Monday, January 26, 2009

we are all bugs.... tiny little bugs...

Satellite image of Inauguration Day!

We are all bugs... tiny little bugs, waiting to get squashed or burned by some giant fat kid with a giant magnifying glass and a need for vengence...
PopularScience.com

Friday, January 23, 2009

The Fixed.

When I was 19, a girlfriend convinced me to read ( more or less made me read) "A Pilgrim at Tinkers Creek", by Annie Dillard. I remember not really wanting to, but found that I really couldn't put it down, once I started. Chapter 4, "The Fixed" is just crazy.

It can be found on Google Books here:
The Fixed


Dillard is so damn descriptive. On pages 59 and 60, she goes in to detail about the mating ritual of praying mantis'. It's just brutal. To paraphrase, the male has a chemical in the lower part of his body that says,"this lovely maiden is yours", but this chemical in his brain says, don't go near her, she'll eat you alive. We (all men) think with our members.... no matter what we are. He goes to mount her and she bites off his head... the damn thing is, he keeps going, like nothing is wrong.

Read it. This is one of a few that I am mesmerized by every time I re-read it.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Seizueres in children

Ever been faced with a situation that just made you freeze? Today, my son came running up to me, with a very distressed look on his face. He said a little boy was down on the ground and he needed help. He was on his way to get the nurse. I told him to go get her, and I ran to see what I could do. He had some type of seizure. The boy had just fallen right in front of my son with little or no indication that it was about to happen.

He convulsed a bit, eyes in the back of his head, minor muscle spasms were apparent through his body. His left hand and wrist curved tightly inward towards his body, and a liquid discharged from his mouth. I had the other kids who were around, give him some room and called 911. The nurse arrived in just a under a minute after I did. She brought with her a pillow. She laid it under his head and checked his pulse; she reassured some of the kids who were around and asked that they go to lunch. Then, she basically softly touched the him on his arm, knowing that he would come out of it okay. The boy was such a sweet little man and there was nothing I could do to make it stop. It was a real sense of helplessness. A few teachers and a parent were also there at about the same time. I think we all realized there wasn't much we could do. The emergency squad arrived about 8 minutes after I called. I ran to the front doors and brought the Paramedics to where the nurse and the boy was.

When we arrived, the convulsions had stopped, the boy was unconscious, and very pale. I had to get back to what I was doing (keeping an eye on the kids), but it really had an impact on me the rest of the day and night.

Later, there were some other children around and few of the girls were crying. They started asking questions about what happened and more importantly if he was going to be alright. I reassured them as best as I could, but realized how little I knew about the subject or even what one should do in a situation like this.

I spent some time tonight researching it and found some pretty decent information about what do to when it happens here: http://kidshealth.org/parent/firstaid_safe/emergencies/seizure.html

A child who's having a seizure should be placed on the ground or floor in a safe area. Remove any nearby objects. Loosen any clothing around the head or neck. Do not try to wedge the child's mouth open or place an object between the teeth, and do not attempt to restrain movements. Once the seizure seems to have ended, roll your child onto his or her side.

Call emergency medical services immediately if your child:

* has difficulty breathing
* turns bluish in color
* has sustained a head injury
* seems ill
* has a known heart condition
* has never had a seizure before
* might have ingested any poisons, medications, etc.

If your child has previously had seizures, call emergency services if the seizure lasts more than 5 minutes, or if the seizure is different or unusual.

If your child is breathing normally and the seizure lasts just a few minutes, you can wait until it has subsided, then call your doctor.

Following the seizure, your child will probably fall into a deep sleep (this is called the postictal period). This is normal, and you should not try to wake your child. Do not attempt to give food or drink until your child is awake and alert.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Nikeplus

The Chronicles of Narnia and reading with your child...

Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.
-Albert Einstein.

My son Tom and I have read "The Chronicles of Narnia" series (by C.S. Lewis) at the same time and sometimes together. I found that this was the easiest way to be able to test him on the material that he read and help prepare him for the computerized tests that he was required to take in school, after reading each book.

Read the series. Even as an adult, I amazed at Lewis' ability to marry so many great concepts of imagination, parallels of Christianity, physics, good and evil, etc. across the 7 books.

We have spent hours and hours discussing things such as the time continuum, Einsteins theory, as it relates the book. The thing is, I really have not talked to him much about what the theory says. Instead, asking him many guided questions about how the children in the books, leave our world, spend many years in Narnia, helping Aslan, then going back to our world as if no time has passed at all.

The following article is a great kind of "Summation" of it.


I am so proud of the boy.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

How to tie knots

Now this is a must for every parent (boy or daughter) who isn't in scouts or even just someone looking for another skill.... tying knots.

It seems like the few that learn the art of tying knot, learn them in scouts, in the military, or through working with rigging while sailing. Outside of that, we only really tie knots of our shoes, ties, and maybe special bows on presents.

http://www.iwillknot.com/

This should be in a book... 100 things to teach your kids... or something like that.

From Things-you-don't-see-everyday

Amy Winehouse.. soulsy bluesy

What a voice....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aygAu1x2uQo





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXjx2fo4XhA

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Amtrak Photo Contestant Arrested By Amtrak Police

I have made it a point to try to refrain from writing about current events. This just probably would not make it to the public eye, so. here it is:
(From my favorite website since 1997), slashdot.org 1

Photographer Duane Kerzic was standing on the public platform in New York's Penn Station, taking pictures of trains in hopes of winning the annual photo contest that Amtrak had been running since 2003. Amtrak police arrested him for refusing to delete the photos when asked, though they later charged him with trespassing. "Obviously, there is a lack of communication between Amtrak's marketing department, which promotes the annual contest, called Picture Our Trains, and its police department, which has a history of harassing photographers for photographing these same trains. Not much different than the JetBlue incident from earlier this year where JetBlue flight attendants had a woman arrested for refusing to delete a video she filmed in flight while the JetBlue marketing department hosted a contest encouraging passengers to take photos in flight." Kerzic's blog has an account of the arrest on Dec. 21 and the aftermath.

1. (by the way, in some programming languages that use regular expressions, the /. means to search for everything... that's pretty much what the site does.. not many people get the humor in that... suppose you gotta be a neo-max-zwin-dweebie like me).

Saturday, January 3, 2009

New Zealand Pics

Man... this looks like Slovenia, Austria or even parts of Scotland. I had no idea New Zealand had mountainous regions and such beauty.

Here's some pretty cool pics




LegalSounds.com



Legal Sounds.com is a website that a friend introduced me to back in September 2008.

No kidding, songs are $0.09 each. Most albums are about $0.99. We have purchased nearly a thousand songs through these folks. Each song lists the bitrate in which the song was saved. Older songs are typical mp3 burn rates of somewhere between 128 - 192mb. However, most new songs are 320 mb. Great Quality!

By the way, in my opinion, save your songs in the following fashion:

c:\somedirectory(like my documents..my music)\mp3\band name\album name

After purchasing, right clicking and saving using the above format, then use Microsoft Media Player version 11 or great to:
1. Get all the remaining Album Information
2. Get the Album Artwork

Import in to iTunes after media player is finished (you may have to go to Media Player -> Library -> Apply Media Information Changes) if using a iPod. I think that Media Player does a better job of categorizing, naming, and storing music and artwork then iTunes.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

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