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Archive for March, 2009

Unfocused_tirades++

07 Mar

A lot of people, including me, piss and moan about mainstream news media. I have no idea what “mainstream media” actually means, but I’ll assume for the purposes of this diatribe that it involves all the major news outlets  — which, really, mostly just copy-paste their news from AP or Reuters. But I digress….

Generally, all this pissing has assumed a kind of knee-jerk quality. Metaphorical, that is, not canine. If you see something moronic on the news, you get to automatically roll your eyes and make a mental note. Then you save it up so you can snark away the next time you’re hanging out with friends. That way everyone of like mind can stand around and agree with each other, like some kind of spontaneous pseudo-intellectual circle jerk.

Ahem.

Uh… sorry about that.

Anyway, the mainstream media is pretty much what we’ve made of it. We’re so desperately bored by information, now. It needs to dance and sing and bat its eyelashes at us. Numbers need to spin and sparkle, and make jangling noises that tickle our hindbrains. It’s little wonder, then, that the major news networks typically have about the same substantive (and stylistic) value as a slot machine in a Vegas 7-11.

I don’t think anybody really, truly believes that Fox News actually delivers news anymore. People who say they do might actually think they do, but in reality they just believe that Fox represents what they already think.

Take note: these people are stupid assholes.

But of course, that’s my point too. News isn’t news. Whatever they don’t read off the wire is all just editorials now. The major outlets are really just ideological cheerleaders. Once you hear what news channel someone watches, it’s just another way to bottle them up into a stereotype. You already know all their chants.

All you closed-minded fundamentalists, strap on your shoulder holsters and swagger down to Fox News.

You whiny under-testosteronized liberals, get your Priuses (Prii? Pria?) in gear and cruise on over to the warm embrace of MSNBC.

And you sweater-vest-wearing intellectual snobs, tune your iPhones to your local NPR station (what, like you’re too good to watch TV, you jagoffs?).

Full disclosure: I listen to NPR — even donated, this year — and don’t have cable TV service. But I despise anything iEtc., think the Prius is kinda cool but overrated, and I used to own a handgun.

I guess that makes me the biggest asshole here. Unless the goatse guy is reading this. In which case, I just have to say: Okay, seriously… what the fuck, man?

Anyway. If you hate the mainstream news so much, stop watching it.

If enough people share your disgust — and I use Fox News as an example, only because to me they are by far the most ridiculous — and tune out, they’ll either wither away and die, or you’ll suddenly see Bill O’Reilly start preaching the benefits of welfare and universal healthcare. All any media is, is a filter for information. Find one that suits your tastes.

If not, then just admit you watch it because it gives you some sort of pleasure. Even if it’s from righteous anger, scorn, or judgment handed down from the lofty perch of your mighty intellect, then the mainstream media is doing its job… It’s entertaining you.

Wait… you actually want unbiased information? Freak.

I’ll say this: I think NPR is the best source for unbiased information, but of course I myself am biased, so you can’t trust anything I say. Yeeha!

 
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You can’t spell “Materialism” without “smile”

06 Mar

While I was cleaning my apartment earlier (all right, instead of cleaning my apartment), I decided to gather some of the gear I’ve accumulated for my Asia trip together in a big pile and see what I had so far. The result was somewhat gratifying in how efficient and sleek it was, but it was also a little off-putting when I started tallying up the actual price tags on each item. Then I started remembering some of the items I’d forgotten, or haven’t yet purchased, and the giant check I had to write to Uncle Sam started to look a little more reasonable.

Only counting the stuff I got specifically for this outing:
– 1 fancy undershirt: $34
– 3 fancy boxer briefs: $25 each
– 1 pair of travel pants: $68
– 2 travel shirts: $25 each
– 1 fancy pack: $150
– 1 pair of trail runners: $125
– 1 Moleskine journal and a pen: $12?
– 2 extra-small eVent dry compression sacks: $60
– 4 pairs of fancy socks: right around $50
– pack raincover: $6
– secret wallet/pocket thingy: $10
– silicone roll-up keyboard for my handheld computer: $26
– Pelican 1020 watertight case for my computer and phone: $22
– Silk travel sheet: $58
– 2 bottles of Picaridin-based bug repellent: $15
– Nylon electronics wrap for camera accessories: $18
– Neoprene camera wrap for my camera: $30
– Asus Eee 900HA netbook +2gb extra RAM: $350
– Nokia N810 handheld computer: $220
– Mugen extended battery for Nokia N810: $80
– Zagg skin for Nokia N810: $25
– Devotec solar charger with Samsung, Nokia, USB, etc. tips: $45
– Universal travel AC adapter: $25
– ACR Electronics MicroFix 406 PLB: $600

You may notice, with some satisfaction, that I got the patently ridiculous (but oh so awesome) underwear. I’d be embarrassed about it, but frankly, I far prefer them to my normal underwear.

Okay, I’m going to go out on a limb and assume that I’ve exhausted the topic of my underpants.

All together, adding tax and shipping, we’re probably nudging the $2000 mark.

That $600 thingy is a Personal Locator Beacon, which is essentially a GPS chip with a big antenna and a battery that sends a high-tech “boohoo” to US Air Force search-and-rescue services (via NOAA) if I’ve fallen and can’t get up. I admit it will be nice, knowing that the crack rural Cambodian GPS-equipped rescue teams/death squads will be there if I get into trouble.

Hm… you can’t spell it without “miasma” either.

 

GMap GPS Link

04 Mar

Update: Because I’m a bored sucker, I went back in and added support for multiple GPS coordinate sets. Now you can add any number of links you like, and they should work. The only caveat is, the plugin is kinda dumb, so it’ll just hack away at anything that has two colons side-by-side and try to turn it into a link. So yeah, I guess look out for that.

:gps:And here’s proof you can now do more than one link in a post. Gee, I wonder who lives in that house?::38.920863601444516:: -77.06569075584412:gps:

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All right, well, I wrote a plugin for WordPress. I’m officially a big dork. More so, I mean.

I was looking around for a simple way to post my location on Google Maps from my GPS-enabled handheld to WordPress, and I couldn’t find any simple plugins that had that functionality.

So I wrote a simple string replacement plugin, with a standard of code that would probably make any programmer worth the name pass out in his own sick.

You’ll install and activate it just like any other WP plugin, then type the appropriately formatted string (I can’t give the format here, since the plugin’s activated on this site and it’ll just do wacky stuff with the page). Check the plugin page for proper instructions.

It will replace your string with a link to a Google map (in _blank) of those coordinates at zoom level 14. I guess I could add more features later, which is why it’s at v0.1. It should also only accept one set of coordinates; you can put in all you want, but it’ll only see the first one.

:gps:And this is where I was earlier today, whee.::32.970705 ::-116.955461:gps:

Download.

 
 

This is another test.

03 Mar

Well, I got a silicone roll-up keyboard to use with my N810. It’s definitely going to take some getting used to, but it’s perfectly usable — and, more importantly, it’s a hell of a lot faster than typing on the built-in keyboard.

I’m typing this post with it (*gasp*), and the annoyance factor is manageable.

On the minus side… using this stuff, whether together or separately, makes me feel so freaking Asian it’s unbelievable.

Responsiveness is good; certainly not as good as using a real keyboard on a real computer, but good enough for occasional blogging and web surfing. Typos and missed keys are much more common than I’d like, but… meh.

In the end, I think this is the best compromise… usable enough, but not *fun* to use, so I won’t be tempted to fall back into old patterns of behavior.

Hopefully this will mark the end of the geeky test posts for a while.