Flickr Poster Received

I received my first of many Flickr posters in the mail today. The quality of both the images and the paper is excellent. Each of the pitcures is crystal clear and the poster paper is thick and glossy.

One small caveat: some of the photos have to be cropped in order to be inserted in the poster. The ordering page informs you of this and allows you to preview the poster to make sure the photos meet your approval. I didn’t preview mine so a few of my photos (4-5 out of 135) have heads cropped off. Even so, the poster looks very cool, and I highly recommend this service.

I expect to order 4-5 posters a year and at least one photo book a year.

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Tech Tips for Tweeners: News, Newsgroups and Newsreaders

babycomputer

One of the primary purposes of Newsome.Org is to introduce and explain computer-related programs and features to other in-betweeners like me- people who are the parents of the youngsters to whom computers and the internet are as integral as the telephone and the children of our parents who have no intention of ever embracing computers.

People in this 35-60 group are in an odd situation. Most have, perhaps begrudgingly, accepted computers as a tool to help them work- at least as far as emails and light word processing goes. But to many, anything beyond that is unfamiliar and confusing. Because I am the neighborhood computer geek, I get a lot of questions about technology. Over the years, two things have become clear. One, many in-betweeners view computers as a chore themselves as opposed to a method to make chores easier. Two, with a little work these same people can and will learn how to make computers work for them. There is always an initial hesitation (“I don’t understand all of that,” “If I give a web site my personal information, my identity will be stolen immediately, etc.”), but these folks have been around technology long enough to pick up more than they think via osmosis and to become comfortable around technology. That’s a valuable head start that will significantly lower the learning curve.

So let’s talk about one way we can make computers work for us. Anyone reading this knows how to send email, so we’ll skip that. Let’s talk about the second most commonly used benefit of computers and the internet: information gathering.

Any information gathering process starts with Google‘s web search. But there are other ways to get even more specific information. Let’s talk about newsgroups.

First, let’s address some terms, that may sound alike, but are not the same thing:

Newsgroups. A newsgroup (focus on the group half, not the news half) is a central list of messages, organized by topic, posted by many users at different locations. Stated another way, newsgroups are discussion groups where people discuss, teach, inquire about, etc. a topic of presumed common interest. For example, there are newsgroups about fishing, hunting, quilting- just about everything. A newsgroup looks similar to the list of email in your inbox, the difference being that the messages are composed by a large group of people from all over the world. From a technical perspective newsgroups are different from web-based message boards, like Songwriting.Org, but from an end user and experience perspective, they are similar. There are two ways to read newsgroups: via a newsgroup reader, such as Outlook Express (which is almost certainly already installed on your computer) or via the web through everyone’s favorite web site, Google. Newsgroup readers have to be configured, which, while not terribly hard to do, is more than a lot of people want to do (recall my mantra- if you want people to use technology, make technology easy to use). Reading newsgroups via Google is much easier. You can find groups you’re interested in via the search box, click on the link to read the messages and “subscribe” or bookmark the group by clicking on the link at the top of the list of messages. Here is a screenshot showing what a typical newsgroup looks like in Outlook Express:

outlooknews

and here is what one looks like via Google.

So why in the world would anyone want to read newsgroups? Simple, to get answers to questions. When I am trying to fix a computer problem, a broken toilet or almost any other problem, I start by searching the newsgroups, via Google. Very few problems haven’t already been solved by someone else and most of those solutions are readily accessible via newsgroups. Most of the hard computer or software problems I have encountered were solved via suggestions I read on newsgroups. And most of the time, you don’t even have to post a question to get the answer. Just search for the problem and you’ll generally find that someone else has already asked it and received an answer.

News Readers and RSS. For some strange reason, the programs that read RSS, which is a relatively new method of distribtuing web site content (like the content on this page) are confusingly called news readers (focus on the readers half, not the news half). They are also called RSS readers, feed readers and feed aggregators. The content displayed by these programs is repackaged web site content, not newsgroups. It’s confusing, but think of it as newsgroups (Google just calls them groups) where a group of people post messages and news readers that allow you to read news (and other content) posted by people like me on their web sites.

News: Don’t get traditional news sites, such as CNN or Google News confused with the stuff we talked about above. Those are traditional news sites, with traditional news. You can usually read that content through a newsreader (look for the RSS link), but that’s the only connection between those sites and newsgroups and newsreaders.

So what do I use for all this? There are many good programs. Here’s what I use:

Reading Newsgroups: Outlook Express, more than likely the program you use to send email from home. I use Outlook (a more robust program with a similar name) for email, but I use Outlook Express to read newsgroups.

Searching Newsgroups: Google. There is no substitute. If I find a group I like, I’ll subscribe to it via Outlook Express, but as mentioned above, you can easily read and post directly from Google.

