Some Updates

I really don't know what the future hold for this blog. I certainly don't find myself posting to it very frequently, but I definitely won't be taking it down any time soon. (I get a lot of hits on some of the older entries.) Certainly, updates are owed to my readers, so here goes.

  • As listeners to the podcast already know, I'll be getting married in September and moving to Brazil. Probably, we'll be living in an apartment in this building (in case you want to check out the floor plan).
  • Before leaving the country, I'll be attending both Inconjunction and DragonCon. If you happen to be going as well, let me know, and we can meet in person.
  • I've been honored at the Podcast Pickle with the task of selecting the Featured Podcast of the day every day for four months. (That's 120 casts I have to find and write about!) You can see my selections on the main page.
  • I'm gradually putting up thousands of photos (mostly old ones) on Flickr.
  • You can also find me on twitter.
  • My podcasts can be found here and here.
  • Blog posts, podcast episodes, Flickr photos, and twitter entries all theoretically show up on my Jaiku page, your one-stop site for all things tvindy.

And Now for Something Completely Different

Remember that praying mantis photo I posted back in 2003? Well, a Dutch blogger stumbled across it and and used the image as a template for a tattoo. How cool is that? As far as I know, I'm the very first blogger to have been so honored.

Yes, I Vlog

Recently Tim expressed that he had never come across any of my video entries. I've noticed that my videos are frequently overlooked or at least don't tend to receive many comments. I thought I'd use today's post to put up links to all the videos I've put up so far.

Must post something -- anything!

I really must get back into the habit of posting regularly.

A couple things of note:

Will has started a secondary multimedia blog on which he's posted his first video entry. Interesting stuff.

I forgot what the second thing was. When I started this entry, I definitely had two things of note in my mind, but I can't for the life of me remember what the second one was. Oh well, a pathetic post is better than no entry at all. sigh

a few minutes later

Oh wait, now I remember! Rowdy Theologian, one of the people who took an interest in my Burger Chef sound files entry. Now he's put up the video to an old Burger Chef commercial promoting Star Wars posters from episode IV, with some of the original characters. (I was surprised that Anakin didn't seem to recognize C-3PO; after all, he built him when he was a child.)

Still Alive

Sorry for my lack of entries lately. I'll post more soon. This is just to let everyone know I'm okay and haven't died or anything.

Another Eugene Weblogger Meetup

Pizza Kitty

Tonight was this month's Eugene Weblogger Meetup. I've managed to attend every one since it's inception, but this is the first time I took a guest. One of my Hello Kitties accompanied me and helped to consume the non-vegetarian pizza.

I usually come away from these meetings with useful tidbits of information on blogging. This time I learned about the Wizbang Trackback Pinger, which Michael uses. It allows you to do manual trackbacks, which is extremely useful for anyone who uses TypePad, since TypePad's trackback feature nearly never works. It also lets you choose which part of your entry to include in the excerpt.

There was also a brief conversation in which we speculated on how obsessive-compulsive disorder (particularly with regard to ideas about contamination and compulsive hand washing) manifested itself in neanderthals. No conclusions were reached.

Kat was there as well. I'm glad I hadn't read her entry for today, because then I would have been afraid. She seemed to have cheered up a little since then, though. Anyway, she brought a copy of the prototype of the magazine she gets to produce for her thesis. It's called Tanuki, and you can order a copy. Since it focuses on Japanese culture, I suggested she include an article on Gloomy Bear, but I think it's too late for additions. (Someday I'm going to buy a stuffed one and perhaps even make a stained glass window in its image.) Here she is with the magazine:

Kat with Tanuki

Finally, Michael used his camera phone to photograph my Hello Kitty and e-mail the picture to me:

Phone Kitty

Blogging Blues

I really should write something. I seem to be going through a period of blogging burnout, which I'm sure will pass. This is the first time I have gone two consecutive days without posting (if you don't count periods of travel and/or finals). I'm also a bit behind on my reading. Bakerina recently left her blog open to guest bloggers when she went on vacation in Scotland. Not only have I not contributed an entry, as I intended, but I haven't even gotten around to catching up on what the other contributors have posted (except, of course, for this entry). Now I've heard through the grapevine that she's already back. Oh well, maybe next time.

