Entries Tagged with iPod

January 12th, 2007

MP3 Player Vs. CD Player: Which is Greener?

Did you know that having an MP3 player is a “Green” Lifestyle choice?

I was surprised to learn this. Apparently, according to It\'s Easy Being Green: A Handbook for Earth-Friendly LivingIt’s Easy Being Green, if you download music rather than buy CDs, you are already making a “greener” lifestyle choice…even if you are only doing it some of the time. It’s still better than the alternative.

CD-Roms and DVDs are made of polycarbonate plastic which is not biodegradable. Think about all of those CDs that came to your house as advertisements in the last 10 or 15 years (ahem - AOL) and you just tossed them — me too. Now they’re sitting in landfills not breaking down and blocking out the sun from other things that need it to break down. Or worse, chemicals just melting and sizzling and poisoning our planet.

iPod Mini GreenI feel so much better about my iPod Mini purchase now. And so thankful for Netflix. I kind of felt privileged to have both; now I feel like I’m doing my little part to conserve. I don’t buy CDs anymore and rarely buy a DVD and only then if it’s something I know I want to keep and watch again and again. With Netflix, I’m even conserving gasoline since I’m not driving to and from the video store to see if they have what I want. ;)

So far, I haven’t found a good way to recycle CDs or DVDs other than passing them on to other people who can use them if they’re store-bought music or movies. However, I did find these suggestions for reusing those CDs that come to your house whether you want them or not:

  • CD disco ballUse for household decorations using scissors and paint
  • Use them as drink coasters by glueing them onto cork wood
  • Place the CD under large pillar candles to catch the wax
  • Hang CDs in the garden to scare away birds from fruits etc.
  • Use as reflectors on fenceposts, driveways etc.
  • Use as garden row markers for vegetables, glueing them onto marker posts
  • Sell used CD’s or DVD’s to a secondhand shop or donate them to charities

Try also About.com’s CD Trash to Treasure Family Craft website or CD Art.

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January 8th, 2007

Project 365 (Day 7): Empties — Plus Some Ponderings

Posted in Photo Blogging, Project 365 by n. mallory

7 of 365: Empties

You wouldn’t know it from looking at my desk at work, but I really have cut way down on my caffeine. I’m just way too sleepy now to carry the empties to the recycle bin. :P

By the way, I edited this picture using the online editor at pxn8.com, which I heard about from Amber Rhea (PXN8: Awesome online photo editor) a while back and for some reason saved the post. Maybe I fore-knew that I’d be lured into this challenge. ;)

One of the things I’ve noticed just in this week is that I’m going through life looking at things just a little bit different already. I look at everything as a possible picture, as a possible future picture…I think I’m even going through life a little slower. I’m definitely taking a closer, observatory look at the world around me as I drive to work or walk around or get ready for work or whatever. When I look at other people’s pictures, I’m trying to figure out how they captured the shot, the lighting, the angle, etc. I have a deeper appreciation for the more difficult shots.

I’ve been wondering if other folks have noticed this change in themselves.

Nikon D40 6.1MP Digital SLR Camera Kit with 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G ED II AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor LensAnd…it’s encouraged me to improve myself. I’ve ordered books on beginning photography and gadgets like the Monster Pod and Gorillapod Flexible Tripod and put a better camera on my wishlist all in the hopes of improving my ability so that by the end of this project, I’m not just snapping shots, I’m creating art.

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December 26th, 2006

Help! Stupid #@%* iPod Mini

Posted in Geekery, Computer & Gadget Talk by n. mallory

I’ve always had a little issue using my iPod mini with my home theater.  Despite the fact that my home theater has a usb slot just for playing MP3 players, when I plugged in my iPod mini, the display on the t.v. would show bizarre file names like “F03N” rather than song names and the directories wouldn’t match the playlists.  I couldn’t control what I was playing from the iPod mini so I would have to basically plan ahead and remove everything from the iPod mini except what I wanted to listen to on my stereo.

Except since the last iTunes upgrade, I can’t even do that.  My home theater can’t read anything on my iPod mini at all now.  This really pisses me off.   What’s the point of having a usb port if I can’t listen to my MP3 music.

