So, I've got a blog . . . Now what?

Everyone seems to be jumping on the blog bandwagon so I thought I'd give it a go as well. Haven't really got a clue what I'm going to talk about, but that's never really stopped me from saying something, so . . .

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Name: Seitherin
Location: Lake Jackson, Texas, United States

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Tuesday, May 31, 2005

My seduction style





Your Seduction Style: The Coquette





You are a pro at playing the age old game of hard to get.

Your flirting style runs hot and cold, giving just enough to keep them chasing you.

Independent and self-sufficient, you don't need any one person to make you compelte.

And that independence is exactly what makes people pursue you.



What Is Your Seduction Style?


Compelte? I should hope I don't need any one person to make me compelte.

;D

That sounds like something you would do to fur and / or hide before you make it into a finished garment of some sort.

BBC NEWS | Americas | Watergate's Deep Throat revealed

BBC NEWS | Health | 'New way' to treat complex grief

Lost

ABC has left fans a hint of what’s to come on the second season of Lost at http://Oceanic-Air.com. The site for Oceanic Flight 815 in the series has a hidden Flash teaser that you can now watch.

To do so, click on the link above. Then at the bottom of the site, where it says ‘Travellers’, type in Hurley’s “lucky” numbers 4, 8, 15, 16, 23 and 42. Click on ‘Find’ which will take you to the flight’s seating chart. Next, click on those numbers again in order right below the chart and the teaser will start.

BBC NEWS | Health | Infancy 'determines cancer risk'

Toting it around

The American Tourister tote I wrote about on the 19th arrived today. It is so cute. It is just the right size for a couple of changes of clothing needed for a long weekend away.

It came a lot more quickly than I was expecting. The survey indicated it would be six to eight weeks before it would arrive, but it showed up in just under two. Too bad I'm not planning on going anywhere for a while.

Urban Legends Reference Pages: Crime (Cell Phone Security)

Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | Westminster Abbey counters Da Vinci Code

Urban Legends Reference Pages: Photo Gallery (Liger)

BBC NEWS | Health | Study calms fears over stem cells

Monday, May 30, 2005

So peaceful

I managed to go three days of a four day weekend without once turning on the computer. No email. No newgroups. Nothing.

It was so peaceful and quiet.

I think there need to be more four day weekends.

Anywho . . .

The wound is still quite red, but it has begun to scab over so it's well on the way to healing. I no longer have to put gauze on so it's been getting a lot of air. I haven't had shoes on since Thursday so nothing has interfered with the healing process.

I did knit Thursday night and I did not suffer a repeat of Tuesday. I didn't have to unknit a single stitch.

I've worked on the butterfly fairy cross stitch all weekend and it is going along nicely. The part I'm dreading is filling in the moon. The yellows and very pale creams are just a pain to work on the white fabric. I may have to put off working on the fantasy sampler until after I finish the fairy so I can take it to work with me. I think the bright lights in my office will help with stitching up the moon.

I'm going back to my stitching now. I'll put up a progress picture later.

UPDATE: Progress picture of the butterfly fairy.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | Toxin in plastics harming unborn boys

Walking wounded

I scratched an itch and now I'm missing a patch of skin on the top of my foot. The patch is about the size of a quarter and it's smack in the middle where the shoe hits when you walk. I have no idea what happened, whether something bit me or I had a reaction to something.

It itched. I scratched. The skin came off. It looks very much like a very, very nasty blister popped.

I've doused the area in Neosporin and taped some gauze over it. I'm wearing my old, worn out shoes because they're not as tight and don't quite cripple me when I walk. Needless to say, I have a funny limp right now.

Update: Here's what my little wound looks like this evening. It's two days old now.

Photo of the wound on my foot

I'm letting it air until I go to bed. Then it will be more Neosporin and another bandage.

Yech! I have dirty feet.

More tired than I thought

I've mentioned hither and yon that I've had a couple of projects at work that have kept me busy and tired. Well, Tuesday night I decided to knit away the hours since there was nothing on television I was interested in watching.

Oh, boy.

I knit a couple of iterations of the pattern and get to within six stitches of the end of the pattern row when I realize I'm one stitch short. I recheck the stitches on the row and I don't see a goof. I check to see if maybe I dropped a stitch and don't see anything obviously amiss. I have no choice but to unknit four rows. I count stitches. I have the requisite number.

