In solidarity with Reddit and other sites, this site is blacked out today (January 18th) in protest against SOPA and PROTECT IP laws. These laws are a threat to free speech and to the freedom of the Internet. Please contact your congressional representative and tell them to vote 'No' on this law.

What is so bad about SOPA and PROTECT IP?

Threat to online freedom of speech

According to the EFF, proxy servers, such as those used during the Arab Spring, can also be used to thwart copyright enforcement and therefore may be made illegal by the act.

On TIME's Techland blog, Jerry Brito wrote, "Imagine if the U.K. created a blacklist of American newspapers that its courts found violated celebrities' privacy? Or what if France blocked American sites it believed contained hate speech?" Similarly, the Center for Democracy and Technology warned, "If SOPA and PIPA are enacted, the US government must be prepared for other governments to follow suit, in service to whatever social policies they believe are important—whether restricting hate speech, insults to public officials, or political dissent."

Laurence H. Tribe, a Harvard University professor of constitutional law, released an open letter on the web stating that SOPA would “undermine the openness and free exchange of information at the heart of the Internet. And it would violate the First Amendment.”

The AFL-CIO's Paul Almeida, arguing in favor of SOPA, has stated that free speech was not a relevant consideration, because "The First Amendment does not protect stealing goods off trucks."

Negative impact on websites that host user content

Journalist Rebecca MacKinnon argued in an op-ed that making companies liable for users' actions could have a chilling effect on user-generated sites like YouTube. "The intention is not the same as China’s Great Firewall, a nationwide system of Web censorship, but the practical effect could be similar", she says.

The EFF has warned that Etsy, Flickr and Vimeo all seem likely to shut down if the bill becomes law. According to critics, the bill would ban linking to sites deemed offending, even in search results and on services such as Twitter.

Christian Dawson, COO of Virginia-based hosting company ServInt, predicted that the legislation would lead to many cloud computing and Web hosting services moving out of the US to avoid lawsuits.

Conversely, Michael O'Leary of the MPAA argued at the November 16 Judiciary Committee hearing that the act's effect on business would be more minimal, noting that at least 16 countries block websites, and the internet still functions in those countries. Denmark, Finland, Ireland and Italy blocked The Pirate Bay after courts ruled in favor of music and film industry litigation, and a coalition of film and record companies has threatened to sue British Telecom if it does not follow suit. Maria Pallante of the US Copyright Office said that Congress has updated the Copyright Act before and should again, or "the U.S. copyright system will ultimately fail." Asked for clarification, she said that the US currently lacks jurisdiction over websites in other countries.

Weakening of "safe harbor" protections for websites

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), passed in 1998, includes a provision, known as the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act, that provides a "safe harbor" for websites that host content. Under that provision, copyright owners who feel that a website is hosting content that infringes on their copyright are required to submit a notice to that website to ask for the infringing material to be removed, and the website is then given a certain amount of time to remove such material. SOPA would override this "safe harbor" provision, by allowing judges to immediately block access to any website found guilty of hosting copyrighted material.

According to critics of the bill such as the Center for Democracy and Technology and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the bill's wording is vague enough that a single complaint about even a major website could be enough to cause the site to be blocked, with the burden of proof then resting on the website to get itself un-blocked. The focus of much of the criticism is on a statement in the bill, that any website would be blocked that "is taking, or has taken deliberate actions to avoid confirming a high probability of the use of the U.S.-directed site to carry out acts that constitute a violation." Critics have read this to mean that a website that does not actively monitor its content for copyright violations, but instead waits for others to notify it of such violations, could be guilty under the law.

Law professor Jason Mazzone wrote, "Damages are also not available to the site owner unless a claimant 'knowingly materially' misrepresented that the law covers the targeted site, a difficult legal test to meet. The owner of the site can issue a counter-notice to restore payment processing and advertising but services need not comply with the counter-notice".

Goodlatte stated, "We're open to working with them on language to narrow [the bill's provisions], but I think it is unrealistic to think we're going to continue to rely on the DMCA notice-and-takedown provision. Anybody who is involved in providing services on the Internet would be expected to do some things. But we are very open to tweaking the language to ensure we don't impose extraordinary burdens on legitimate companies as long as they aren't the primary purveyors [of pirated content]".