I've recently discovered the wonders of torrents. I installed bittorrent several weeks ago in the hopes of being able to download Brazilian programming, especially novelas, but it turns out that Brazilians mostly use torrents for downloading American programs. It took me awhile before I found anything that interested me, and then I discovered I could use it for getting episodes of the new Dr. Who, which, as far as I know, are only airing in the UK. The writing is quite impressive, by the way, and, if you liked the original 26-year series, you should definitely check out Dr. number 9. (Yes, that silly attempt on Fox several years back is apparently cannon, and a complete waste of a regeneration cycle if you ask me.)

Tomorrow it's back to my stained glass Hello Kitty.

Footwear Revisited

Way back in 2003, I posted this entry. Over the course of nearly a year, it managed to get 77 comments, making it my most commented entry ever. Unfortunately, some people just can't appreciate great art, and many of the comments are a bit negative. I finally had to close the comments down when one gentleman started insulting some of the other commenters. I was afraid some of the more negative repeat commenters would start going after more recent entries once they found themselves locked out of the one on shoes, but they never did. Anyway, I find some of the comments to be hilarious, but I've waited until now to link back to them so the bad people would have time to forget all about it. Now I ask you, how could anyone think that such shoes are gay?

Strange Ball

I never did find out the meaning of this strange wooden ball that one day appeared on campus and then vanished several days later.


Completely unrelated to the giant ball, Dean has asked that I blogroll him. As most of you already know, I try to only add people that have been commenting for at least several weeks, but I have no problem linking to someone in an entry:

DEAN

Checking In

My flu has turned into a big head cold, so I haven't really been up for writing these past two days. (Mostly I'm putting all my time into catching up on DVDs.) I'll try to be more productive tomorrow in terms of posting and responding to comments. In the meantime, please feel free to read Will's most excellent guest post from yesterday.

To Do

It's high time I blogged, don't you think? After all, I'm supposed to be posting every day. There are a couple of other things I need to get done. The first is to declare the winner of my advice contest.

I received a lot of interesting and helpful tips from many people. Though the one that made the biggest impact on my life, and is therefore the winner, is by lisa. She provided a link to a simple instruction page written by her brother that explains how to set up an online webcam that does everything I want it to (as my experiments have demonstrated).

Since her prize is a copy of the book, that brings me to the other super-urgent item on my to-do list. I've got to get that puppy put together and submitted! It's way overdue at this point, and I'm making it a major priority in my life. Hopefully the next few days will bring a major update to the book saga. Thank you all for being so patient. (Or maybe everyone has just given up hope.) Lisa needs her prize, and, as soon as it's in print, I will e-mail her for her mailing address and send it on to her.

A couple of other items on my blogging to-do list that are not urgent, but which I intend to one day do are firstly to put up a sorely-needed "about me" section to this blog, including my e-mail address (tvindy[AT]oddpost.com). The "about me" details were requested by Snozzle, but, since she is no longer blogging, there is no longer any real urgency. Secondly, Jenny long ago requested that I write about the year I spent in Cameroon, and I still need to do that. Can anyone think of any other loose ends that I need to take care of?

In other news, I was the only reader to discover the secret Easter egg on Will's site. This is the second prize I've won from him in less than a year. (Remember the shirt?) And the prizes just keep getting bigger! This time I've won a guest-entry by Will himself, so be on the lookout for that in the coming days.

How to Blog

Ever since I started blogging, I've wanted to write a how-to guide for bloggers. I have lots of thoughts on the process, but, since I probably don't know any more about it than a million other bloggers, I'm holding off on that until the day I actually know what I'm talking about. In the meantime, Tony Pierce has written an excellent article on how to blog. My list would be a bit different, and I think it will be fun to comment on Tony's points. I'll take them one at a time:

1. write every day.

Yes.

2. if you think youre a good writer, write twice a day.

That's a recipe for burnout. If you've got two great topics, you're very fortunate. Choose one, and save the other for tomorrow. I try to write every day, but I never allow myself to post more than once a day.

3. dont be afraid to do anything. infact if youre afraid of something, do it. then do it again. and again.

Perhaps it would be better to just do it once and study the repercussions before repeating it.

4. cuss like a sailor.

Don't cuss at all for days on end, and then, all of a sudden, do it gratuitously just to prove you can.

