a look?"  I still thought the first strike was an accident.  

Growing up in Manhattan in the '50's I was used to stories of planes hitting the sky scrapers, the Empire State Building, the most infamous of them.  I thought the second plane was coming around for a look when I saw it make the the turn over the harbor.

It took a moment to set in that this was done on purpose.  It wasn't an act I thought possible.  

I soon discovered I had lost friends sent to help and workers trapped on the upper floors.  

My wife and I dined on a regular basis at Cellar in the Sky. We had even taken most of the staff out for drinks after closing.

What bothered me most this year is I didn't see it coming.  When I first wrote the date on an official document, it hit me.  It hit me so hard I had to sit.

I thought about 1949, the same amount of time after the attack on Pearl Harbor.  Did people write 12/7/49 on official paper and suddenly remember Pearl Harbor? Or then, like now, had so much war and mayhem hit them, that one barbaric act lost some of its horror?

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Monday, September 07, 2009

The RSS Wave

Does She ever smile

Image by sgtret via Flickr

Residing on the East Coast of the United States I can feel the tide of content flow over my head in the morning coming from the east.  I monitor my RSS reader, FeedDemon from around 0600 until usually past midnight.

The first flow is always from Europe, reading English as my primary language, mostly from the UK, but certainly other parts of Europe and Africa contribute to the content.
Then, as the sun grows brighter, the Canadians seem to perk up before the pundits from NY and Boston add their morning stretches to the mix. After that, the more civilized who actually sit down to breakfast, get the kids off to school, or settle into their cubicles begin to comment.

During the work week, I don’t go back to reading the feeds until after 1800, but when I do, I find the Midwest and Pacific coasts of Canada, the US and parts of South America have all contributed to the content.

After my own Dinner and the house has settled in, I make my last scan to say good morning to the left side of the Pacific Rim, Japan, China, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and the most vociferous, Australia and New Zealand.

Beside the 600 meters a second scientist are saying we travel through the universe, this gentle wave of information, not intrusive but actively available has become my connection to civilized thought.  Without the RSS reader, it would be much more difficult to scan so broad a range of information, opinion and shared wonder.

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Thursday, September 03, 2009

The Labor Day Weekend

Pepper Gold

Image by sgtret via Flickr

The days are getting shorter and the first week of school is done.  It’s won’t be long before the leaves turn gold and red and them become so much litter.

Though we all know Summer has a few more weeks to it as the world tilts, but, tilt be damned, we have created this day in September, Labor Day. 

It was originally designed to celebrate the working man and later woman.  Now it is seen more of seasonal marker.

The fun is over, the business begins. At least in the US of A.

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Sunday, August 30, 2009

I know it’s only a day, but..

Summer on the Estate

Image by sgtret via Flickr

There never was a summer vacation that I recall that ended while it is still August, but my son is expected at school tomorrow, August 31, 2009.

I know it’s only one day, but it is still August. 
I know there is the Swine Flu Thing, but it is still August.

It just doesn’t seem right. To me.  My son seems to care less. 

He is actually looking forward to going back to school.

What has happened to kids today???

Back in the day we would have organized committees, tacked signs to sticks, prepared safe houses and decided what to do if the police came. Now, they get on the bus, plug in their iPods, put on a happy face and go to school.

But, it’s still August!!!
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Thursday, August 06, 2009

August and March

A friend in Sonoma just commented on noticing how it isn’t as light now when she gets up at 0530.  Why she gets up that early in Sonoma escapes me, but I am sure she has her reasons.

 August like March is a transition month.  For those of us who renew our routines in September, a huge amount of preparation takes place in August.  Grasping onto the last threads of light in the morning and in the evening, we still thinks weeks ahead.

I have a five year plan.  I hope it is more successful than those the Soviet Union used to displace people and free will.  It really is a seven year plan but that would bring all sorts of jinx issues into play.

This plan gets revised every August.  It was a twelve year plan once.  I suppose that’s a good sign.
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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Slightly Disappointed – 1/2 Blood Prince

Because of bad weather we put off an outdoor activity and opted instead to finally see Half Blood Prince.  With our son, we have seen all of the other Harry Potter films and went to midnight book release parties for at least the last three or four books.

These comments have little to do with the general reader’s complaint about the movie not being true to the book.  Plenty has been said about Harry below the floor and not frozen at the scene.  I can allow for artistic license by the film maker.

