Journaling on estrip is easy and free. sign up here

Zobar's Journal

zobar
My Podcast Link

04/12/2006 20:09 #37303

cure for pain
Category: music
somebody'd mentioned being a Morphine fan, so here you go: 'Bo's Veranda,' from the Get Shorty soundtrack.

I'm going to try to keep my journal music instrumental, since I often find vocals distracting, and I think pop instrumentals are an underrated niche.

- Z
twisted - 04/14/06 23:40
Re: pop instrumentals. I couldn't agree more. Thanks for the Morphine drip! In return, I'm posting an instrumental version of Tears for Fears "Everybody Wants to Rule the World." I don't know if there's an audience for this one here, but I find it addictive. Maybe it's the syncopation. Anyway, you may have heard it as the intro on the Dennis Miller show. My friend Steve digitized this from vinyl, so it's somewhat rare in this format. Gather ye iTunes while ye may...

TRACKING NUMBER: 0741234001144899416

(Oh Lord. Someone bounce me off "Latest Comments" before the RIAA finds me, haha.)

04/11/2006 20:15 #37302

wheels
Category: roller skating
Last summer (e:dragonlady7) and I went to Dick's so she could pick up some work shoes. She spent an hour hemming and hawing over different kinds of sneakers. I immediately found a pair of low-top roller skates on clearance and spent the hour whizzing around the store. I did not purchase them, but I was close.

This evening we saw some kid at Anderson's with a pair of Heelys , which I had never seen before. The thing you've got to love about kids is they're always testing out innovative ways to break their necks.

I should just impulse-purchase both of them. For $100 I'd never have to walk again.

- Z
dragonlady7 - 04/11/06 21:09
> never have to walk again

Or, within short order, be able to.
paul - 04/11/06 20:49
The Heeleys only go up to size 9, that's why I asked. By the way did you get mey email about setting up reverse dns. It is pretty critcial because aol and a couple others are rejecting our emailw without out. According to the dns lookup I did, artvoice doesnt have reverse dns either. I think our upstream host whoever that is, needs to configure it on thier end.
paul - 04/11/06 20:33
Can you fit in a men's size 9?

04/10/2006 18:29 #37301

buffalo's geekiest restaurant guide
Category: food
For those of you without an iPod: if you have an Internet-enabled cell phone, our restaurant guide is in pre-beta and available by typing the usual link into your phone's web browser.

If the logo at the top of the screen is black-and-white on a solid orange background [XHTML-Mobile], you're good to go.
If the logo is black-and-white on a white background [WML], your phone is oldish and I haven't gotten to that part of the site yet.
And if the logo is black-and-white on a flowery orange background [XHTML], your cell phone would like to think it's a desktop.

In particular, if you have a super beefy mobile device [PocketPC, palmtop, &c.] I'd like to know which site you get [mobile/desktop] and which site you'd prefer to get.

- Z

04/09/2006 13:45 #37300

free your mind and your ass will follow
Category: web 2.0
Yet another geeky post, but there's a cool technology preview at the end. Feel free to skip the geeky part.

<geeky>
I am considering how to do a distributed GUI for backend database management at work, and I remembered I had done a presentation on Mozilla XUL when I was at school. XUL [XML User-interface Language] is used to describe the entirety of the Firefox user interface, and a very neat feature of Firefox is that if you browse to a XUL file on the Internet, it will render the XUL UI and let you interact with it.
</geeky>

I came up with a proof-of-concept demo for an iPhoto-like online photo album based on XUL. If you are using Mozilla/Firefox [it will not work in any other browser, I promise you] visit xPhoto to see some pictures of my aunt's cottage on the lake and (e:dragonlady7) 's sister's springer spaniel Scout.

Now I'm going to see if I can score some points by cleaning the house before (e:dragonlady7) gets home.

- Z
leetee - 04/09/06 14:11
Thanks for the &lt;geeky&gt; &lt;/geeky&gt; warning.

