Original ExistDifferently.com Weblog of David, a Christian Network and Systems Manager, with topics ranging from Apologetics to Worldview, and some crypto, open source, programming, opinion, and daily life thrown in between.

Tue, 2005-05-10 (May 10)

Prey that the disc works!

Filed under: Blog,Books,Entertainment,General — David @ 00:59

So I was listening to Michael Crichton’s “Prey”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060536977/davidsworldva-20/002-2086300-3510456?%5Fencoding=UTF8&camp=1789&link%5Fcode=xm2 tonight, on disc 11, the last disc. It’s a book on CD in case you didn’t figure that out :-) I have it out from the library, and it’s really good. All 10 of the first discs were perfect in audio quality, no noises or other imperfections. However, this last disc, nearly halfway through, in the middle of one of the most suspensful parts…locks up. Starts skipping and freezing over and over, from at least track 6 to track 8, where I finally quit. I was home, so I came in, and tried some moist lens-cleaning cloths I picked up from a local warehouse club cheap a while back…then I tried ripping it into iTunes. It works! So I’ll try listening to it again, if that doesn’t work I’ll burn myself a temp. copy to get me through it. I may return it to the library with a note saying there might be an issue with disc 11! Fortunately I have a backup though….the hardcover version of the book from the library as well! So if nothing else, I could’ve read the end. But I’m tired and I think I’ll go listen to it right before I fall asleep :-)

This is the end :-)

Wed, 2005-03-16 (Mar 16)

Life Is Good

Filed under: Blog,Books,Christianity,General,Personal — David @ 00:53

Yep, life is good. Bears repeating. My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers is a good book. So is Secrets of the Secret Place by Bob Sorge. I’m not even going to give you links to them, because you can find them at Amazon yourself just fine. Actually, it’s becuase I’ve got better things than to find the links to them right now. And I’m feeling lazy. But I’d appreciate you buying them through a search using this box if you wouldn’t mind:

Amazon Logo

Search Now:

Give’s me a tiny kickback and costs you nothing but searching from this page (or using the links to Amazon for other books in my older posts). Thanks.

Anyway, just started those books. Gotta move slowly in them, quite a bit of info.

Still no pics of new car up, but that’s due to, well, the whole lazy thing. Plus a lot going on now. I don’t really feel like spending the time to type out those things that I don’t mind saying publicly, and, well, the other things wouldn’t end up here anyway :-) Librarygal mentioned that’s why she uses Friends mode to post more sensitive, not-quite-public posts, in Live Journal. Blah. Blasted features community sites implement that I don’t feel like adding or upgrading or developing my own community on my server directly at the moment. So I’ll live without it I guess. Public only. When I have time.

But, remember, life is good! Which it is. There will never be a time when it couldn’t be better here on earth, and there are those things that I’d rather were different at the moment. But they are looking up compared to, for example, a month ago (not that I remember what was going on a month ago…), just in general.

Maturing is good. Maturity is only a state we think we’ve reached when we don’t realize we’re still on the journey. The never-ending process of maturing, however, basically means growing and learning (in my opinion…no dictionary was harmed or consulted in the defining of the term): from circumstances, thoughts, feelings, experiences, friends, books, chats, talks, conversation, movies, literature, family, God. And making yourself better by experiencing these things. “But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.” says 2 Peter 3:18, KJV. That’s how we mature.

Don’t fret or worry. Instead of worrying, pray. Let petitions and praises shape your worries into prayers, letting God know your concerns. Before you know it, a sense of God’s wholeness, everything coming together for good, will come and settle you down. It’s wonderful what happens when Christ displaces worry at the center of your life.