5. dont tell your mom, your work, your friends, the people you want to date, or the people you want to work for about your blog. if they find out and you'd rather they didnt read it, ask them nicely to grant you your privacy.

I've found the opposite to be true. Tell everyone in your life about your blog, and no one will ever read it. Forbid them from reading it, and they'll never miss an entry.

6. have comments. dont be upset if no one writes in your comments for a long time. eventually they'll write in there. if people start acting mean in your comments, ask them to stop, they probably will.

Let them be mean to you, but don't put up with anyone who uses the comment space to insult your other readers.

7. have an email address clearly displayed on your blog. sometimes people want to tell you that you rock in private.

I really need to do that.

8. dont worry very much about the design of your blog. image is a fakeout.

Yes, at least at first. If you've been blogging for five years and still use the default template, then you're just being lazy.

9. use Blogger. it's easy, it's free; and because they are owned by Google, your blog will get spidered better, you will show up in more search results, and more people will end up at your blog. besides, all the other blogging software & alternatives pretty much suck.

I'm much happier with TypePad. (Does Google really do a better job of crawling Blogger sites?)

10. use spellcheck unless youre completely totally keeping it real. but even then you might want to use it if you think you wrote something really good.

Yes.

11. say exactly what you want to say no matter what it looks like on the screen. then say something else. then keep going. and when youre done, re-read it, and edit it and hit publish and forget about it.

Yes.

12. link like crazy. link anyone who links you, link your favorites, link your friends. dont be a prude. linking is what seperates bloggers from apes. and especially link if you're trying to prove a point and someone else said it first. it lends credibility even if youre full of shit.

It is possible to overdo this.

13. if you havent written about sex, religion, and politics in a week youre probably playing it too safe, which means you probably fucked up on #5, in which case start a second blog and keep your big mouth shut about it this time.

Does anyone out there really want me to blather on about sex?

14. remember: nobody cares which N*Sync member you are, what State you are, which Party of Five kid you are, or which Weezer song you are. the second you put one of those things on your blog you need to delete your blog and try out for the marching band. similarilly, nobody gives a shit what the weather is like in your town, nobody wants you to change their cursor into a butterfly, nobody wants to vote on whether your blog is hot or not, and nobody gives a rat ass what song youre listening to. write something Real for you, about you, every day.

Hey, those things are marginally interesting to me . . . sometimes. (But I won't stand for anyone who changes my cursor into a butterfly.)

15. dont be afraid if you think something has been said before. it has. and better. big whoop. say it anyway using your own words as honestly as you can. just let it out.

No.

16. get Site Meter and make it available for everyone to see. if you're embarrassed that not a lot of people are clicking over to your page, dont be embarrassed by the number, be embarrassed that you actually give a crap about hits to your gay blog. it really is just a blog. and hits really dont mean anything. you want Site Meter, though, to see who is linking you so you can thank them and so you can link them back. similarilly, use Technorati, but dont obsess. write.

Yep, check your stats occasionally, and see who's linking to you. Just don't do it more than once a week.

17. people like pictures. use them. save them to your own server. or use Blogger's free service. if you dont know how to do it, learn. also get a Buzznet account. several things will happen once you start blogging, one of them is you will learn new things. thats a good thing.

Pictures are good (unless they're of knitting).

18. before you hit Save as Draft or Publish Post, select all and copy your masterpiece. you are using a computer and the internet, shit can happen. no need to lose a good post.

Essential.

19. push the envelope in what youre writing about and how youre saying it. be more and more honest. get to the root of things. start at the root of things and get deeper. dig. think out loud. keep typing. keep going. eventually you'll find a little treasure chest. every time you blog this can happen if you let it.

I need to do this more.

20. change your style. mimic people. write beautiful lies. dream in public. kiss and tell. finger and tell. cry scream fight sing fuck and dont be afraid to be funny. the easiest thing to do is whine when you write. dont be lazy. audblog at least once a week.

Yes, audblog once a week. (If you do it, it might encourage me.)

21. write open letters. make lists. call people out on their bullshit. lead by example. invent and reinvent yourself. start by writing about what happened to you today. for example today i told a hot girl how wonderfully hot she is.

I tend to steer clear of wonderfully hot girls. (Or perhaps it's the other way around.)

