Thu, 31 May 2007

A Zombie Brand Spreads its Blight
Remember how Night of the Living Dead started with one zombie, lumbering around a graveyard so as to not seem so horribly out of place? Well, that mechanic works for brand zombies too; Flying Biscuit, recent addition to the Zerg Overmind's Raging Brands' legion of genetically corrupt minions portfolio of food franchise concepts, is opening an Athens location, according to this Craigslist ad. The conquest has begun.
posted at: 00:56 | permanent link to this entry


Wed, 30 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
pudding, cake, pie, or pastry?
posted at: 13:19 | permanent link to this entry

And then, history.
I'm finally playing around with the site, so expect change (for better or worse) over the next weeks and months. First off, archives (by month) of all postings and "topics of discussion", courtesy the 'flatarchives' plugin. Messy, but the old links are there. Next up: some tag-based categorization, then some cleaning of the resulting mess.
posted at: 04:29 | permanent link to this entry

Would somebody please not donate wins to the Mets?
I mean, really. Two Balks and a Home Run. This, after the Cubs blew a game from a non-save situation. The Mets have lost 17 times in 52 games, and six of those losses came to the Braves. This is getting silly.
posted at: 03:54 | permanent link to this entry


Tue, 29 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
By the time you pass away, you will have collected __________.
posted at: 23:03 | permanent link to this entry

Return of the flowering thing
Rumors of orchid's death have been greatly exaggerated. I repotted the plant, in some bark-and-charcoal mix I picked up from a nearby store. The plant didn't immediately die off, and after a period of spike regrowth, it's now budding another set of flowers. This time, the spike has a nice hook to it. I've tried rotating the plant to generate a spiral growth pattern, to very limited effect.

As for the rest of the plants, it's a matter of remembering what to water: the cucumbers have grown halfway up the railing, and need at least one water a day. The dill is surprisingly finicky; it will wilt and die in a matter of hours. The basil is finally starting to look like basil, although the dwarf variety I planted this year is a far cry from the porch-enveloping beanstalk-kin of prior years. Oregano and thyme show the most promise, due to their affinity for drier soils. So I'll probably replant some more, for transplanting after one of (a) tomatos or (b) cucumbers die off.

posted at: 22:59 | permanent link to this entry


Sat, 26 May 2007

IM IN UR MAILBOXES STEELIN UR ADDYS
Someone broke the door off my mailbox and stole some mail last week. And, the expected credit card fraud has occurred, using the address pilfered from my mailbox.

Wait, my mailbox? Hey, they did use my address, didn't they. Not only that, the perps (or their customer) overnighted a replacement card (to my address), when the first once didn't arrive to their location Friday. So maybe someone did not think their plan all the way through. It will be interesting to see what else shows up, who uses my name and info to leverage what. And just as interesting, how much foot-dragging the various lenders and "reporting agencies" do.

For now, I only see card acceptances from Discover ($10k) and WaMu ($2k). I've contacted both, and will write about their varied responses later.

posted at: 17:40 | permanent link to this entry


Fri, 25 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
Contrary to popular belief, calling the umpire a "Phillie-f****** son of a b****" is not the best way to plead your case.
posted at: 20:53 | permanent link to this entry


Thu, 24 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
When was the last time you used a wire service to transfer money?
posted at: 10:54 | permanent link to this entry


Tue, 22 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
Take Me Out to the Ballgame was written in 1908.
posted at: 21:03 | permanent link to this entry

Tonight's forecast for Metro Atlanta (courtesy NOAA):
  Patchy Smoke. I mean, really. Hopefully the resulting ashes will feed better growth in the next few years.
posted at: 20:58 | permanent link to this entry


Mon, 21 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
What is your favorite way to prepare ramen?
posted at: 03:45 | permanent link to this entry


Fri, 18 May 2007

Required Reading for this week: (links pop)
NPR's interview with Tony Blair, who says what U.S. "conservatives" can't say without lifting the veil, and "liberals" can't say without biting the hand(s) that feed them.