Summing it all up, friends, I’d say you’ll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious–the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse. Put into practice what you learned from me, what you heard and saw and realized. Do that, and God, who makes everything work together, will work you into his most excellent harmonies.
— Philippians 4:6-9 (The Message)

Good advice in all the translations/paraphrases, but I liked The Message at the moment, it’s different than the usual wording, giving it a fresh perspective. Stop reading. Start doing :-)

Sun, 2005-03-06 (Mar 06)

Rules of Thumb

Filed under: Blog,Books,Entertainment,Movies — David @ 22:35

Maybe if I try shorter posts about things I find and stuff, rather than trying to write an essay on everything, I’d get more posted. I’ve found tons of awesome stuff since my last post, but I usually am on to reading the next cool thing before I get around to posting! I’ve been so busy with life, too…I suppose that’s as good a reason as any to be absent from my blog, being the introvert I am.

Anyway, good post over at 43 Folders about an old book he found in his closet, with quotes! They’re all “Rules of Thumb“:http://www.43folders.com/2005/03/rules_of_thumb_.html and I like his favorites! I’m trying to hold myself back from reserving the books at the library, I have too many out already! I’m having to return them without reading them as people put them on hold.

Right now in fact I’m listening to the first audiobook I’ve listened to in years. I figured if I can’t read in the car (while driving to work), and I don’t feel like listening to music, why not listen to a book? Especially since I haven’t had time to listen to the myriad books that I just mentioned I have out from the library :-)

So, the book I’m listening to is “The Great Train Robbery“:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060502304/davidsworldva-20/002-2086300-3510456?%5Fencoding=UTF8&camp=2025&link%5Fcode=xm2 by Michael Crichton. It’s a true story and it’s very well told, at least from the first CD (the one I finished so far) of eight. Once I’m done, I think I’ll also watch the “DVD of the movie”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0792839064/davidsworldva-20/002-2086300-3510456?%5Fencoding=UTF8&camp=2025&link%5Fcode=xm2 from the book, made in 1979 and starring Sean Connery. My friend Shawn recommended both the book and the movie, along with “Michael Crichton’s other books”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/external-search?search-type=ss&tag=davidsworldva-20&keyword=Michael%20Crichton&index=books, some of which I already have from the library. Many are also movies.

While doing some Googling about The Great Train Robbery, I found another interesting “movie by the same name, made in 1903”:http://www.filmsite.org/grea.html! It’s not my genre (silent western) but apparently it set a lot of moviemaking milestones, according to the review at the link. They also released a 100th anniversary DVD version, it’s “at Amazon”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000WN1JA/davidsworldva-20/002-2086300-3510456?%5Fencoding=UTF8&camp=2025&link%5Fcode=xm2 in case you’re more interested than I.

Haven’t gotten around to those pictures of my new car yet, but they’re coming eventually.

On a quick unrelated note, domain names ending in .us are apparently losing the ability to be registered privately through a proxy service such as the Private Registrations that “GoDaddy”:http://www.godaddy.com/ provides. GoDaddy’s owner provides a very good discussion of this “on his blog”:http://bobparsons.com/index.php?/archives/36-Domain-owners-lose-privacy.-Nine-ways-we-are-now-more-vulnerable..html. Good read.

I did mention I was trying to make these posts shorter, right? :-)

Sun, 2005-01-16 (Jan 16)

LibraryLookup

Filed under: Books,General,Internet,Tech (General),Web Development — David @ 01:49

Another awesome library-related web tool (the first I mentioned was “LibraryElf”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2005/01/16/library-elf/) is the “bookmarklet(Google for term to define)”:http://www.google.com/search?q=bookmarklet creation tool over at “Jon Udell’s LibraryLookup”:http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/stories/2002/12/11/librarylookup.html page. If you live in Indianapolis, Indiana (or in the county of Marion in Indiana), you can use his customize tool to “build your own bookmarklet”:http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/stories/2002/12/11/librarylookupGenerator.html that lets you, when browsing Amazon.com or another similar web merchant, click this bookmarklet in your toolbar to open a search for that book at your local library! Easy way to save money buying a book that’s at your library!