I’m told that other people have usb ports in their cars and stereos and have no problems, so what’s the deal?  Heck, isn’t there a commercial where they do this?  Is this a push to force me to buy either a Nano or a bigger iPod?  Or is my year old home theater system now out of date too?

WTF?

Can’t someone tell me how to hook up my iPod Mini to my stereo so I can listen to my music?  Please?

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October 18th, 2006

Plugging In Could Hurt You

Since several of us on the blogosphere were just discussing the use of iPods/MP3 players in public and their effect on society, I found this article to timely…considering it’s another more permenant effect and all.

storyearphonesgi.jpgNEW YORK (Reuters) — Listening to loud music with earphones on a digital music player for more than 90 minutes a day can damage your hearing, according to a new study.

The study of 100 doctoral students concluded that people who listened to music at 80 percent of volume capacity, at which point the sound is considered loud, should keep it to under 90 minutes a day.

“If a person exceeds that on one particular day and happens not to use their headphones for the rest of the week, they’re at no higher risk,” study author Brian Fligor told Reuters. “I’m talking about someone who’s exceeding 80 percent for 90 minutes day after day, month after month, for years.” More

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October 17th, 2006

Recommended Reading — Mostly Women’s Rights Edition

  • A Proposed Small Step For Womenkind — Buttercup @ Buttercup & Bean writes about the problem of unwanted attention from men and how the real problem is not that women are putting themselves in situations where they could become targets but that men feel that they are entitled to any “piece of female ass that shows up in their vicinity.” Excellent post.
  • To iPod or not to iPod (or, See the Person!) — Colleen @ For All the World to See wonders if technology isn’t creating a society of isolation and anti-social individuals.

    We pass people in the grocery, on the street, at school, at work, in the car and they’re just people. The plural, the generic, the masses.

    But they aren’t. Each person is a person.

    And what a difference we would make if we saw each one of those people as a person , not as one of a mass.

    As an individual, who maybe had a bad day, woke up on the wrong side of the bed, their coffee maker didn’t work this morning, they got in a fight with their kid, they got some unexpected money, they passed a test, they finished a big project, have a headache, found out their mom has cancer, found out their wife was pregnant….

    You get the idea.

    What if we each did that, maybe not to every person we came in contact with, but made an effort to really see the person we pass on the grocery aisle or who serves us our coffee, or who takes the parking place we had our eye on? What if?

    What if we didn’t wear our iPods so as to be lost in our own little world, but instead had the earphones out of our ears, so we heard the little old lady behind us in the grocery ask for help getting something down…or we actually talked to the server who takes our order, instead of talking to them in short, one-word comments while our cell phone is pressed to our face?

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August 28th, 2006

Don’t Panic: From The Accidental Terrorist To The Accidentally Terrorized

Posted in In the News, The World, 9-11 & Terrorism by n. mallory

Think back over your life.

What’s the most embarrassing thing you’ve ever did?

I’m sure the memory is still there hanging around in the shadows of your mind, waiting to jump forward to your memory forefront at an extremely inopportune moment. Your cheeks flush at the thought. You stomach flinchs. Maybe you even feel just a little bit queasy just at the mere hint of a flashback.

Maybe it’s something that happened 20 years ago in school and maybe no one but you remembers it. Maybe it’s something that happened last week in front of 15 strangers on a bus and no one but you remembers it. Still it haunts you, doesn’t it?

Then again, maybe your bestest friends remember all too well and just won’t let go and it’s the inside joke of inside jokes that just keeps getting told and will still be told, probably even at your 40th high school reunion.

Hey, we’ve all been there. Some of us go there on a fairly regular basis. In fact, so regular that we have a discount pass to the park.

Which is why, I really had to feel for this guy, self-nicknamed “Stupid”. At least after his embarrassing story made the press, he decided to tell his version of it. What exactly was his embarrassing, press-worthy act? He accidently dropped his iPod in an airplane toilet and ended up having to deal with airport security, the bomb squad, and Canada’s version of Homeland Security; he was interrogated as if he were a terrorist involved in 9/11 and the most recent liquid bomber plot and the rest of the passengers were held up for three hours because of him…and they knew it was because some moron dropped an iPod in the toilet. Put yourself in his shoes.