Oh, boy.

I knit a couple of iterations of the pattern. I get to within six stitches of the end of the pattern row when I realize I'm one stitch short. I recheck the stitches on the row and I don't see a goof. I check to see if maybe I dropped a stitch and don't see anything obviously amiss. I have no choice but to unknit four rows. I count stitches. I have the requisite number. I put the knitting away. I was obviously too tried to be working on it if I could loose one stitch twice.

Oh, boy.

I'm going to try my hand at knitting again tonight since there is nothing on television I care to watch. With any luck, it won't be a repeat of Tuesday and I'll actually get some knitting done.

Scientific American: Brain Region Linked to Understanding Figures of Speech

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

North America Settled by Just 70 People, Study Concludes - Yahoo! News

Seems there's no such thing as a native American.

Scientific American: Cosmic 'Magnifying Glass' Reveals Distant Planet

Guardian Unlimited Film | News | Out of the lion's den: CS Lewis film saves Disney from Christians

You cannot imagine how it gladdens my heart to know a group of bible thumping bigots has decided to stop its ban on Disney. I will sleep so much better tonight.

BBC NEWS | Americas | US House backs stem cell funding

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Voyager 1 pushes for deep space

BBC NEWS | Health | Anti-social behaviour 'inherited'

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Bets reopen on Dumbledore death

Not that I have any illusions left, nor even a microscopic shred of innocence, but betting on which character dies in a children's book sort of takes what little was left completely out of me.

COOL WEATHER PICTURES

There are some seriously kewl pictures of clouds.

CNN.com - Researches hope artifacts identify pirate's ship - May 24, 2005

Avast ye, matey!

(You know, that just doesn't look right.)

Monday, May 23, 2005

Epilogue Artist - Ken Faraoni : Raindrop

Pretty!

The Complete List - ALL-TIME 100 Movies - TIME Magazine

Jayme Lynn Blaschke's Gibberish : The trouble with Sith

Book Reviews, a novel approach - StoryCode.com structured book recommendations

I've haven't dug into this yet, but it looks mighty innerestin'.

:: Kinky Friedman Official Site ::

He's really running for governor of Texas. He's got my vote.

BBC NEWS | Health | Stem cell hope for liver disease

Powerful New Map: Where the Wind Blows - Yahoo! News

And yet most electric utility companies would rather use non-renewable fossil fuels or nuclear power to generate electricity.

Elephant attack boosts business at eatery - Yahoo! News

It seems even rampaging elephants come with a silver lining.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | New Star Wars film breaks records

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Wormhole 'no use' for time travel

BBC NEWS | Americas | US urged to curb Viagra allowance

I'm not going to say anything.

Yes, I am.

Why are convicts, regardless of their crimes, getting Viagra? Are erections something prison officials really want happening in prisons where, as we've been led to believe by television, voluntary and involuntary sexual acts among inmates abound?

Color me skewed, but failing to get an erection is not a serious health issue requiring public funding to dispense medication for.

Sci Fi Wire -- Mythopoeic Finalists Named

Looks like there might be some interesting reading in my future.

Saturday, May 21, 2005

The New Yorker: The Critics: The Current Cinema

Thank you, Anthony Lane:

The general opinion of “Revenge of the Sith” seems to be that it marks a distinct improvement on the last two episodes, “The Phantom Menace” and “Attack of the Clones.” True, but only in the same way that dying from natural causes is preferable to crucifixion.

Star Wars III

The Prodigal Son, his girlfriend, and I went to see it last night. The good news is this one is very much better than the last three Lucas did. The bad news is that what's wrong with the last three is also wrong with this one - cutesy, corny crap, stilted dialog, flat acting, special effects that overpower everything. No matter how many times you try to convince me to the contrary, more is not better, George. Most of the time, more is just more.

I was actually prepared to like this film given the mostly positive things I'd heard about it from various sources. But when the 'droids at the beginning of the movie had more personality than the live actors, the likelihood of me liking the film stepped out of the theatre and patiently waited for me to join it in the car.

