Saturday, October 15, 2016

Just putting this out there

Hitting someone with a FOIA request because you’re having a workplace dispute is a bitch move.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

This is what I really think

Among the long list of annoying things in the world, I am adding this: people who respond to a clever (imho) tongue-in-cheek diatribe with a stock catchphrase. I don't necessarily expect you to take the time to be clever in response, but for god's sake if you can't be clever, at least be genuine.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Related to the previous

Recent suggestions I have made that were inexplicably not taken:

  • You should respond with "Will that count as a service item towards tenure?"
  • Y'know, some Skoal would aid in expressing that thought mightily.
  • I hope someone is going to call them out on advocating spousal abuse. That's so 19th century.
  • The baseball bat's in the garage.

Self-assessment

It's performance review time. Here are a list of things I would like to include, but probably won't:

  • Successfully refrained from telling clients, "Hey, not my problem. Bud-dee."
  • Under obstacles, list "Central IT's inability to tell their collective ass from a hole in the ground."
  • "Dude, I fookin' rock!"
  • Explained to clients that the time has passed for major changes without any four-letter words.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Inspired by a dream

Not necessarily my dream, but that's not important.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Conversations with my mother

I learned from my mother last night that one of my cousins has been trapping beaver. This conjured up images of 1) Davy Crockett and 2) Wakka Chikka Wakka Chikka... She later said that there was no limit on trapping beaver, and he could take as much as he wanted. I don't think she heard me giggling...

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Cloud storage for iTunes?

Ars Technica sums up my thoughts on cloud storage for iTunes nicely:


Removing local storage would bring the iTunes Store model dangerously close to that of Netflix and other streaming services; at a minimum, customers would no longer be able to claim even the limited ownership they have of their media in the current format.



A backup, on the other hand, might be more appealing if it's pitched the right way. As it stands, recovery of iTunes Store-purchased media is far from difficult— often a note to customer service will do the trick— but being able to get whole seasons of TV shows off a cramped hard drive without this extra step to get them back indicates that a cloud-based library- or backup-type solution might actually be helpful to some users.



This is the kind of thing that makes me nervous. The last thing I want is for Apple to be able to do the kind of crap Amazon has pulled with its Kindle content. Case in point: iTunes had the season finale of Leverage up a full week early. They pulled it from the store pretty quickly, but if you were a subscriber or beat them to the punch you could get the file. With a cloud-based storage system, it would be all to easy for Apple to yank the file back.



On the other hand, storage is an issue. Video content is not trivial, and while my desktop can handle it (so far), our Apple TV is perpetually cramped for space. Having a way to deal with that would be nice if they can do it without 1) resorting to streaming and 2) being dicks about access à la Amazon.