Shock and disappointment

Series of shocks and disappointments this morning, some worse than others:

  • dante, due to my mortal enemy’s failure, was unreachable all night and most of the morning, cutting me off from my site and my email.
  • The cute blonde barista that gave me her email address last week gave me ample evidence this morning that she’s only doing her job and being customer-friendly – nothing more.
  • I find myself monumentally unmotivated at work (not that that’s a new thing, mind you, but the guys on the team I work with were complaining more heavily and passive-aggressively than usual about the workload)
  • And the scariest piece of news is that last night around 4:00, when I was leaving work, there was a shooting on the corner by my building.

What in the hucking fell am I doing here? If I could be randomly injured at any moment, why am I wasting time working somewhere I despise?

Something’s got to change.

Meta: this close

Update on site re-design:

I’m this -> <- close to being ready to roll it out!

I just need to:

  • design a logo,
  • tweak the colors a bit,
  • figure out what’s going in the sidebar,
  • get the comments section working,
  • go back through the archives and fix broken links,
  • get all the little “goodies” like the drop-down menus working,
  • and update the picture gallery css,

…and I’ll be done.

I think y’all will be pleased with the result. Very pleasing, simple design, easy to read and dial-up friendly.

It should even be mobile-device friendly for those of you reading my blob on Blackberries or cell phones or PDAs. Y’know… management-types.

All four types of why

I read a review last night for a book called “Why?” In it, the author, Charles Tilly, analyzes the reasons we give for different things and breaks them into four categories: a convention, a story, a code, or a technical account.

You can read the review linked above, or the book (which I am going to do at some point) for more complete descriptions of the four types. The main thing I took away from the review, however, is that which type of explanation we give is more dependent on our relationship with the person to whom we’re giving it – we use stories, for example, with people we are close to or want to be closer to, we use technical accounts to impress with our knowledge, and we use codes or conventions with people we are strangers to or want to distance ourselves from.

It was with all this in the back of my mind this morning as I approached my normal bus shelter, and saw this guy standing inside there, smoking. I’ve seen him before and I’ve seen him smoking before, and I’m not normally hard-core about not smoking but sometimes it irritates me, and Tri-Met has recently helpfully put up “No Smoking” signs on many of their bus stops which gives me a reason to speak up – that reason being a code, or more specifically, a code of behavior, a rule to follow or procedure.

I walked up, he looked at me briefly, I looked directly at his cigarette and then back at him, pointedly, I thought. It was very passive-aggressive of me.

Before I’d thought through what I was going to say, I burst out with “You know, there’s no smoking at the bus stops!”

He looked at me, looked at his smoking butt, and took a step outside the shelter. “There. I’m not in the shelter anymore.”

I walked up into the shelter, and pointed at the “No Smoking” sign. “All I know is, it says ‘No smoking’. I don’t know about in the shelter or not in the shelter.”

He took a few more steps away. “Sorry,” he said, sounding not sorry at all.

I stood there, inside the shelter, upset by the encounter, and then the concepts of the four different reasons flooded back into my thoughts. Was that kind of an asshole way to tell that guy not to smoke? Probably from his perspective, it was. But I didn’t like him and didn’t particularly want to like him or be his friend; I just wanted to not have to breathe his smoke.

But I pondered the different types of reasons and tried to come up with one of each other type. For a convention, which is like a lower-level simplified code, I could have pointed out that bus stops are for everyone, or asked him how he felt about non-smokers. OK, I’m not completely 100% sure of the difference between a convention and a code so I’m fuzzy on what I could have said here.

For a story… I could have told him about my mom who died of lung cancer (whoa, heavy one) or just mentioned how I’ve seen Tri-Met drivers enforcing the no-smoking zone.

For a technical account, I might have offered information on the damage smoking does or how second-hand smoke can be as dangerous, if not more dangerous, than smoking itself.

As I write them, none of the above explanations, including the actual one I used, sound good to me now. At the time I just grabbed for the one that came to mind right away. In the future I may give more thought to the type of explanation I give, though, and I think that’s a valuable skill to have.

Meta: Atom feed

On the other hand, for the millions of my readers who depend on instant updates of all content on this site* via RSS or Atom feeds, I believe I have fixed my broken Atom feed for now.**

You should see the link over in the right sidebar, or if you’re using a modern browser (sorry IE users) you’ll see the tell-tale orange feed link in its appropriate place.

* And by “millions” I mean probably none of you.


