Hello Twitter!
- Fri Jun 20 2008
- Site News
- one comment
I’ve just installed Alex King’s Twitter Tools plugin. If all goes well, something to do with this post should show up on my Twitter thingie.
Edit: Holy shit it worked!
I’ve just installed Alex King’s Twitter Tools plugin. If all goes well, something to do with this post should show up on my Twitter thingie.
Edit: Holy shit it worked!
This is directed to those of you who might only read these notes on Facebook. You may (or may not, which is more likely) be interested to know that I don’t write these on Facebook; they get pulled over from my blaugh at www.canspice.org.
If you’re at all interested in following along, I suggest subscribing to my RSS feed. What is RSS? It’s a standard way for websites (and other such technologies) to publish updates automatically, and software polls RSS feeds on a periodic basis to retrieve these updates. Using an aggregator (also referred to as an RSS reader or news reader), you can keep up-to-date with a number of websites at the same time without having to visit them individually. Personally, I use Vienna on OS X. Other OS X RSS readers include NetNewsWire and NewsFire. Web-based RSS readers include Google Reader, which allows you to access your RSS feeds from any Internet-connected computer.
So Facebook readers, you don’t need to follow along on Facebook, you can use a separate program and collect updates from all kinds of websites in one convenient location!
The instructions are simple: your band name is the first random Wikipedia article title, your debut album is named after the last four words of the last quote, and the album art is the third picture of the most interesting Flickr pictures from the past week.
That said, Government of Ontario would like to announce their debut album, “Really Don’t Want It”. The cover art is La musique des vagues….
The Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Darmok” has Jean-Luc Picard stranded on a planet with Dathon, an alien captain of another ship. Dathon is a member of a race called “The Children of Tamar”, and they communicate with each other through metaphors and references to historical occurrances. The most famous of this is Dathon’s continual reference to “Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra”, a situation where two heroes in Tamarian legend come together to trust each other to defeat a common foe. Picard and Dathon are set upon by an invisible enemy and have to come together to defeat it.
XKCD is a rather geeky webcomic that I’ve mentioned before. It appears to have some degree of popularity amongst geek circles, with people making reference to specific comics through phrases and innuendo.
Why not mix the two? Each XKCD comic is numbered and can be got to via http://xkcd.com/<number>, so they’re easy to uniquely reference. Suppose you were at a Chinese restaurant and got your fortune cookies. If you’re with a bunch of geeks and nerds you’d say “four twenty-five” and everybody would snicker. Or you could say you “four twenty-oned” for breakfast. And I know of way too many people who have two fourteened, myself included.
So, huge nerd or hugest nerd ever?
From the CBC:
One of this country’s most familiar tunes may have been heard on CBC-TV for the last time Wednesday night when the Detroit Red Wings defeated the Pittsburgh Penguins and won the 2008 Stanley Cup.The Toronto agency representing the composer of the theme tune for Hockey Night in Canada says the CBC has declined to enter into a new licensing agreement for the song for next NHL season.
A news release posted on the website of Copyright Music & Visuals quotes company president John Ciccone as saying the CBC’s licence agreement for the hockey theme song ended with the Stanley Cup final.
The CBC “has advised the composer, owner and administrator of the musical composition that it is not prepared to enter into a new licence agreement with respect to the use of the theme,” the release says.
The CBC had no immediate comment Thursday.
The familiar theme music for Hockey Night in Canada was written in 1968 by Dolores Claman, who was raised in Vancouver.
In the news release, Claman expresses her disappointment that her song will no longer be heard in homes across Canada during hockey season.
“I am saddened by the decision of the CBC to drop the Hockey Night in Canada theme after our lengthy history together. I nevertheless respect its right to move in a new direction,” she says.
Copyright Music & Visuals says it had offered the CBC a chance to renew its licence to use her song on terms that were “virtually identical to those that have existed for the past decade.” Each use of the song in the past has cost the broadcaster about $500, the company says.