The MPAA's O'Leary submitted written testimony in favor of the bill that expressed guarded support of current DMCA provisions. "Where these sites are legitimate and make good faith efforts to respond to our requests, this model works with varying degrees of effectiveness," O'Leary wrote. "It does not, however, always work quickly, and it is not perfect, but it works."

General threat to web-related businesses

A news analysis in the information technology magazine eWeek stated, "The language of SOPA is so broad, the rules so unconnected to the reality of Internet technology and the penalties so disconnected from the alleged crimes that this bill could effectively kill e-commerce or even normal Internet use. The bill also has grave implications for existing U.S., foreign and international laws and is sure to spend decades in court challenges."

Art Bordsky of advocacy group Public Knowledge similarly stated that "The definitions written in the bill are so broad that any US consumer who uses a website overseas immediately gives the US jurisdiction the power to potentially take action against it."

On October 28, 2011, the EFF called the bill a "massive piece of job-killing Internet regulation," and said, "This bill cannot be fixed; it must be killed."

Gary Shapiro, CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association, spoke out strongly against the bill, stating that "The bill attempts a radical restructuring of the laws governing the Internet," and that "It would undo the legal safe harbors that have allowed a world-leading Internet industry to flourish over the last decade. It would expose legitimate American businesses and innovators to broad and open-ended liability. The result will be more lawsuits, decreased venture capital investment, and fewer new jobs."

Lukas Biewald, founder of CrowdFlower, stated that "It'll have a stifling effect on venture capital... No one would invest because of the legal liability."

Booz & Company on November 16 released a study, funded by Google, finding that almost all of the 200 venture capitalists and angel investors interviewed would stop funding digital media intermediaries if the House bill becomes law. More than 80 percent said they would rather invest in a risky, weak economy with the current laws than a strong economy with the proposed law in effect. If legal ambiguities were removed and good faith provisions in place, investing would increase by nearly 115 percent.

As reported by David Carr of the New York Times in an article critical of SOPA and PIPA, Google, Facebook, Twitter and other companies sent a joint letter to Congress, stating "We support the bills’ stated goals — providing additional enforcement tools to combat foreign ‘rogue’ Web sites that are dedicated to copyright infringement or counterfeiting. However, the bills as drafted would expose law-abiding U.S. Internet and technology companies to new uncertain liabilities, private rights of action and technology mandates that would require monitoring of Web sites.” In response to Carr's article, bill sponsor and Committee Chairman Lamar Smith said the article "unfairly criticizes the Stop Online Piracy Act", and, "does not point to any language in the bill to back up the claims. SOPA targets only foreign Web sites that are primarily dedicated to illegal and infringing activity. Domestic Web sites, like blogs, are not covered by this legislation." Lamar also said that Carr incorrectly framed the debate as between the entertainment industry and high-tech companies, noting support by more than "120 groups and associations across diverse industries, including the United States Chamber of Commerce".

Threat to users uploading content

Lateef Mtima, director of the Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice at Howard University School of Law, expressed concern that users who upload copyrighted content to sites such as YouTube could potentially be held criminally liable themselves, saying, "Perhaps the most dangerous aspect of the bill is that the conduct it would criminalize is so poorly defined. While on its face the bill seems to attempt to distinguish between commercial and non-commercial conduct, purportedly criminalizing the former and permitting the latter, in actuality the bill not only fails to accomplish this but, because of its lack of concrete definitions, it potentially criminalizes conduct that is currently permitted under the law."

An aide to bill sponsor Lamar Smith has said, "This bill does not make it a felony for a person to post a video on YouTube of their children singing to a copyrighted song. The bill specifically targets websites dedicated to illegal or infringing activity. Sites that host user content—like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter—have nothing to be concerned about under this legislation".

Threat to internal networks

A paper by the Center for Democracy and Technology says that the bill "targets an entire website even if only a small portion hosts or links to some infringing content."

According to A. M. Reilly of Industry Leaders Magazine, under SOPA, culpability for distributing copyright material is extended to those who aid the initial poster of said material. For companies that use virtual private networks to create a network that appears to be internal but is spread across various offices and employees' homes, any of these offsite locations that initiate sharing of copyright material can put the entire VPN and hosting company at risk of violation.

