A Copy Of Your Paste, Sir
Quote of the Moment Edit this quote!
Posted by Greg Y :: Jul 17 2006 at 10:55

The only thing in life you have to earn is love. Everything else you can steal.
- Bret Maverick, quoting his father. From the Maverick TV series.

--"Bret Maverick"

 

I hate the federal government, but I love America. That's the way I truly feel. I love the American people, I love the ideals of freedom and liberty on which we were founded. I hate unchecked Capitalism and privatization of public lands and resources. I love the fact that we have a highway system, a post system, the internet, and clean running water almost everywhere. I hate the fact that we don't have health care, that social security is bankrupt, that the rich are getting richer while the poor are getting poorer.

I hate George W. Bush. He's a fucking asshole; and absolute idiot and a clueless anti-leader. Him and his cronies are quite literally ruining America. But as this article from LiveScience points out, presidential power has been growing for decades, and George W. Bush is only the latest manifestation of an Executive Branch that is out of control.

As Jefferson pointed out "Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes" (Declaration of Independence). So whatever is wrong with America, it would not be prudent to throw the whole Grand Experiment out the window. However, we must not let our leaders (Bush in particular, also the Supreme Court) trample on the traditions and precedents that have made our country great.

So like I said, I hate the federal government.

But I fucking LOVE America.

Happy Independence Day! Fuck the Brits! :)

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The first line of the Tao Te Ching, roughly translated, is "The Tao that can be known is not the true Tao". I struggled a lot with that last night, but the following paragraphs, ripped wholesale from Stan Rosenthal's introduction to his Tao Teh Ching 'translation', helped a great deal.


Consider a thing such as a strawberry. If we wish to find the word 'strawberry', we look in a dictionary; if we wish to find a description of a strawberry, we look in an encyclopaedia. But if we are hungry, we do not go to the library, but to the field where fine strawberries may be found. If we do not know where there is such a field, we might seek guidance as to where fine strawberries may be found. A book on the Tao is like such a guide.

It can point us in the direction of the strawberry patch, but cannot provide the fruit itself. It can give an idea of the taste of Tao, but of itself, has no taste to compare with direct experience of the Tao.

Consider now three things: There is the universal principle which enables all things to be, and to flourish naturally; there is the name 'Tao', by which that universal principle is known; and there are words which describe the manifestations of the Tao.


-Rosenthal, http://www.religiousworlds.com/taoism/ttcstan2.html

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Pretty hefty title for a blog post.

I was talking to my roommate Frank today about all sorts of different things, and I came to two conclusions, which I will now share:

  1. I really want to go to Wikimania 2007. Unfortunately, "Wikimania 2007, the third annual international Wikimedia conference, will be held August 3-5 in Taipei, Taiwan at Chien Tan Overseas Youth Activity Center (CTOYAC)."
  2. If you want to make the world a better place, first focus on 'your corner' of the world. This doesn't mean you should be selfish and only do things to benefit yourself. But maybe that wouldn't hurt, either. If you think of karma as the doctrine "Whatever good or bad you do in the world is reflected in yourself" then the corollary is "Whatever good or bad you do to yourself is reflected in the world". Also, focussing on 'your corner' means not forcing yourself to act or forcing yourself upon a situation. This doesn't mean being lazy! It's simply taoism, 'going with the flow'. Leave your mind open to helping situations that you are familiar with, and when the appropriate time comes to act you will recognize it and benefit all involved.

I agree with Socrates, who stated:

"My opinion is more or less this: no wise man believes that anyone sins willingly or willingly perpetrates any base or evil act; they know very well that every base or evil action is committed involuntarily."

So really, I'm once and for all rejecting the Puritan work ethic. My belief is that an effective strategy for doing good works and therefore 'making the world a better place' is to "do what you can, with what you have, where you are." (Theodore Roosevelt).

No Way
Posted by T-$ :: Jul 01 2007 at 09:30

Flights to taiwan, at least from what I can tell, cost $1500+. And I don't know what the chance of me getting a visa at this point is.

Guess I'll have to wait till next year. Darn!

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I created an app on Facebook using their API. It's called 'Wishes'. It was inspired largely by the 'cheer' idea that I'm using for songs on this site.

Anyways, the way it works is that each user makes a 'wish' that gets added to their profile (as well as the global wish board). Then, other users 'cheer' the wish to help it come true.

If you think that sounds cool, or if you think it sounds really lame....well give it a try: http://apps.facebook.com/makewishes/

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The only real purpose of this entry is to pop up in your RSS reader and get you to come to my site and see my new Song Display Module (tm).

Holy SHIT it is so sweet. It put my CSS and javascript/AJAX skills to the absolute limit, and took a good 9 hours straight of coding. But it's here, and it works.

Also, if you hadn't noticed, you can "Cheer" songs if you like them. Yes, it's a ripoff of Digg...whatever at least you don't have to register.

To download the songs, simply click the title or the image. Wooooooooot!

Okay, so it's not really finished. What I'm working on now is a way to link blog entries to songs, so that I can talk about songs I upload, and so that songs can have their own display page that displays the full title and info about the song. But I think what I have now is a great start!

..
Posted by Eric Mill :: Jun 16 2007 at 15:53

Hey, that is pretty sweet. I like the "No more songs available" slot, I wouldn't have thought of adding that, but it's intuitive and professional.

I recommend adding "return false" to the end of your onClick handlers, which means that the anchors won't have an effect. This matters less since it's at the top of your page, but if I'm even a little bit scrolled down, clicking on them makes the page leap up to the top, which is a little disruptive. It's not a big deal, but it's a dirt simple addition. Your handler would go from "forward()" to "forward(); return false".

I'm gonna be doing a bunch of UI work to my music site soon -- maybe you just subconsciously influenced it!

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Thanks!
Posted by T-$ :: Jun 16 2007 at 18:20

Thanks for the tip. Implemented and deployed.

The 'no more songs' message is the else of my _song.rhtml partial. If the song is nil, that's what you get. I also 'grep' it (with javascript regex matching that is) in order to know when to disable the more link.

You didn't cheer anything, though! :(

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MAD WORLD
Posted by Maxwell :: Jun 18 2007 at 09:21

Dude, I love the music- especially your cover of Mad World. It's like Jeff Buckley-guitar with punk rock vocals-- very very nice.

(also, clever "captcha" thing)

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[JIRA] Assigned: (BoM - 987)
Posted by Lee Whitaker :: Jun 18 2007 at 12:20

Application error
Rails application failed to start properly"

---

FAIL

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