MSNBC's Netiquette column is a decent read, especially if you read it like radio commentary:  glossy, not particlarly in-depth, lots of references (which are linked, in true web fashion). It's mildly amusing.
posted at: 06:10 | permanent link to this entry


Thu, 17 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
Fill in the Blank(s): Better living through ______.
posted at: 14:57 | permanent link to this entry


Tue, 15 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
Pastel, Charcoal, or Watercolor?
posted at: 17:57 | permanent link to this entry


Sun, 13 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
Catfish: Deep-Fried, Pan-seared, or Blackened?
posted at: 16:34 | permanent link to this entry


Sat, 12 May 2007

Here we go again...
Braves strung six(6) straight hits with 2 outs, to chase the Pirates' starter and take a game-winning 4-1 lead.
posted at: 19:29 | permanent link to this entry

Today's topic for discussion is:
Horseradish leaves are edible as a salad green.
posted at: 19:27 | permanent link to this entry


Fri, 11 May 2007

Slack reporting sucks.
One more thing about Wednesday night's game...the ESPN's summary (and originally, the AP story) describes the turning point as "Chipper Jones and Andruw Jones came up with two-out, run-scoring hits in the seventh inning, giving the Braves a 3-2 lead." That's half the story, as AP filled in their blanks with a later report. The correct answer is: with two out and empty bases, the Braves strung together four straight hits--singles from Kelly Johnson and Willie Harris, double from Chipper Jones, and another single from Andruw Jones. Four hits, two runs, and a lead.

So you'd figure the Padres would have figured out to not walk Braves' batters. Wrong again. This time, it was reverse order for Harris (walked), then Johnson (bases-clearing double). Two outs, Three runs, and another lead. I was kind of afraid of this series, because the East's pitching is soft, but it seems the East's pitching is mainly soft against the East's batters.
posted at: 02:31 | permanent link to this entry

Today's topic for discussion is:
Turnips, Radishes, or Beets?
posted at: 02:17 | permanent link to this entry


Thu, 10 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
Only two active MLB players have more than 100 career triples. Steve Finley (124 / T-#90 all-time) and Kenny Lofton (110 / #122 all-time). The leader: Sam Crawford, with 309 triples in 9570 at-bats (that would be an .032 triples percentage).
posted at: 02:40 | permanent link to this entry

Braves win!
I mentioned earlier that the NL East had soft pitching. Now that we're having to face real pitching (courtesy Dodgers and Padres), the Braves' offense has largely dried up. We're still winning, but the games are a lot closer. And, I'm seeing a lot of "Braves haven't hit a homerun in (x) games. what's wrong?" pop up in various online reports. The Braves aren't playing the Eastern Division, that's what's wrong.

Speaking of wrong, Padres decided it would be a good idea to walk Chipper to pitch to Andruw. They chose...poorly. Now, the league has to deal with a resurgent #25, and they have the Padres to thank.

How's this for strength of schedule? Mets play Yankees six times, Braves play Red Sox six times. I just hope the Yankees get their act together.

posted at: 02:30 | permanent link to this entry


Wed, 09 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
Obfuscation.
posted at: 18:26 | permanent link to this entry

The Wonderment that is IRC
One of my main gripes about 'Web 2.0': the fad seems to hang its hat on the idea that piles of unsorted messages, collected and distributed in a post/get manner, are actually real-time conversations. Back home, we called this type of proposition "bullshit." Live chat is real-time conversation, and everything else isn't.

