Back in the Garage again

So, after an 8 month or so hiatus, I was back at Dad’s Garage tonight.

They were short a couple folks, so I said I would host. I wasn’t brave enough to actual play, but it would be good to ease back into things.

However, if I’d known they were going to do a mediocre show for almost no people, I mighta’ played.

It was good natured and it had some high points, but overall a blah show. And a tiny audience, I guess because of the holidays.

Regardless, I enjoyed myself. Good old garage.

Of course, as is typical, here I am at 1:00am, wide awake.

Maybe I’ll watch part of a Battlestar Galactica.

Oops.. no… wait… I just got tired.

‘Night!

At your service, Blood Sucking Fiends

I gave blood today, for the first time ever.

Which means I’ll finally get to find out my blood type.

When I was in 8th grade, we did blood type tests in science. After an ordeal of pricking my finger during which I felt nauseas, the science teacher came to me with the little bottle of fluid to mix with the blood and discovered he had run out. So everyone found out but me.

At some point in my young teenagerhood, someone had told me that I was too skinny to give blood. I took whoever it was at their word, and never revisited the question of giving blood, because I was terrifically squeemish about all things below the skin level. In 9th grade, I had to run out of health class during a graphic filmstrip to avoid passing out.

Sometime after college, the myth of being too skinny was busted (possibly because I was not so skinny anymore) and had had enough experience with needles to figure I could handle the ordeal.

Plus, I had heard there were cookies.

But it never worked out. Blood drives never seemed to happen around me, and I wasn’t aware you could just go give blood randomly. I’m not even sure how you would go about doing it even now. With all the other things in life that need to be scheduled, todo’d, and figured out, giving blood never rose to the top of the list.

I signed up for a few, a couple at the companies I worked for, one at ‘ work. I either got called out of town or the drive got cancelled every time.

But today, though I waited with each passing hour for the inconvenience that would crop up preventing my bloodletting, I finally got it done. In 4-6 weeks, I’ll learn my bloodtype.

I did not feel woozy or anything, and I spent a pleasant half hour reading a book.

I’ll probably do it again.

Evolution of the Onion

Kansas Outlaws Practice Of Evolution

http://www.theonion.com/content/node/55807

“If Earth’s species were meant to change over successive generations through physical modifications resulting from the adaptation to environmental challenges, then God would have given them the genetic predisposition to select mates and reproduce based on their favorable heritable traits and their ability to thrive under changing conditions so that these advantageous qualities would be passed down and eventually encoded into the DNA of each generation of offspring,”Olathe public school teacher and creationist Joyce Eckhardt said. “It’s just not natural.”

Brilliant.

So. Here we are.

Given that the Dems are going to “change things”… does anyone have a suggestion on what they should do in Iraq1?

‘Cause I’ve got no blessed idea.

On other fronts, I’m with Robert Reich. (hat tip to for the link).

1 Not having gone there in the first place, while true, is not an acceptable answer.

Nemo Revue

AP– ‘Finding Nemo’ to Become Stage Musical

Musical numbers , her boss and I predict:

1. An Anemone For Me (And You) – Coral, Marlin
2. Barracuda, Howa Could Ya’? (Marlin’s Lament) – Marlin
3. Latchkey Fish – Nemo
4. Send in The Clowns – Nemo, Marlin
5. The Joke – Marlin
6. Gone Fishin’ (‘Cause I’m a Dentist) – P. Sherman
7. Hello, Dorey! – Dorey, Marlin
8. Shit! A Shark! – Marlin, Dorey, Bruce
9. The Joke (reprise) – Marlin, Dorey, Bruce, Chum, Anchor
10. Shit! A Shark! (reprise) – Marlin, Dorey, Bruce, Chum, Anchor
11. The Tank Rap – Nemo, Gill, Bubbles, Deb, Peach, Bloat, Gurgle
12. There’s a Light (Over On The Angler Fish’s Head) – Marlin, Dorey
13. Dammit, Dorey! (I Love You) – Marlin, Dorey, Moonfish
14. Grrr, Filter Fish – Nemo and the Tank Fish
15. Why Can’t A Fish Take Prozac? – Marlin, Crush
16. Whale, Whaddaya Know? (It’s a Whale!) – Dorey
17. Seagull Shuffle – Nigel, Dorey, Marlin
18. Get Down, Swim Down, and Boogie – Nemo, Marlin
19. The Joke (reprise) – Marlin & Company
20. Leaving Well Enough Alone (Pixar’s Lament) – Audience

Goodbye, Paper

Slate reviews Sony’s Reader, which uses e-Ink technology.

Essentially, you’re paying for the screen. The 6-inch display, which is made using E Ink technology, looks surprisingly like paper. It’s very sharp, doesn’t flicker, and can be viewed from any angle, even in bright sunlight. It’s supposed to be easier on the eyes than an LCD, and it definitely was on mine. Because E Ink is “image-stable,” it takes no power to keep an image displayed once it’s on-screen—that means the Reader only eats up battery life when you turn pages. You’re supposed to get 7,500 page turns on a single charge.

E Ink has a lot of potential for low-power applications and, I imagine, signage—since it can be read at every angle. But it also has significant drawbacks relative to LCD screens. We expect our electronics displays to dazzle, but the Reader’s is dull, and its palette is Etch A Sketch gray. There are also problems with “ghosting,” and since it has no backlight, you need a clip-on light to read in bed. Unfortunately, the slightly reflective screen tends to bounce the beam into your eyes. The biggest problem with E Ink is that it has a very slow refresh rate—around a second to turn a page. Though that doesn’t sound like much, it’s quite a pregnant pause: Clicking through the Reader’s menus is tedious, and page turns quickly become a bore.

Disappointing, but I’m not an early adopter anyway. Hopefully, they’ll work out the kinks in Version 2.0.