I'm glad the saga is finally over. It didn't deserve what was done to it. It deserved a dedicated storyteller with vision to craft it into a tale of love and hate, peace and war, good and evil. It did not deserve to be handled by a CGI fan-boy with the heart of a merchandiser.

Friday, May 20, 2005

Scotsman.com News - Features - A bit of a star

And die is what he did in surely the most famous film of his career. As the final Star Wars film takes cinemas by storm, MacInnes can bask in the reflected glory earned by his role as Gold Leader in Star Wars: A New Hope. Or at least he could bask if he thought that any of the latest films were any good.

"George Lucas has just destroyed Star Wars with all the Computer Generated Images." says Angus. "Someone really should have taken his toys away!"

A man after my own heart! It's too bad Lucas couldn't have hired someone capable of telling a story to tell the story he thinks he's told.

BBC NEWS | Health | Stem cells tailored to patients

Thursday, May 19, 2005

The master of all I survey

I took two surveys today. They were almost identical but were run by two different companies. They were IT/IS related and asked how I find out about IT products and services and took about 45 minutes each. One of the surveys will pay me $25 for my time and the other will send me an American Tourister tote.

I need a tote for those short weekend trips I take every once in a blue moon. The one I used to have disappeared somehow somewhere and I had to use one of my craft bags as an overnight tote when I went to Austin a few weeks ago. I'd planned on going either this weekend or next to pick up a tote at WalMart or Target, but now I won't have to.

Sometimes, it really pays to be in IT.

~ snerkle ~

The Rules of Writing

1. Verbs HAS to agree with their subjects.

2. Prepositions are not words to end sentences with.

3. And don't start a sentence with a conjunction.

4. It is wrong to ever split an infinitive.

5. Avoid cliches like the plague. (They're old hat)

6. Also, always avoid annoying alliteration.

7. Be more or less specific.

8. Parenthetical remarks (however relevant) are (usually) unnecessary.

9. Also too, never, ever use repetitive redundancies.

10. No sentence fragments.

11. Contractions aren't necessary and shouldn't be used.

12. Foreign words and phrases are not apropos.

13. Do not be redundant; do not use more words than necessary; it's highly superfluous.

14. One should NEVER generalize.

15. Comparisons are as bad as cliches.

16. Don't use no double negatives.

17. Eschew ampersands & abbreviations, etc.

18. One-word sentences? Eliminate.

19. Analogies in writing are like feathers on a snake.

20. The passive voice is to be ignored.

21. Eliminate commas, that are, not necessary. Parenthetical words however should be enclosed in commas.

22. Never use a big word when a diminutive one would suffice.

23. Kill all exclamation points!!!

24. Use words correctly, irregardless of how others use them.

25. Understatement is always the absolute best way to put forth earth shaking ideas.

26. Use the apostrophe in it's proper place and omit it when its not needed.

27. Eliminate quotations. As Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "I hate quotations. Tell me what you know."

28. If you've heard it once, you've heard it a thousand times: Resist hyperbole; not one writer in a million can use it correctly.

29. Puns are for children, not groan readers.

30. Go around the barn at high noon to avoid colloquialisms.

31. Even IF a mixed metaphor sings, it should be derailed.

32. Who needs rhetorical questions?

33. Exaggeration is a billion times worse than understatement.

And finally...very important

34. Proofread carefully to see if you any words out.

(Submitted by Scribes on 1-14-2003)

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

College ad to protest Bush visit - The Washington Times: Nation/Politics - May 17, 2005

Wow. I'm impressed.

"No single political position should be identified with God's will," says the ad, which also chastises the president for "actions that favor the wealthy of our society and burden the poor."

Christians are to be characterized by love and gentleness, it adds, but "we believe that your administration has fostered intolerance and divisiveness and has often failed to listen to those with whom it disagrees."

Moreover, says the letter, set to run in the Grand Rapids Press, the Bush administration's environmental policies "have harmed creation," and it asks the president "to re-examine your policies in light of our God-given duty to pursue justice with mercy."

Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly: DOE V. MOE

This is a case of the ol' bump and grind being a little too bumpy and grindy. Basically, the guy sued the girl because she broke his . . . well . . . you know . . . while she was riding him like a bucking bronco.

I'm smirking. Can you tell?