So, IRC (Internet Relay Chat) has been around since '93 or so, and is simply not flashy enough to pass muster in the blog era. It's also synchronous, which is a real trait that dampens participation...except for the several (dozen) people sending "OMGWTFBBQ LOL" back and forth. They definitely benefit from synchronicity. Still, it's live chat, and live chat has value. I've collected a few choice moments from some logs I collected from various channels.
posted at: 03:03 | permanent link to this entry


Tue, 08 May 2007

Today's topic for discussion is:
scallops: grilled, seared, curried, or baked?
posted at: 19:17 | permanent link to this entry


Mon, 07 May 2007

Weekend Report
This weekend, as it turned out, was a "get the hell out of the house" weekend. Seen and heard:
  • Friday: Heather Luttrell (opening) and John Butler Trio at the Roxy, Brick Store, Birdi's and Sage in Decatur. It's rare that I can say I'm enlightened by a performance, but this Butler guy produced, using a 12-string, pedal board, and slide, complexity similar to pipe organ pieces. The next Decatur trip will involve Sage, to try those green tomatos.
  • Saturday: Cinco de Mayo seems analagous to celebrating the War of 1812. "Yay, D.C. is burning! Let's drink some bourbon!" Great. So, after starting at Taco Mac-Perimeter for the Braves/Dodgers game, I caught at 10:30 train to Midtown, to watch The Last Great Fight (tm) (r) (c) (pdq). I ended up watching the fight at Saga, in Midtown. I really like the space, and I'll have to go back to try the menu next time.
         Afterwards, there was the winding-down party at Twisted Taco. What the hell kind of bar plays Neil Diamond? Not only did this one play it, but everyone knew "Sweet Caroline". "Long Live the Internet" would be the moral there, I suppose. This was as entertaining as most anything else, and I got out of the bar before the weekly "last call" fight broke out.
  • Sunday: Five Seasons Brewing is one of the best restaurant/pubs in Sandy Springs. I've been way, way overdue for a visit, and was long overdue for scallops and homebrew. Five seasons didn't dissapoint, on either. Also, it seems this place is spearheading the local "slow food" movement. Good for them, and good for the locals, and good for us diners. :) It seems that the brewery is branching out, starting the climb toward franchisement, with a second location in Alpharetta (Old Milton), and a third on the way.
posted at: 09:45 | permanent link to this entry


Wed, 02 May 2007

Clearing the Air
After the Fark debacle, I've taken to wandering the local blog scene, much more than I have in the past (I still have only so much energy to apply to writing much of anything, and I still don't see how folks do this full-time).

So, I ran into this thread, at Creative Loafing's site. And there was the "condition the loyal left for the upcoming impeachment fight" entry, with immediate garbage comment from some AM Repeater. So, I chimed in, and ended up summarizing my thoughts on our involvement in Iraq, and the Bush Administration, in a nutshell. I couldn't let all that go to waste, so I copied it here. :)

To the red repeater:
Speaking of Bills not taking care of business...

You forgot about the Kenya embassy bombing and that jetliner in New York. (I believe in "magic gas tanks" about as much as I do "magic bullets")

Also, that would be a blue dress in the Lewinsky case, IIRC. You may have confused that dress with The Little Black Dress(tm), which I really can't fault you for.

Monicagate showed that Bill Clinton did not have the balls to make our taliban pay for their intransigence. If he says "Yeah, what of it" instead of "I didn't have..." , the 700 Club's placeholder doesn't get close enough to flip the election in 2000, in spite of their use of the energy markets to shake the economic tree prior to that election.

Lack of open warfare against the Islamists, especially after multiple attacks, shows Bill Clinton did not have the balls to offend his party, as Tony Blair has done by supporting the current actions.

This is in not-so-much contrast to our current (P)resident, who, as I've mentioned above, is much more a placeholder than an actual president. Just as Clinton did not have the balls to offend "the left", Bush Jr. doesn't have the balls to be a real president.

Bush Jr. has acted as a conduit for our taliban, without objection, on nearly every domestic and international issue they want a say in, amounting to a government sponsoring of religious governments worldwide, and specifically the "Christian mission". But, on what basis? Blatant disregard for separation of church and state?