This is very cool. If you go to the “Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library(IMCPL)”:http://www.imcpl.org/ you can just drag this link to your bookmarks/favorites/links bar, go to a page at Amazon (see “my LibraryElf post”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2005/01/16/library-elf/ for some Amazon links), and click the bookmarklet to try it yourself! It seems that IMCPL returns the identical match in a list of search results, but it seems the exact ISBN match is the third item down, so click the third ISBN down in the results to see the actual book information.

Note that if you use his “custom bookmarklet generator”:http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/stories/2002/12/11/librarylookupGenerator.html (which I did to create the link above) the values for IMCPL are:


Base URL: http: //catalog.imcpl.org/
Library Name: [whatever you want to call the link]
Vendor: "iPac" is the one you must select

(note: remove the space between the “http” and the “catalog.imcpl.org” above, I had to add it to get it to show up correctly in this post)

I provide this information because it was very hard to figure out that “iPac” was the correct vendor type, since it doesn’t mention that specific vendor anywhere on IMCPL’s site. Try it, you’ll like it!

Library Elf

Filed under: Books,General,Internet,Tech (General),Web Development — David @ 01:02

In news important enough to deserve its own entry, I found a great new little resource over at “LibraryElf“:http://www.libraryelf.com/ that I found through a great little “post at 43 Folders“:http://www.43folders.com/2005/01/lazyweb_library.html. It gives you an RSS feed, and emails, with notifications of books due at the local public library here in town (they added ours, in one day, at my request!) and several others around the country. Granted, the local library already has reminder emails. But this site will not just email you, but text message your cell phone and provide a nice little RSS feed you can stick in your newsreader to let you know when what’s due, or overdue. With customizable reminder times (library’s limited to three days prior to due date), and the ability to notify you when holds are ready to be picked up as well!

For those with big families of book-checker-outers, or those with accounts at multiple libraries that ‘Elf supports, you can add multiple cards to one account and it will track all of them for you on the same system. Makes tracking all your stuff that much easier, even if they don’t let you place holds or auto-renew the books online through their system at the moment.

I’m thinking maybe if they allowed you to place holds on books you find in the library’s catalog (wait, I know the library lets you do this already through their site, let me finish!), but add them to an “interest queue” (see the second comment at that 43 Folders post above, which links to “Netflix for books or ‘interest queues'”:http://www.sauria.com/blog/computers/open_source/osaf/chandler/1129) that monitors when I return books and puts the next book or two on hold for me automatically. That would give the library more books on its shelves (so I don’t have to check out 30 books on a topic because I don’t want to forget to get them, then renew them up to the 15-times max unless someone else requests them). And me a more manageable stack of books to read at once, while letting me get to my “wish list.” But ‘Elf doesn’t place holds yet, so it’s a dream for the moment. Enough from, me go check it out!

Unrelated: “this is cool”:http://www.lazyweb.org/.

Sun, 2004-11-21 (Nov 21)

Neal Stephenson: more books for me to read!

Filed under: Blog,Books,Entertainment,General,Tech (General) — David @ 21:08

Over at the BoingBoing.net blog, there’s a nice entry about Neal Stephenson’s “Baroque Cycle Trilogy”:http://www.boingboing.net/2004/11/21/neal_stephensons_sys.html of books that it looks like I might have to check out now. I really enjoyed his “Cryptonomicon”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060512806/davidsworldva-20?dev-t=mason-wrapper%26camp=2025%26link_code=xm2. Looks like these three are REALLY long though! Wonder how long it will take me to have the time to read them? Let’s just say I’ll probably check only one at a time out of the library! The books are “Quicksilver”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060593083/davidsworldva-20?dev-t=mason-wrapper%26camp=2025%26link_code=xm2, followed by “The Confusion”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060733357/davidsworldva-20?dev-t=mason-wrapper%26camp=2025%26link_code=xm2 and “The System of the World”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060523875/davidsworldva-20?dev-t=mason-wrapper%26camp=2025%26link_code=xm2.

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