June 28, 2008
June 27, 2008
June 24, 2008
Wild Weather
What the hell was up with the weather today? I was walking across town to my writing group and the weather went nuts. The clouds gather, the sky goes dark and then rain pelted down. Once I'm thoroughly drenched, I notice the temperature had dropped like 10-15 degrees (or at least it felt that way) and then comes hail.
This is not the New England weather that I'm used to!
This is not the New England weather that I'm used to!
June 21, 2008
June 20, 2008
Rainbow
June 17, 2008
June 12, 2008
Asus Eee Pc redux
I've been playing with it for a few days. It mounts thumb drives in Windows format, but seems to have problems with an iPod formatted for the Apple. I'll have to explore further.
USB keyboards and mice seem to work without a problem.
USB keyboards and mice seem to work without a problem.
June 9, 2008
Sunset over the Charles
June 8, 2008
KatrinaRitaVille Express
KatrinaRitaVille Express is in Boston by Boylston T stop on Sunday and Monday to illustrate FEMA's failure.
For more information:
June 7, 2008
Ryan's Birthday Party
Ryan's Birthday Party
Update: The party was at a laser tag arena. It was a lot of fun. Though running around in the dark was inadvertantly painful at least to my knees and shins.
Update: The party was at a laser tag arena. It was a lot of fun. Though running around in the dark was inadvertantly painful at least to my knees and shins.
June 5, 2008
Bonus!
I love when Karma works my way. I was looking for some place to kill some time before my memoir workshop started and found out that the class will be right next to Doyles, an institution here in JP. The food's always been good here, so I'm really looking forward to it.
And to think this is the first time I've been here without someone driving. The nice thing about being clueless is that the world has many more welcome surprises that way.
The food didn't disappoint. The garden burger frozen and adequate, but then hand-carved garlic fries and crisp lettuce and tomato on the top were fantastic. Even better was listening to the two men next to me handicapping the democratic Veepstakes like they would a racing form. Clearly, my kind of bar.
And to think this is the first time I've been here without someone driving. The nice thing about being clueless is that the world has many more welcome surprises that way.
The food didn't disappoint. The garden burger frozen and adequate, but then hand-carved garlic fries and crisp lettuce and tomato on the top were fantastic. Even better was listening to the two men next to me handicapping the democratic Veepstakes like they would a racing form. Clearly, my kind of bar.
Asus Eee PC
This might fit the bill on both counts. It'd be a little easier if the keyboard wasn't built for hobbits, but it's not too bad.
Pictures will be coming...
Update: Yes, it's that small. Sadly, difficult, but not impossible to use with my big hands. I can only imagine it will be worse for my Dad. I can't wait to give it to him and watch him suffer. (Does that make me a bad son? Or just passive-aggressive?)
June 3, 2008
Book Reviews
A friend challenged me to write haiku reviews of the last several books that I've read:
Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine"
Friedman's neo-cons -
Crisis, exploitation, greed.
Perhaps, Keynesian?
James N. Frey's books on writing
Remember: premise,
character driven stories
for damned good novels.
Neil Gaiman's "Anansi Boys"
A modern fable,
entertains as it teaches.
The old become new.
William Landay's "The Strangler"
Boston terrified:
memorable characters,
weak plot - adequate.
Robert W. Cabell's "The Hair-Raising Adventures of Jayms Blonde"
Cliches, every page.
Vanity press - no surprise.
Dear God - Don't read this.
Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine"
Friedman's neo-cons -
Crisis, exploitation, greed.
Perhaps, Keynesian?
James N. Frey's books on writing
Remember: premise,
character driven stories
for damned good novels.
Neil Gaiman's "Anansi Boys"
A modern fable,
entertains as it teaches.
The old become new.
William Landay's "The Strangler"
Boston terrified:
memorable characters,
weak plot - adequate.
Robert W. Cabell's "The Hair-Raising Adventures of Jayms Blonde"
Cliches, every page.
Vanity press - no surprise.
Dear God - Don't read this.
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