It is the film making itself that bothers me. As the films progress through the books, the telling of the story seems to become less important so that, is this latest version, the story isn’t told at all.

In a fashion similar to the Dune movie best known for a shirtless Sting, several people near me at the film’s conclusion said “If you didn’t read the book, you wouldn’t have a clue what just happened.”  All too true.

Instead of continuity and smooth segue, I felt like I was watching an animated slide show.  If you had divided the scenes, numbered them and put them on the web, I would’ve been better entertained. Some scene changes were so painfully artless I was wondering if the theater was showing a pirated version.

And who cast Gollum's  cousins for the soul sipping scene on the island in the cave?

This disappointing experience will not stop me from seeing what follows in the series.  No matter how poor the snap shots, it’s always good to see the family maturing and coming of age.  I just hope they change directors, in mid production if need be.

Please!

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Saturday, July 18, 2009

Shortbread

After a very long workday, I knew I was coming home to an almost empty house. (see: cat)  With no one here, I only turned on the lights I needed to get settled and didn’t notice the square white postal box sitting on the Chinese apothecary in the atrium.

But then Facebook stepped in under the direction of a beloved niece.  She was thinking of me, alone at home on the other side of the continent.  A home crafter and accomplished artist herself she wanted to send something to lift my spirits.

She remembered a list from a long time ago where I answered the question. “What is your favorite junk food?” with Shortbread.

I know there are many people in the world who would not consider a food of such simple purity junk.  But it becomes junk food when you get a can of Dundee shortbread for Christmas, open the can and eat each round in order, like pancakes.

These shortbread squares are from a small scale and very talented baker whose web site is http://www.thehomebaker.etsy.com 

The Home Baker’s motto is From My Kitchen to Your Tummy. Homemade Treats by Mimi, Baked & Shipped Same Day.

Let’s all give Mimi a rousing set of applause!  Save another for my Niece!

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Sunday, July 12, 2009

You Would Think Things Would Slow Down in July…no.

A wooden Filing Cabinet with drawer open

Image via Wikipedia

After a short break on the Rocky Coast of Maine and a rather disconcerting encounter with the dreaded Blue Screen of Death, we came back to find regulations unknown to us were waiting to remove a portion of our collective buttocks without properly filed documentation.

It was one of those things where everything in real time was done correctly but the documents proving that to the future were stuffed in a drawer, left open on a laptop’s desktop and not filed or were sitting in a briefcase in the trunk of car.

Created by Joost de Meij, screenshot taken fro...IOW, no big deal but the skills of an experienced file clerk were needed. That and a good, and scheduled, back-up program.  The second digital issue was fixed immediately. 

The surprise was that none of had every really done any filing. We lived in our laptops and Blackberrys.  A chart was drawn i.e.: get file cabinet, find room for it, get the proper size hanging green things and properly colored folders.

Once the receptacle was in place the next step was collection. It took only one very long meeting for everyone to figure out who had what and how to bring it all to one place.

The services of UPS and Federal Express were needed as well as a FAX machine.  There’s another blast from the past.  We weren’t sure there was a FAX machine until we noticed it was a feature in the mega-wattage printer in the backroom where no-one goes.

The collective angst was soon abated when all the pods were in place and a plan created to prevent its reoccurrence.  Part of the humor here is no one is probably every going to look at these files now they’re in place.  However,  the law of chance says, if they weren’t there, someone would ask about it tomorrow.

Believe it.

As an aside, my constant use of Evernote made my portion of this adventure much easier.  I didn’t need the FAX or the overnight couriers.  I brought up the program, signed in and, presto-change-o, there were all the files I needed.  A quick connection to a color printer and I was sitting pretty.
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Sunday, June 28, 2009

SquareSpace online editor & Firefox RC3

Mougli weighing his frolic options

Image by sgtret via Flickr

We’ve discovered the cause of the problem we were having with SquareSpace online blog creator and manager and Firefox RC3. 

It was the LastPass add-on the Firefox.  I inadvertently, meaning clumsily clicked through a pop-up box without reading it.  LastPass was filling in fields I had mindlessly instructed it to fill.

Thus, every time I brought up the editor, it filled in the blanks and defaulted to the Fathers Day entry, during the creation of which the offending action on my part took place.Pepper Gold

When there is a technical problem we always first ask, “Is it plugged in?”  Now when we have  Firefox problem, we need to ask, “Is it a plug-in?