** And by “for now” I mean until I update the site and forget to fix the broken site feed again.

Meta: progress report

Site update:

I’ve worked on the re-design all weekend and, well, it’s not done. I’m very close, and I think I’ve got all the major components in the right arrangement to each other, but there remains much tweaking of sizes and margins and all that, and I still need to add in the optional components I’d planned for.

Plus I still need to design a new logo. That’s the hardest part. Despite my love of Mac OS, I’m not really a graphics kind of guy. Can’t have a new design without a new logo.

It’s fun, and I’m learning a lot about CSS and XHTML and how Blogger works. But just give me a little more time, maybe this coming week, before I unleash Lunar Obverse 2.0 on y’all.

Boot Camp report

Even though I haven’t actually posted about it yet, I have, in fact, used Boot Camp to install Windows XP on my new sexy thing. It had it’s scary moments, not the least of which being the fact that I was installing Windows XP on my Macintosh, but mainly related to the fact that this is beta software and drivers. But once it was on there, it seemed to work OK. I installed a couple of games and they ran pretty smoothly (I’ll finish up the longer report and post it… um… soon).

I haven’t run it a lot this week because I’ve been working on my site re-design, and everyone is right – rebooting is a pain in the ass. I keep thinking I’ll get around to playing those games soon…

But now, via The Unofficial Apple Weblog, I’m reading a discussion thread about a bunch of people who are stuck in Windows XP! They’ve booted in, and they can’t boot out again. I haven’t read the whole thing (there’s 117 replies to go through) but mostly it’s a sad sad tale of doom and woe.

Maybe I’ll get rid of that partition… until the beta software is a little less beta

Meta: snowball effect

Why do projects, which seem so simple at first, always seem to snowball into larger and larger projects?

So, as mentioned, I’m elbows-deep into redesigning this site. Basically from the ground up. It’s fun, being all design-y and stuff. I’m digging it.

But I’ve realized that I’m going to have to go back over my previous posts on this blog and add the appropriate CSS tags to make the styles all work correctly. I wish I was better at using grep or awk – would make it so much easier.

But then, I also had a realization about domain names and blog names (those are two different things to me – I’ve caused confusion in others by mixing-and-matching). For instance, here are the domains I own:

And here’s the thing. The Lie Factory blog is on liefactory.com. Run, Moon, Run! is on runmoonrun.com.

But Lunar Obverse, this blog you’re reading now, isn’t on lunarobverse.com. I got to thinkin’ it should be.

But Lunar Obverse, the blog, is my personal blog. However, Lunar Obverse Consulting is my DBA and business name.

The reason I’ve been holding off putting something up at lunarobverse.com is because I meant for that to be my professional site. Now I’m thinking that maybe I should move this personal blog that you’re reading now to lunarobverse.com, and make bamoon.com or brian-moon.com my professional site.

Decisions, decisions. The more I thought about it (and was gently prodded about it by my friends) I realized that, if I was really super-cool, I could make one page the jumping-off point, and aggregate all the new content in one place for your reading pleasure. That would probably be kinda easy to do, although I don’t know how much strain that would put on dante. I’ve been making a lot of requests of Caleb lately and he’s been very supportive but I don’t want to push it…

For now I’m just going to finish the re-design. Then update the back posts, fix broken image tags and links. Finally I’ll figure out what to do with all the domains I now own. It’s an ownership society, they tell me, so I guess I’m doing pretty well in virtual estate.

As a side note, this will mark my 933rd post on Lunar Obverse. I might have a celebration or contest or something for my 1000th post. I’ve got a lot of garbage swag I could give away… Just an idea. Maybe it’ll boost my readership!

Look closely

Nice. Look closely… image not safe for work (if you’re managed by small-minded children):

Not sure if same

I got an anonymous comment tonight, in response to this post, as follows:

is this the same jann brown that managed the johnson oil company in astoria oregon a few years back. there was talk then that she left with more cash than was hers. – 4/12/2006 05:53:44 PM

I’m answering here, as well as in the comments for that post, in the hopes that our anonymous commenter might show up and drop a few more details, or shoot me an email, or something.

Others would know better than I, but the Jann O. Brown I’m referring to has worked at Multnomah County for at least as long as I have – I started in September 1999, and Jann had worked there for at least a year or two prior to that, I believe. I know that she also worked for the Army Corps of Engineers at one point, though I don’t know exactly when.

The Jann I’m talking about is about 5’7″, light brown hair, tanned, thin, in her 50s. That’s all the details I can pull out of my brain right now but I have been drinking tonight.

If anyone knows any more, or if this is just an unfounded accusation, let me know. When I’m seeing straighter I’ll try to google around and see what I come up with. In the meantime I’m just passing this along.