22. when in doubt review something. theres not enough reviews on blogs. review a movie you just saw, a tv show, a cd, a kiss you just got, a restaurant, a hike you just took, anything.

Reviews are always good. Here's an example of a good one I read today.

23. constantly write about the town that you live in.

What if I never leave campus?

24. out yourself. tell your secrets. you can always delete them later.

Deleting entries is a sin. Besides, they'll just end up in the Google cache.

25. dont use your real name. dont write about your work unless you dont care about getting fired.

check

26. dont be afraid to come across as an asswipe. own your asswipeness.

An unwiped ass is the devil's plaything.

27. nobody likes poems. dont put your poems on your blog. not even if theyre incredible. especially if theyre incredible. odds are theyre not incredible. bad poems are funny sometimes though, so fine, put your dumb poems on there. whatever.

check

28. tell us about your friends.

Do I have to?

29. dont apologize about not blogging. nobody cares. just start blogging again.

Apologies aren't necessary, but it's nice to provide some sort of explanation for a longer-than-usual pause between posts. People worry, both about you and whether or not you plan to terminate the blog.

30. read tons of blogs and leave nice comments.

And you might think about using an RSS aggregator to help keep track of them all.

if you're going to ripoff/mimic/be inspired by one blogger make it raymi, shes perfect.

Does she have boobies? (embracing my inner asswipe)

On Vacation

Another quarter is coming to an end here at the U of O. With finals and projects due, things are pretty hectic, so I'll have to take a short break from blogging. I'll be back in a few days.

356,351 Words

Wanna see my stats?

They're not all that exciting. I'm using just under a third of my diskspace allotment, which means I'm probably good for another three years. (Hopefully by then, the maximum will have been increased.) Not shown in my current stats is that in February I went over my 5 gigabyte bandwidth limit and used over 109%. That's a bit scary, but, so far, TypePad isn't charging for this kind of overage.

Now on to the interesting stuff. I did a wordcount of the entire blog, and this is what I got:

That's 356,351 words. Of course, this includes not just entries, but also comments (many of which were written by me) and probably a few HTML tags. Still, that is over a third of a million, which makes for quite a bit of online content. My goal now is to achieve a wordcount of over a million. Who needs quality when you've got quantity?

If you'd like to do a wordcount of your TypePad blog, just follow these simple steps:

  1. Back up your blog. (You should be doing this already.) Click on Weblogs > Manage > Import/Export. Then scroll down to the bottom of the page, and save the target of the export link.
  2. Once you've got the text file, open it in Notepad (to remove extraneous formatting), and copy all the text to the Clipboard. Close Notepad.
  3. Open a word processing program, such as Word, Works, OpenOffice, or StarOffice, and paste the text into a new document.
  4. Do a wordcount.

Checking in

I'm back. I've made it to Muncie, and now it's time to start blogging again. I've got so much to catch up on: reading blogs, answering comments, updating the book project, and recovering from jet lag (because that's just how fast I drive). I'll post more tomorrow.

Blogger Meetup

Tonight I attended the second meeting of the Eugene Weblogger Meetup Group. Here are some things of interest:

  • I commented to Michael that his is the first blog I've encountered that displays comments on the main page. He said he looked all over for a blogging service that did that and found none, so he wrote his own program to do it.
  • Corona mentioned last time that she wanted to post pictures of people wearing her hats, because many of them are as interesting as the hats themselves. She has posted them, and they truly are interesting.
  • If you're into Easter eggs, here is a little-known one created by Michael. Take a swipecard from Osco, go to an Apple Store Mac Store, and have them run the card through their machine.
  • Also, Michael talked about his bad experience at Victoria's Secret, the letter he wrote to the management, and the final satisfaction. (Look out, Paul Davidson.)

Presents

I think by now everyone has gotten their presents, so I can safely blog about them without spoiling the surprise for anyone. If not, then read no further.

Continue reading "Presents" »

It's Karmic Payback Time

Since I started blogging, I've received some nice things in the mail here and there from other bloggers. It really is the thought more than anything else that touches me. It's hard to believe that someone who only knows me from what I write here would actually take the time and trouble to package something up and send it to me. And with each little gift, I get progressively more uneasy as I reflect that almost never have I ever done this for a fellow blogger. Somehow I've turned into this gigantic karmic black hole, existing for no other purpose than to suck up people's presents.