Newsreader: Onfolio, which has many great features. There are also web based newsreaders. Of the ones on that list, I have tried and liked Newsgator and Bloglines. Both are free.

Once you go to the effort to set these programs up, they make it easy to find, collect and store information. It’s a little learning time now that is repaid with interest when you need information fast.

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The TIVO Deathmarch Continues

nailcoffinHD Beat is reporting on a “reliable” rumor that, as I predicted, DirecTV will switch out at no cost to the customer the soon to be obsolete $1000 door stops previously known as the TIVO HR10-250 in exchange for a new one or two year satellite service commitment.

HD Beat and the quoted article actually say that the DirecTV representative did not give any details about the timing of the switch out or whether a new contract would be required. Logic tells me, however, that a contract will be required as a way to boost customer retention and allocate the cost of the new boxes. I wouldn’t mind having to sign a 1 or 2 year contract if I could be assured of good service, a good box (like, for example, the TIVO box that DirecTV is dumping), and lots of new HDTV channels (not just satellite streams of the local channels that I already get over the air). I don’t see how I can get those assurances so the prospect of a long term satellite contract isn’t very appealing to me.

Big Loser: TIVO (great box; but dying on the vine thanks to DirecTV)
Jury’s Out: DirecTV (if the box is good and free, minimal damage)
Big Winner: Cable TV (angry DirecTV subscribers may go back to cable)

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My Favorite Records:Al Green – Call Me

As we meander through my vast record collection, we are done with the numbers and now move into the letters. Because records are indexed on my music server under the artists’ first name, we’ll use the same convention here.

As my roommates and anyone else who knew me in college will gladly attest, from 1978-1982 was the middle of my “Al Green Phase.” I had such a jones for Al that for most of 1981 I hardly listened to anything else. I pretty much wore out all his pre-1976 records, but Call Me, from 1973, was and remains my favorite.

allgreencallmeIt starts out with the most soulful title track, which just may be the best boy longs for girl song ever. Next is the mellow, groove-filled Have You Been Making Out OK. It’s hard to describe what a hip, sad, cool, wistful vibe this song has. Stand Up puts a funky horn arrangement to an empowerment message. There are two excellent country covers- Hank Williams’ I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry and Willie’s Funny How Time Slips Away, the latter being my definitive version of the song. My two favorite songs are at the end of the record. You Ought to Be with Me, is a theme song for every guy who ever courted a girl. Jesus is Waiting is so funky that you have to pay attention to the words to remember that it’s a gospel number.

Oh, and by the way, there’s another top ten hit that I didn’t even mention- Here I Am (Come and Take Me).

The songs are all excellent, but what makes this my favorite Al Green record is the tight arrangements and excellent playing. Great guitar and horns (by the renowned Menphis Horns) throughout. And I don’t know what Al paid the drummer on these sessions (Booker T and the MGs drummer, Al Jackson, who also played on many of Otis Redding’s records, including Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay), but it wasn’t enough. This record is a clinic on how a drummer can be understated and still chase the melody. There is no song on which the drumming is front and center, but there is no song on which you don’t tap along with the beat.

I had an old Marantz stereo and speakers in my room in our apartment back then (Broadmoor Apartments, Winston-Salem, NC). I’d sit in this orange garage sale chair I had and listen to Al for hours and hours.

A great record by a master of soul.

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Jukebox, Uncensored

You know the drill. Open up your jukebox of choice, point the shuffle feature to your entire library of songs and list, without exception, the first 10 or so songs that play. Each week, I add a little commentary about some of the artists, songs, albums, etc.

Sailor – Molly Hatchet (Beatin’ the Odds) (1)
Roy’s Bluz – Roy Buchanan (Live Stock) (2)
Handsome Molly – Bill Morrissey (A Collection of New Folk Artists) (3)
Soothe Me – Charles Brown (The Classic Earliest Recordings) (4)
All You Are Love – The Flatlanders (Now Again) (5)
Carry You Down – Son Volt (Wide Swing Tremolo) (6)
Where You Been – T-Model Ford (Pee-Wee get My Gun) (7)
Looking at the Rain – Gordon Lightfoot (Don Quixote) (8)
Cowboy – The Sugarcubes (Life’s too Good) (9)
Linger – Pinetops (Above Ground and Vertical) (10)

(1) The under-appreciated Jacksonville 3-guitar southern rock band’s third record, but the first without original vocalist Danny Joe Brown. A good song on a good record, but their first two records rock harder and better. I saw these guys in 1980 and they rocked the house.

(2) This is a great live record by a great, but often overlooked guitarist. This is the best song on the record and demonstrates why Roy was called “The Greatest Unknown Guitarist In The World.”

