Friday, September 26, 2008

Mass transit can cause massive problems

I walked home with thousands of people last night.

A very busy section of the
subway was shut down during the evening rush hour yesterday. It turns out electrical cables fell on the tracks near Eglinton station (my closest station). The trains were turning back at Bloor and Lawrence about 6 kms apart. Faced with a few of these situations in the past, I typically resort to walking. So I walked 4kms home with thousands of other people shoulder to shoulder on the street and surrounded by jammed roads and the overcrowded stand-in shuttle buses. It took me about an hour. A lady here at the office waited patiently for a shuttle bus and got home in 3 hours.

I contemplated my thoughts on the walk:

  • A little irony here - this happens a day after the announcement of the massive regional transportation plan.
  • I noticed that many people didn't seem to be used to walking. Perhaps the daily routine was a short shuffle to the bus stop and and a transfer to the subway, but a good healthy city walk was foreign to them. Walking etiquette and pace was inconsistent and of course footwear was an issue. I was hoping I wouldn't witness a heart attack. Surprisingly, I only saw a few smokers (or are smokers more likely to drive?) and every other person was telling the tale via their cell phone.
  • The bars were doing a cracking business.
  • I imagine that people driving their cars around the suburbs listening to this news on the radio, or even sitting in their cars along Yonge street were thinking - these people are crazy, why take the subway if you have a choice to take your car ? It just gives public transit a very bad image, especially in times when we're trying to promote it's environmental benefits.
  • A lot of people don't know their city very well and rarely take a look around or get above ground for a peek. Some people were unclear of what the major streets were, how far they were walking and a few weren't even clear on the direction they should be walking. There was lots of people looking in shop and restaurant windows, obviously clueless to the wonderful shopping and dining you can find thru midtown Toronto.
  • Canadians are often described as a tolerant bunch and I could say that that was evident last night. There wasn't a lot of yelling or complaining, just an acceptance that things don't always go to plan and you just get on with it.
  • I was glad I'd decided to leave my laptop and (heavy) external drive at the office - it made the carry home a little more bearable.
When mass transit hits a serious snag like yesterday, it produces a massive problem for tens of thousands of people. I hope the TTC (disappointing there's no formal apology on their front page) and the regional public transportation authorities truly understand that the service they provide to the public is essential for the health of a modern thinking, metropolitan city.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Investing in your passions


Who needs or deserves your money more - Purnomo the meatball vendor in Indonesia or Sexy Marvin, the indy rock band from Mexico ?

I'm not a great economist, money manager, investor, cash flow maximizer or accountant, so digest this post with a generous sprinkling of salt.

I've recently heard of two financial products that allow you to invest your money in some new ways. These new financial products touch on two interesting facets of everyday life, but are on opposite ends of the responsibility spectrum. Charity and music.

My cousin, and like-minded music fan, pointed me to a financial "product" a few weeks ago called
Bandstocks. The idea is that you make small (or large) investments in an unsigned musical talent. It could be considered an easy way to truly put your money where your mouth is with respect to "good" music. If you really think band XYZ is going to be the next big thing, then invest your money. It doesn't have to be much, but it can pay dividends, long term returns and provide non-financial benefits as well.

My wife told me about an interesting concept tonight about investing in individual businesses in developing countries. The investment is made easy by
kiva.org and was mentioned in Bill Clinton's book Giving.

I simply like the idea that you're not just donating your money to a charity or a hard up musician. Instead, your making a conscious decision to say, I believe in something strongly enough and something that I'm passionate about, and I believe it will be a success. But rather investing in Apple or pork bellies that you may not really care too much about, you can perhaps say to yourself...great, if my bet works out, everyone's a winner, but if not, I've made a pseudo donation
(I'm not certain if these investments are also tax deductible) and given someone else in the world a chance to make it. Or you could simply cozy up to the karma gods and embrace a no-strings-attached, pay it forward doctrine (but that's a whole other topic).

Investing in your passions


Who needs or deserves your money more - Purnomo the meatball vendor in Indonesia or Sexy Marvin, the indy rock band from Mexico ?