The situation has become intolerable. I really need to give at least as much as I get. So I'm sending a special gift to each person who has sent me something. It's nothing spectacular or fancy, but it's fairly appropriate and, with luck, no one will hate it. Here are the recipients:

  • Bakerina who sent me a jar of her homemade lemon curd
  • Mike who sent me a Blue Monday
  • Orionoir who technically sent me nothing and is getting preferential treatment, because he deserves it
  • Receptionista who sent me a couple of letters, one of which was written on pandy happy paper
  • Snowball who proposed and also visited me on my trip
  • Will who is sending me a t-shirt as a prize in a contest I did not win

And it should go without saying that no one is allowed to send me anything in return. Now that I'm finally getting my karma back into whack, the absolute worst thing that could happen would be for this to turn into an orgy of ever-escalating back-and-forth gift-giving.

Also, my apologies to all my other readers who may not have sent me anything but are still highly valued. Please don't think I'm playing favorites. These really are people I felt a need to pay back somehow, and I just don't have the resources to include everyone in this. Perhaps I'll come up with something else in the future. Anyway, it has nothing to do with liking some people more or trying to impress anyone.

More Fun with Apple

A couple weeks ago when I attended the Eugene Blogger Meetup, I had an interesting conversation with a fellow blogger. (Unfortunately I don't remember his name or blog, but it is very likely this one.) He mentioned the phenomenon of MP3 blogging with which I was utterly unfamiliar. This made me simultaneously proud of myself for having thought up and started my MP3 e-mail list without having been previously exposed to the idea and also ashamed that I had somehow missed the birth of a new trend.

He talked about the problem of file size, both in terms of the cost of keeping large MP3 files on a server and also the problem of limitations on bandwidth that can suddenly become a problem should an uploaded file prove to be popular. My solution was to write about a track in my blog and make it available to interested people through an e-mail list. Both Yahoo Mail and Gmail allow messages of up to 10 megabytes in size, so this is a good way to distribute most single MP3s. (It also makes it much harder for the RIAA to come after me.) Since Yahoo Mail is free, and I still have invites available to Gmail (does anyone want one?), no one is excluded.

The fellow I spoke to had taken a different route. He told me that he used a Dot Mac account to provide downloadable music files. With an account, you get 125 megabytes of filesharing space (plus another 125 for e-mail) with no limit on downloads. (A million people can download one of your MP3s without extra cost to you.) And even PC users can access the files. The service costs $100 a year, but you can get a free two-month trial with 25 megabytes of storage. Today I tested it out.

For some reason, I was under the impression that an account could only be established on an Apple computer. (According to Bill, No Apple user or even Apple fan would ever call the machine a MAC., so I'm calling it an Apple computer.) I went to a university computer lab and fooled around for awhile on an old iMac with a 6 gigabyte drive. It was quite slow and took even longer than a PC to boot. The interface was a bit confusing. I spent several minutes in the ironic position of being unable to find something called the "finder" that was necessary for setting up my account.

In the end, I finally got everything set up okay. I've got two months to play around with the system and see if it's something I want to subscribe to. I look forward to being able to offer some big downloads to my readers. In the meantime, mostly as a test, I've set up a page where you can download all the tracks I have offered on my MP3 mailing list over the past several weeks. Check it out here:

http://homepage.mac.com/tvindy/

Thank You!

I'd like to thank all the people who guest-blogged for me while I was on the road and then settling in at school. Unfortunately, I don't think I can match Bakerina's level of elegance and graciousness when issuing thank yous (Is that really the correct plural of "thank you"?) Also, since my blog is not configured to display author names (since that would previously have been pointless), Snowball's alias of Buttercup Hamsterchunks never got to appear, which really is a shame. I am grateful to each and every one of you, and definitely owe some favors, which, like a good Andorian, I intend to fully repay somehow. In the meantime, here are links to the blogs of of my beloved guest-bloggers:

Day Off

I'm suffering from blogging burnout, so today I will take a day off. In the meantime, check out the new iPods Apple has just released. Thank God they dont make the iPod Mini obsolete.

Bad, Typepad! BAD BAD BAD!!!

An hour ago, I was typing up my entry for Sunday (It's currently 3:30 am Sunday -- Muncie time.), and when I hit "Save", Typepad gave me a message that they had gone offline for maintenance. That's all well and good, but now I find out that the post wasn't saved. There is no trace of it! So instead of rewriting it, I am writing about how disappointed I am in Typepad.