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Monday, June 22, 2009

Firefox 3.5r2 Editing Problem with SquareSpace










-__________________
This is the page where the entry to be edited is selected. When I clicked on "edit" in the right column the Modify Post box would pop up.

Instead of the June 22 entry, the June 21 entry shown below popped up.

When I tried to edit the June 20 entry, the same Happy Father's Day window would pop up.

Through use of SquareSpace's excellent trouble ticket service it was determined that the proble was not with their editor but with the way the cache is stored in Firefox 3.5r2.

When we came to the online editor from Chrome or Opera, there was no problem. In fact, we edited the blog entry in Chrome quite easily.

Again, kudos to the support staff at SquareSpace for their insite towards the problem source.


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Summer? Seattle Now in New England?

DSC_0109View from the Vineyard Haven Ferry to ...

Image by sgtret via Flickr


When Summer began yesterday we were ready to break out the shorts and sandals, check the ferry schedules and decided if we will finally make it to PEI this year. 

Then we looked out at the sodden landscape, put on our polar fleece and decided not to open the pool this year.

Seattle has exported its weather to New England.  I can recall one full day for the past few weeks that did not involve rain.  Even the day we all went to Martha’s Vineyard started with rain.  It faded as we approached the Oak Bluff ferry landing.

We were there for a graduation celebration held in the Methodist Camp.. Their magnificent open air meeting room simultaneously gave the feeling of a big-top open to the air and a cathedral dome. The sun this day did its duty.

We could see the storm clouds massing behind Cape Cod as we approached Woods Hole. Sure enough, the next morning, the grass was soaked and the car’s windshield was covered with wet droppings from the overhead red oak.

A Nest by the Woods Hole FerryWhen the temperature rises above 100 and we look out at the unopened pool, we’ll return to this blog entry and understand our motive.  That’s right before we decide again, this is the year to visit PEI.

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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Happy Father’s Day!

Sam at Bethesda Fountain in NYC Central Park Copyright 2004 JDK Communications of New England.

Image by sgtret via Flickr

To all the fellow fathers out there, think not of today as your day.  It is the day for your children, your family, to show their love for you by doing things they feel you would like. 

It matters little whether any of these things are to  your liking.  You must show appreciation for the spirit in which they are given. Do this and you will be a good father.

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Saturday, June 20, 2009

Working Today

Normally on a Saturday we would be all over FeedDemon finding interesting links and commenting on the news of the day.  Not today.  Today we actually earn a living to put turkey bacon in the fridge. 

It is the way of the world. 

The good news is tomorrow's Father's Day. 

I get to relax and bask in the glow of admiration from my son before I do the laundry.  What could be better?
Candide eat your heart out!
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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Firefox Search Box Font Problem!!

I am having trouble with the fonts on Firefox 3.5's search boxes. The font appears to be white with a

Mozilla FirefoxImage via Wikipedia

white back ground. This is very annoying.
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Monday, June 15, 2009

Reinstalled Firefox Add-on Scribefire

Haven't used Scribefire in Firefox for a while. Now that we have a new Famous Grazing blog, I thought it would be a good idea to set the Scribefire up to use it.
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Powered by ScribeFire.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Got to the end of the internet!

A defunct grazing blog

Image by sgtret via Flickr

There was a cartoon back in the nineties of a man sitting at a PC staring at the screen with a look of incredulity. The message on the screen says, “You have reached the end of the internet.”


That’s how I felt this morning when I had no more links on my RSS reader FeedDemon.  I had started with 521 pages to view.  This seemed an insurmountable task. But, using FeedDemon’s Newspaper View where you can choose between a list of headlines, the headline with a summary or a stripped down version of the entire page, with a steady use of the J & K keys and the spacebar, I bounced through it....

Note: Cross posted from SquareSpace.

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Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Union Reject Concessions

January 3, 1863 cover of Harper's Weekly, one ...

Image via Wikipedia


When I was a kid growing up in Manhattan, the news stands were covered with newspapers, not magazines.

There was the morning Daily News, Mirror and Times

In the afternoon the Journal American, the ...

NOTE: Cross posted from SquareSpace.