Answering similar criticism in a CNET editorial, RIAA head Cary Sherman wrote: "Actually, it's quite the opposite. By focusing on specific sites rather than entire domains, action can be targeted against only the illegal subdomain or Internet protocol address rather than taking action against the entire domain."

Threat to free and open source software

The Electronic Frontier Foundation expressed concern that free and open source software (FLOSS) projects found to be aiding online piracy may experience serious problems under SOPA. Of special concern is the web browser Firefox, made by Open-Source advocate Mozilla, which has a plug-in, MAFIAAFire Redirector, that redirects users to the new location for domains that were seized by the U.S. government. In May 2011, Mozilla refused a request by the Department of Homeland Security to pull MAFIAAFire from its website, asking "Have any courts determined that the Mafiaafire add-on is unlawful or illegal in any way?"

Ineffectual against piracy

Edward J. Black, president and CEO of the Computer & Communication Industry Association, wrote in the Huffington Post that "Ironically, it would do little to stop actual pirate websites, which could simply reappear hours later under a different name, if their numeric web addresses aren't public even sooner. Anyone who knows or has that web address would still be able to reach the offending website."

An editorial in the San Jose Mercury-News stated, "Imagine the resources required to parse through the millions of Google and Facebook offerings every day looking for pirates who, if found, can just toss up another site in no time."

Deep-packet inspection and invasion of privacy

According to Markham Erickson, head of NetCoalition, which opposes SOPA, the section of the bill that would allow judges to order internet service providers to block access to infringing websites to customers located in the United States would also allow the checking of those customers' IP address, a method known as IP blocking. Erickson has expressed concerns that such an order might require those providers to engage in "deep packet inspection", which involves analyzing all of the content being transmitted to and from the user, and may raise new privacy concerns.

Negative impact on DNS, DNSSEC and Internet security

The Domain Name System (DNS) servers, most often equated with a phone directory, translate browser requests for domain names into the IP address assigned to that computer or network. The bill requires these servers to stop referring requests for infringing domains to their assigned IP addresses.

Andrew Lee, CEO of ESET North America, has expressed concerns that since the bill would require internet service providers to filter DNS queries for the sites, this would undermine the integrity of the Domain Name System.

Representative Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), whose district includes part of Silicon Valley, has called the bill "the end of the internet as we know it."

According to David Ulevitch, the San Francisco-based head of OpenDNS, the passage of SOPA could cause Americans to switch to DNS providers located in other countries who offer encrypted links, and may cause U.S. providers, such as OpenDNS itself, to move to other countries, such as the Cayman Islands.

In November 2011, a new anonymous top-level domain, .bit, was launched outside of ICANN control, as a response to the perceived threat from SOPA, although its effectiveness (as well as the effectiveness of other alternative DNS roots) remains unknown.

Internet security

A white paper by several internet security experts, including Steve Crocker and Dan Kaminsky, wrote, "From an operational standpoint, a resolution failure from a nameserver subject to a court order and from a hacked nameserver would be indistinguishable. Users running secure applications have a need to distinguish between policy-based failures and failures caused, for example, by the presence of an attack or a hostile network, or else downgrade attacks would likely be prolific."

DNSSEC

There have been concerns raised that SOPA would harm the usefulness of the Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC), a set of protocols developed by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) for ensuring internet security. A white paper by the Brookings Institution wrote that "The DNS system is based on trust," adding that DNSSEC was developed to prevent malicious redirection of DNS traffic, and that "other forms of redirection will break the assurances from this security tool."

On November 17, Sandia National Laboratories, a research agency of the U.S. Department of Energy, released a technical assessment of the DNS filtering provisions in the House and Senate bills, in response to a request from Rep. Lofgren. The assessment stated of both bills that the DNS filtering would be unlikely to be effective, would negatively impact internet security, and would delay full implementation of DNSSEC.

On November 18, House cybersecurity subcommittee chairman Dan Lungren stated that he had "very serious concerns" about SOPA's impact on DNSSEC, adding, "we don't have enough information, and if this is a serious problem as was suggested by some of the technical experts that got in touch with me, we have to address it."

Lack of transparency in enforcement

Brooklyn Law School professor Jason Mazzone warned, "Much of what will happen under SOPA will occur out of the public eye and without the possibility of holding anyone accountable. For when copyright law is made and enforced privately, it is hard for the public to know the shape that the law takes and harder still to complain about its operation."

Who are my congressional representatives and how do I contact them?