Blogroll Meme

Lately I seem to be fixated on my blogroll, so when Snowball posted this entry, I was hooked. Here are the rules:

There are TWO rules when answering these questions:
  1. Only ONE answer to each. Of course its tough - thats the point!
  2. Each blog/blogger may only be used ONCE

What blogger inspired you to FINALLY start a blog?
None, I actually became enamored of the concept before I actually found any of the good blogs. My major inspiration came from Lileks, but I never got around to reading the blog section of his site.

What blog do you visit the most often everday?
hammer and peg (She never stops posting.)

What blogger do you think you have the most in common with?
Romanika

Which blog can you be sure will make you pee a little you laugh so hard?
Oblivio

Which blogger leaves you the best/funniest comments?
Orionoir

What blogger do you wish would update more often?
#!/usr/bin/girl (She often goes through extended periods of inactivity.)

Which blog do you wish more people would read?
bill stevenson dot org (Other than me, it appears that his most faithful readers are his mother and his girlfriend, but I leave more comments. Please go there now and read his stuff. It's good.)

Which blog do you learn the most from?
The Laporte Report

What blog is your newest addition?
Snozzle5

Who has been on your blogroll the longest?
Mulubinba Moments

Whose blogroll would you LOVE find yourself on?
This One

Whose blogroll were you the happiest to find yourself on?
The Adventures of a Snowball in Hell (And then she proposed to me!)

If you could write like any blogger, who would it be?
making contact (With her writing skills and my life experiences, I could create the greatest blog this world has ever seen.)

What blogger are you the happiest you've "met?"
I haven't yet fleshmet any of them.

Which blog do you recommend the most?
Tvindy (I'm not saying mine is the greatest in the world, but it's fairly interesting, and it covers such a wide array of blogging practices and subject matters that it would be a good starting point for someone new to the blogging world.)

Who is the next person you'll add to your blogroll?
Light & Dark

Who is the blogger you hope to meet in "real" life?
[chezcabbage] (Just look at the picture!)

Which blogger you admire the most?
Plain Layne (She was able to manipulate the very fabric of reality and create a universe in which she never truly existed. Not many people have that ability.)

Who would you trust with your blog while you were away?
Bakerina

Which blog has your favorite design?
It was Kitty's World, but the author has switched templates. It used to look like this, and it had little Hello Kitties constantly raining down the page.

How many blogs are on your blogroll(s)
26

Blogrolling Woes

I've been doing a bit of reorganizing on my blogroll. Since I started this blog, I've tried to be fairly conservative about adding people, so I don't end up with one of those sidebars containing hundreds of links. My goal at the begining was to add people slowly and try to reach a point where I had ten core readers blogrolled. People often show up and leave two or three comments over the course of a week, add me to their blogroll, and then completely disappear when I don't immediately reciprocate. In other words, their reading my blog is contingent on me linking to them. Those people come and go. I usually only link to someone who has been poking around on my blog for so long that they are clearly reading for their own enjoyment and don't really care about getting a link. But once I link someone, I make a point of reading them regularly.

Recently, with the addition of Michael's orionoir, I managed to bring the list up to ten. At that point, I didn't want to add anyone else, so I really dragged my feet. But Alicia of TwilightCafé and Courtney of Aethele really should have been added. What to do?

I ended up creating another category, which I called "People Who Have Forgotten Me". That way I could move Essay from stupidangrycanajun and Schmed from Dumbidity, neither of which had left any sort of comment on my blog in ages, to that list and free up two spaces in the primary list. I also added Rose from QueerlyCreative to the secondary list even though she had never been on the first, since I always felt bad for not adding her back when she was reading me.

So then I go to check my comments today, and both Essay and Rose have left comments. Obviously, I can't say that they have forgotten me. So now I have one list entitled "Primary Readers" and another entitled "Intermittent Readers". As near as I can determine, the people in the first list are my most faithful readers, and I read their blogs faithfully. The readers in the second list read me occasionally, but not faithfully, and I sometimes read their stuff. I'd like to read everyone all the time, but ten blogs is about all that I can handle on a regular basis.