I'm not a great economist, money manager, investor, cash flow maximizer or accountant, so digest this post with a generous sprinkling of salt.

I've recently heard of two financial products that allow you to invest your money in some new ways. These new financial products touch on two interesting facets of everyday life, but are on opposite ends of the responsibility spectrum. Charity and music.

My cousin, and like-minded music fan, pointed me to a financial "product" a few weeks ago called
Bandstocks. The idea is that you make small (or large) investments in an unsigned musical talent. It could be considered an easy way to truly put your money where your mouth is with respect to "good" music. If you really think band XYZ is going to be the next big thing, then invest your money. It doesn't have to be much, but it can pay dividends, long term returns and provide non-financial benefits as well.

My wife told me about an interesting concept tonight about investing in individual businesses in developing countries. The investment is made easy by
kiva.org and was mentioned in Bill Clinton's book Giving.

I simply like the idea that you're not just donating your money to a charity or a hard up musician. Instead, your making a conscious decision to say, I believe in something strongly enough and something that I'm passionate about, and I believe it will be a success. But rather investing in Apple or pork bellies that you may not really care too much about, you can perhaps say to yourself...great, if my bet works out, everyone's a winner, but if not, I've made a pseudo donation
(I'm not certain if these investments are also tax deductible) and given someone else in the world a chance to make it. Or you could simply cozy up to the karma gods and embrace a no-strings-attached, pay it forward doctrine (but that's a whole other topic).

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Almost Genius

I've been experimenting a little with iTunes' 8 new feature Genius. Specifically the Genius playlist feature that creates a playlist in your music collection based on one seed track. I don't think the smarts have been revealed yet, but the gist is that it's matching based on the complete iTunes library, mixed with ratings and playlists from other listeners and then comparing with your tracks and preferences. I did one with Viva la Vida and got quite a predictable but refreshing auto playlist of more unusual tracks from bands like Spoon and Radiohead. The one I'm listening to now was based on a Life Stories from Just Jack and it's picked up tracks from Babyshambles & Cat Power - interesting, but also mixed in Jamie Lidell (odd).

The one thing that made me a little uncomfortable was that you to share your library with Apple when you switch on Genius. As I said in
Mark Evans' blog:

I’m just beginning to play with Genius, but I definitely have some reservations about sharing my library, especially since many of my downloads are from gray area sources and they “kindly” embed an MP3 tag showing the source that I’m now sharing. In the big picture, I’m pretty comfortable with the big boys keeping my info private, but the dark side possibilities are there !

What I actually did was clear the references to legalsounds and allofmp3 from the comment meta data tags before switching on Genius.

So, Genius isn't really a genius, but it does make some interesting choices and, if nothing else, provides a new way to automatically create pseudo random, but focused playlists. And I'm amazed how fast it works. I like it.

Almost Genius

I've been experimenting a little with iTunes' 8 new feature Genius. Specifically the Genius playlist feature that creates a playlist in your music collection based on one seed track. I don't think the smarts have been revealed yet, but the gist is that it's matching based on the complete iTunes library, mixed with ratings and playlists from other listeners and then comparing with your tracks and preferences. I did one with Viva la Vida and got quite a predictable but refreshing auto playlist of more unusual tracks from bands like Spoon and Radiohead. The one I'm listening to now was based on a Life Stories from Just Jack and it's picked up tracks from Babyshambles & Cat Power - interesting, but also mixed in Jamie Lidell (odd).

The one thing that made me a little uncomfortable was that you to share your library with Apple when you switch on Genius. As I said in
Mark Evans' blog:

I’m just beginning to play with Genius, but I definitely have some reservations about sharing my library, especially since many of my downloads are from gray area sources and they “kindly” embed an MP3 tag showing the source that I’m now sharing. In the big picture, I’m pretty comfortable with the big boys keeping my info private, but the dark side possibilities are there !

What I actually did was clear the references to legalsounds and allofmp3 from the comment meta data tags before switching on Genius.

