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the dredwerkz

I admit it, I"m biased. When someone applies to work at my kick-ass firm and uses the wrong form of the word "piqued", it bothers me. Especially if said person is listed as an "editor" of an undergraduate publication. Just to clarify:

  • peaked: pointed or sickly
  • piqued: to arouse or irritate

Saying that something "peaked" your interest is stupid, but especially so if you're supposed to be the editor of a collegiate publication. Doing it twice in one application is unforgiveable...

Of course, said person believes in Social Security privatization, and mentioned so in her application. I'm always confounded by people who mention political hot potatoes while applying for positions in institutions that deal with political issues. If I were to work at the World Bank, I wouldn't mention that I hate Wolfowitz. If I were to apply to work in a hospital I surely wouldn't mention that I enjoyed firebombing abortion clinics, right? So why do people who apply for jobs in Washington think it's fun and/or productive to wade into debates over Social Security or the budget deficit? Sheesh.

posted at: 2005-03-28 17:33:42 with 1 comments

Want to blow up this website?

Man, that's fun! The dinosaur is also enjoyable...

posted at: 2005-03-28 16:05:51 with 6 comments

I'm very busy. Hence, light posting. A website today asked me for my favorite quote...I couldn't think of just one, but these four by Andrew Jackson seem appropriate:

  • "There are no necessary evils in government. Its evils exist only in its abuses."
  • "There is no pleasure in having nothing to do; the fun is having lots to do and not doing it."
  • "Corporations have neither bodies to kick nor souls to damn."
  • "One man with courage makes a majority."
posted at: 2005-03-28 14:53:44 with 0 comments

I'd hazard that this is the funniest thing on the internet in a couple of months. An essay about koalas written by an eighth-grader in Pittsburgh.

Koalas

posted at: 2005-03-24 10:58:27 with 2 comments

Okay, I've got a few morsels to share with you...although, keep in mind, these are very low-quality. I'm sorry, but they're all I've got. Each one is in either realmedia or quicktime format.

The ninja song is a little large for me to host...but I can e-mail anyone it if they want to jump from roof to roof and get their friends free cable.

posted at: 2005-03-24 02:27:53 with 1 comments

So I was reading Real Simple the other day. After my initial crush on the design—so clean, so white, wise and simple font choice—I found myself disappointed. Unlike ReadyMade (whose design and subject matter is cool enough to have actually gotten me party invites from girls on the Metro) it doesn’t really feel committed to its project. Some of the advice was good, but a lot of it seemed overly complex or odd (the 10 uses for olive oil would have made my house a sticky mess). And the recipes looked damn hard.

But I myself have been on a drive to simplify my life. Moving to my new place in November helped a lot, though I’m still fighting with the detritus of my previous lives. And now my new life is getting complicated. So it’s going slowly, and I keep backsliding…but it’s beginning to work…I think.

So here are some of the practices I’ve come up with. I'm not doing this to be vain—though today is my 27th birthday: Worship me, mortals!—but as a confessional...since these practices necessarily reveal much of what is poor and slipshod about me. Plus I'm also really interested in your practices.

Note that many of them have to do with my forgetfulness, sloth, and packrat tendencies (this is the part of the post where I apologize again to Forrest for having had to put up with me). Note that I also don’t count the things I’m doing to improve my life, since many of those things (exercise regularly, write more, contribute to the ‘Werkz, buy t-shirts at funky artist coöps, and use umlauts in the style of The New Yorker) complicate my life even as they improve it.

So, my personal rules:

Grooming & Style

  • Shave every day if possible. You look better and not doing so doubles your time the next day.
  • Clothes (dirty and clean) go where they belong immediately. (I’m actually worse about putting away the latter—I do laundry then fail to put the folded clothes back on shelves/in the closet).
  • Try, try, try like hell to make your bed before you leave for work.
  • When you get your hair cut, schedule the next appointment. (I know for girls—and even most guys—this is a no-brainer. But as a former teacher—“Can I come in today? Yes, 2:30 is fine”—it came as a rude shock to me how hard it was to get a haircut on a 9-5 schedule.

Food & Shopping

  • Buy milk every time you go to the grocery store.
  • Buy stamps every time you think of buying stamps. Because you won’t remember to buy them when you need them.
  • Buy 6 days of lunch food for work, not 5. So when you forget next week you get a day of grace.
  • Use the dishwasher. (I mention this because my roommates for some reason hate the dishwasher, one of the most glorious inventions Man has ever created. They handwash. Freaks.)