It all started when I got out of my seat to go to the bathroom. I went to the bathroom, washed my hands, and returned to my seat. A little while later the two stewardesses on the flight crossed each other in the aisle. They had a quick conversation that I was in earshot of.

“I locked off the front lav. There’s something in the toilet that’s preventing it from flushing. Run some water and see if you can clear it.” My face immediately turned red. The seat cover! I thought. It must have been too big to flush! I should have thrown it out!

I was so embarrassed. I tried to act normal … I took a sudden interest in the contents of the seat pocket in front of me, acted nonchalant and all. I watched as the stewardess got on her hands and knees in the lavatory and did unfathomable dirty work.

Sometime later, I decided it would be best if I forgot the whole thing happened, so I went to put on my headphones and drown myself in iPod music. But … no iPod. I panicked, checked my other pockets. Where was it? Not under the seat, not in the pockets, not … anywhere. I looked up to the stewardesses. One of them had run past me in a decent clip. She was carrying a green handbook. She brought it to the other stewardess. They flipped through the handbook, read a page, then made a call. The other stewardess had retrieved a blue metal box and was removing some equipment from it.

I put two and two together. I knew what had happened.

So I walked up to the stewardesses, both clamoring over the handbook, and tapped one on the shoulder.

“So, I had an iPod before I went to the bathroom, and now I don’t. I think I know what’s in the toilet.”

We had a quick conversation. I told them, “You don’t have to call the TSA or anything, it’s just my iPod.” They said, “Oh, but we already did.”

So now I’m starting to realize that this is turning into a big problem. They offer their condolences, tell me that it’s unfortunate, and I take a seat. Okay. So far, not so bad. I return to my seat and spend the rest of the flight trying to act normal.

That is, right up until the pilot comes over the intercom.

“Folks, this is the captain. I don’t want to alarm you, but we’ve found a suspicious device in the front lavatory. Now, we think it’s probably nothing, but in this day and age … you can never be too careful. We’ll be landing at Ottawa, where we will await further instructions.”

The cabin erupted with commotion. At that very moment, my face fell into my hands. What have I done?

We landed at Ottawa, and we were taxiing to the gate. Without warning, the airplane then lurched to a sudden halt.

“Folks, this is the captain. We’ve been ordered to make an immediate stop. Buses are coming to evacuate the aircraft.” We were to leave all of our belongings on the aircraft; we would be shuttled by bus to the terminal, where we would receive our carryon items.

[…]

It took them 45 minutes to round up not just a bus and air-stairs, but an army of police and customs vehicles. One of the stewardesses took me aside and whispered to me. “Get off the plane last, and talk to the constable.”

So I did. I exited the plane last, and spoke to the Ottawa police officer waiting at the air-stairs. I told him that the device was my iPod, and he took down my license number.

I continued to the bus. After a brief wait, it did NOT take us to the terminal. It took us to some industrial facility, where they housed utility vehicles. There, in the open garage, we were instructed to sit and wait. And wait we did … another 30 minutes or so.

This was possibly the worst part … While we were waiting I got to overhear the passengers talking about me. Well, they didn’t know it was me, but they knew someone had dropped an iPod in the toilet, and they made aaallll sorts of assumptions about this person.

“Why didn’t he have it on a clip? He could have clipped it to his damn pants.” Or, “Why didn’t he tell the stewardesses? Why is he hiding it from them and making us go through this?”

I could have corrected them. I could have told them that it WAS on a clip and I DID tell the stewardesses. In fact, it was a lot of self-restraint to just keep my mouth shut and not make things worse.

By this time the sense of guilt had left me. This wasn’t my fault. Anyone could have dropped his stupid iPod in the toilet. It’s really the government here. I mean, at this point the building contained six customs officials, an army of policemen, people from various security agencies, a bomb squad, and a couple of detectives. No one was doing anything. No one was taking charge. *I* didn’t create this mess.

The whole time, the officers were watching me. They had told me to keep in sight of them at all times.
Finally, five or six customs officers set up a table and made an announcement. “We will be interviewing each of you one by one. Please form a line. Before we have our chat, make sure you have your ID, passport, and customs information with you.”

