The saga of one man's quest to achieve Microsoft Certification and live to tell about it...but he failed, so now you can read about his regular life instead |
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McDBAs of Our Lives
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Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Atlanta is a city that eludes the right angle. Roads, parking lots, housing developments, you will find nothing at 90 degrees to something else or straight for more than 100 feet. Even the lines painted on roads are curved; the parallel lines in parking lots are decorative, no one parks aligned with them. It must have been Sherman: he MUST have marched his soldiers in box formation as they burned everything down. The city planners got their revenge on all those who came afterward. Especially from NY.
19:47
Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Reddit has been giving me some good ideas lately. This story on Boing Boing was pretty interesting and got me thinking about e-books, which I always thought were a good idea that wouldn't work unless there was a useful business model and good hardware. Also on Reddit was a link to this conceptual mock-up of a new touch-screen iPod. It's no great stretch to me that anything that can play movies can also display a good amount of text, like a book or e-book.Since iTunes seems to have the music and video download business figured out, I can't believe someone isn't already looking at book downloads for it too. I haven't Googled for such articles but I'm sure they're out there. And the Boing Boing article suggests pretty strongly that the entire industry would benefit (authors AND publishers) once they get over the idea that the only way to make money is to keep paying for the overhead and passing it on to the consumer. I also like the iPod's scroll wheel, and I think it would be perfect for reading a book. Not only could you use the up/down keys to scroll text, but you could simulate flipping pages by using the left/right keys. This might sound silly, but one of the things I like about books is flipping pages. One reason is that it preserves the flow of the book, and allows for strategic interruptions that can make surprises or transitions more effective. If you don't believe me, then you need to read this book. There's a key revelation that totally smacks you in the face (a lot of Frederick Forsyth's books are like that) and it happens just after you turn the page. I know it would not have the same impact if you were scrolling through the text. I also think that combined with this technology you could come up with something a lot closer to a book, especially regarding the power consumption (or lack thereof), which, to me, would FINALLY make e-books worthwhile. Considering how many features they are packing into devices these days (phone, music, video, PDA) adding a good e-book reader would be child's play. It seems like I'm not the only one who thinks this might work. UPDATE: Remember, you saw it here first. :)
05:46
Saturday, January 14, 2006
I may have said earlier that I would gladly pay good money to drown myself in Keira Knightley's bathwater. I was mistaken. I meant to say I would beg, borrow, and steal every last dollar on the planet Earth so that I could bid on the slightest chance that I might sample one drop of this woman's bathwater:I absolutely recommend purchasing this exquisite publication, it's like watching the sun rise every time you look at it.
14:50
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