(3) It was this song on this compilation that turned me onto Bill Morrissey who for a number of years was my favorite songwriter. After hearing this song, I bought all three of his then-released records. This one is on Standing Eight, but both of his prior records, Bill Morrissey and North, are also excellent. The following one, Inside, is also excellent. His subsequent records don’t match up to the excellence of his first four. He hasn’t released a record since 2001, so I hope he’s due for another great one. I’ve seen him several times and he’s always good live.

(4) I really love blues piano, and Charles Brown along with Otis Spann and a few others hold a special place in my music collection. This song is a very old one and I tend to like his later stuff a little better. Still, it is a good song by a great piano player.

(5) Like everyone else, I have always loved their famous first album. This is a new one, released in 2002. This is a fairly straight forward love song by Jimmie Dale Gilmore, and not one of my favorites. But any band with Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Joe Ely, and Butch Hancock is worth hearing. If you’re looking to get into The Flatlanders, start with More a Legend than a Band, released in 1972 and rereleased in 1990 with some extra tracks.

(6) Granted, I like this record substantially less than their first two records, but it’s still pretty good. This is a mellow little number. Nothing spectacular, but worth a listen. Jay Farrar and some new bandmates have released a new record and, while I haven’t heard it yet, it’s getting some good reviews.

(7) Fine song off a fine record by a North Mississippi blues legend. Now that R.L. Burnside has joined Junior Kimbrough and Asie Payton in the juke joint in the sky, T-Model is one of the last of the Mississippi kings. This is hard, raw, bare blues. And it rocks.

(8) Nice cut off of a 1972 record by the Canadian who wrote what I consider to be one of the best and most musically and lyrically strong songs ever written: The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. This is a pretty good song. A little mellow, but that’s not always a bad thing.

(9) I don’t like this song much. For a brief period in the late 80’s I was captivated by Bjork’s voice, but this is a crappy song on an album that, for me, has not aged well at all.

(10) Great song off of a wistful alt. country record. This is mellow done correctly. I highly recommend this song and this record. Good stuff.

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3 Things I Remember About: 1965

I’m going to start an occasional series of the most significant things I remember from each year. It may take me a long time to get from the earliest years I can remember until today, but I’ll give it a shot. I would love it if others would add their lists via the comments or a trackback.

I was born in 1960. I have a few scattered memories from pre-1965, but 1965 is the first year that my memories can be definitively associated with a year, so here goes:

(1) I went to kindergarten at The Little Red Schoolhouse. Someone went potty in one of the play structures on the playground. I believe it was in the Shoe (as in the old lady who lived in a shoe), but it may have been in the Daniel Boone Hut. It was a huge scandal. It wasn’t me and I don’t think I ever knew who it was. Nor do I know if the teachers ever discovered the culprit.

C65-741251

(2) I had perhaps my best Christmas as a youngster ever that year. I got a racetrack, a little round pool-table game and this neat golf game, which my dad and his friends played a lot.

(3) I remember regularly watching two TV shows with my dad. The first is The Honeymooners, which must have been in reruns, since it only aired as a separate show during the 1955-56 season. The second, and my favorite, was Combat. We watched Combat together for years. In fact, reruns are still shown on the Encore Action channel on DirecTV, and I still watch it once in a while.

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Happy Labor Day

Into the Pool-765248
Labor Day has been celebrated on the first Monday in September in the United States since the 1880s. The origins of the American Labor Day can be traced back to the Knights of Labor in the United States and a parade organized by that group and held on September 5, 1882 in New York City.

The US Department of Labor’s web site has this to say about Labor Day:

Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.

Today, Labor Day is generally regarded as a day for picnics, barbecues, water activities and other family activities.

The Veldmans, LeFevers, Clarks and Carlsons came over today for a cookout. The kids swam and played in the new yard. We had hamburgers and hot dogs for dinner. It was big fun and we are blessed to have such a good group of friends.

Digital Music Update

The other day, when I was discussing the vast and unnecessary limitations that online music sellers place on downloaded music files via DRM, I decided to cancel my Rhapsody subscription because (a) Rhapsody is now owned by RealNetworks, maker of Real Player, that bloated and computer hogging software that I detest, and (b) there is a new version of Rhapsody that allows you to buy DRM infested downloadable music files. Previously, Rhapsody was a burn to CD only service (you ended up with CDs and not DRM infested music files).

Well, when I logged onto Rhapsody to cancel, I was quickly reminded of why I avoid RealNetworks software like the plague. When I finally found the page describing how to cancel your account, I found this little jewel:

rhapbs-744163

So, even though you can sign up, upgrade and buy music online, to cancel you are forced to call a telephone number and speak to someone. And of course the telephone number only works during business hours. I remember having the exact same problem in the past when trying to cancel RealNetworks services.

I’ll call on Tuesday. And I’ll vote with my keyboard and my wallet. No RealNetwork products. Not now, not ever.

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