Journaling on estrip is easy and free. sign up here

Carolinian's Journal

carolinian
My Podcast Link

04/11/2007 00:38 #38849

Ledbetter's Love Letter Bed Wetter
Category: dating
My old college bud (e:lizabeth) suggested I change my Myspace user picture to one of her suggestion since she thought the current one was hideous. I heeded her advince, and today I received a myspace message from some interested girl, or at least someone purporting to be female (I'll give (e:lizabeth) 10 secs to gloat and tell me "I told you it needed changing" before I go on...one..two..three) Here's the basic gist of the message.

"Hey sexy!

I saw you on myspace in the men's section....blah blah blah...

blah-blah-blah...Long walks on the beach..blah-blah-blah..I'm honest, funnier than Jerry Seinfeld...blah-blah-blah...piƱa coladas and getting caught in the rain...blah-blah-blah...I'm attractive, spunky...blah-blah-blah...on the rebound after serious relationship...blah-blah-blah...I don't have a myspace account and I'm just using a friend's, so instead e-mail me at random_email@whatever.com

I'll be checking for your nice message!"

Now, I would never look a gift horse in the mouth, and I think I'm at enough time after my breakup that I'd like to start dating other people again. And it would be such an ego boost if a simple picture change were to cause such a sea change. I want to believe, I reallly do. However...

This myspace message seems a bit fishy. Having done the whole match.com thing (which (e:vincent) told me would be a waste of money and he was pretty much right), most of the people mailing me out of the blue were women (at least purporting to be women) in russia who sent overly flattering messages that were so obviously some kind of spam scam. And in those telltale spam messages, there was always the same "cut through all the red tape and e-mail me immediately" reqeusts (can we say e-mail address harvesting?). While the message I received today did actually originate (supposedly) from the account of a myspace user who supposedly lived in Buffalo (whose picture was pretty hot, if it was an actual person), who in the heck actually uses their hot friend's myspace account to message other people? Wouldn't it have made more sense to get their own account? And more importantly, English-speakers' e-mail usually does not refer to a responding message as a "nice message". It almost sounds like a phrase adapted from some foreign language where the use of the world "nice" would be less tacky.

I don't want to be embarrased enough to actual fall for a scam. We've all had the one first time where we encountered our first phishing message, where we nearly gave our credit card to someone who wasn't eBay. I surmounted that point long ago and I'm adequately jaded by ten years of using the Internet. However, at the same time I'm embarrased to seemingly look like I'm not an optimist. Could friends of hot Buffalo myspace chicks actually throw themselves at me? Sure, why not! What's wrong with that?

I guess I'll do what I do best--pocrastinate. Usually anyone who spams myspace gets their account deactivated within several days of me getting the message. If the account's still there is several days, I'll pursue this matter a little more closely.
lizabeth - 04/11/07 23:45
Yay for you changing your MySuck pic... boo for random spam-bot spamming you... (meaning my advice for you is "ignore that message, it is bullshit"). Glass half empty, optimism is for weenies, evil will always triumph because good is dumb, etc., etc.

That said, Jill (you know Jill) has hooked up with a lot of guys through MySuck. Then again, she is a pretty cute girl who is willing to put out with nearly complete strangers, so YMMV.
jacob - 04/11/07 17:18
You could always open up a diposable email account to reply to her.
museumchick - 04/11/07 09:38
While I do think it's easier to meet people in person, you never know. I'm sure its possible to find true love on myspace... I think.

04/05/2007 02:31 #38753

Show Review
Category: music
So I'm back from the Bedouin Soundclash show at the Icon. It was the first time that I've actually been to the Icon, and the building was far bigger than I had imagined it, though somehow I managed to pass it several times before realizing that it was the nondescript blue building on Ellicott.