04/08/2006 12:12 #37299

god bless the vanilla suburbs
Category: food
So I did my annual white suburbanite duty today, drove into the East Side, spent 45 minutes and $4 at the Broadway Market, and got back to Kenmore, happy to report that my car did not get 'jacked' by any 'gangstas.' I look forward to going back next year, if it's still open.

This is sarcasm, of course, but it's all true - does it make it any less terrible that I at least realize that it's terrible? No, it makes me a ponce who would rather feel guilty than do something. Perhaps I will make an effort to do regular shopping at the Market this year. Perhaps I say that every year.

Broadway/Fillmore reminds me a lot of where I used to live in Greenville, Jersey City. Both neighborhoods, obviously, have seen better days. I don't know about Greenville, but B/F used to be a bustling shopping district not very long ago. Unlike other areas of the East Side, B/F is ripe for large-scale retail investment. All the buildings - gorgeous, big, retail buildings - are still there [excepting Sattler's, which is now a gorgeous, big, empty parking lot], are largely vacant, and the real estate is dirt fucking cheap. I firmly believe that if you build it they will come - but seriously, who's going to invest millions in renovating a dilapidated old department store in the ghetto when you can spend millions on a brand-new box store built to spec out on Niagara Falls Blvd? It's fuckin' depressing.

But enough with the sadness; the Broadway Market brought me great joy today as well, for nowhere else in the world would they bother to clean 25 fresh smelt (WIKIPEDIA - Smelt) per pound for four bucks a pound. Hell yes. The noble smelt averages six inches long, and is best described as 'bait.' Smelt are extremely plentiful in the lower Niagara near Lewiston early in the spring, and all you have to do to get a bucketful is to dip your net in the river and pull it out. You have not truly tasted seafood until you've eaten a basket of fresh smelt, six hours from river to fryer - but you have also not truly prepared seafood unless you've cleaned a five-gallon bucket of fresh smelt, 25 to the pound.

One of my happier childhood memories involves my dad coming back from a fishing trip with a drywall bucket full of smelt he'd just pulled out of the river. He showed up at my aunt's house with the bucket and a hopeful grin.

"Nuh uh, no way. Get away from me with those. There's gotta be at least a hundred fish in there. If you don't want to clean them, I'm sure as Hell not going to clean them."

"No, no. It'll be great. Let's do this." So they spent the entire afternoon gutting and beheading the little fuckers, and we gorged ourselves on just this insane pile of the most delicious fried fish you can get.

I think that was the last time I ever had smelt, for obvious reasons, and this is why I love the Broadway Market. You think Danny Jr's got the cojones to offer fresh smelt at $4/lb? pfft.

- Z
zobar - 04/08/06 15:07
Lake Erie is shallow and has a fast turnover; this, in addition to our zebra mussel problem, keeps the lake very clean. According to the health department, you are allowed one meal per week of Lake Erie fish [except carp, which is limited to one per month due to PCBs].

Lake Ontario is deep, has a slow turnover, and is the lowest of the Great Lakes, so it collects all the contaminants from everyone [as well as Kodak, may they rot in Hell]. There are severe restrictions in place for eating Lake Ontario fish.

The only advisory for smelt in NY is for the waters off Staten Island.

- Z
ajay - 04/08/06 14:24
Umm... haven't there been countless health advisories about eating Lake Erie fish?
zobar - 04/08/06 14:07
A lot of people in North America also have difficulty telling their ass from a hole in the ground. Bottom-feeders and baitfish are where it's at. Catfish. Smelt. Sardines and anchovies. Hairy and scaly, Hell yes.

I went to a fish market in Westchester County and said, hey, I'd like two haddock fillets. No haddock, they said. I said I'll take two of those Boston scrod then. Yes sir, of course, eight bucks a pound, they said, but it's the same damn thing. I did not last long in Westchester.

- Z
mrdt - 04/08/06 13:35
alot of people in north america consider smelt and other oily fish as garbage fish. you would probably make alot of my ancestors very happy.
ladycroft - 04/08/06 12:21
i used to work the broadway market for a whole summer when i was 15...fruit farm.