digital paper

A Coffeyville, KS childhood

April 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

Right before the street lights come on
when the sun is a deep orange and you still want to play.

When the cicadas are playing the soundtrack of summer.
When the 4th of July is 2 weeks away
and mid August is an eternity.

When every day feels like a blank canvas.
You wake up with no intentions,
no routine,
no responsibility.

When Sycamore Creek is your office
and the traffic on the trails is light.

When the early summer crawdads are jumping
and the tadpoles are sprouting legs.

The rock bridge needs rebuilding from last week’s thunderstorms
and the yard needs mowing.
$5 more in your pocket,
or in the savings account for fireworks.

When downtown feels so far away
and riding your bike down there makes you feel grownup.

Saturday mornings at the pawn shop.
Talking/trading baseball cards with Steve and Fish.
Buying The Punisher and a few Rickey Hendersons.

This was my childhood.
Filled with every small town cliché you can think of:
Grandparents living close
Having some of the same teachers in high school that taught your parents
A creek or forest to escape to
Massive amount of time on bikes
Not worrying about strangers and riding my bike wherever I wanted
Coming back home for lunch or getting a slice of pizza from Casey’s along with some 5¢ gum

And I love those clichés.

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Larry Schwarm - Photography

March 4, 2008 · No Comments

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Garfield minus Garfield

February 27, 2008 · No Comments

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I’m white and I like these things

February 27, 2008 · 1 Comment

http://stuffwhitepeoplelike.wordpress.com is a site that makes me a little nervous. There are too many things on this site that I like, and the descriptions about the people that like them hit close to home as well.

I am a white person and I like/enjoy the following things:

Kitchen gadgets

Dogs

The Sunday New York Times. This one hit REALLY close to home for me. This is almost my exact Sunday morning routine.

Public Radio, NPR

Indie Music

Apple

Netflix. Though I don’t have a subscription it was brought up at party I was at recently.

The Daily Show

David Sedaris

Wine

Microbrews

Asian Girls

Coffee

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Better Oil stain in trees

February 24, 2008 · No Comments



Better Oil stain in trees

Originally uploaded by fyrdude09.

Oil stained trees in my hometown (Coffeyville, KS).

It’s amazing how empty the east side of Coffeyville is. The EPA has been testing the ground all over the east side and houses are now coming down.

I’m not sure what the COOP (the refinery that spilt the oil) is going to do with the land. It’ll be interesting.

This photo was taken by my dad.

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FCC Auction Opens Door to Open Access

February 3, 2008 · No Comments

FCC Auction Opens Door to Open Access

While the identity of the high bidder for the C block remains a mystery under the FCCs rules, it now appears certain the nation will see its very first open-access wireless network within a few years. Until now, the FCC has always allowed licensees to exercise full control over which phones and applications could be used on their networks. Indeed, three of the five blocks being auctioned this time around will allow the owners traditional discretion over their networks.

This could be interesting.

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Snow sculpture

February 2, 2008 · No Comments



Snow sculpture

Originally uploaded by tonystl.

Twisting, turning, coming off like a wrapper.

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New technology makes me happy

January 22, 2008 · No Comments

It’s about to happen. I’m getting a new cellphone in a couple of days. The only thing I’ll be able to think about, and the only Google searches I’ll be doing for the next two weeks, will revolve around the Nokia N75.

This will be my first phone with the Symbian operating system. Apparently this OS is highly customizable. The OS also has quite a following with developers, so there are plenty of little applications to download and fiddle with.

This will also be my first phone that accepts Micro SD cards. The phone can be used as a mass storage device, which is pretty exciting for me since I’ve been wanting to get 1-2 gigs of flash memory, but never really wanted to put the money (even thought it wouldn’t be much) out for it.

The phone has a 2 megapixel camera. Which isn’t much, but will be much better than my <1 megapixel Razr.

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White bread for young minds, says university professor

January 15, 2008 · No Comments

White bread for young minds, says university professor - Times Online

Google is “white bread for the mind”, and the internet is producing a generation of students who survive on a diet of unreliable information, a professor of media studies will claim this week. She believes that easy access to information has dulled students’ sense of curiosity and is stifling debate.

If these students are so addicted to Google, then how is Google dulling their sense of curiosity? Don’t you Google something when you are curious about it? I don’t just mindlessly Google things all day long unless I have a passing interest in what I’m typing. Also, I usually run across a decent news article or two about my topic and learn more than I knew the moment before.

True, students may rely too much on Google or Wikipedia (which are two different beasts, each with its own set of strong points and weak points) for their information, or as a first, and only, research source. But I don’t think this is the solution:

Her own students are banned from using Wikipedia or Google as research tools in their first year of study, but instead are provided with 200 extracts from peer-reviewed printed texts at the beginning of the year, supplemented by printed extracts from eight to nine texts for individual pieces of work.

Draining the available research pool to these finite texts isn’t going to teach these students anything. By gathering all the printed material together for the students, handing it to them and then expecting them to use it for research paper preparation is like giving open-book tests all year long. Do the students really learn how to do their own research by giving them all the available material, telling them not to deviate from it, and then the next year releasing them into the wild, Google-White yonder to suddenly know how to research any better than before (when they were supposedly sustaining on a diet of Google search results and Wikipedia entries)?

“I want students to experience the pages and the print as much as the digitisation and the pixels - both are fine but I want students to have both – not one or the other, not a cheap solution,” she said.

If she can also provide those texts in digital format with a decent search algorithm, then more power to her. It sounds like she also has a problem with the digitizing of the printed word.

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Words on paper

January 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

Sometimes I like to look at books, and photos of books, more than I like to read books.

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