One person asked, “What if that stuff is still on the plane?” The customs official responded, “Then we will have a more formal chat.”

I got in line with the rest of the people, but shortly thereafter two police officers took me out of line. “Come with us.”

They took me to a discreet corner. They brought out a tape recorder. I was told to put my hands up on the wall and spread my legs, and I was frisked from head to toe. They removed my wallet, disassembled it completely, and placed each of its contents in its own plastic evidence bag.

“Now Tim, for the sake of the tape recorder, I want you to state your full name and address.” I did. “Now, each of us will state our name and position into the tape recorder.” There were two detectives from the police department, a detective from Customs, and two members of the bomb squad.

Then started the questions. They were easy at first. They asked me where I lived. What do I do for a living? Why am I unemployed? How come it’s taken me 4 months to find a job?

They asked me why I was visiting Canada. I was to visit a friend I met on World of Warcraft, Cara. They took down her name and what I could remember of her address. They asked me how we met.

“In an online game.”
“What online game?”
“Umm … World of Warcraft,” I responded meekly.
“What kind of game is this?”
“It’s a fantasy game … it takes place online.”
“Fantasy … like it’s got wizards and warlocks?”
“Well, it’s got warlocks.” (And they need to be nerfed.)

They asked me to describe my relation to Cara. I told them that people meet up in the game and go on adventures together, and that Cara and I were in a guild together that I was the leader of. They confused the concept of a guild with the game, however, and I had them believing that I was the Lord and Leader of all of WoW until I was able to correct them, and explain to them what a guild was.

So, when they put the pieces together; namely, that I was visiting a female person that I had met over a computer game, their next line of questioning went down an obvious path.

“So you and Cara are friends?”
“Yes.”
“How long have you known her?”
“About 5 months I think? Maybe less.”
“Do you have a romantic relationship with Cara?”
“No.”
“Do you want a romantic relationship with Cara?”
“No.”
“OK, so … if you and Cara were drunk together, and she turned to you and said, ‘Tim, let’s go–’”

I interrupted him. “Excuse me … what’s the point of these questions?” The detective hardened. “Let me make things clear. I ask questions. You answer them. Do we have an understanding?”

“Yes.” I paused. “I just don’t see how this is relevant.”

He spoke right in my face. “I’ve got 5 good men going into that airplane right now. Five of my best bomb squad guys. If there is any reason that I should be concerned for their life, then I need to know now. So just answer the questions, and do as I say.”

Now the questions became really pointed. What do you think about 9/11? What are your views on the Iran issue? Do you think government is too big, too powerful? Would you ever “make a point?”

He asked me if I knew how to make a bomb. “I have a degree in physics, and I’m not an idiot.” Of course I knew how to make a bomb — what kind of question is that?? The better question is, WOULD I make a bomb? The answer is no.

They tried to trap me with some of their questions. I noticed they would try to get me to contradict myself. Like, I had earlier mentioned that I had never met Cara in real life, so they would later nonchalantly ask me when I had last seen Cara. Stuff like that.

He told me there was a similar bomb scare in LA today. He asked me if I was connected with it. He asked me if I was connected to the “liquid” thing from Britain.

Finally, he was done. He and the two bomb squad guys left. The customs lady followed up with more prying personal questions. She asked me more about Cara, how I got to know her, how we interact, etc.

The interviewers would periodically withdraw to talk about me in French, then return with followup questions. I was picked apart by these questions. They wanted to know how I could pay for my ticket, being unemployed, and what my motivations for visiting Cara were. They had me on the defensive the whole time.

She had finished her interview and I was then returned to the garage where they were questioning everyone else on the plane, one by one. I waited for another hour or so as the bomb squad did their thing (I assume). Eventually, they loaded everyone up on the bus to take them to retrieve their stuff. Except me — I and two others were to be inspected by Customs.

They took my photo, asked me to wait in the cold for 30 minutes, and then escorted me to a red van. Along the way I passed the detective who had first interviewed me. He was carrying a green paper bag. He called me over.

“I just got it back from the bomb squad. It’s an iPod. Do you want it back?”
“It’s been in the toilet.”
“Yeah, it’s messy.” Then he walked right up to my ear. “Tim, you’re not in any trouble anymore. Nothing you say now is going to be on record. I want you to answer a question honestly, just for me, not for my agency.”
“OK?”
He whispered into my ear. “Did you … did you take a dump, and then drop your iPod in the toilet on accident?”