Actually, yes, but not just blatant disregard, disregard to the point of racketeering, and that's where the charges will come from. Follow the money trail here, people, both from the public coffers through friendly contracts, and election campaign "contributions."

Remember, our taliban think they're God's chosen, so things like embezzlement for the Mission aren't a big deal.

And, speaking of intellectually vetting material, you left this gem: "Had poor Bill been less interested in extramartial affairs and acted aggressively against terrorist after the first World Trade Center attack and the subsequent Cole attack..." Guess what? Clinton wasn't too busy setting up "Faith-based initiatives" (taxpayer-funded missionary work), and trying to pitch the idea of "peace through mutual theocracy" to that bunch of morlocks that run the Middle East, to adequately defend against the threat. But then, neither was Bush, because he's the placeholder for the folks that were.
And, to the columnist (blue repeater):
Now that the AM repeater’s been dealt with, time to deal with this article.

What did cheney-Bush do? That whole preface is full of assumption that an action committed by the Administration is evil because it was committed by the Administration. In doing so, it misses some points. Picking through the mess:

1a) Deception for going into Iraq. Almost any president would have moved to depose Saddam Hussein, given the same starting conditions. It takes a bunch of cold-war republicans to lie about the reasons: (a) the oil-for-food program was being used to skirt the embargo, prop up Saddam, and maintain relations with friendly (mainly socialist) allies scattered around the world; (b) enforcing this nullified embargo and related no-fly zone involved permanent station in Saudi, which was used to motivate the Terrorists. we wanted out of Saudi, and had to choose between moving out (giving Saddam a second chance to take over correctly), and moving in (removing Saddam, knowing the likelihood of a resulting civil war).

1b) The war ended with the routing and capture of Saddam Hussein. It was then promptly thrown away by allowing an "islamic" constitution (ditto for Afghanistan, BTW). Then again, why would an administration even bother enforcing church-state separation abroad, when they view the concept as invalid?

1c) You make the war seem like a single event; let's review: Invasion (1991) shifted to seige (1991-2002), then a second invasion (2002-03) and occupation (2003-present), with civil war breaking out in '05 or 06.

1d) Whatever the monetary cost, "squandered" isn't the correct word. "Embezzled" would be more appropriate, as a lot of of those funds have been funnelled into "friendly" (to the administration) sources in the form of overcharges and uncontrolled spending. It isn't good enough to drain the treasury for "faith-based" initiatives, we can juice contracts from the tax and bond revenue, to embezzle money to recipients that we wouldn't be caught dead including in a budget.

2) Wiretapping is one of the few correct things the BushCo has done in two terms. In World War II, we interred the enemy, along with 100+ times as many innocent people. Now, we have the technology to attempt sorting the enemy from everyone else, and that's a much better alternative to camps and deportation.

3) Torture. Yep, and torture of anyone who happened to get sold out to the U.S., whether or not they were a problem. True to form, most of those responsible aren't in prison.

I think Kucinich has an actual case with the second article (deception of Iraq-al-Quaeda relationship); this was a lie on its face. The first article (deception for entering war) is mostly strong, but its weakness is the "Despite all evidence" portion. Recall the old Soviet double play (Russia to China to France...) bought themselves all the time needed (8-9 months) to clean up whatever they might have been doing in Iraq. The third article is faulty, particularly the "absent any real threat {of Iran} to the United States" part, and this is where the articles really show themselves as disingenuous.

You totally skipped over the implications of a President Cheney, specifically the fear that if installed as a lame duck with a year or so left in office, Cheney has the capacity to singlehandedly save the White House for the Republicans. Bush is right where the Democrats want him; his impotency is their strength.

Now is the time to act, you say. I think the action is under way as we speak, and will be drawn out as needed between now and the '08 election.
That's mostly how I see it.
posted at: 05:55 | permanent link to this entry


Tue, 01 May 2007

Always close your tags...
...you never know which browser (e.g., IE) will not handle the mistake gracefully.
posted at: 02:48 | permanent link to this entry