Expect to see cameos from other annoying Disney characters. This movie will suck compared to the two originals. Full story (yes, I know, old link, but it’s been sitting here waiting to be posted for a while).
Month: December 2004
The Death Of Christmas is Coming
Why, you say? Because Jerry Fallwell says so.
I’m starting to agree with him, though, despite Fallwell being a raging lunatic. Why? Christmas tree accidents are all too common, 30 Santas got in an ugly fight, another Santa beat up a 74-year-old woman with a 2-by-4, Planned Parenthood sells holiday cards, fruitcake is still a popular gift, and Christmas parties are bad for your health.
Happy Holidays, everyone. I’ll be locking myself in my house now to avoid holiday trouble and to especially avoid Jerry Fallwell. Thanks everybody for the links.
Sunriver Elementary School Uses Students as Janitors
First off, a quick rant: I read about this story in the local daily paper this morning, and intended on blogging about it earlier, but their Web site doesn’t have the story. Anywhere. It wasn’t until I got a Google News Alert that the story had been picked up on the Associated Press wire that I could even point people to this story. OK, I’m a dork as the story is online locally , though it didn’t show up in my Google Alert, and Google News should’ve caught it, nor did I find it on their site easily the first time. My apologies, just the same.
Anyway, in yet another example of why our school system is a laughing stock, because of budget cuts in the district, there’s a shortage of janitors at some schools. At Sunriver’s Three Rivers elementary, kids are being asked to clean up:
The students are learning these skills because the fast-growing Bend-La Pine School District reduced its custodial staff in a budget-saving move. At the same time, the district added two new schools and several additions.
With fewer adult hands to clean the buildings, several elementary schools have asked kids to help with the chores.
The benefit, school officials said, is a chance to learn about responsibility while taking ownership in their school.
I wonder how OSHA would feel about this? I know the housekeeping department in our company has to abide by a pile of OSHA regulations, and if those kids are doing anything remotely janitorial (especially at their age — we won’t even get into child-labor stuff here), there’s a chance the school be shut down. Now that this story has hit the wire, it’s only going to be messier for the local school district.
Personally, any time that takes my kid away from learning what a teacher is there to teach them is wasted. If they’re not getting taught this kind of responsibility at home, then the kids have no hope anyway.
Wanted: The Ultimate Note Taker
Barney and I were talking about this the other day. I really wish that somebody could create what he’s looking for, as I know I needed one when I was reporting more (as I’m in the same boat as he):
I’m a reporter. I skipped third grade, so I’m sure I missed some handwriting classes. Ever since, my handwriting has sucked, especially when someone is speaking fast and I’m trying to get down every interesting word. It’s sort of a self-encryption – if I don’t transcribe the notes within 12-24 hours, even I can’t make out what it says. (It’s why I love phone interviews – not out of sheer laziness – well, not just that – but I’m a real fast typist, so those notes are 1,000 times better.)
Sooo…. there’s voice-recognition software out there, right? Getting better all the time? But apparently you still have to train the thing? I’d LOVE to tape interviews, rather than scribble them, then upload the audio file and have a program turn it into text! Heck, I’d settle for 30 percent accuracy, that’d be better than my stinkin’ notes!
Does anybody know if such a thing exists or is even on the horizon? I know it would require a good chunk of CPU power, but those portables/PDAs/etc… are getting pretty dang powerful. It would be a blessing for so many reporters, that’s for sure.
MovableType = MS Outlook of Blogging
A very good article about how MovableType’s popularity may be its biggest downfall when it comes to comment spam. Link via MovableBlog.
Is Rob Gone?
Has AboutItAll bit the dust? The last entry of his I see in my RSS reader was titled “You know… I just don’t have time to keep this blog going” and the entry excerpt (don’t have the full entry in the feed) says “So posting will be spotty at best during the holiday season. I’m pretty sure that after the 1st we’ll be pulling the plug on the AboutItAll.com family of blogs. It’s been fun, but I’ve got to focus on other things for a while…” His site now says “closed. Email me at admin at aboutitall.com if you want to know more.”
I’ve e-mailed him, haven’t heard back. Anybody know what’s going on? He was probably the first Portland-area blog I started reading (along with Jack‘s), and he’ll be missed.
Google Gives Suggestions
As you’re typing in your search term, this new Google toy will give you real-time autocompletion of popular search terms. Besure to check out the one-letter suggestions (“P” gives you “Paris Hilton” for example). Links via Waxy and the Google Blog.
Google Gets Nine-Cents On Every Search
Considering the millions of searches they do on a daily basis, let me be one to say “Holy Crap!” Full Story.
250,000 Sci-Fi Mags Head To University of Oregon
Why is my former stomping grounds not covering this story? I had to read it over on Boing Boing.
Hello, Jason Scott here (historian guy). I saw that the 250,000 fanzines up for sale on ebay were taken down. I took the step of looking up and contacting Mike, the guy who put them up, and spoke for a while.
Apparently he had gone to the ebay sale as a last resort after contacting a number of universities to donate his collection. And, as luck would have it, his auction was spotted by a worker at the University of Oregon, who have contacted him and offered to take the collection whole.
So, the collection has found a home, and a sale to the highest bidder (not always the greatest way to divest decades of collecting and collating) is no longer necessary. Great news.
Of course, the Knight Library news site nor does the University’s news site have anything.
It’s obviously not a huge story, but still print-worthy (as it’s quite a collection).
Update on 2/13/05: The collection is actually going to the University of Iowa.