Congress needs to hear from all of us or this bill is going to pass. Each representative usually publishes their phone number, email address, or a contact form on their individual official websites. Links to their websites can be found in these directories:

I don't live in the US. What can I do?

The US State Department constantly speaks out against internet censorship in other countries. Pressure them to speak out against America’s new domestic censorship system.

How do I blackout my blog with this template?

Blogger users:
  1. Download a backup of your original Blogger template FIRST!!! If you do not do this, you will not be able to restore your blog.
  2. Download the SOPA Blackout template from here.
  3. Extract the .xml template file from the .zip file.
  4. Upload the SOPA Blackout .xml template at 8am on Jan 18, 2012.
  5. Upload the backup of your original template at 8pm on Jan 18, 2012.
  6. This November, send donations to the competitors of those politicians who voted for SOPA.
Wordpress users:

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"The fact of the matter is, you will not see bin Laden walking on this earth again" - Barack Obama, US President

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Out of Bounds II

After being estranged from my family for more than a decade, I've come home. So, no: it's not a sports blog.


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Monday, May 31, 2010

MM: Memorial Omelet


Here's a Meatless Monday (MM) recipe for a simple, fast, über-healthy and delicious breakfast I'm calling the Memorial Omelet. This meal is safe for people with blood-sugar conditions (like those who are diabetic and hypoglycemic) , and for those, like me, following the Diet Solution Program (DSP). Commentary will follow.

Ingredients (preferably organic and locally farmed):

  • 2 whole free-range, veggie-fed eggs
  • 1 whole tomato (small)
  • ½ avocado
  • ½ water
  • Handful fresh spinach (uncooked)
  • tsp cold-pressed organic coconut cooking oil*
  • Pinch of sea-salt and pepper (to taste)
* You can get coconut oil in most any natural whole foods store. If you don't have it, use butter and always start with low heat to melt it, but I highly encourage you to give coconut oil a try. It only takes a very little and it has a low melting point, so things get crispy without the need for high heat. It also has a wonderful, subtle flavor that brings vitality and freshness to food. Finally, you'll find with coconut oil that it's really easy to turn your omelet and slide it onto your plate when you're finished. Try it—I'm sure you won't be disappointed.

Directions:

  • Start by boiling the water. ½ cup doesn't take long, so make sure you have your spinach prepared.
  • To prepare the spinach, pull the leaves off the stems and give it a gentle rinse in cold water to crisp it up; you can throw the stems out. Once the water is boiling, place the leaves in the sauce pan and turn off the heat. We'll just let the leave stew in the hot water for a few minutes to soften up while we cook.
  • Beat the eggs in a bowl.
  • In a fry-pan of your choice, place a tsp of coconut oil. Add low-medium heat.
  • That will only take a few seconds, so as soon as the coconut is melted and covering the pan, add the eggs. Note: This omelet will cook a little faster than you're used to if you're using coconut oil. The bottom-side will likely have a thin, golden brown layer that I find delicious, but if you like totally soft omelets, you'll need to turn it often and work fast.
  • As the bottom is cooking, add salt and pepper to omelet inside to taste.
  • Once you are ready to close the omelet, pull out the spinach leaves with a fork, letting them lightly but not completely drain. Add to the omelet and then fold it over to close it. Remove from heat and let the hot pan finish the work.
  • Slice the whole tomato or half if you're using a large one. Note: Organic produce doesn't tend to be huge, though, and it's far more flavorful while only being slightly more perishable. Since the portions aren't as big, I find this a good trade off as I'm more apt to eat fruits and veggies because they actually taste good. No waste and less waist!
  • Place the sliced tomato on a plate. Lay the omelet on top of the tomato.
  • Slice the half of avocado. Add it to the top of the omelet to garnish with a dash of salt and pepper to taste. Note: I also add a sprinkle of hot pepper sauce (like Red Hot or Tabasco) instead of salt, but you can add some salsa and/or jalapeños if you like. Enjoy.
Food Diary: Next time I'll take a picture, but it looked so delicious I forgot and now all I have is an empty plate. Yum, and I feel satisfied but not full or lethargic. It only took 15 minutes! In my book, that makes this a 5 star meal.