So, Genius isn't really a genius, but it does make some interesting choices and, if nothing else, provides a new way to automatically create pseudo random, but focused playlists. And I'm amazed how fast it works. I like it.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Toronto violence - good intentions overshadowed by news of school shooting

On my morning subway ride, I read a positive story on page 3 of Metro - Officers hit schools to bond with teens. In all the negativity and doom and gloom reporting of today's urban violence, I was pleased to the city doing something progressive and proactive and it appeared the reception from the community was very positive.

Now just about 6 hours later, I see the headlines - Boy, 17, in critical condition after Toronto high school shooting. These schools are just 7 kms apart.

Let's not give up on trying to make this city safer.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Photo Blog #4: Hot Wheels


I love getting a nice result from an impromptu photograph. Remnants of hurricane Ike beginning tonight and I was sitting on the porch with the family and snapped a few pics. Great porch lights and dark spray from the street (actually the wind just picked up for a sec and sprayed by laptop keyboard and screen). Wondering what made the wheels red ? No it wasn't a Photoshop trick !
Posted by Picasa

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Superlative soccer

Absolutely amazing. I'm just watching the Manchester City vs Chelsea game and I was once again reminded how huge football is in the world. The estimated viewing audience for this game is 800 million people (just a little less than 1 in 8 people in the world). And it's not a particularly important game but there is a lot of off field drama and anticipation for this match. With the mid week takeover of Manchester City by UAE gazillionaires, these two teams are the now the richest football teams in the world (and perhaps in all of sport), and today was the debut of super signing (32M pounds) Robinho, the most expensive player ever to play in England. Robinho didn't disappoint with a goal off a free kick in the 13th minute. Score 1:1 at the half. 2nd half just started, gotta go.

Friday, September 12, 2008

But seriously

There are a lot of serious things in the world that I could write about (and I do occasionally).  Yesterday's anniversary of 9/11.  Afghanistan. Canadian and US political elections.  Financial investments and the economy. How many spaces follow a period ? Cyber security and identity theft. My children's education. 3rd world hunger.  

Instead I write about other things. Music. Movies and TV. Sports. Technology and photography.

What does this say about me ? A guy with his head in the sand, simply looking for entertainment ? I don't recall the exact words that I used as the original blog header, but I don't really think I made any promises about setting the world right. I don't really think that my friends enjoy spending time with me because of my political views or my expertise on internet security. I do question my priorities sometimes, but then again, this forum is mostly a personal outlet. Occasionally a news event or serious topic does become front and centre in my life and I want to say something about it.  But often, like today, I'm enjoying sharing some thoughts of good times, when I last had a good laugh with friends, looking forward to a nice dinner and a bottle of wine with the wife tonight, getting a hug from my kids, watching some footy tomorrow morning, finding the right music at the right time, talking photography with my daughter, playing PS3 with my son, planning the next visit with family and friends.  That's what my life is all about.

There are two sayings that perhaps explain why my life is still not in perfect balance:

Life's too short...[verb]...[serious and sensible thing]

When all is said and done, what will I remember most of my life and how will people remember me ?

Television

With a new season of television shows upon us, I thought it would be a good time for a few lists. But before diving into the itemizing and annotating my favourites, perhaps I'll take time to reflect on the medium.

When I was growing up, after kids TV (
Tiswas, Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlett), it seemed that my regular TV viewing was variety shows (It's a knockout, Top of the Pops) of some kind, which still haven't gone away and to some degree are ancestors to today's reality shows.

For me, there is a fine balance between the strict serial drama and the casual evening sitcom or the event driven drama. With the strict serial drama (e.g. Lost) the viewer is almost forced to watch every single episode and will be
lost if the first or last episodes are missed. With the sitcom (e.g Seinfeld) or event drama (e.g. House) , no worries, jump right in and enjoy the show (although some characters and relationships develop over the season).