Monday, May 16, 2005

HoustonChronicle.com - Officials to temper biting term

Officials to temper biting term

By CINDY HORSWELL
Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle

THE Anahuac City Council has dealt with sensitive topics on occasion, and today's meeting could provide another opportunity.

Tammy McDaniel, the animal control officer in that Chambers County town, has suggested replacing the word "bitch" in the city's animal control ordinance with "female dog."

"It's a term that's been around forever. Even kennel clubs use that word," McDaniel said. "But people don't like to hear it called out."

The word has even been used in classical literature by such authors as William Shakespeare, in The Merry Widow, and D.H. Lawrence, in Sons and Lovers.

But city officials said one of the word's most common slang definitions, which refers to an ill-tempered woman, is considered profane.

"The word does not necessarily offend me. It's what I've grown up calling a female dog," said longtime councilman Ottmar Schimek, who retired after the council's most recent meeting. "But the word has a different meaning to the younger generation since the women's movement and equal rights."

The ordinance, which currently states that it is unlawful to let a "bitch in heat" run at large, will be changed to say "female dog in heat," McDaniel said.

Oh, please.

Scientific American: New Views of Dinosaurs Take Center Stage

BBC NEWS | Business | US lifts ban on out-of-state wine

Woohoo! Texas used to be one of those states you couldn't order out-of-state wine from. I'm not much of a wine drinker, but it's nice to know I can order wine if I want.

MoveOn PAC

This looks interesting. I haven't perused it to my satisfaction (or complete edification), but it does look interesting.

Jesus Is a Democrat

There really isn't a whole lot to say about this.

camarilla

Dictionary.com/Word of the Day:

camarilla \kam-uh-RIL-uh; -REE-yuh\, noun:
A group of secret and often scheming advisers, as of a king; a cabal or clique.

Camarilla comes from Spanish, literally, "a small room," from Late Latin camera, "chamber" ("vault; arched roof" in Latin), from Greek kamara, "vault."

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Kuwaiti women win right to vote

Many of these had argued that Islamic law prohibited women from positions of leadership.

The amendment requires women voters and candidates to abide by Islamic law.

Correspondents say this is an attempt by the ruling family to reassure Islamists. But it could also place restrictions on women campaigners.

Makes it sound like a step sideways instead of a step forward. But even a step sideways can be a good thing in the larger scope of things.

BBC NEWS | Business | 'Gender gap' is biggest in Egypt

Committee Schedule Display

A summary of Texas politics.

I find HJR 6 particularly offensive. Through it, the state would like to legalize bigotry, prejudice, and hatred.

Sunday, May 15, 2005

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Bird song sheds light on learning

BBC NEWS | Health | 'Alcohol worse for female brains'

B.C.

Women know what's important . . .

Strange New World: No 'Star Trek'

"Screen sci-fi has finally caught up with written science fiction. We're in college now. High school is over. There's just no need for 'Star Trek' anymore."

Friday, May 13, 2005

triskaidekaphobia

triskaidekaphobia \tris-ky-dek-uh-FOH-bee-uh\, noun:
A morbid fear of the number 13 or the date Friday the 13th.

Triskaidekaphobia is a fairly new word (first found in print in 1911) formed from Greek treiskaideka, triskaideka, "thirteen" (treis, "three" + kai, "and" + deka, "ten") + phobos, "fear." The adjective form is triskaidekaphobic. One who fears the number 13 is a triskaidekaphobe or triskaidekaphobic.

There are many theories about the origin of triskaidekaphobia. In medieval Christian countries the number 13 came to be considered unlucky because there were 13 persons at the Last Supper of Christ. Fridays are also unlucky, because the Crucifixion was on a Friday. Hence a Friday falling on the thirteenth day would be regarded as especially unlucky.

Some famous triskaidekaphobes1:
Napoleon
Herbert Hoover
Mark Twain
Richard Wagner
Franklin Roosevelt

1. Source: "It's just bad luck that the 13th is so often a Friday," Daily Telegraph, September 8, 1996

Pigging out

Remember the wild pigs in Germany I was watching last month? Well, there be young'uns. I just watched a whole passel of them nursing, rooting, scratching, gamboling, and chatting up the blackbirds that were hopping around.

~ time passes ~

Aw, how swee