If you want a heartier, more traditional American breakfast, add a link of no-antibiotic turkey sausage (not soy!) on the side and a piece of spelt toast with real butter or a serving of fresh organic fruit like an apple, peach, or some blueberries. You can have black coffee and tea, but not juice unless it is literally freshly squeezed in a juicer and no milk! If you have juice to drink, try to pass on the toast.

The important things we're trying to avoid here (besides toxins and pesticides) are sugars without nutritional value that raise blood sugar. High blood sugar signals our bodies to create insulin, which then makes our bodies store fat and then signals that we're hungry again, creating a vicious cycle that has left more than 50% of America overweight and me, personally, 70 pounds over my happy weight.
Wondering why there is an expidemic of diabeties? This is why: the constant production of insulin wears out the bodies ability to produce it naturally...and the reason we are constantly producing insulin now when we weren't 100, even 50 years ago, is because food is everywhere now. It's super easy to get and it's loaded with processed ingredients to make it cheaper, bigger, more attractive, and longer-lasting.
Sure, high fructose corn syrup is made from corn--it's an engineered process that starts with corn to create a syrup that is sweeter than sugar and, thus, far cheaper than using sugar. While I was cooking this meal I saw an advertisement for "getting the facts" on high-fructose corn syrup on the TV that my mother was watching. It's not about you, my friend; it's not about our health; it's not about the good of the country, even on memorial day. It's about money and that's why they call it the Almighty Dollar.
You know me: I've done my research. I've taken a Type II diabetes class and I've recently read about the nutritional process. It's a science, and my own body is all the proof I need. So, I'm not recommending that you start the Diet Solution. I'm just saying that the Diet Solution is the only program I've found that talks about typical results and also encourages a slow and steady transition. There's nothing to buy besides information...and that information mostly adds up with everything I've read. That makes sense to me: it's my time-table, my food, my decisions...and if it doesn't work, you'll read it here.
God Bless the Troops! Go Navy!

The President’s Challenge

A couple of months ago I stumbled onto the President's Challenge website for promoting active lifestyles. I had already resumed walking again, so I decided to start tracking my progress. I started a short story and feel off the wagon for a couple of weeks, but I'm back on it now. As summer approaches there's a lot more daylight, so I've gotten off the treadmill and out into the outdoors, which is a far better workout and more enjoyable, truthfully. It also presents almost a daily opportunity to talk to Sister K.

It's a little frustrating that I'm not seeing any results, yet, though. Tomorrow I'm starting on The Diet Solution, though, because I really think my blood sugar is sabotaging my efforts and keeping my body in a storing fat mode. So, I went to Henry's Market and spent good money on good, organic, raw food. I'm willing to give it my best effort for 2 weeks. If I'm still at 209.5 after that, I don't know what else to do except never quit quitting.


I feel very confident the diet is effective, especially considering what I do know about nutrition and insulin, but I'm not confident that I'll be able to keep it up as I'm worried it's going to require more time and resources that I have. It's not my house, not my fridge, and not my kitchen…and not cheap to be buy whole food.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Instant Gratification

This topic is heavy on my mind. Today I had the experience of sitting
between two attractive 40-somethings female friends, both of whom were more
interested in texting other people than participating in the conversation at
hand with 3 other women. Strange. Even stranger is that these ladies are older
than me by nearly 10 years.

I'm a Gen X'er. It's supposed to be my generation that's me-focused and socially detached by technology, right? Yet I find the whole texting phenomenon utterly crude, frankly. Sure: texting is very convenient and helpful in many situations, but why must I answer NOW just because I can without having to hear your voice? Surely I am not alone in finding this disconcerting.

But it's a pattern, isn't it? I think so. We have our phones; we have our water bottles: all these things just for us to provide instant gratification everywhere we go like mama's bosom. Me, me, me, NOW! But we're not suckling babies anymore. Why can't we wait? What happened to 'patience is a virtue'…and dare I ask: What happened to class? Surely I'm not alone in thinking that it's rude to text at the table…right? Hello?!?

It's a process to break a pattern. So this post is not about texting. It's about working on that relationship with myself…analyzing where I have a pattern of succumbing to selfish, instant gratification...becuase I do, it's just not with cell phones.

Talking with my dear Sister K this evening, the conversation turned to our mutual issue with balance. It's the thing I struggle with most: how to live a balanced life where it's not all or nothing; where it's not all about someone or something; where I don't lose myself and what I need to be me in order to gain love.