Bookkeeping & Maintenance

  • Attempt to have a one-touch policy on mail. In other words, if you pick up a bill from the mail pile, you open it, you pay it, and you file the papers immediately.
  • If you read a magazine cover-to-cover, actually read it cover to cover, so you know it’s read and done. (Exception: I save the fiction for last in The New Yorker.)
  • Throw away magazines you’ve read. If a review or something caught your eye, cut it out. (A clipping takes up less space, and less space is simpler).
  • Put magazines you’ve read but you don’t want to throw in a place were you will never, ever be tempted to touch them again until you’ve read the rest of the magazines you need to read.
  • Index, bag, board, and box your comics immediately.
  • Index and catalog your CDs immediately. (I’m currently out of shelf space and I get a lot of compilations, so this is a huge problem for me right now.)

Leisure

  • If you have a regular show, check the listing (I’m assuming cable and/or Internet access here) early in the day (say, while you’re working out) so you don’t schedule time for something that’s being rerun or preëmpted.
  • Only one “serious” read (novel, short story collection, etc.) and one “frivolous” read (comics, Terry Pratchett novels, D&D books—shut up, I like them) at a time.
  • The Internet is an evil timewaster and complicater, which is why it is great at work and to be shied away from at home.

Yours?

And sometimes, simple isn’t really.

posted at: 2005-03-23 16:05:34 with 3 comments

Well, not only was yesterday one of the best Tuesday Salons ever (introducing Colonel Ronald's Special Chicken was a brilliant addition to the evening), but I also had the chance to stick it to the man beforehand, regarding my broken TiVo.

How? Well, let's just say that if you plan to stick it to the man (in all his forms), count on being baffled by a complex phone system. After a full hour of calling various folks in India and Winchester (and explaining, patiently, that there was no Mrs. Edward, that the person in question was my mother and that, no, they didn't list their telephone number, and that no, i didn't have the original receipt) I finally may have been able to get my TiVo repaired. And by "repaired" I mean "replaced", which means all my old episodes of ATHF, My Life as a Teenage Robot, Sealab 2021, etc. will be shortly terminated. Which is somewhat sad....but not when compared to the ability to watch one show and record another.

Did I happen to mention, in the past, that last week I found all my old Sifl-n-Olly episodes on a cd? They sure took me back...

posted at: 2005-03-23 14:26:13 with 4 comments

It's all described right here. Finally, a solution for cranks and ranks, years after Srinivasa Ramanujan came up with the original idea.

posted at: 2005-03-23 13:56:31 with 0 comments

David Brooks is a heartbreak for many liberals, because he appears to be such a anti-Republican every now and again that one can believe the rest of the time he's just a bit misguided, or naive, or just scared than William Kristol will punch him in the nose. His most recent column is a perfect case in point. Brooks says, amongst other things:

Back in 1995, when Republicans took over Congress, a new cadre of daring and original thinkers arose. These bold innovators had a key insight: that you no longer had to choose between being an activist and a lobbyist. You could be both. You could harness the power of K Street to promote the goals of Goldwater, Reagan and Gingrich. And best of all, you could get rich while doing it!<

Brooks skewers Grover Norquist, Ralph Reed, Jack Abramoff and Tom Delay's old chief of staff Ed Buckham for offering the influence they wield over their often motivated and extreme constituencies. Now, of course, who reads the Times and doesn't realize such things.

I would hope that his sentiments would be an early indicator that the public will become disillusioned with the current crowd of conservatives, who are greatly distressed over the fate of a brain dead woman but are seemingly less perturbed that millions of Americans do not even have the requisite health insurance to get them to a similar hospice, but it is difficult to imagine.

posted at: 2005-03-22 23:01:57 with 1 comments

This article is a must-read. The first two paragraphs certainly start the ball rolling:

During the past fifteen years, Republicans have consistently held a rosier view of economic conditions than Democrats, but at no time has this perceptions gap been greater than in the past year, according to a historical analysis of weekly data from The Washington Post-ABC News consumer confidence survey.

The overall Consumer Comfort Index currently stands at -9, matching its long term average. Among Republicans, the index rises to 28. Among Democrats, it is -35, more than 60 points lower.

Wow. That's a huge gap. Staggering, really.

posted at: 2005-03-22 17:24:29 with 0 comments

This evening. Come if you can...we'll be busting out the new mandoline and Ronald might make some General Tso's.

posted at: 2005-03-22 16:33:50 with 0 comments
  • eating lots of salmon: good and fun for you
  • going to the gym: good for you, not so fun
  • eating lots of salmon and then going to the gym: not good or fun for you
posted at: 2005-03-22 14:45:25 with 0 comments

go back a week...

...go forward a week