“No!” I yelled a little too loudly. “Like I said … I didn’t notice it was missing until after!”

“OK, OK. I believe you. You did great, Tim.”

I got my wallet back and was escorted by police to the van. I waited some more on this van, and finally it took me to a harmless immigration office. I waited some more there, the whole time being watched and followed by police officers. Finally, they escorted me to the baggage claim to fetch my stuff, and took me to a very private room with some bomb-screening equipment and tinted mirrors for windows.

It was me and a gruff, humorless customs official. He unpacked my luggage entirely, ran the contents of my wallet through a bomb sweep, and carefully examined all of my belongings. He then asked me to turn on my laptop. I did, and he began using it. I saw him open Spotlight and begin searching.

“Do you connect to the Internet on this laptop?”
“Yes.”
“Have you downloaded and images?”
“Huh? What do you mean?”
“Do you have any pornography?”
“No.”

I waited in total silence for about 10 minutes as he kept searching and searching, until I finally asked him, “What are you looking for?”

“Contraband,” he said without looking up at me.
“Such as?”
“Child pornography, hate propaganda.”
“Child porn I can understand, that’s illegal. But hate propaganda is protected speech.”
Now he looked up. “What country do you think you’re in?”
“Oh, it’s illegal in Canada?”
“I honestly don’t know. But that doesn’t matter. I get to decide what goes in this country. Do you have a problem with that?”
I paused for a long time while I thought about what I should say to this. “Yes.”
“Yes, you do have a problem?”
“Yes, I do. If it’s illegal in Canada I’ll understand, but saying ‘I don’t want it in my country’ isn’t good enough when you’re a government official.”

Now he was pissed. “Don’t fool around with me. I’m sure you want this to end as much as I do. So I will ask you questions, and you will answer. Do you understand?”

Another long pause while I thought. “Yes, I do.”

He continued his exhaustive audit of my computer’s contents, then returned it to me. We waited for a Customs escort, who showed me out of the room and back to the terminal. There they left me without saying a word, and I was free to go.

O.K. I can’t just leave this story without saying how weird it is. I mean, this poor guy accidently dropped an iPod in a toilet. He was honest about it. It seems to me that those people were out of control, especially the one who thought it was his job to decide what got into his country whether it was legal or not.

But then there’s been a lot of overacting lately, hasn’t there?

  • There were the two men who were removed from the flight to Manchester when the other passengers refused to board the plane out of irrational paranoia due to their appearance and watch checking.
  • A Muslim man and his companions were removed from a Denver flight because he was reciting his prayers.
  • There have been cases of airports being shut down due to false positives for liquid explosives in make up and bottled water.
  • A plane made an emergency landing in Miami because two of the lavatories turned up locked but nothing was found amiss.
  • A flight from London to Washington had to be escorted to Boston by fighter jets after a 59-year old , claustraphobic woman with contraband hand cream and matches had a panic attack and became violent and had to be restrained.
  • And then there were those 12 arrested on that Dutch flight to India for arrousing suspicion with cell phones.

And I’m sure there are more.

I’m not saying that we shouldn’t be vigilant and we shouldn’t be cautious, but we seem to be jumping at every little blip and bleep. How can we tell what the real threats are if we jump at everything?

Here’s a great observation from Bruce Schneier:

The point of terrorism is to cause terror, sometimes to further a political goal and sometimes out of sheer hatred. The people terrorists kill are not the targets; they are collateral damage. And blowing up planes, trains, markets or buses is not the goal; those are just tactics. The real targets of terrorism are the rest of us: the billions of us who are not killed but are terrorized because of the killing. The real point of terrorism is not the act itself, but our reaction to the act.

And we’re doing exactly what the terrorists want.

[…]

Our politicians help the terrorists every time they use fear as a campaign tactic. The press helps every time it writes scare stories about the plot and the threat. And if we’re terrified, and we share that fear, we help. All of these actions intensify and repeat the terrorists’ actions, and increase the effects of their terror.

