Categories
Critters

Kitten home found!

The itty bitty kitty is now someone else’s welcoming committee!

Spooky Cat

Here she is, just a few minutes before her new family came to pick her up. Her name is now Spook, and she’s spreading kitten kraziness to a new home. I hear she’s making the whole family very happy.

Bon voyage, Spooky cat. We were glad to have you here with our motley assortment o’ kitties, but we’re even more glad you’re bringing the pint-sized fuzzy crazy to a new family.… Read more

Categories
Critters

The department of mousing and urban development

Max vs. mouseFirst off: mission accomplished! A home has been found for the pretty mystery kitten. I’m glad we could, for once, add four legs to someone else‘s family for a change.

It’s very late at night, and I just came back from the kitchen and noticed that an annual ritual has begun that takes place every year when it finally gives up on being warm and gets seriously cold. Every year, Obi and Puck (it used to be Obi and Othello) start camping out in the kitchen and staring intently at every nook, every cranny, every cabinet door. It’s like they know something and they’re not sharing that information with me.

It’s like they hear a mouse or something. … Read more

Categories
Cooking With Code

Puzzled

In case you hadn’t noticed, Scribblings has undergone another revamp. I’ve never particularly felt like my personal blog needs to have the same “look and feel” as the rest of the site, but I’ve grown so fond of the Easel theme being used everywhere else that I’m actually more than happy to make everything unified this time. Perhaps not surprisingly, my blog section is a bit more… colorful. Easel gives you lots of options, and if you have any graphics or PHP chops at all, you can coax it into giving you even more options. It’s the best WordPress theme I’ve encountered thus far. Really.

The “season to taste” menu is still there, though it may go away soon. It’ll allow you to swing things back over to the faux-Facebook look, though I’m gonna come right out and say that I’m becoming less and less enamoured with Facebook with every change they roll out. I suspect that the “timeline” thing they dump on us by the end of this year may be a make-or-break for me. And for a lot of other people. I don’t just automatically dislike every Facebook alteration that lands on our doorstep; it’s this jacked-up “OHCRAPWENEEDTOADDTHISBEFOREGOOGLEPLUSTHINKSOFIT!” stuff that’s really annoying. They’re really feeling threatened by Google Plus, aren’t they? Here’s a hint, Zuckerberg: making constant changes to a system that people have liked and enjoyed is what drives them to Google Plus. Just a crazy thought. Anyway, that being said, you can switch back to the Faux Facebook look if you like. While supplies last.

Drifting dangerously closer to my original point: the near-psychedelic background artwork for this section is my invention and mine alone, and had a lot to do with the state of mind I was in on Friday when I put it together.

Puzzling

Puzzling, isn’t it?… Read more

Categories
Funny Stuff Toiling In The Pixel Mines

LASTDAY

Logan's LastdayHoly crap. I want to work this morning and my palm crystal had turned red! LASTDAY! Time to report to carousel.

One of the last things I worked on was checking and prepping this morning’s Live With Regis & Kelly, the source of more than one closed captioning snafu. This one was funny: when you slow it down and pause it for whatever reason (getting up to answer the phone, answer a question, have a conversation with someone, save the universe, etc.), the captioning sticks on whatever characters last came through, and it repeats itself onscreen. It doesn’t do this on air, just on the edit station.

I just thought it was weirdly appropriate.

HEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE

It’s like the equipment knows, man.

Last day at the station was more or less quiet. I’m so happy that I don’t have to drive to Rogers every night and back from Rogers every day. There aren’t words to describe how much of a drag that was, and how tired I was as the end of either leg of the trip.

Best of luck to my former co-workers. Enjoy your nice new batcave.… Read more

Categories
Serious Stuff

Dream Jobs

Anyone who knows me via Facebook or, well, just knows me, will probably not be even a little bit surprised to hear that the semi-frantic hunt is on for a new job. It’s been made official to those of us who pushed the buttons that run the ads (and make the money) at the Fort Smith teevee station have been given a firm drop-dead date after which our services will no longer be needed. That date is Friday, October 7th. … Read more

Categories
Home Base Serious Stuff

Steve Jobs

It’s almost certainly not news to anyone here that Apple co-founder (and Pixar investment angel) Steve Jobs has died. I’m pretty confident that I don’t need to explain the guy’s background.

I wasn’t the biggest fan of his business practices, but it’d be nigh-on impossible for me to try to deny the huge influence Jobs (and Steve Wozniak) have had in my life.

AppleMy first computer was an Apple II clone. Okay, maybe that didn’t feed any money into Jobs’ bank account at the time – at least not until Apple sued Franklin and the other clonemakers – but the thing’s lifeblood was Apple II software. I learned to program BASIC and some machine code on an Apple II. I was convinced I was going to start cranking out games on that machine.