The main act was really good, and had a lot of good energy going on. The audience was pretty enthusiastic, and there was a pretty good turnout (~200, maybe). The live show definitely lived up to what I heard on the CD. I can't wait for the next album.

image

I managed to snap one photo, with my mediocre new Nokia 6102i phone I got for $90 at the compusa clearance sale (had I gotten an nokia E62, there wouldn't be a picture at all, so the quality could have been worse--as in nonexistant).

I spent tonight going out and doing something instead of uselessly wasting my evenings in the idle pursuits I usually engage in. That's got to count for something.
lizabeth - 04/11/07 23:31
Eh, leaving the house is so overrated. ;) Anyway, I'm glad you had a good time at the show.

04/04/2007 03:54 #38738

Lake Erie airwaves
Category: music
Today Bedouin Soundclash comes to the Icon. I am so psyched about this because their CD is perhaps the most incredibly fucking good CD that I've bought in years. While I've never seen them live, I'd imagine they'd be pretty good in front of an audience. I will try my damnedest to make it to that show.

My last post, I mentioned something I didn't like about Buffalo (the pizza). This post I dedicate to something I do like about Buffalo--radio stations. NC doesn't have anything like 92.9 Jack or the 107.7 Lake (at least last time I was there), and back home is way too far south to get the Canadian radio that I'm finding myself more and more addicted to during my drives to work. I dig an environment rich in classic rock and interesting music with "new country" and religious stations few and far between, and I'm certainly getting that up here.

In a recap on yesterdays activities, I also went to a passover seder at Temple Beth Zion on Delaware with (e:museumchick). It was a lot of fun, though my long held ideas about what constitutes a traditional passover song have been thoroughly undermined.
museumchick - 04/05/07 10:26
The seder was really fun:). I'm glad you enjoyed the show yesterday.
lizabeth - 04/04/07 21:43
Hey kiddo - you should be at the show right now, so I hope you're having a good time. I wanna hear all about it later.

Hope you're having a good Passover (it has started by now, right? I love how out-of-touch I am).
mrmike - 04/04/07 09:09
Lake is still the Lake. Those two combined with the Canadian influences gives us some of the better variety in sometime. IF we could just get 97 rock to quit playing Boston every hour on the hour, life would be good.

04/09/2007 03:17 #38814

Ruby Colored Houses
Category: programming
- First off, an addendum. Yesterday was easter, and as I didn't have anything better to do (insert Chinese restaurant joke here) I took advantage of the lull in traffic at the Elmwood & Marion intersection to snap a few photos for my project. Like the madman that I am, I rushed out into the middle of the street between traffic light changes and tried to get the best shots I could while not being run over. However, I didn't refer to the original photograph for reference like I should have, so after all my hard work and risk-taking, the distance was still all wrong and the overlay won't work. The small piece of Marion in the original isn't in the target. I really should use the stitching feature of my digital camera on the next pass.

Original:

image

Target:

image

- For some reason, Safari has been crashing on estrip for months. I think it has to do with a new userpic appearing when someone new logs in. At some point, I really should set up a packet sniffer or something and check it out further.

- BEGIN BORING PROGRAMMING PARAGRAPH (skip if bored by programming stuff)

Yesterday, I decided attempted to learn Ruby on Rails. After spending several hours trying to learn the stuff, I decided to pretty much give the technology a write-off, as I was about ready to throw my computer and the book I just bought clean out the window. A while ago, I started writing my own blogging application based on XML that I could have eventually rolled into a full-fledged MVC web application environment. I am seriously kicking myself now for having not finished it. I am so dissatisfied with everything out there. You know, come to think of it, I'll probably continue trying to learn Ruby, just so I'll know what's going on if I ever see any example code for anything general that uses it, and just because I'm so freakin' thorough and don't like to leave unfinished what I've started. I'm just a masochist like that.

END BORING PROGRAMMING PARAGRAPH

- I've also started looking at houses a little bit more. I'm really not sure whether I want to buy one, as I've considered moving back home to North Carolina near my family someday, or possibly moving somewhere else to a different job. But I keep thinking that I'm sinking 8k a year into rent that I could be putting into equity.

