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You're reading a collection of archived posts from a single month in 2003. If you'd like something current, visit the onfocus home page.
Wednesday, April 30th, 2003
little white flowers
[.] posted at 3:19 PM

Tuesday, April 29th, 2003
yellow flower
[.] posted at 12:24 PM

Monday, April 28th, 2003
According to TVEyes, today's NewsHour on PBS has a story about weblogs. And here's the RealAudio of the story.
[.] posted at 4:50 PM
orange flower
[.] posted at 12:35 PM

Sunday, April 27th, 2003
I can't wait to see Winged Migration, it looks fun. I hope it hits a theater nearby. Here's a trailer.
[.] posted at 6:00 PM
I'm glad I can finally talk about Amazon Hacks. I've received several great hacks via email already. (Thanks everyone who sent something in. I'm still checking all of them out. Keep them coming!) And it's great to hear general excitement about the book. This email made me laugh out loud:
...That machete makes your Amazon Hacks cover the most TERRIFYING COMPUTER BOOK COVER I'VE EVER SEEN...
Maybe O'Reilly is trying to scare people into buying it. ;) Though I do think it's one of the best tools you can literally "hack" with; out of all the hacks covers so far. How else would you get through the Amazon jungle?
[.] posted at 11:56 AM
Some things I learned at eTech: It was a fantastic conference.
[.] posted at 11:08 AM - comment

Saturday, April 26th, 2003
I added a few more photos to my eTech gallery. (I'm back in Oregon now. Luckily the drive up was uneventful!)
[.] posted at 6:26 PM

Thursday, April 24th, 2003
Here are some photos from eTech so far.
[.] posted at 11:27 AM
squirrel
[.] posted at 7:44 AM

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2003
Battle of the Blog Builders: "The company behind one of the weblog world's most popular tools is preparing to launch a new service which will attack market leaders Blogger.com head on." The new tool will be called TypePad. Congrats Ben, Mena, and (now!) Anil!
[.] posted at 9:51 AM

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2003
So the cat was let out of the bag today at the eTech Amazon Workshop. I'm working on a book for O'Reilly called Amazon Hacks. They distributed a confidential draft (actually printed in block letters across the top!) printing of a chapter from the book to everyone, and I attempted to talk to everyone about a couple of cool hacks that are in the book already. (I'm not so great at public speaking...but I hope I got something across beyond the fact that I was nervous.) They didn't have enough copies of the sample chapter to go around, and I even gave up my copy to someone who didn't get one the first time around.

Now that the project is public, I'm going to step up my efforts at finding code for the book. If you have a bit of cool Amazon hackery, let me know. It doesn't have to be anything formal, hence the word Hacks in the title. If you've written some unusual way to work with Amazon, let me know! (Or let me know if you just have a dream Amazon feature...maybe it could evolve into a code hack.) You can submit a hack at the O'Reilly site if you want to go the official route. Or just send me an email directly. Like the other Hacks books, contributors are fully credited and have a bio in the book.
[.] posted at 1:58 PM - comment
The World as a Blog. Interesting combination of Geo-info, RSS, and Weblogs.com. You can see posts as they're posted in their geographic location on a world map. [via irc #etcon]
[.] posted at 10:45 AM

Sunday, April 20th, 2003
Even though it was a short trip, here are some pictures I took...

Train Pictures (click for more)

I didn't take any pictures on the bus ride, even though there was a beautiful sunrise as we were passing Mt. Shasta. It's hard to enjoy anything on a bus.
[.] posted at 1:35 PM
Hitting the rails didn't go nearly as well as expected. I got on board in Albany, OR around 4:00pm. A few hours later I was enjoying the ride as the train was leaving civilization and climbing into the Cascades. Just before I went to the dining car for dinner around 6:30, the train came to a complete stop. This isn't unusual...sometimes the train has to wait for a freight train to pass. That usually takes 10 minutes or so. During dinner we overheard the crew saying that somwhere up ahead a freight train derailed. They were saying it was one car, it would be cleared, and we'd be on our way in about an hour. After dinner we still hadn't moved.

Next, an engineer let us know that four cars had derailed ahead, and that we would be turning around and heading back to Eugene. But first, we'd need to move the engines to the front of the train. This ordeal takes an hour or so, during which there is no power on the train. We eventually made it back to Eugene around midnight where they herded all of the passengers onto buses. So my trip ended up being by bus.

