New Feature - Comment On Photos In The Photo Album
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

One thing that always annoyed me about my photo gallery is that to leave a comment you had to login to flickr.   This is all fine and good, but I wanted a bit more of control over those comments instead of sending you to another site.   I finally found that I could “hack” the plugin I was using to use Disqus, the same commenting engine I’m using on the rest of the site.

Does this mean you will actually leave any comments?   I don’t think that will change too much, but the overhead and change was so small I had to do it.   So if there was any pictures in the album that you wanted to comment on, now is your chance.   Something small, but a new feature to end the week on.


The Freaking Mile Long Pier in Huron
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Image from here

The stupid mile long pier.    It’s located in Huron, Ohio and at the end of the pier is the Huron Lighthouse.   Growing up in Vermilion, Ohio there wasn’t much to do that we didn’t do on a regular basis.  One of the odd-ball things we did was go out to the mile long pier.   The official name wasn’t the mile long pier, but it is supposedly a mile long - so the local nickname stuck.  For some reason the trips were a bit more frequent once I managed to get the woman who would one day be my wife.

My wife always enjoyed the mile long pier, except when she managed to get to the end of it she had to use the restroom.  This almost always made it a pain since as soon as we made to the end of the end of the pier we immediately had to turn around and head back in most occasions.   When a group of us wanted to head out there we started making her use the restroom at the Riverview Bowling alley just up the street from the pier.

It was one of those places that youth go and hang out in groups.   Usually the minimum number of people we took was three, but I can think of a couple times it was almost a dozen of us.   Climbing from rock to rock to make it to the end of the pier.  Since most the time it was in the evening or close to it, we watched the sunset down.   Otherwise we just headed out and stared into the darkness that was the water of Lake Erie at night time.

Was it a fantastic experience, not in anything that I say that you must do.  It was a time period where the friends and the memories make it important.   Too many times the pier started off as a springboard for other activities.   Whether it was friends in high school or friends from my early twenties.   It was a gathering spot of sorts.  Eventually I’ll get around to heading back and taking some pictures - for now it has to exist solely in memories.


Consolidated Categories
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Image from here

Yesterday to help ease navigation around Creeva.com I consolidated my categories.   I went from over one hundred to just having twelve.   I used categories kind of like tags, but not really.  I was using them for specific organization methods, but over time that becomes unwieldy - especially when certain categories are not relevant or used any more.   So yesterday was a big consolidation that literally took hours.

One side effect I noticed that alot of old articles managed to get re-crossposted.   I’m not sure why  since nothing I did should have called that function in wordpress, but it did.   It honestly is as much of a pain for me the author as much as you the reader on this different sites.   Hopefully though you will find it easier to navigate different categories around the blog.   I also added a ton of tags yesterday so articles should link together better and keyword search should be stronger.


Some Great Macro Photography Images
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

25 Beautiful Macro Photography Shots | Monday Inspiration | Smashing Magazine

Check out this site to see some great macro photograpy.

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Moved to a New Commenting Platform
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.

So a couple weeks ago I moved all of my blogs over to the Disqus commenting platform.  So far so good.  The best thing is that I now have an offsite backups for all of my comments.   I had held off using any commenting platforms until they could sync back to the local wordpress database.

I backup all of my blog posts in e-mail and google documents, but there hasn’t been a good offsite backup system for comments until now.   If I loose my blog or migrate to another platform Disqus (supposedly) will be able to sync the contacts back correctly.

Check them out, and leave a comment to test it.

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.


Blogging For Hire
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.

We’ve all thought about it.   Why don’t I try one of the services that pay me for each post I do.  I only have to write about something I know nothing about and make it seem convincing.  Yeah, right.   There is more to it then that.   I’m not going to call out all services or their designs, but at the same time, they are bunk.

They don’t want to be black listed for spamming themselves so they are calling you out to do it for them.   Normally you would get anywhere from 2.50-5.00 for the privilege of doing this for them.  So for 5.00 you’ve lowered your integrity.   I can understand if your blogging about cruises or vacation providers if you have a travel blog, if you have a personal blog though it’s kind of transparent.

Looking through the benefits and pitfalls of getting in bed with one of these services, I would recommend becoming an Amazon Affiliate - at least there you can make residual income on a blog post that should add up to more then 5.00 for the right item.

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.


More Web Statistics - Why Are They Going There?
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.

How do you use your web statistics?   I’ve written that alot of people that visit my site need updated browsers and computers, but mostly I’m curious on where they going.   They are browsing around my site, but not to the content I want.

The content that is most read is the articles that don’t have much depth or they are social network invites.   You take what you can thought.   It is surprising watching how people found your site and what they are reading.   I recommend checking your web stat software regulary.

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.


Have You Replied To Your Commenters Today?
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.

They (don’t ask me who “they” are) say that to grow a blog you need to create a social environment around your blog.  This theoretically will make people want to come back and read your blog again and again.

I’m not going to discredit this theory, but at the same time it’s not the complete picture anymore then saying Myspace is one of the greatest web sites in the world because of the traffic it generates.   Beyond social aspects you also need good content.   Not all of us are good content providers, heck most of you probably hare my stuff.   That’s fine, no one is forcing to read it.   However commenting is part of the equation.