Am I overanalyzing? Any suggestions? I'd love to hear other people's thoughts on how they manage their blogrolling.

Audio Entries

Receptionista is planning on posting her first audio entry but can't think of what to say. To help her, and anyone else who needs ideas, I've spent the afternoon scouring the World Wide Web for examples of interesting audio posts that can serve as inspiration. Here's what I found.

The Reverse Cowgirl reflects on how audio blogging generates different sorts of feedback than written entries. The last part of the post is hilarious (to me at least).

Nikita uses audio blogging to illustrate what a southern girl sounds like. (It's not pretty.)

Danelle uses the awesome capabilities of audio blogging to allow a small kitten to guest blog. (You can't do that with a written entry.)

Wil Wheaton (yes, the Wil Wheaton) reveals yet another reason why he loves Hollywood.

Kevin Sites reports live from the border between Iran and Kurdistan.

Katey reads a poem she wrote about a grasshopper.

2L audio blogs while on the road. (She really understands the importance of ending with a compelling closing statement.)

Of the entries I listened to, I was surprised by how many people were blogging while driving. Considering the amount of button-pushing that is necessary to log into your account, I would think this would be a fairly challenging procedure.

Even though I love listening to people's entries, I don't think I will ever have significant audio content on my blog. The problem with using Audblog is that all my audio entries would be hosted outside of Typepad. If Audblog were to go out of business and I had a lot of audio posts, then I would lose a bunch of my content.

Yes, I know that today is Thursday, and I should be posting my weekly links. But I've decided that I'll do them every other Thursday from now on. I just can't seem to find enough good links every week.

250 Posts!

Yes, it's true. My blog is now 250 posts old!

Websites That Have Inspired Me

Today I think it will be fun to reminisce about the handful of personal websites that I have encountered over the years that made a big impression on me. These are the sites which have really taught me by example what good web design and content is all about, and they are what I try to live up to with this site. If you like Tvindy, you'll probably love these.

lileks.com

lileks.com is a very famous site created by James Lileks, newspaper columnist for the Star-Tribune. I often see bloggers reference his Daily Bleat, but there is so much more to it. I first discovered the site when a piece in it entitled "Cooking with 7-Up", dealing with a cookbook of the same name published in the 50s was mentioned on a now-defunct program on TechTV called Internet Tonight. Unfortunately that particular part of the site is no longer up, since it was made into a book. But there is still plenty of content, most of it dealing with oddities from the past, combined with witty commentary. One of Mr. Lileks greatest achievements is including a huge number of photos of his dog Jasper and presenting them in a way that is actually very interesting. Not many people could do that. Also particularly interesting to me (but not necessarily to anyone else) is his presentation of the various currencies of Brazil. I've been to Brazil many times over the course of several years and have had to deal with at least five different currencies there, so it was amusing to read his impressions of the money. But what I really took away from the site was the simplicity of its design. It has no bells and whistles, no pulsating graphics or flash animation, not even a background image. What it does have is lots and lots of content in a simple, easy-to-read format -- black text on a white background combined with easy navigation. Great content alone makes makes this a highly enjoyable site.

#!/usr/bin/girl

This site has been maintained since 1999 by a young woman in Seattle who goes by the name Zannah. Actually, it's part of a much bigger site, but this is the highlight of it. #!/usr/bin/girl is really nothing more than a blog of interesting links to content on the internet, but Zannah has been collecting them for so long that she has come close to indexing just about everything of any interest anywhere on the web. If one were to go through the entire archive, they might well come across links to every cool site they have ever encountered online. Google inexplicably doesn't index her archive anymore, so it is no longer possible to find specific entries using Google's site search feature. (Boo Google!) In the past year or so, she has really slowed down in her posting, but that may well be because there is nothing more for her to find. Nevertheless, she still has an enormous following. Her blog was mentioned on The Screensavers on TechTV, and there was a blurb written about it in Yahoo! Internet Life magazine. In 2001 she received the Bloggie Award for Weblog of the Year. Perhaps even more significant, ThinkGeek.com sells this shirt, which apparently was created in honor of Zannah's site. Many decisions I have made on the structure of my blog were based directly on this site. For example, I don't have external links open new windows; I keep html turned on in the comments; and I cite where I find my links in the same way Zannah does.

