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Recent Posts18 July 2008 Later | Link thisI'd mention that today's frustration also extends to Microsloth Internet Exploder and its annoying tendency to make text do things you never told it to do (today, a couple of form elements started sponteneously centering themsleves without a relevant tag in sight), but that would be too easy. Not, mind you, that the new Mac version of Firefox is a whole lot better. Especially if you don't like random and unpredictable freezes, or do like having your computer be able to enter sleep mode. 18 July 2008 | Link thisCurrent mood: frustated. I've spent a week dealing with a client situation that had any number of quick and simple solutions, but none of them could be implemented, because a corporate IT department got involved. As many of you know, this is the kiss of death for simplicity, as IT departments seem to exist for three reasons only:
I could have had my client set up with a solution to this problem a week ago. Instead, I have a big pile of bullshit hanging over my head, most of which I can't even bill for, because I'm not really doing anything other than sitting around waiting for them to make up their minds about how much more complicated they can make the whole fucking process. This is a really small and simple thing, the kind of thing that I probably would've billed an hour or two for, and they're acting like I want to rewrite their whole bloody webserver from scratch, while creating free admin accounts for Ukranian spammers in the process. Note to certain corporate IT drones: web designers nowadays are pretty gosh darn tech savvy and often know more about many aspects of webservers and PHP than you do. We also know when you're bullshitting, overreacting, and overcomplicating, and we're not afraid to share that knowlege with our clients, most of whom are as frustrated with you as we are -- and are therefore inclined to trust us more than they trust you. Sometimes people need to understand when a solution that works fine and causes no problems will suffice. The perfect "by the book" solution is not always necessary, particularly when it takes twenty times more effort to implement than the current problem demands. Yes, I know that complicated solutions are sometimes needed, but not for every small issue that arises. 15 July 2008 | Link thisTo me, the most interesting (and under-reported) story in the Census Bureau's recently-released city population estimates for 2007 is the dramatic increase in the inner-city population of Atlanta over the past few years. Atlanta is landlocked and can't grow by annexation, and for much of the late twentieth century, its population was actually declining, although the metropolitan area was growing at a pretty spectacular pace. Since 2000, however, the city has added over 100,000 residents -- a population increase of nearly 25% in just eight years, from 416,000 to 519,000 residents. This is absolutely amazing, and is almost unheard of for an older urban center surrounded by suburbs, particularly one that had long been viewed by many as somewhat "in decline". Even booming Charlotte (which isn't landlocked and can still annex surrouding territory) can't boast of quite so large a percentage increase. Is it really a "back to the city" thing? Is it about the much-publicized draw of Atlanta for the black middle class? Is it because Letser Maddox finally died a few years ago, and sane people now feel safe in Georgia? I'm not really sure, but whatever they're doing down there, they're apparently doing it extremely well. 14 July 2008 | Link thisI'd love to pretend that my absence was due to all the exciting things I've been busy with lately. It hasn't. I have been very busy, but it's mostly been with pretty tedious stuff.
Some exceptions:
OK, so my life is exceedingly boring. I realize that. That's why I haven't been saying much lately. I'll try to be more interesting (for my own sake) but I make no promises. Maybe a road trip soon... 4 July 2008 | Link thisJesse Helms has begun to decompose. Over the next few days, any number of North Carolinians will be writing commentaries that begin with "I didn't agree with him, but..." I'm not one of those people who will write sweet, apologetic obituaries despite my differences with the man. The fact of his death does not suddenly transform him into a great and honorable man. He was neither great nor honorable. He was a small-minded bigot and political opportunist who used his considerable power to make many people's lives more miserable than they needed to be. The fact that you "always knew where he stood" is irrelevant; consistency isn't an asset when one is consistently wrong. Jesse Helms was an evil son of a bitch, and now he's an evil son of a bitch who also happens to be deceased. Period. I won't say I'm glad that he's dead, and I don't mean to suggest that he deserved to die for his opinions. However, I also won't pretend that I'll miss the man, nor that I feel any particular sense of loss upon his passing. He's dead. It doesn't change my opinion of him in any way. 30 June 2008 | Link this
A lot of things happened 31 years ago today. There were assorted Supreme Court rulings. The Grapes of Wrath was the Thursday night movie on channel 36 in Charlotte. "Got to Give It Up" by Marvin Gaye was the number one song in America. Marvel's KISS comic book (alleged to have a trace of the band's blood mixed in with the ink) was published. And Jimmy Carter canned the B-1A bomber. But the most important thing that happened 31 years ago today was this. 27 June 2008 | Link thisThis amuses me, although I think a drug rehab center or a remedial education facility might have offered a more ironic twist. 18 June 2008 | Link thisWow. Who knew that the little cup that attaches to the top of the washing machine agitator and into which you put the fabric softener (your machine may vary) has a couple of removable parts that should probably be cleaned on a semi-regular basis? I sure didn't. But I never had my very own twenty year old washing machine before. Recent Entries:July | June | May |Full Archive |
Videolog16 July 2008 | Link this
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