The only way to not fall into that trap is to love myself first…and show it.

From "The Wanting of You" by Melissa Etheridge

We make our choices,
Doing what we think is good.
We deny our own dreams
'Cuz we think we've been told we should--
We think we've been told we should!

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Melissa Etheridge - Fearless Love?

I love that feature of Twitter that tells you about new things. Would you believe I never knew about Blip? I would. Anyway, thare be my channel, mateys! http://blip.fm/tracecook

My first blip? Melissa Etheridge's "Fearless Love"...even though, I have to admit, that I've been feeling down on M.E. since news broke of she and Tammy's break up. I've wanted to blog about it, but I also didn't because it's so not my business--tonight it struck me.


When I heard about the split, I literally couldn't believe it. Why? I don't know, but I couldn't imagine Tammy leaving "Honey" and after what M.E. went through with Julie, I couldn't imagine her walking away from that dreamy thing like the movies--"tank top, smooth skin, sunned lips, tan thighs." I mean "Secret Agent" alone, which I saw live before it ever came out on Lucky was enough to tell me that Missy was around the bend and never comin' back with the cows.

I immediately went to Tammy's blog. I've been following it steadily for a few years, not because she's married to a famous artist I like or because she was on TV, by the way--I'm not a groupie-type and I still don't watch TV--but because she's a poet/writer with actual talent whose point of view I understand as we're similar in age, prefer the mid-west, and think California is the moral/societal equivalent of Chernobyl.

Okay...that sounds incredulous, even if it's not. But it kind of is, too. Here's the whole truth: because my ex, Diane, (the one who feels like an ex because I can lament and miss her) is about Melissa's age and knows her from way back on the scene in Omaha; she also worked in the music industry. True. It was funny to us, Di and me, when they hooked up and got all that press--I guess we felt a little like kindered spirits from far away in Michigan, but that was already the second time around for us. As much as I loved her, and always will, truthfully, as least the parts that used to make me smile like mad money, I wasn't mature enough to understand the problems she had with depression as I had not had them myself to that degree. The first time we broke up was not my fault, but the second time was...so that's why I follow Tammy and why I care that they split and why I need to write a bout it...even though I recognize it's none of my business.

It's not them I'm writing about; it's me.

So, I shouldn't judge. I really like them both; I want them both to be happy...because, if they can be, then maybe I can be...somewhere my fearless love can't stop the wanting, either.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Congress Cracks Down On Anonymous Prepaid Cellphones


Buy your prepaid cell phones now, evil-doers! Congress is once again managing to the exception in the interest of "safety" by limiting freedom and invading privacy to create just another way for your personal information to be gathered and stored. And when those methods fail to stop some terrible event, it'll be because no one was paying attention to the information...because there's too much information.



Meanwhile, how many integrity breeches will there be with that data? How many worthless privacy statements will be mailed to your address which basically say the company is not liable for anything when your identity is stolen and then someone dies in a hotel room in Dubai or Shanghai?



I gather there are more harmless and even safety-oriented reasons why anonymous pre-paid cell phones are used than there are nefarious ones (think domestic violence/witness-protection), but fear always wins here. And legislating is quasi-action that obscures the truth that our government is bloated and inept when real crimes and real mass destruction is occurring--when real action is needed like in the Gulf of Mexico.



America: Home of the free and the brave...circa 9-10-2001.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Senate Armed Services Committee Votes To Repeal 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' Ban On Openly Gay Soldiers


Die DADT, die!
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Monday, May 24, 2010

Bamboo Art - BP

Share photos on twitter with Twitpic

Starting to get the hang of my Bamboo. I wanted to doodle something a little more meaningful but still easy and forgiving as I learn the tricks to pressure sensitivity and absolute reference--what better subject than a murky oil spill?!?

Damn--what an effin' nightmare this is... :-(

Female Priest Ordained In Italy By Rebel Catholics


I think this is awesome! Just last week I was writing a short story about an Irish female priest in Sicily. It was set in the future.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Fun with Animation - LOST

Made with Animator and Bamboo Dock. Fun!

Bamboo Art - LOST

I recently replaced my Tooya graphics tablet with a Bamboo Pen & Touch. Getting used to the differences is going to take some work, but I already love it; although, for the time being, I'm going to keep my Tooya around just in case I need something to work on something that doesn't use absolute positioning.