catenema.com

Whenever I mention this site to people, they are usually a little put off by the title, and sometimes they even refuse to go there. (Don't worry; I assure you that there are no photos of a cat receiving an enema.) This is really a delightful concept for a website. The author has led a rich life, and is a great storyteller. The site contains short stories from his life accompanied with illustrations that he drew in crayon. I know it sounds lame, but the drawings really do add a lot to the stories. Once again, the simple approach to website design proves to be the best. My favorite stories are Grandma's Been Kidnapped and, of course, I Gave My Cat an Enema. The sad thing about this site is that the stories have not been added to in years, and now for some reason, the author has put it into a blog format, which, in my opinion, really is a step backward and does not work well for the site. This is what the main page used to look like.

Thoughts from Moz

This is the only blog I have ever read in its entirety from beginning to end, so I had to put it on this list; although I doubt that most people will be as interested in it as I was. The site was kept by a Peace Corps worker during the year she spent volunteering in Mozambique. The normal term of service is two years, but her superiors there actually fired her without warning for blogging! That alone makes it interesting. She gives a very detailed account of her experiences there. The purpose of the blog was to keep all of her friends stateside informed of her doings without having to e-mail them each individually. The account is well-written and thorough enough to give anyone a good sense the most significant details of her entire experience during the course of that year. I was further interested in her account for several reasons particular to me. I have friends who have worked in Mozambique, and I myself have spent time there and actually been to many of the places that are mentioned. I also have an interest in development work. Furthermore, I have worked for two NGOs which were not run well, so I am very interested in accounts of the problems encountered in other non-profits. So, once again, it is doubtful that you will find this quite as rivetting as I did.

I would also like to give special mention to two sites which I enjoy very much. They are the blogs of Megan Morrone and Leo Laporte, television personalities from TechTV.

Trackback Test

This is just a quick test to see if I've mastered trackback. Hopefully this post will send a TrackBack to this entry at Mulubinba Moments.

Suggestions for Typepad

I haven't been using Typepad for very long. (This is only my seventeenth posting.) But I have a few thoughts on developments that I'd like to see in the future:

The Interface
I'd love to see things become a little more intuitive. Altogether too much clicking around is required to accomplish anything. Once I log in, the welcome page appears, but I have to click to another page to do anything useful, such as post, or to see any information, such as visitor stats. Also, the navigation is a bit confusing. Currently on the "Compose a New Post" page, I am looking at a row of options under a row of tabs beneath yet another row of tabs. I'm not a skilled enough web designer to propose a solution, but one thing which might improve the situation a bit would be for the welcome screen to be customizable. Each user could choose the functions that (s)he acceses most often and have them be available from that page.

Comments
Two things about the current comments system bother me. First, as far as I know, it is not possible to track comments I have left for other users. Unless I make a point of bookmarking the posts where I leave them, I have no way to find the comments again, so I have won't know if anyone responded. It would be great if I could access a list of links to the last comments I made. Second, when I am responding to comments on my own site, there is no way for me to prove that I am, in fact, the site administrator. And anyone can post under my username and pretend to be me until I discover their post and delete it. I'd like for comments on one's own site to have some distinctive feature, such as a special font or icon, indicating that the commenter is, in fact, the owner of the site. It would also be nice if we were given the option of opening the comments in a separate window.

Templates
Until recently, there existed a website at www.strangebanana.com. (It appears to no longer be around.) It was a random template generator. You went to the page, and it created a random template. If you wanted to see another, you just refreshed the page. It never repeated, and some of the templates, although never quite good enough to use, were fairly impressive and definitely helped people to come up with ideas. The concept had a lot of potential that was never developed, but maybe Typepad could pick up where Strangebanana left off. They could create a similar program that functioned within the parameters of the Typepad site. Users could peruse countless unique randomly-generated templates, and save the ones they liked to their own personal library. Typepad could survey the templates saved by users and examine them for common combinations of traits, which could then be added to the randomizer to train it to make more desirable templates. And users would still have the option of tweaking the templates to their liking.

Trackback
A lot of people (for example, this person), myself included, who have never used trackback before are a little confused about it. Of course there is the Movabletype page about it. And there is also this. But any additional information/tutorials would be appreciated.

That's just my two cents. None of this is meant as a complaint. I am extremely happy with Typepad and expect to be using it for years to come.