DARYL' S DEN

Friday, December 29, 2006

cars are a pain!

I still haven't got my car fixed! I waited and waited for a call that the part was in, I finally called them, only to find out they hadn't even ordered it yet! And then, as I was leaving work to go out to the dealership and find out what the hell was going on, I rolled my window down to talk to my boss, and it got stuck halfway open.
Well, I got some action on the air conditioner compressor, they got on the phone and had it on the way, plus they got my window up, but it's going to cost another 135 bucks to fix it so it goes up and down (I hate power windows). They're going to fix it all next wednesday, but it looks like it's going to be over 900 dollars to do it all. GOD!
Some good news, AT&T gave in on net neutrality. This a major victory for the american public. I won't go into it now, but I think I will soon.

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

I want it to get cold!

This is some weird december we're having. It started out with the worst blizzard in years, and now it's stayed unseasonably warm for weeks. I know most people like it warmer, but I want to go skiing, darn it. I've only been once this year, I'm really getting frustrated. If I was rich, I could just hop on a plane to colorado for the weekend, but I'm not, most of the season I have to ski the close areas, and it's just been too warm. Oh well, it will get colder soon, it has to.
Of course, I have to cough up 800 dollars to fix my car before I can go anywhere.
Running the defroster through the air conditioner? What a racket car companies have!

Friday, December 22, 2006

one thing after another

Things just get better. I found out today I'm going to have to come up with 800 bucks to keep my car going, because the auto makers, in their infinate wisdom decided that the air conditioner compressor has to be used for other, vital things. Man, I can live without air conditioning!
To top it off, my twin brother's sewer has collapsed, he faces a few thousand dollars that he doesn't have to fix it. It just gets harder and harder for working people to get by. We may have do something about it soon.
At least we had a good drum practice tonight, I think we finally have the Ponca flag song down.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

spiritless

It seems every year it gets harder to get any christmas spirit, and this year is no better, maybe worse. When I was a kid, we would have huge gatherings, ten or fifteen at my parents for christmas day, thirty or forty or more at my grandparents the next sunday. There was lots of food, presents, family, and fun.
It's hard to feel anything when you don't have anyone to share it with. The truth is, it's just another day off work for me now, I've pretty much given up on it being anything else ever again.
Hopefully, when ski season kicks in for good, then we have the powwow in Hamilton next month, I'll get to feeling better. It's just not a good season for me.

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Person of the year

Hey! I'm Time magazine's person of the year. Read this:
The other day I listened to a reader named Tom, age 59, make a pitch for the American Voter as TIME's Person of the Year. Tom wasn't sitting in my office but was home in Stamford, Conn., where he recorded his video and uploaded it to YouTube. In fact, Tom was answering my own video, which I'd posted on YouTube a couple of weeks earlier, asking for people to submit nominations for Person of the Year. Within a few days, it had tens of thousands of page views and dozens of video submissions and comments. The people who sent in nominations were from Australia and Paris and Duluth, and their suggestions included Sacha Baron Cohen, Donald Rumsfeld, Al Gore and many, many votes for the YouTube guys.

This response was the living example of the idea of our 2006 Person of the Year: that individuals are changing the nature of the information age, that the creators and consumers of user-generated content are transforming art and politics and commerce, that they are the engaged citizens of a new digital democracy. From user-generated images of Baghdad strife and the London Underground bombing to the macaca moment that might have altered the midterm elections to the hundreds of thousands of individual outpourings of hope and poetry and self-absorption, this new global nervous system is changing the way we perceive the world. And the consequences of it all are both hard to know and impossible to overestimate.

There are lots of people in my line of work who believe that this phenomenon is dangerous because it undermines the traditional authority of media institutions like TIME. Some have called it an "amateur hour." And it often is. But America was founded by amateurs. The framers were professional lawyers and military men and bankers, but they were amateur politicians, and that's the way they thought it should be. Thomas Paine was in effect the first blogger, and Ben Franklin was essentially loading his persona into the MySpace of the 18th century, Poor Richard's Almanack. The new media age of Web 2.0 is threatening only if you believe that an excess of democracy is the road to anarchy. I don't.

