Random Stuff

March 05, 2008

Monkey Stuff

You read StuckInStuff.com... but not for posts like this.  Even so sometimes everything falls into perspective, crystal clear, and I have to break away from normal posts for a higher purpose.  In this case it is pet monkeys.

Like Stewart, I too have always wanted a pet monkey.  We considered raising a service monkey, but even benevolent domesticated monkeys are illegal in California.  And besides, they don't let families with small children train service monkeys.

Bringing this back around to stuff, one of my favorite quotes of all time comes from the beautiful pen of E. B. White in The Trumpet of the Swan, "Animals and birds are lucky. They don't keep acquiring things, the way men do. You can teach a monkey to drive a motorcycle, but I have never known a monkey to go out and buy a motorcycle."  Apparently you can teach a monkey to ride a dog, as well.

I suspect that owning a monkey would add new perspective to life.  Stuff would seem less important.  A miniature primate zipping around the house would bring out a more instinctual, less industrialized and materialistic outlook on life.  So I'm for it.

March 01, 2008

guynameddave revamp

My blog life has been confused over the years.  For the most part, one blog has lasted the test of time.  Take a look at the recent tweaks to the look and feel of guynameddave.  My best intentions are for StuckInStuff.com to continue as well, though if I ever get unstuck in stuff there might be need to rethink things.

January 03, 2008

January 3rd is and interesting day in history

The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor is an enjoyably easy-listening daily podcast.  At just around five minutes an episode, it is nevertheless packed with fascinating information and inspiration.  Subscribe to The Writer's Almanac and you'll learn that on January 3rd

Martin Luther was excommunicated by Pope Leo X

Herman Melville set sail for the first time on the whaler Acushnet

J. R. R. Tolkien was born, and so was Father Damien

Oh, and each day you get a poem read to you by Keillor as well.  Enjoy!

December 20, 2007

Bruno Family Year in Review

Well the year is wrapping up.  We're working on putting the finishing touches on 2007 and the Bruno Family Christmas Newsletter, which is notoriously late each year.  It will contain all the interesting details about how the girls are doing, about the pets' health, Leanne's new Web 2.0 lifestyle, and Dave's new job.  But we might not post it online.  Maybe we'll just mail them.  Who knows.

For now, if you feel so inclined, browse over to LetterPop.com to look at some select photos of the family in 2007.  Would love to see a "Year In Pictures" from any readers.  Feel free to post links in the comments of this post.

October 23, 2007

California Wild Fires

Just a quick update, StuckInStuff has not burned up.  Our home is in the midst of the wild fires but probably will be fine.  We're sad for the many people who have lost their homes, though.

In the next week I'll be writing on the fires, an update for the 100 Thing Challenge, and hopefully a full response to Rowlings news about Dumbledore.

Blessings for now, Dave

October 05, 2007

Shakespearean Gambit

Over the years I've enjoyed chess.  Some years more than others.  I've owned and read Modern Chess Openings 13, though I cannot find it now.  And once I was an moderately good unrated player.  (Chess Tip: don't stop, you lose it fast.)

Anyway, recently I've gotten back into chess.  It happened when I tried to sell my chess pieces and board on SIS as part of my reduce efforts for the 100 Thing Challenge.  My wife said I shouldn't.  Since wife's know best, I listened.  And now I'm staying up late working on odd defenses for black.  My wife is kicking herself.

Speaking of men and women and chess... I was browsing the U.S. Chess website when I came across this, uh, encouragement to young male chess players:

I'm a single guy in college, and I heard chess is nerdy and devoid of womenfolk. Why should I play?

Chess is a great game that can lull its devotees to trance like states of concentration. Finding a wonderful and surprising move can fill you up with aesthetic joy and the pride of discovery. A game of chess or a tournament can test your will power, discipline and sportsmanship, resulting in intense situations that draw many to the game. In the chess world, race, gender and class are invisible. It's inspiring to see eight-year-olds competing with senior citizens, and Gucci-clad investment bankers fighting it out with high-school janitors.


Chess is not nerdy at all. We've come a long way since the days of cheap "chess is nerdy" jokes in Saved by the Bell! Celebrities who are crazy about chess include supermodel Carmen Kass, pop star Madonna, actor Will Smith, magician David Blaine and boxer Lennox Lewis. International chess superstar Garry Kasparov has been interviewed in every place from Charlie Rose to Playboy, and starred in a Pepsi commercial. Alexandra Kosteniuk, a Grandmaster from Russia has done modeling shoots for Vogue, Elle and Mademoiselle. If you still think chess is nerdy, browse through our U.S. player galleries for more evidence to the contrary.

 

The lack of female participation is a serious problem in chess. I hope that doesn't cause you to leave chess, but rather to think about changing chess. Do you have a female friends or sister who is sharp witted and confident? Teach her chess and bring her to a tournament. The male-dominated atmosphere scares many women at first, but many warm up to the attention they get at tournaments. Now there is usually a critical mass of girls and young women at tournaments. Often, these female participants meet and bond together, making the environment less alienating.

