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.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Shared Items From Google Reader

There is a "sort of" blog generated when you share RSS Feeds  scanned with Google Reader.

Each time I see something I may want to read in detail later, I mark it with a star.
When I see an item that may be of value to others with interests similar to mine, I set it to share.

This is easy with Google Reader.  Click on S for star and Shift-S for share.

The blog our sharing generates can be found at http://tr.im/sgtret

This will take you to:

 
SGTRET'S SHARED ITEMS

 Some of the most recent shared items are

How to Edit a PDF File from eHow,
Do You Own Your Email, from PCMech,
Sprint BlackBerry 8830 Gets Official OS Update from RIMarkable

and my latest favorite, Hello World!, an opening blog entry from Twitter/spedteacher's Education On The Plate.

Anyone who uses Google Reader can produce a quick blog demonstrating their interests as well.

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Posted via email from grazing's posterous

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Plasmalamp Posterous Link Test

We just made some administrative changes on the Grazing blog hosted by Posterous.com. This is a combined test of the continued links and the Posterous Bookmark in Firefox.
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Posted via web from grazing's posterous

Monday, February 23, 2009

Testing The Posterous Bookmark Button

We just dragged the Post it on Posterous book mark to our Chrome Bookmark bar. To test it we went to Wikimedia and found a nice tray of muffins to share with the world.
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Posted via web from grazing's posterous

The Oscars


We just watched a Colbert Report from a few days ago.  

Using his completley nonsensical methodolgy he predicted every major Oscar.  The second choice he made when he first predicted Sean Penn did not take away his first choice being right.  

What makes this close to interesting is his doing exactly the same thing last year.  One hundred per cent correct.  

It will achieve truly interesting status if he does it ten years in a row. That would require first that Comedy Central still exists in eight years and his show is still playing on it.

Considering how disposable is fame, even more so when the source of fame is contemporary comment, the odds are not in our favor.  

The standards must be lowered.

We will declare it truly interesting if he does again one more year.  That's possible.  

Will the Vegas & London bookies agree?
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Posted via web from grazing's posterous

Friday, February 20, 2009

Guys & Dolls with Oliver Platt

Though it is Oliver Platt's name that draws you into the theater, it is Lauren Graham and Tituss Burgess's performances as Adelaide and Nicely-Nicely Johnson you remember when you leave.

We watched the February 19th Matinée performance of Guys & Dolls at the Nederlander Theater on Forty First Street.

With the exception of Steve Rosen, all of the members of the ensemble fit the Damon Runyon mold.  Rosen's tropical hat was the only out of place item on the stage.  The remainder of the production ran like clockwork; down to the placement of the chairs by the members of the cast in rhythm with the music. The revolving entrances, the door to the mission as well as the revolving door to everywhere else were very clever devises. 

I am normally against the use of video during a stage play, but its use as an enhancement to scenery is very well done.  The plane to and from Cuba and the occasional passing of an El train, instead of being a distraction, is accepted as part of the show.

The insertion of Damon Runyon himself is a cute addition in the beginning, but he and his lit cigarette, became a bit much toward the end.  This is commented on by Kate Jennings Grant's Sarah Brown character to the agreement of the audience.

The multiple parts played by each of the ensemble players, from shoeshine boy, to garage owner/police officer and everything in between was a marvel to watch.

Let us not forget the Hot Box Girls.  Hoo boy, they were fun to watch, with Lauren Graham extremely hot in each of their musical numbers.  Her smile won the audience over quickly.

The major players, Oliver Platt as Nathan Detroit, Craig Bierko as Sky Masterson and Kate Jennings Grant as Sister Sarah did their jobs well enough, but Miss Graham and the rest of the cast carry the show.  Jim Ortlieb and Mary Testa as the Grandfather and General both have their moments on stage, filling out the musical numbers so that each of them were memorable.

This is petty, I know, but the automatic umbrella used by Craig Bierko as he walks up onto the stage annoyed the historian in me.

The greatest disappointment was lack of an original cast CD.  I want one as soon as it is produced.
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Posted via email from grazing's posterous

Sunday, February 15, 2009

A Flashing-Blinking Curious Sunday Morning

In the normally sylvan surroundings we call home, it was a tad startling to find our bedroom curtains a show of blue, red and white lights mixing with the morning sun.

A glance down the driveway found a fire truck and two police cars parked by our mail box.  The police were in conversation with a white coated man who had his arms out to his side parallel to the road.

An ambulance quietly pulled up behind the fire truck.  The police, after putting his hands over the roof and patting him down, urged the man into the ambulance’s side door.  After a short conversation, one officer went into the ambulance and closed the door behind him.

First the ambulance left, then one police car.  I was almost curious enough to go down and ask for the details, but not enough.  I know I’ll read about it in next weeks local paper.

Not a normal Sunday wake up  in these sylvan surroundings.
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Saturday, February 14, 2009

Privacy Problem with Twitter DM

Another twitterite sent me a message thanking me for an invite code to an alpha test. This is a code that was sent to me by the developer for my personal use.

I did not make that code public.  In fact, that person's using the code caused it to die for me.  Not their fault at all. It was The System.

After much examination with that person's cooperation, I was able to determine that all of my DM's, Direct Messages, on Twitter were now open on my public timeline. 

This goes against the private guarantee of Twitter's DM's

What this tells me is the system is way from perfect.  It tells me that no personal information should EVER be entrusted to a Twitter message of any kind. 

I had to go in and manually remove all of the DM's in my account. 

The ones that were important, I copied into Evernote's file on my hard drive. 

If they go public, I will lose all faith in anything on the internet, including email, being safe from exposure.
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Posted via email from grazing's posterous

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Twitter Mosaic


Get your twitter mosaic here.



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