Journalists once had the exclusive province of taking people to places they'd never been. But now a mother in Baghdad with a videophone can let you see a roadside bombing, or a patron in a nightclub can show you a racist rant by a famous comedian. These blogs and videos bring events to the rest of us in ways that are often more immediate and authentic than traditional media. These new techniques, I believe, will only enhance what we do as journalists and challenge us to do it in even more innovative ways.

We chose to put a mirror on the cover because it literally reflects the idea that you, not we, are transforming the information age. The 2006 Person of the Year issue—the largest one Time has ever printed—marks the first time we've put reflective Mylar on the cover. When we found a supplier in Minnesota, we made the company sign a confidentiality agreement before placing an order for 6,965,000 pieces. That's a lot of Mylar. The elegant cover was designed by our peerless art director, Arthur Hochstein, and the incredible logistics of printing and distributing this issue were ably coordinated by our director of operations, Brooke Twyford, and director of editorial operations, Rick Prue. The Person of the Year package, as well as People Who Mattered, was masterfully overseen by deputy managing editor Steve Koepp. Designing a cover with a Mylar window does create one unanticipated challenge: How do you display it online when there's no one standing in front of it? If you go to Time.com, you'll see an animated version of the cover in which the window is stocked with a rotating display of reader-submitted photos. Maybe you'll see yourself.

Bloggers Rule!

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

weird weather again

The weather is doing it's usual strange Illinois thing, a foot of snow, single digit temperatures, and now up into the fifties. I did get to go skiing sunday, just to the local hill (an hour and a little north), but I had planned on taking friday off and going up to Chestnut Mountain. I'm glad I didn't take the day off, it's going to be way too warm, the snow will wet and mushy. I'm kind of dissapointed, but it's too far to drive for those conditions. Hopefully next week sometime (maybe thursday).
Great little get together last night before drum practice, mostly for Ellen's friend Richard, visiting from New Mexico. Hopefully he'll make it back this way in the not too distant future.

Saturday, December 09, 2006

meet the new boss (hopefully not the same as the old boss)

Had a big meeting at work yesterday, we met the new public works director,(straight from Beverly Hills, no kidding) and maybe things are looking up. He does not believe in privatization, he believes in letting the people who know the town do the work.
On the bad side, it's official, I'm the only person in my department who isn't taking early retirement.
I really think it's not that bad, I will be the only one who knows how to run the sewer plant, they need me, I hope.

Friday, December 08, 2006

cold house

I got home from work yesterday, and man it was cold in here! My furnace was out. Not a good thing when the lows are down around zero in Illinois.
It was after 7:00 pm before it was fixed, by that time my house was an ice box.
It was just a clogged intake tube. I remember when all you had to worry about was the thermocouple. Now furnaces have so many safety things I'm surprised they work at all.
Okay drum practice tonight, Richard couldn't make it, we need all of us there for practice before Hamilton.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

getting dug out

We're finally getting dug out around here, most of the streets are clear, and mail is getting through. I did get stuck getting out of my drive yesterday, but some people from work pushed me out. This was an awesome storm, some people say it was more than a foot in one night.
DSL is fantastic, I don't know why I didn't get it a long time ago. I can download things so much faster, I've already downloaded two albums and a number of individual songs. That would have taken forever with dial-up.
I finally got a computer working for my sister Dinah, so she can use the internet now, though I imagine she will stick to dial-up, at least for now.
Looks like I can go skiing this weekend, I've been looking forward to it for months.

Friday, December 01, 2006

WHAT A SNOWSTORM!

Wow, we got blitzed last night! I haven't heard an official figure, but it had to be 10 or 12 inches at least. Everything was canceled, they even cancelled classes at the university, which just doesn't happen. I didn't get my car out of my drive until 7:00 tonight, and some people still aren't out. Since it's supposed to go down to single digit temps this weekend, this snow is sticking around for a while.
And its only the first of december!