I normally love traveling by train, and this is the only problem I've ever had. But it's a big problem.
[.] posted at 12:55 PM

Friday, April 18th, 2003
I'm about to hit the rails for a trip to CA.
[.] posted at 2:02 PM

Thursday, April 17th, 2003
Kim Jong Il (the illmatic)'s Journal. Why do these always show up on LiveJournal?
[.] posted at 5:03 PM

Wednesday, April 16th, 2003
BlogFodder: Big in Japan? (or mocked in Japan?)
[.] posted at 9:40 AM - comment

Tuesday, April 15th, 2003
Holy crap, this is cool: Freevo! An open source TiVo clone that runs on a PC. (Thanks, Nate!) Check out the screenshots.

Also: mythTV. [via Slashdot]
[.] posted at 2:17 PM - 2 comments

Sunday, April 13th, 2003
The world—
Like an elephant's tail
Not passing through the window,
Although no one is there
Holding it back.

- Dogen
[.] posted at 11:42 AM

Friday, April 11th, 2003
Magazine ranks Corvallis in top 10
"Using 34 variables from cancer rates and cholesterol levels to air and water quality to access to major airports and major cities, Men's Journal magazine in its May edition listed Corvallis as one of The 50 Best Places to Live among U.S. cities with populations between 50,000 and 500,000."
My research ranked Corvallis at the top too. That's why I moved here. Go Corvallis!
[.] posted at 10:21 AM

Thursday, April 10th, 2003
The Emerging Technology conference is coming up this month. They have a 30% discount going on right now for friends and family. You are friends and family!

eTech

Here are some notes I jotted down after eTech 2002. I was wishing for a ping service to track weblog posts last year, and this year it exists in the form of trackbacks for every session. Sometimes wishes come true. With trackbacks, a centralized note-swapping place might not even be necessary if everyone attending the conference has a blog (and they're willing to post their notes there).

Who else is talking about the conference?
[.] posted at 7:50 PM
Some photos I've taken in Mariposa Grove.
[.] posted at 4:49 PM
Two Giant Sequoias Fall in Yosemite

AP Photo

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, CA, 2-APR-2003: Park ranger Deb Schweizer discusses two fallen giant sequoia trees, Wednesday, March 5, 2003 in the Mariposa Grove in Yosemite National Park, Calif. For more than 1,000 years, the two giant sequoia trees thrived in the Mariposa Grove, eventually towering 30 stories into the sky. When they fell, a hole the size of a jetliner opened in the forest canopy.
[Photo by Gary Kazanjian, copyright 2003 by AP and ClariNet]
[.] posted at 4:22 PM

Wednesday, April 9th, 2003
can't blog. busy.

but want to point to self evident by ani difranco anyway. she rocks.
[.] posted at 9:50 AM

Sunday, April 6th, 2003
Instead of the government spending hundreds of millions of dollars on creating an Arabic al-Jazeera competitor, they should just let News Corporation (Fox) buy them. Their programming would change dramatically. In fact, maybe Fox will be able to soon—the FCC is about to give even more ownership latitude to the big ten. It reminds me of the immortal words of Princess Leia, "The more you tighten your grip [Big 10], the more star systems will slip through your fingers." (Though I'm pretty sure News Corporation owns that quote.) [first link via rc3.org]
[.] posted at 3:01 PM

Thursday, April 3rd, 2003
André Breton objects for sale. It's sad to see his life's private minutia and collected objects cataloged and auctioned off. But at the same time it's fascinating to go through. Maybe Breton wouldn't mind. As he once said (in translation), "The legs beneath the fruit-bearing cloud travel all along the greenhouse."

And I now know that Duchamp had hair well ahead of its time. And that's worth something.

I love this photo of a sunflower by Man Ray. And this painting by Marie Toyen. So much to see there.
[.] posted at 9:40 PM
What is the meaning of the phrase The Second Superpower? [via Scripting] An interesting look at language on the Web, and the heavy influence certain weblogs have on Google.

The phrase (in its early meaning) was altered slightly (The Other Superpower) and used on the cover of The Nation recently.

Keep an eye on googlewashed. (Sure to be googlewashed?)
[.] posted at 7:40 PM

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2003
The NewsHour on PBS continues to have the best television war coverage and analysis I've seen. To get a sense of the current rift between the military and politicians, check out this segment from last night's show. (or realaudio.)
[.] posted at 10:02 AM

Tuesday, April 1st, 2003
Remember Usenet? clari.news.photos has quite a few AFP photographs of current events. They're bigger than the versions you find at Yahoo! news.
[.] posted at 8:32 PM
Matt has mophos. Here's how he does it with 3 servers, 7 clicks, a secret email account, a weblog CMS, and a script that checks the email account every 10 minutes. My setup for mophos is pretty much the same sort of rube-goldberg scriptery. Someday this will all be easier. (I'd like to see a "publish" option on my phone.)
[.] posted at 11:17 AM
It was bound to happen: GooFi.
[.] posted at 12:18 AM

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