I really like the whole "Elmwood Village" area, and I'd like to stay within walking distance to Spot. I'd actually like a house on Richmond, but aside from being kinda pricey for someone in my income bracket, they would cost a bitch to heat (no insulation and high ceilings) and every house on the street is so huge because it's designed for tenants to live in the upper half. I really don't want to be a landlord or have large heating bills, and unfortunately most of the houses in the Elmwood-Richmond band (for lack of better terminology) require you to endure both if you own them.

So far, the best fit for me seems to be the northern buffalo/kenmore area, which is actually where I was driving around this weekend looking at the houses for sale. That area seems to have a decent number of homes that are small enough to keep sanely heated/cleaned by one person and would keep my mortgage somewhere near to what I'm currently paying for rent.

Another day or so, and I can eat regular bread again instead of matzoh. At least according to my religion. According to my triglycerides and my doctor, regular bread will always be chametz.



carolinian - 04/12/07 00:52
(e:lizabeth)

I'm currently in the process of chasing down the bug and finding a reasonable workaround I can hand to (e:paul). When I've made more progress I'll probably write a really boring (though interesting from a technical point of view) post about my bug-hunting exploits.

(e:dragonlady)

If you've found a way to insulate an old house for only $800, you're in the wrong line of work at the airport. Anyone who can make a house in Buffalo not leak heat like a sieve and do it cheaply is sitting on a virtual goldmine.

(e:james)

I've seen the guide before, and I really dig the illustrations. It's more the design of rails itself that I find confusing.

(e:jenks)

Marion is a cross street to Elmwood. I'd love a house in the Richmond-Elmwood band, but the houses are too big to heat cheaply. It seems that in Buffalo it's not about how much house you can afford to buy but how much house you can afford to heat.


lizabeth - 04/11/07 23:53
2 things:
- what jenks said about Safari. I've totally switched to Firefox for browsing this site.
- the pics are a little off, but I think with some cropping, they could still work. N'est-ce pas? I am anxious to see your results.
james - 04/09/07 14:52
Oh! I forgot to mention:

The area around Kleinhan's has smaller houses that are much cheaper than the Richmond/Elmwood homes. It is an up and coming neighborhood and seems to have had a blue collar history rather than a ghetto crack house history that so many neighborhoods now enjoy the fruits of.
james - 04/09/07 14:51
I don't know squat about programing. I do know that Why The Lucky Stiff's Poignant Guide to Ruby is a fantastic read. I hear from a good Ruby programer that it was, in addition to page turningly good, educational as well.

It is online. Google it and love the Ruby
dragonlady7 - 04/09/07 08:47
I actually think it would be kickass rad to get one of those huge old houses and, you know, add insulation to it.
That's a dream of mine.
It's possible, I looked into it.

I suppose I could start by adding insulation to the tiny house I have now... I figured it out at about $800 not including sheet rock.
zobar - 04/09/07 07:42
The biggest problem with RoR is that you have to learn Ruby to use it. That, and it's not really mature yet. If you know Python maybe look into Django - same deal but also not really mature.

North Buffalo is my hood. The median age here is a little higher here than elsewhere but on the other hand your car won't get broken into once a month. We're not Right Where It's All Happening, but the short drive is not an inconvenience at all. Plus we have a yard, a driveway, and a garage, which we'd most likely have to do without on the West Side.

- Z
jenks - 04/09/07 05:56
Ok I'm totally late for work but:
1: what's the marion?
2: i have the same safari crash thing and I would be eternally grateful if you figured it out
3: the elmwood strip area farther north near buff state is probably cheaper- the streets like ashland and claremont and norwood have some reasonable houses...