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Sunday, June 07, 2009

Not Commenting on the Gilmore Girls

I will admit it was my intention this morning to join the mob and comment on the brouhaha about the exchange recently on the Gilmore Gang.  But  apologies from both combatants have been issued. The matter should now be dropped.

So, have you seen the flash games on Owen’s World? The flash based games can be a harmless distraction.  However, the ever so simple Tetris posted there brings back memories of my first computer addiction. What this version doesn’t seem to do is increase the intensity, but remains at the level started.  This could explain how I got to 1900 rows before I dragged myself away.

The fact that Tetris didn’t exist before 1984 is very hard to believe. It seems like one of those things that have always been there. Graceland was opened to the public two years before Tetris was invented, almost to the day.

This is all a geeks attempt at changing the subject.  It’s something like someone saying, “So what about those<insert sports team>?”

When an icon goes all potty mouth, what else can you do?
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Note: Cross posted from SquareSpace.

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Clouds All Over the Place.

The latest cloud that has come up in the web chatter can be found at Oursignal.com -  It grabs it’s links from a combination of the aggregate  feeds generated by Digg, Reddit, Del.icio.us, hackernews and yahoo buzz

image

Hackers, geeks and geek-a-wannabees, will find their equivalent to gossip chatter in this cloud.

For those addicted to Twitter, there is Twitscoop,

image

 

Hovering over a word at the Web site will bring up a pop up of the latest tweets on the subject. A click on any of the words will take you to a running list of the tweets as they come in.

In TweetDeck, the  Twitscoop cloud is one of the many options you can include as content in the many columns a power user
image

deploys to keep up with the pulse of social networking.

Where Twitscoop depends on one dominant word expanding and diminishing the font size to reflect the traffic, Oursignal highlights a phrase.  When the traffic increases it too increases the font, but it also uses colors to show if the trend is coming or going.

Consider yourself standing in a crowd of people.  There is a buzz of general conversation going on around the room.

If you focus on the people closest to you, you can get the gist of their individual topics. But if suddenly you hear one word our phrase moving like a wave though the mass, it would be the same as the way both these clouds manifest the level of general interest.

It’s cute, but I wouldn’t depend on it to keep you informed.  That’s Jon Stewart’s job.
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Saturday, June 06, 2009

The Live Writer Standard

In our old age, we no longer want to write code, edit HTML, check color wheels for the 000eee or 02h0011 for exact color settings.  We want to go online and set the blog up, with as many options and bells and whistles that will fit into the side bars, the carneys rows, to give the reader options other than the links in the message itself.

Listening to Leo Laporte and Amber MacArthur on their podcast, Net@Night each of them mentioned SquareSpace as a great place to host a blog. 

We did try it when it first started and found it didn’t support off line editors.  We mentioned that to the owners and went on our merry way.  Thankfully, the people at TWiT also mentioned it in their weekly podcast as well.

So…

Being ever influences by this web-wise cadre of speakers, we popped back the SquareSpace and found a much more mature interface for the creation of the blog.  Not only that, we found it supports Live Writer. Bingo!!

So, Famous Grazing, a renewed name, will be the seventh active Famous Grazing blog.
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Hey, I'm a Twit Again (technologizer.com)


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Thursday, June 04, 2009

Eighty Two Subscribers!!

On my iPod sits all of the Net@Nights for the year 2009.  They haven’t been listened to because I followed Leo Laporte’s advice and subscribed to Audible.com 

I just finished listening to a wondrous biography of Arthur Conan Doyle, which included recording of his own voice, (cool!)

Before downloading another book, I resolved to listen through first the Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me’s and then the Net@Night’sTWiT, I am leaving for the beach in Maine

In the first recording of the year, Leo and Amber chatted with Robert Scoble about Friendfeed. He mentioned a way to manage the feed using folders.  So, I went back in and did just that.

There were only 14 people listed that I have followed with no rhyme or reason.  Then I glanced and noticed 82 people were following me.  I felt like the guy on the Verizon Mobile commercials.

Here I was thinking the banal comments I was making might be seen by my friend Deven, only to find this group had wandered by to graze. A quick glance revealed 1480265970_7fccd545e6_s[1] almost all of them to be from my Twitter site. That was a relief. The same flock on a different branch.  This was almost nice.

I am not bothered by the followers at all.  What bothers me is I didn’t know they were there. That won’t happen again… maybe.
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