Anyway, tonight is the series finale of LOST. I've quietly followed this show faithfully since before the beginning of Season 2. It isn't my all-time favorite show, but it's been an interesting journey and a real trailblazer for new media. So, while I was fooling around with my new Bamboo and the twitpic application, I noticed that my doodling looked a little like the fictitious Oceanic Airlines symbol, so I set out to make it focused on something rather than just learning the different effects of the pressure-sensitive pen.

This is what I came up with. Voila!

Share photos on twitter with Twitpic

Saturday, May 22, 2010

iPod Art -- Perspective


Got Milk, Mother Fucker


Something has come to my attention that I can't process. It's so bad that I can't even write about it here. Sure, it could be worse, but I really hate that sort of reasoning: it can always be worse—an asteroid could be on a collision course with Earth; the zombie apocalypse could be tomorrow and I don't have a shotgun; Carrie could be planning her lesbian wedding with her daughters as her bride's maids (You PMS like a bitch; I would know).

Side note: I confess: I love Katy Perry's Hot N Cold. So?

I'll speak in metaphors and art. Prodigal Daughter, heal thyself…

Friday, May 21, 2010

The Best Laid Plans…

This post was supposed to be about emergency preparedness, a subject I've always cared about, and a project I've recently taken up. Instead, I was told today 15 minutes before 5:00 that my contract is ending 2.5 months early.

This throws a serious wrench in my plans. Now I have to decide, soon, what to do since I'll be out of a job in less than 3 months.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

"The Plan"

I know, I know – I’m such a terrible blogger. I always have been, probably always will be. But, hey: never quit quitting right? *nod*

Basically, I just get tired of talking about the $#!T happening in the world (or in my life). I prefer to write fiction to escape; yet, strangely, since returning to California I haven’t been able to write one GD thing that is substantive. Not one. Clearly this place is just not my happy place—never has been, never will be.

I think I care too much about what I put here, too. I can’t say too much because…well…let’s just say I know some bad things about some apparently good people. I also have this automatic feeling (not sure I agree with it) that airing dirty laundry is lacking class.

So, after some thought, I’ve found a subject to write about: my projects or my plan (think "Six Feet Under"). Not at work, but in my life. Catching up, I’ve recently finished a 6+ month project to rebuild my computer from scratch after a serious hardware failure. I’ve always been technically inclined. I’m self-taught, and I figured this was my one opportunity to really take the time (and the money) it was going to take to build the system I really wanted—sparing no expense, basically. So, I got a little a time; I did my research; I went high-end where it was visible and solidly robust where it mattered. I’ll post the video I made soon.

My other project since then has been to quit smoking and get my hypertension under control. I’m happy to report that I am now 6 weeks smoke free and the last three weeks is without the medication I was taking (Chantix). I think I’ll try to sell the left over supply to some friends that still smoke. It really worked great except that it had the side-effect of making me depressed…more than I’m comfortable with, so even though it cost me $500+ to get it (I still don’t have health insurance), I had to stop taking it after 3 weeks. But, it served its purpose and if I could have written a $1000 check to a genie who would make me stop smoking I would have, so no loss if I can’t recoup any money. Most of the time I’m very charitable and will just give it away, but I’m going to try to sell it, first, even cheaply, just to try something new.

Also, my BP has significantly improved now that I am medicating that. I hate taking medication—I really do—but BP medication is just something that I have to have. Even when I was 19 and in perfect health my BP was elevated. Both my parents have hypertension. Fact: I have depression and hypertension. So, deal with it. I do not medicate my depression anymore because no amount of medication was going to work when it was, and always has been, my environment that was the cause. That is what I have to change, not my brain or my mood…because my mood changes when my environment changes. I can be happy and motivated, easily, in the right environment. That is what I have learned.

So, this blog is where I will discuss what I’m doing, step-by-step, little by little, to create an environment where I can flourish as a human being…and, in doing so, reduce my stress and the things that I often worry about. They are things that I feel I should do and have just put off...from my health to my career to my family to my finances. It’s all connected, right? *nod*

My next post will discuss what I’m working on right now.

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Corona, CA, United States
How can one chick be so different than her family when she has 3 sisters? I don't know, but I am. Explore more below to find out how. I'll let you decide why.