Current:

House - a good use for the term becrutchedy, new season starting next week.
Entourage - fun guy stuff, fanastic soundtrack, new season started this week
Top Gear - fab cars, funny hosts, years behind but still loving it

Memorable older TV shows:

The Sopranos - T was arguably one of the most complex TV characers of all time
Dead Like Me - very clever premise and story lines
The Office (UK version) - can you say awkward
Twin Peaks - super serial silliness, great mystery but went very weird in the end
The Young Ones - Brit lad humour that still pops up when some of me mates get together
Blackadder - linguistic comedy at it's best, Shakespeare would have loved it
Seinfeld - the best American TV comedy of all time, a ife time of plots and quotes

Notables:

Durham County - briliant Canadian and local drama
Dexter - redefining protagonist, Michael C. Hall creates lots of polite after dinner conversation
Six Feet Under - making death entertaining, Michael C, Hall again

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Break-Fix

There is a service within the computer hardware business called break-fix. This service is for business customers who want computer hardware support - when their computer "breaks", a technician is dispatched to the customer site to fix the problem.

I have a new definition of break-fix.
break-fix, noun. [breyk-fiks] The lengthy event when a 43 year old bald English-Canadian man attempts to repair something broken in his house. The repair results in greater damage and inconvenience than the original problem. Results typically comprise of one of more of the following: healthy doses of profanity, unplanned expenses, injured body parts, sweat, a foul mood, multiple visits to the hardware store and sometime a resolution to the problem - the fix.
My kitchen faucet hasn't been right for a long time, first it was the handle mechanism that was loosening and not holding it's position correctly. Then it was a leak that was getting annoying worse. All of the faucets in the house are Moen, I've always liked their styling and have taken advantage of the their fantastic service of the years. If you have a problem with one of their products you can call customer service, explain the problem and they will ship you the replacement parts (free of charge). My only complaint may be that the instructions for repair could be written better. That being said, I'm a loyal customer to the brand. So, I finally get around to calling them with these latest problems, they diagnose the problem well - a broken handle inner piece and the cartridge. The parts were a little slow arriving, but it is a free service ! Then the parts sit for quite a few weeks before I tackle the job a few weekends ago, what better day to do some home repairs - Labour Day.

First job, get access to the problem parts, easier said than done. Faucets are designed to look sleek and shiny, the last thing you want is a visible screw. So from past experience, I knew there had to be a clever way to remove the faucet. So I loosened the lower handle surrounding collar, to see what that would do, no go. Then I looked under the sink to see how the faucet was attached, checked a few screws and pipes and with some dismay, saw that the eventual removal of the faucet was going to be a bitch. I checked the instructions. So with my single handle faucet, Moen cleverly hide a small access screw behind a small logo plate (always wondered why that thing comes off so easy). I know what you're thinking, don't forget to turn the water off mate. Done that, although under the sink isn't the most accessible work area in the world and the valves were quite tricky to close. I already noticed that my early figgling may have loosened a few pipe joints as I saw a few small drips (argh - memories of the upstairs bathroom break-fix may years ago begin to creep into short term RAM).

So, the small screw. Yes I found it, and yes, Moen was kind enough to provide the correct sized allen key. Excellent. This faucet is about 10 years old. So you can image the screw was pretty tight. So tight I had to lever it with some pliers - BIG MISTAKE. I thought I was making progress but then it really loosened and I lost a grip on the head of the screw and it disappeared. I took me quite a long time to figure out that the screw head had fallen into the handle base and the screw had sheared off - F#$^. But I persisted, and naively thought maybe I could still remove the handle and salvage the situation. So, with an arsenal of tools and some idiotic ideas of remedy, I set to removing the handle. A drill is put to use and surprisingly seems to making some progress (the goal is to break down the screw to the point of it loosening its bind on the situation). More drilling, mixed with some heavy handed yanking and rotating and finally voila - I've got a shiny handle loose in my hand.

Now, back to the original mission, I'm trying to replace a metal component in the handle with a new one, although I can't really tell where the break is because I've destroyed its connection to the base. Anyhoo, I set to separating the components. This was the real tough part as the sheared off screw was holding it's place very firm. More drilling and the introduction of a hammer. And finally I separate the (really) damaged component and was left with this...


and then I could see that my skilled attack had done a fine job of enlarging the hole in the soft cast-metal handle molding (enough to create some concern that I'd damaged the handle beyond repair but funnily enough, not enough to get that pesky screw out). More vice grips, drilling and yanking and I finally get the old screw out. I do a quick test of the new part and the new screw and it seems to be ok. Amazing, I catch a glimpse at the light at the end of tunnel.