04/02/2007 01:23 #38714

Our daily affliction
Category: food
Today, I hit up Casa di Pizza two get two slices of the last truly enjoyable bready thing I'll get to have for the next eight days. Once pesach starts, it'll be no more bread and eight days of a boring dry cracker that reminds me of the fact that my ancestors had to high-tail it out of Egypt.

To go off on a tangent, it's kinda of strange that in a city with so many pizza joints like Buffalo it's so hard to find a place where a single person can sit down and quickly get an individual slice of pizza with exactly what they want on it that hasn't been sitting in a warmer for 12 hours and do so without involving wait staff. It's like you're expected to buy an entire pie if you want it your way, and you're usually expected to bring it home. If I had a dime for every time I've gone into a place wanting a slice of plain-cheese non-pork pizza only to be told "sorry, there's only what we have in the warmer", I'd have a lot of dimes. It's actually one of my biggest gripes about living in Buffalo. There are a very few places I've found in Buffalo that meet all my criteria, but they're few and far between.

Back home in civilization North Carolina, we had lots of locally owned (i.e. not Sbarro) places that filled in the function of fast-food restaurants where you could reasonably go out on a lunch break and get a slice that had whatever you wanted on it, and it was always shoved into the oven and served piping hot.

As I can't get what I want up here, I don't eat pizza too often, save for the once a month at the Buffalo PHP meetup at Casa di Pizza. This is probably a good thing, given my family history of cholesterol problems. But it's ironic that when I visit back home, the thing that I want more than anything is not biscuits or sweet tea, but pizza.


metalpeter - 04/02/07 18:49
I say try Just Pizza and see what happens, they do have places to sit down. But I think the real issue is that places bake entire pies so to change up ingriedants isn't practical for one slice. But that being said there are two places that I know of where you can get personal pizzas with what you want on them one of wich is Subway (don't know if it is all Subways or just the one by where I work) and pizza hut.
james - 04/02/07 16:46
Pizza,

A topic I can go off on for hours.

1) North Carolina? Civilization? It is funny that you think of your native state as being civilization where as most New Yorkers would think of it as a bunch of backwards tobacco farmers with confederate flags waving everywhere.

2) I have experienced the same thing. You can get pizza by the slice at dozens of places. But they are all "Buffalo style" thick crust pizza that isn't very good. To differentiate their product they will slather on a Noah's ark of toppings. Pepperoni and Cauliflower. Baby Seal and Spinach. Carrot and finger. So that cheese pizza just sits there and dies. To be scraped into a dumpster.

3) Buffalonians seem to like their pizza like they have all their other food: with a giant zigguraut of meat and cheese on top. That subdued, understated, modern looking slice with just a crisp layer of cheese looks more like a napkin than a meal to some people. Or, at least that is how I imagine how the natives think.
leetee - 04/02/07 12:03
Have you been to La Nova? We usually get a whole pie (thier NY style cheese is big, but very very good) when we go, but i have seen people leaving with wee lil miniature boxes that i assume have wee pizzas or a slice in them.
dragonlady7 - 04/02/07 11:01
I think we just don't have the cultural niche of pizza-by-the-slice in Buffalo. When I eat pizza it's always at social events with at least three other people, so we always get pizza pies with the toppings on different sides and what-have-you-- I just don't think it's ever occurred to me to buy just a slice of pizza.

But I've done it elsewhere. Funny, that.
tinypliny - 04/02/07 09:24
Hmmm.. guess its a good thing then that I am sworn off pizza for the whole of 2007. Come to think of it, its probably the only new-year resolution in all these years, that has made it past the fool's day.
museumchick - 04/02/07 04:44
There's a place down on Elmwood near Buff State where you can get two for one individual slices. I'm not sure if its any good, though.
vincent - 04/02/07 03:10
That's strange. Here in NF/Lewiston I always have a craving for greasy pepperoni only to be denied with, "We just have cheese at the moment." Actually one of my favorite pizza places [Pizza Pizza] over in Canada always has a cheese slices ready to go in the oven.