As it so happens, I also discovered bulletin board systems on an Apple II, and that’s why you’re reading this here, because that fascination – with reaching out and writing stuff that other folks could read – can be followed straight to the front door of this web site, whose oldest content started out as a series of files handed from BBS to BBS. All written, at least at first, on an Apple II (or a similar facsimile thereof).

During some of my most troubled teenage years, games like Ultima IV and Project Space Station occupied large swaths of my time and kept me out of trouble that I could’ve been getting into at that time (heaven knows I didn’t exactly have a strong parental influence guiding me at the time). Those were made for the Apple (and run by my trusty Franklin ACE) too. Then there was a very early desktop publishing program, The Newsroom, which helped me to further my interest in writing for print. Both my copy of The Newsroom at home and the one at school, ran on an Apple II.

Eventually time, and the diminishing availability of software, caught up with me and I reluctantly retired my Franklin ACEs from active duty and started writing my stuff on a PC instead. Only it was my stepmother’s PC and, as she commonly did, she let me use it and then yanked it out from under me just to cause me grief. All she really did was make me shrug and go back to writing the early LogBook files on a machine compatible with an Apple II.

Ten years ago this time, I was producing TV spots on a Mac-based Avid system, and was cursing its incessant ability to take forever to render, or just completely crash. Let’s skip the Mac. It wasn’t my friend.

The Android tablet that travels with me everywhere is not an Apple product. I’m consistent, if nothing else: it’s kind of like the modern day equivalent to the Franklin ACE. It’s also something that I’m sure nobody would’ve bothered to make if they weren’t trying to get the budget-minded portion of the market for Apple’s iPad. I use it… a lot. I’ve passed on the iPhone revolution, and I sat out several rounds of iPod in favor of a cranky old minidisc player and, more recently, the aforementioned tablet, but one would have to be perilously close to the crazy end of the scale to deny the huge cultural impact of those products. As Variety.com noted, the iTunes Store virtually single-handedly created the paid digital content market at a time when internet piracy was running rampant and outstripping the studios’ and labels’ ability to keep up (let alone comprehend) the changes taking place around them on the media landscape.

Oh, and my kid loves the Toy Story movies. Jobs brokered the deals that made those happen, too, having bought Pixar from George Lucas when Lucas needed a cash infusion in order to – and let’s be honest here – avoid feeling any impact whatsoever from a massive divorce settlement.

Now, to be sure, the hardware that made the Apple II happen was Steve Wozniak’s invention, and the design of the iPod/iPad/iPhone/iEtc. was driven by guidelines laid out and fiercely championed by Jobs, but he didn’t create the machines in either case. Jobs’ genius was that he could stride out into the middle of the American consumer landscape and convince us that, yes, we need personal computers in our homes, and they might as well be Apple IIs. Yes, you need a personal digital music device to replace your CD Walkman, and here’s the iPod. Yes, you need a phone that will grow tendrils that intersect every possible part of your life. Yes, those little flatscreen touchscreen computers they had on Star Trek: The Next Generation? Let’s move the timetable on those up from the 24th century to rightaboutnow. And, oh, by the way, you need one.”

He may well be the most successful carnival barker in history, because everything that Jobs’ company has cranked out since the introduction of the iPod, we’ve needed. Considering how ubiquitous everything since the ‘Pod has become, the man either had a deal with the devil, or he was a stark raving mad genius.

My money’s on the latter. Thanks for being a stark raving mad genius, Steve Jobs. Look at you. You went and changed the world. You made geeks out of everyone, even the folks who swore up and down that they’d never become geeks. And speaking as a fellow nerd… that is the sweetest revenge.

(Tapped out on the onscreen keyboard of my decidedly non-iPad tablet.)… Read more

Categories
Critters

Catgirls!

Aren’t they so pretty and fluffy?

Catgirls

And hasn’t Maria gotten FAT? I mean, she’s bigger than Portia! She’s almost as big as Olivia!

(You’re asking “What? Almost a month without any bloggery and this is all you have to show for it?” There’s a lot more to tell, just stick around… I’m about to have plenty of time for the telling.)… Read more

Categories
Gadgetology

Last machine standing

The Tower Guardian?!?Just a quick note – I may be a little bit scarce on the interwebs in the coming week or two because the last reliable desktop machine in my house went belly-up last night. I’m left with the tablet, the MobilePro, a desktop machine that can’t maintain a network connection for crap, an old laptop that has no battery and requires a second person to stand behind the machine holding the power supply cord in the jack at a very specific awkward angle… oh, and the web browser on the Wii. Yay.

As I’m literally expecting to be released from my job at the teevee station almost any day now (with a modest severance payoff to come right behind that), I’m planning on blowing just a little bit of money to buy or build a replacement machine, but it’ll take a little bit of time to get up to speed. All video, writing, graphic design and web projects are “on hold” until then because the equipment I was using to work on them is dead as a doorknob. Bear with me.

There’s new stuff already written for theLogBook.com next week – just drop by the site itself to see what the daily special is.… Read more