Part 2, I focus my attention on the base and the cartridge. This looks tricky. The leak seems to have rusted the large fastening rings (I knew I should have fixed this as soon as the leak started). So I try to loosen the rings for a while with various vice grips and wrenches but no go. Note that all the while the leak under the sink has been growing, so I make the executive decision - I'm going to throw in the towel and buy a new faucet. A quick check online and a very quick trip to Canadian Tire and I'm home with a new faucet.

Part 3 - removing the old faucet. As mentioned earlier, I knew the removal wasn't going to be easy. There was a centre bolt anchoring the faucet to the counter. Underneath the sink there was a 1 14" nut tightly in place and it was recessed and behind pipes and the underbelly of the sink. On the trip to Canadian Tire I tried to find an appropriate tool to extend by reach into the tight area and took a gamble on a deep socket. Of course it wasn't the right size so I struggled with traditional wrenches and finally got the nut removed. It was only when I unpacked the new faucet I found a handy-dandy long pipe tool to remove nuts of this size - thanks Moen #&$^.

The end - so the new faucet went in quite easily and the pipe connections were good and tight and we were back to normal. Only about 6 hours later.

The motto of the story: assess the situation very carefully before proceeding with a fix. How much work is it going to take to fix it - double that, multiply the risk factor and trade that off against a new replacement or calling a professional.

For me, anything to do with water is always a problem and a big worry, incl. plumbling, ice damming, gutter overflows, basement leaks and leaking bathtubs. I just hate that sound of water dripping or a surprise wet foot step.

Last weekend, I found no humour whatsoever in this story and in fact was going to post a blog called "there is nothing funny about this story". However, a week to reflect, has softened my attitude a little and allowed me to write this story with a small smile on a my face.

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Outdated technolgy in months, not years

We know technology is moving very fast these days. I spend a lot of money on technology and pride myself on staying pretty current, but come on, give me a break.
  • iPod Nano. I purchased the first gen Nano quite a few years ago and I think the 2nd gen was only released last year. Now the 3rd gen Nano has just been released and it's back to it's skinny shape again. Shake shuffle feature is pretty cool as well as new Genius song matching! They must be selling a ton of these babies to release new versions so quickly in a rainbow of colours. PJMixer argh score: 3.
  • iTunes. iTunes updates are pretty frequent and sure enough there is a new version 8 available with the Genius feature that aligns nicely with the new Nano release. PJMixer argh score: 1 - no big woop, zero cost software.
  • The camera. This one really doesn't count as the Nikon D80 was about 3 years old and announcements for the D90 were still only fan rumours when I bought the D80 in the summer. So a few weeks ago the D90 was released. It has the live view LCD that I had been waiting for but also is the first DSLR with video recording capabilities. I'm not sure if I'd be able to splurge the extra dough and I am very happy with the D80, so the PJMixer argh score is 7.
  • Photoshop Elements. A software purchase is pretty rare for me, but with the new camera I was really looking for the best photo editing and management features available at the consumer level, and Photoshop from Adobe is the hands-down best product in the market today. I just bought version 6 about a month ago, and just saw that version 7 has been released. I guess I didn't do the research too well on that one. Luckily there's not a huge difference as the upgrade is costly, plus the hardcopy manuals and books (which I just bought 2 of) are not yet available for version 7. PJMixer argh score: 6.
  • Picasa. I've been using the free photo software from Google for a while and I've been very impressed by it (and I'd recommend it to any digital photographer who doesn't need all the bells and whistles of Photoshop). There is a version 3 beta now available that ups some of its editing features and adds lots of sharing features. PJMixer argh score: 1 - no big woop, zero cost software.
  • I guess I can't finish this post without including the computer. Our primary desktop PC is almost 5 years old. It was pretty good machine in it's day but now it pitifully out of date. 2.8GHz Pentium 4 with a whopping 512GB of RAM, 120GB of disk and a downgraded video card. Support cost: 5 PJMixer hours per month.
Luckily Sony aren't dropping rumour bombs of Playstation 4 yet and they're not saying my Bravia LCD is passe (phew, but I wonder what they did with all the extra money I gave them 18 months ago). I rarely use VHS tapes and wired PC to stereo connections are just fine for me. My Blackberry Pearl is a workhorse of convenient technology and I can still buy gasoline for my Mazda 6 Wagon. The new cordless phones were a no brainer and the two tube TVs left in the house are getting a little nervous. Ironically, the one item that I really want an upgrade for, and one that I rent so it should be zero cost, is my Rogers PVR. That new PVR extension from Bell looks better every week, if only that 200 year old oak wasn't blocking SW satellite angles !

