Dang, here I am almost caught up on my reading and Acetylene goes and blogs something I must read–Sinclair Lewis’s It Can’t Happen Here.
Curse you, Acetylene! 😉 Next time the blog-bug bites, fill out a survey or something. 😀
Dang, here I am almost caught up on my reading and Acetylene goes and blogs something I must read–Sinclair Lewis’s It Can’t Happen Here.
Curse you, Acetylene! 😉 Next time the blog-bug bites, fill out a survey or something. 😀
About two months ago, KCTC started broadcasting Air America Radio programming, replacing KSAC as the Sacramento affiliate for AAR. I wasn’t able to find any programming information on KCTC’s web site back in November, but today I checked again. They do have a program schedule, but for some reason they chose to ignore accessibility guidelines and buried the schedule in a graphic:
Also, there are no links to the shows’ web sites. In an attempt to correct these problems, I’ve transcribed the KCTC lineup graphic into the table below. All times are Pacific, in 24-hour format. The “Live?” column indicates whether the show is being broadcast live, via tape delay, or a replay of an earlier broadcast.
Time | Show | Live? | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
00:00 | – | 02:00 | Randi Rhodes | replay |
02:00 | – | 03:00 | Rachael Maddow | live |
03:00 | – | 06:00 | Bill Press | live |
06:00 | – | 09:00 | Morning Sedition | taped |
09:00 | – | 12:00 | Al Franken | live |
12:00 | – | 16:00 | Randi Rhodes | live |
16:00 | – | 19:00 | Majority Report | live |
19:00 | – | 22:00 | Mike Malloy | live |
22:00 | – | 24:00 | Al Franken | replay |
Please note that I haven’t verified this schedule. This is just a copy of what I found on the KCTC web site on 2006-01-02. If you find any errors, please drop me a comment.
While I was installing BitTorrent on my Mac, I read the Wikipedia entry for BT and learned that Democracy Now! is available via BT. In fact, they have a pretty nice “how-to” page for BT that covers the basics pretty well.
DN is providing relatively high-quality video of their hour-long daily news program, so these files are pretty big: approximately 400 MiB or about 2/3’s of a full CD-ROM. Between the much larger file size and the larger number of simultaneous downloaders, the performance of the Torrent was much better than my Omni download. I downloaded Friday’s DN! program that afternoon and had about 20 members in the swarm, whereas when I downloaded OmniOutliner I was directly connected to a seed since nobody else was downloading at that time.
I’ll have to try slurping up DN! on Monday morning when it’s fresh. Presumably there will be a larger swarm which should improve performance even further.
Update: 2006-01-02 05:59:29 I just downloaded this morning’s episode, 418 MiB in 110 minutes, or about 65 kiB/s. There were only a few more members of the swarm (22-24), but performance seemed quite a bit better.
I found a humorous quiz on Kevin’s blog:
The question on how many planets are in the solar system threw me for a bit–not because I’m stupid, but because there is some ongoing discussion as to what constitutes a planet. I thought the quiz authors were trying to be tricky, but it turns out that they are merely looking for the customary answer, i.e. consider Pluto one of the planets and ignore 2003 UB313.
I guess “3% stupid” isn’t too bad, but I prefer the nerd test over this stupidity test.
Over on Call Me Fishmeal, Wil Shipley is linking to a speech on economics, democracy, media and the environment. It’s a broad topic, and the transcript of the speech is a relatively long read, but it’s well worth the effort. Wil is right: Whether you’re a Republican or a Democrat, who can disagree with this stuff? Who wants their children to have birth defects, to suffer asthma, to live on a moonscape?
There isn’t really much else to write on the issue other than, “Yeah, what he said!” So save your reading effort for the speech.
I tried to download the latest version of OmniOutliner this morning and discovered that Omni’s normal download server is hosed. They have cobbled a replacement together at an employee’s home, but the network connection is pretty overworked. The number of simultaneous downloads is severly restricted, but at least they have set up a queueing mechanism instead of making people retry their download. Even better, they have set up a BitTorrent server, which isn’t queued or throttled. While I was waiting for my OmniOutliner download, I found a BT client, downloaded it, then used BT to download OmniOutliner; meanwhile, I had moved about halfway up the queue to begin downloading. I’ve left BT running so my copy can be used as a seed, but I’m not sure if my ISP will block the traffic. According to Omni’s BT download stats, I’m the third “complete” of six downloads. (Presumably this means I’m the third seed?) I’ll leave it running for a few hours and see what happens. Hopefully somebody will benefit from the sharing of my bandwidth/disk space.
It’s that introspective time of year when people start thinking about their shortcomings and what they might do about them, in the form of New Year’s Resolutions. I can already envision the post-holiday crowds forming at health clubs everywhere!
I consider myself a pretty well-adjusted person, but there are obviously things I should do, but don’t (and vice versa). In fact I’m sure that I could easily come up with a dozen changes I would like to make in my life. This raises a question: do I try to make all of these changes beginning on 1 January 2006, or should I prioritize them and pick just one for 2006? I’ve been given good advice on attempting massive changes in habits — it doesn’t happen without concomitant motivation, e.g. your life hangs in the balance. I don’t have such a threat hovering over me, so the shotgun approach is out.
But instead of attempting one Resolution for 2006, potentially failing to stick to it, and maybe even picking up another bad habit this coming year, I thought of another possible approach: How about a monthly resolution? I’ve heard that if one can willfully change their behavior for a full month, the new behavior becomes habitual, i.e. something that doesn’t require effort to maintain. If I adopted this approach, I’d have 12 chances for self-improvement in 2006. Heck, if even one of these things “stuck” I’d be doing better than most people with respect to New Year’s Resolutions! But being realistic, I know that I’m likely to fail at least as often as I succeed in this endeavor, so I’m not going to queue up a new resolution for every month. Instead, I’ll allow for several “do-overs” starting about April (or later, on the off-chance that I’m successful in January and February).
What sort of resolutions would be good candidates? Well, it seems to me that they should be daily (or more frequent) tasks, particularly things that are important to me — my family and my health are the first general things that come to my mind. Some possible specifics might be:
A dozen monthly resolutions seem like a better approach to self-improvement than the typical New Year’s Resolution. I’ll pick something easy for January and see if I can stick with it throughout the month. For February I could take the next easiest task, and so on. Hmm, if I kept at it for a few months perhaps I would get into the habit of changing my habits. 🙂
OMG! If you haven’t seen the Chronicles of Narnia rap/hip-hop skit “Lazy Sunday” featuring Saturday Night Live’s Chris Parnell and Andy Samberg, go download it from iTMS (for free) and check it out! If you don’t have an iTunes account, you can view it here instead. If you’re having trouble understanding it, KYDem has a transcript the lyrics. And this article on Slate has some more info.
Wow, my family ended up with nine new games on our shelf this Christmas! As far as I know, all of these were picked up at Viking Hobby, so they did pretty well by us this season.
Any guesses as to what we’ll be doing in our spare time for the next few months? 😉
Andante sent me an invite for this survey. How could I refuse, especially since I was listed as her first victiminvitee?
Seven Things To Do Before I Die
Seven Things I Cannot Do
Seven Things That Attract Me to…Blogging
Seven Things I Say Most Often
Seven Books That I Love
(Yes, I know I went over the limit. Luckily I only went over by 1, it was hard enough to trim the list down to 8!)
Seven Movies That I Watch Over and Over Again
Seven People I Want To Join In Too
Obviously there is no obligation, but it would be interesting to hear from the following people:
(Those who don’t blog, feel free to leave your answers as comments on this article.)