(I am not saying that the politicians and press are terrorists, or that they share any of the blame for terrorist attacks. I’m not that stupid. But the subject of terrorism is more complex than it appears, and understanding its various causes and effects are vital for understanding how to best deal with it.)

The implausible plots and false alarms actually hurt us in two ways. Not only do they increase the level of fear, but they also waste time and resources that could be better spent fighting the real threats and increasing actual security. I’ll bet the terrorists are laughing at us.

Another thought experiment: Imagine for a moment that the British government arrested the 23 suspects without fanfare. Imagine that the TSA and its European counterparts didn’t engage in pointless airline-security measures like banning liquids. And imagine that the press didn’t write about it endlessly, and that the politicians didn’t use the event to remind us all how scared we should be. If we’d reacted that way, then the terrorists would have truly failed.

It’s time we calm down and fight terror with antiterror. This does not mean that we simply roll over and accept terrorism. There are things our government can and should do to fight terrorism, most of them involving intelligence and investigation — and not focusing on specific plots.

But our job is to remain steadfast in the face of terror, to refuse to be terrorized. Our job is to not panic every time two Muslims stand together checking their watches. There are approximately 1 billion Muslims in the world, a large percentage of them not Arab, and about 320 million Arabs in the Middle East, the overwhelming majority of them not terrorists. Our job is to think critically and rationally, and to ignore the cacophony of other interests trying to use terrorism to advance political careers or increase a television show’s viewership.

The surest defense against terrorism is to refuse to be terrorized. Our job is to recognize that terrorism is just one of the risks we face, and not a particularly common one at that. And our job is to fight those politicians who use fear as an excuse to take away our liberties and promote security theater that wastes money and doesn’t make us any safer.

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July 13th, 2006

Roadtrip Music: The UK Experience

So, I’m sure you’re dying to know what was playing on my iPod while I was wandering around magical Edinburg or trying to sleep on the airplane over the Atlantic.  What haunted my spirit as I peered at the Stone of Destiny or searched for 221b Baker Street?

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April 1st, 2006

What I’ve Been Listening To — Lost Road Trip Edition

Posted in Books, Music, Movies, & T.V., Geekery by n. mallory

So, I went to visit Pugly today and I spent over 20 minutes lost going and over an 1 hour lost coming back. I never did find the route I was looking for and ended up taking a different way back. Could have saved myself an hour and a quarter tank of gas if I’d just gone that way to begin with. *sigh*

Anyway, so I decided not to limit this week’s playlist to the last 25 songs. You get to see what I listened to there and back again. :)

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March 26th, 2006

What I’ve Been Listening To

Posted in Books, Music, Movies, & T.V., Geekery by n. mallory

I’ve mostly been listening to talk radio — the news in particular — and watching TLC or Lord of the Rings all weekend. The last time I acually listened to my iPod was when I went to see Pugly on Tuesday and I was in a country kind of mood, so here’s this week’s list of the last 25 songs I played…

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March 19th, 2006

What I’ve Been Listening To

Posted in Books, Music, Movies, & T.V., Geekery by n. mallory

Here’s this week’s installment of the the last 25 things I listened to on my iPod Mini. I know you all are just holding your breath in anticipation because I’m the source of all that’s cool and fashionable. :P (By the way, I listened to most of these while writing the previous post.)

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March 12th, 2006

What I’ve Been Listening To

Posted in Books, Music, Movies, & T.V., Geekery by n. mallory

I don’t know if I’m bored or curious, but I decided I wanted to know what I’ve actually been listening to. Really, I’d try to blame the fact that I’ve been coming down with a full-on head cold complete with cold sores, sneezing, stuffy ears, and not breathing since Friday night and I can’t seem to focus on what really concerns me for very long, but I was looking at various iTunes plugins before that.

So, without further delay…

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August 10th, 2005

Is it wrong…

Posted in Some Fun Now, Discombobulated by n. mallory
  • that most people in both political parties make me giggle? And not when they are trying to be funny?
  • that I have I’m Just A Bill on my iPod mini?
  • that I would rather watch a fishing show than exercise?
  • that I read about other people’s marriages and love lives and feel glad I’m single?
  • that I want to clone myself but with the neat-freak gene?

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