Today's fashion faux-pas

On the walk from the subway - two great examples of fashion faux-pas.

Number 1. We all know that you shouldn't really wear sport socks with dress pants (stop laffin' Pete, trousers then). And white sport socks score very high on the international faux-pas scoring charts. But today was a first. No, they weren't white. They were ankle socks. I wear ankle socks for golf and ultimate sometimes, but the guy I saw walking up the stairs from the subway had a pair of black logo ankle socks and dress pants. Leg hair was clearly visible. Lovely.

Number 2. The picture tells K words. I have no idea what this dude was thinking. Short shorts and baggy bunched up cream coloured, wool-like socks (almost like Flashdance leg warmers) with dark dress shoes. I was mesmerized, I followed him for a few blocks trying to get the best possible shot with my crappy Blackberry camera.

Don't Look Back in Anger

Perhaps appropriate words to summarize Sunday night's Oasis concert at the Virgin Festival.

The Manchester lads lived up to the hype - perhaps the best modern rock anthem band of all time. I don't recall a concert (yes, even Coldplay) where everyone was singing along with the multitude of big hits. I wasn't at the front, but close enough to be jammed in and swaying and high clapping along with thousands of other fans. I admit I was much older than the average and at times I felt it, but the songs seemed to unite the whole crowd and we were all in it together.


I did get close to enjoy the big Brits Stereophonics and Paul Weller and along with some independents they definitely added to the great festival atmosphere, but I was there to see Oasis. The only small disappointment was not getting to see Moby's DJ set in the lineup tent. Although I wouldn't call myself a huge Oasis fan, but I do love some of their hard rocking tracks and ballads, plus I'd heard they were great live.


As I've already mentioned here in the fine print and on Facebook, the night wasn't without some drama. A guy managed to get on stage and push Noel down which of course caused all kinds of panic and confusion. You could sense that half of the audience immediately had the feeling of being cheated, expecting the moody lads to chuck it in. But the relative good mood witnessed earlier in the set won out and the lads returned to the stage 5 mins later to finish off, albeit an abbreviated set. My feelings could have been a lot different if they hadn't returned. They won a lot of points in my book.


So the real highlights were Liam's famous stage stances, the compliment of Noel's ballads, psychedelic video backdrops, Cigarettes and Alcohol being dedicated to all of us from England and everyone singing along to almost all the songs. The loudest singalong was probably my highlight, although Liam was offstage as his brother sung Don't Look Back in Anger.


The night was clear, but mud was underfoot, the sweet smell of marijuana was in the air, the bodies were moving and the sound quality was spot on.


A very memorable rock show.

Don't Look Back in Anger

Perhaps appropriate words to summarize Sunday night's Oasis concert at the Virgin Festival.

The Manchester lads lived up to the hype - perhaps the best modern rock anthem band of all time. I don't recall a concert (yes, even Coldplay) where everyone was singing along with the multitude of big hits. I wasn't at the front, but close enough to be jammed in and swaying and high clapping along with thousands of other fans. I admit I was much older than the average and at times I felt it, but the songs seemed to unite the whole crowd and we were all in it together.


I did get close to enjoy the big Brits Stereophonics and Paul Weller and along with some independents they definitely added to the great festival atmosphere, but I was there to see Oasis. The only small disappointment was not getting to see Moby's DJ set in the lineup tent. Although I wouldn't call myself a huge Oasis fan, but I do love some of their hard rocking tracks and ballads, plus I'd heard they were great live.