September 24, 2007

"List Maintenance Specialist" = "Scrambling Corporations"

So my wonderful wife found this really cool web service Green Dimes.  Basically you give them a little bit of money and then they help get you off of catalog and junk mail lists.  Generally this is a good thing, except when my wife starts meddling with my camping gear catalogs.  (Just kidding.  I'm glad she took me off of them, even if I didn't have the will.)  Well, one of the catalogs we chose not to get is Land's End.

So the other day we got a letter from a "List Maintenance Specialist" at Land's End.  It is really interesting.  The letter tells us that Land's End has removed us from their mailing list according to our request.  But then it goes on to say,

"Due to concerned customers like yourself, we now offer an alternative.  We have developed a program that allows you a choice of receiving our catalog on a Bi-monthly, Quarterly, Semi-annual or  Annual basis."

The way I read that is 1) companies are frightened, 2) the power of customer backlash is scaring companies, and 3) with a little effort people who have been treated as soulless buying zombies by companies for generations can frighten companies into treating them more human.

I'm afraid I'll remain a corporate cynic.  For the most part companies respond to the concerns for people for one reason only, so that they can attempt to convince those people to still buy stuff the mostly don't need.  Sure there are companies out there that truly attempt to not do this.  Like, uh, where?

September 04, 2007

Heat And Apathy Go Hand In Hand

Just a quick observation, perhaps mostly about myself.  Heat and apathy go hand and hand.  Sitting in front of a computer trying to think rationally and act productively in a room without AC wearing a shirt that will not allow you to reach for the mouse because the sweat has sealed your arm in the keyboard-only position is not a good way to stay chipper and Web 2.0 handy.

Looking forward to a break in the weather and a good productive week to come!

August 21, 2007

Stone Cold Sober Alma Mater

The Princeton Review has released its most recent survey of schools and Wheaton College (an alma mater of mine - MA 2002) came in second... in the Top 10 Ten Stone Cold Sober Schools category.  The Mormons (BYU) beat the Evangelicals for the number one spot.  (Speaking of Mormons, you really ought to buy the This American Life episode God Close Up on iTunes.)  I think Wheaton has come in second a few years in a row.  My wife and I will be visiting our old tromping grounds some time next month.  We'll let you know if we spot any brews.

In the spirit of too much information, I will let you know that I've never been drunk, though I do enjoy a cold one every now and again.  I cannot remember if I ever drank during my time at Wheaton.  My guess is no.  There is The Pledge, which I seem to remember is operative only when at school.  So it is possible I had a beer when visiting family back in California.  But I don't recall.

August 02, 2007

Deathly Hallows Review Makes Its Way to Christianity Today Online

Many thanks to Ted Olsen at Christianity Today for asking me to revise my Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows review "Harry Potter 7 Is Matthew 6" for CT online.

Also, Ted has an excellent response to the awful article in the New York Times which suggests listening to audiobooks is inferior to reading print.

Challenge Stuff Reading Group

Quotes & Stuff

  • "Holy places are dark places. It is life and strength, not knowledge and words, that we get in them. Holy wisdom is not clear and thin like water, but thick and dark like blood." - The Priest of Ungit in Till We Have Faces by C. S. Lewis
  • "I am thoroughly convinced that much of the evil of our times is related to specialization and that we desperately need to develop an attitude of suspicious caution toward it. I think we need to treat specialization with the same degree of distrust and safeguards that we bring to nuclear reactors" - M. Scott Peck in People of the Lie
  • "And so we can say that the industrial economy's most-marketed commodity is satisfaction, and that this commodity, which is repeatedly promised, bought, and paid for, is never delivered. On the other hand, people who have much satisfaction do not need many commodities." - Wendell Berry in "The Whole Horse" in The Art of the Commonplace
  • "The problem is not just that more consumption doesn't yield more satisfaction (as in the extreme case where all satisfaction comes from relative position), but that it has a cost. The extra hours we have to work to earn the money cut into personal and family time. Whatever we consume has an ecological impact, whether it's the rain forests cleared to graze the cattle which become Big Macs, the toxins collecting in our bodies from the plastics that now dominate our material environment, or the pesticides used to grow the cotton fro our T-shirts. Americans increasingly resent paying taxes to buy public goods like parks, schools, the arts, or support for the poor because taxes are perceived as subtracting from the private consumption they deem absolutely necessary. We find ourselves skimping on invisibles such as insurance, college funds, and retirement savings as the visible commodities somehow become indispensable. In the process, we are threatening our temporal, social, and biological infrastructures. We are impoverishing ourselves in pursuit of a consumption goal that is inherently unachievable. - Juliet B. Schor in The Overspent American
  • "Once the revolution of exploitation is under way, statesmanship and craftsmanship are gradually replaced by salesmanship... Salesmanship is the craft of persuading people to buy what they do not need, and do not want, for more than it is worth." - Wendell Berry in "The Unsettling of American" in The Art of the Commonplace
  • "They had never even thought of such a thing as having a penny. Think of having a whole penny for your very own. Think of having a cup and a cake and a stick of candy and a penny." - Laura Ingalls Wilder in Little House on the Prairie
  • "Animals and birds are lucky. They don't keep acquiring things, the way men do. You can teach a monkey to drive a motorcycle, but I have never known a monkey to go out and buy a motorcycle." - E. B. White in The Trumpet of the Swan.

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