As I've already mentioned here in the fine print and on Facebook, the night wasn't without some drama. A guy managed to get on stage and push Noel down which of course caused all kinds of panic and confusion. You could sense that half of the audience immediately had the feeling of being cheated, expecting the moody lads to chuck it in. But the relative good mood witnessed earlier in the set won out and the lads returned to the stage 5 mins later to finish off, albeit an abbreviated set. My feelings could have been a lot different if they hadn't returned. They won a lot of points in my book.


So the real highlights were Liam's famous stage stances, the compliment of Noel's ballads, psychedelic video backdrops, Cigarettes and Alcohol being dedicated to all of us from England and everyone singing along to almost all the songs. The loudest singalong was probably my highlight, although Liam was offstage as his brother sung Don't Look Back in Anger.


The night was clear, but mud was underfoot, the sweet smell of marijuana was in the air, the bodies were moving and the sound quality was spot on.


A very memorable rock show.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Live blog - Oasis concert

Monday morning update-I did try to live blog the set list from the Oasis show last night (see below), but I was off the mark a little. But I'll leave below just for the fun of it.

Rock 'N' Roll Star'
'Lyla'
'The Shock Of The Lightning'
'Cigarettes And Alcohol'
'The Meaning Of Soul'
'To Be Where There's Life'
'The Masterplan'
'Songbird'
'Slide Away'
'Morning Glory' (This is the song during which Noel got pushed, so it ended early)
Original:
R and r star
Layla
New 1
Cig and alc
?
?
Acquisess/master plan (noel)
She not anyone ?
Slide away
Liam just got tackled...

Live blog - Oasis concert

Monday morning update-I did try to live blog the set list from the Oasis show last night (see below), but I was off the mark a little. But I'll leave below just for the fun of it.

Rock 'N' Roll Star'
'Lyla'
'The Shock Of The Lightning'
'Cigarettes And Alcohol'
'The Meaning Of Soul'
'To Be Where There's Life'
'The Masterplan'
'Songbird'
'Slide Away'
'Morning Glory' (This is the song during which Noel got pushed, so it ended early)
Original:
R and r star
Layla
New 1
Cig and alc
?
?
Acquisess/master plan (noel)
She not anyone ?
Slide away
Liam just got tackled...

Live blog - Oasis concert part 2

Monday morning update-I did try to live blog the set list from the Oasis show last night (see below), but I was off the mark a little. But I'll leave below just for the fun of it.

'The Importance of Being Idle'
'Wonderwall'
'Supersonic'
'Don't Look Back In Anger'
'Falling Down'
'I Am The Walrus'

Original:
A few minutes later...
Noel track 2 - I don't mind, give me a minute
Wonderwall
Supersonic
Don't look back in anger (noel and everyone)
All I ever know ? /falling over (noel)
I am the walrus

We're done.

Live blog - Oasis concert part 2

Monday morning update-I did try to live blog the set list from the Oasis show last night (see below), but I was off the mark a little. But I'll leave below just for the fun of it.

'The Importance of Being Idle'
'Wonderwall'
'Supersonic'
'Don't Look Back In Anger'
'Falling Down'
'I Am The Walrus'

Original:
A few minutes later...
Noel track 2 - I don't mind, give me a minute
Wonderwall
Supersonic
Don't look back in anger (noel and everyone)
All I ever know ? /falling over (noel)
I am the walrus

We're done.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Duped by Google

I have to admit I was a little sleepy last night…I got word of the Google Chrome last night, downloaded it immediately and installed it, but wondered why Firefox was releasing a new browser with only a few new mods. It works well out-of-the-box and the new tab function is nice. I only realized this morning that I had installed a browser from Google, not Firefox (when I read Mark Evans blog). I got duped. I’m not certain what this says about me, the internet or the exploitation of subconscious marketing by Google.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Fancy meeting you here

I love it. I played ultimate last night against some familiar faces. Heading down in the elevator from my office just now and the door opens on a lower floor and who should walk in - a guy I was playing against last night. I've "known" him for years and knew his name but never said more than foul or nice game in the past.

Testerday, I also found out that a friend who also works in my office building who I know from my kids school - his daughter is now in my daughter's class.

It'll be nice to have some new people to invite for downtown lunches or beers.

Sometimes this metropolis really does feel like a small town.