Every time someone leaves a comment on one of my blogs I do my best to reply within twenty four hours.   This shows that someone is reading their comments and takes an interest in them.   I take an interest in each and everyone of my readers, though some of them don’t care enough about me to actually leave a comment.

So have you left or replied to a comment today?

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.


Rebloggers - Why Are There So Many of Them?
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.

I don’t reblog very often.  When I do it’s mostly because it’s something that really interests me.    However even sites like Gizmodo or Lifehacker will take stories found somewhere else and write another article about it.  This in and off itself isn’t much of an issue.

The issue lies in the fact that Lifehacker wrote about someone else’s article, in turn someone else writes about the Lifehacker article, then another person writes about that article.   Instead of original thought or words there are huge amounts of people that are regurgitating information and creating a buzz.   The problem lies in the fact that the original author often times do not get credit, the credit goes to the large sites.   This is a great misfortune since the only way to find out where the true information comes from is by chasing link through link.    That is if the chain of attribution is intact during the whole line along the way.

If you are a reblogger, please write something original.   I would say write something original most of the time.  Put your words and voice into someone else’s story, but also tell one of your own.

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.


The Crossposting God Series Part 8 - Using A Lifestream to Keep Track of Your Crossposts
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

In part 8 I was going to write about crossposting to blogger, but that’s been delayed for the time being.  I’ll get back to that subject as soon as I get a chance.   Let’s move onto monitoring your crossposting.

Some people may have noticed that on my lifestream there seem to be duplicate posts.   This is because I’ve been working on adding all the RSS feeds from all the services in one trackable lifestream.   The benefits are that you can see and track how long information takes to get from one site to the next.   This also allows you to see where your crossposting is failing.   For example I’m noticing that my posts going to pownce are not getting through so when I get a chance I’ll look into what is actually causing that.

Lifestreaming all of our sites into one endpoint site that you can control and maintain allows all the little maintance to happy at a single glance.   We all know that crossposting is usually best effort delivery.  Not everything shows up in all the sites, but that happens because your not actively maintaining those sites and sometimes things just go wrong.

By having a single stream of all of your sites you are not bogged looking at RSS items for every site all together.  If I put all my feed items in google reader then it would take me an hour each day to get through all of them.  Having a quick glance allows the information to be singled out in a daily quick view.

Currently I’m using the wordpress lifestream plugin to handle my lifestream page.  It gives me the benefit of having a daily summary post generated automatically.  This allows me to have a permanent archive of all of my daily archives that I can go back search and vault away in my own life vaulting fashion.

Life is good.  Maintaining and monitoring in a single glance - that’s great.

Previous Entries in The Crossposting God Series:

The Crossposting God Series Part 1 - The Introduction

The Crossposting God Series Part 2 - Vox

The Crossposting God Series Part 3 - Live Journal and Derivative Sites

The Crossposting God Series Part 4 - Entry, Distribution, and End Points

The Crossposting God Series Part 5 - Myspace

The Crossposting God Series Part 6 - RSS Feeds to Crosspost

The Crossposting God Series Part 7 - Where Can You Post By E-Mail?


Sharing Information - Who To Share It With
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

First and foremost I don’t believe there is such a thing as sharing too much information.    That being said I want to control what I share, I also want to be aware of what is being seen, searched, and digested.   I will happily write about anything and everything in my life, even to the annoyance of friends, family, and of course readers who have to put up with my inanity.

I dislike however background checks, interview questions that deal with your personal life outside of work, and assumptions based on the findings of those two things.   What I do outside of work as long as it’s not illegal is none of our business.   It is my life and if it has no bearing on our company or business sector, then buzz of.  If you are so concerned about it subscribe to my RSS feed, I’m sure something on that subject will eventually arise.

During background checks I’ve been ask who my neighbors are.  I don’t know I’m not the neighborly type.  I don’t hang outside with a beer and play the “get to the know the neighbors routine” - just because they live in a geographic location adjacent to me doesn’t mean I want to know or hang out with them.  I’m a picky person on who I waste me time.   The ones that I do waste time with have some degree of amusement or I gain something from it.   My neighbors are not these people.  The simple answer is that maybe if I got to know them they would be.   That’s the rub and catch-22 now isn’t it.

The reason I’m writing about this is the fact I was talking about a background check with someone via e-mail the other day and she said that I shouldn’t worry about it, that her life is more interesting then mine.  She may be right.   That’s the not the point, I’m pretty in control and aware of what I write online, how I share, and how it’s reused.   Check out my lifestream page for m activities pulled and duplicated from many different services.   I spread my dataphonic seed across the blogosphere.

I’m aware and to an extent I’m in control.  It’s when information is forced from me in which I take issue with and will clam up.


New Lifestreaming Plugin I’m Using.
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Some people may notice that on my lifestream page it has a new look and feel, it also has a whole lot more stuff in it.   I’ve transitioned to a new lifestreaming plugin, previously I was using the “Simple Life” plugin.   The new plugin is is called “Lifestream“.  It allows me to put in more RSS feeds then I was previously able to with “Simple Life”, it also performs a daily digest post (which has allowed me to stop using the twitter plugin I used to use to pull in my digest of tweets).   There is one bug with the digest posting in the fact that it does a double post.

For creeva.com this is easy to fix.  I just go in each morning and remove the duplicate post.   However the people feeling the sting are the ones that I crosspost to.   There is absolutely no way I’m going to go everywhere my data replicates and track down and clean out the duplicate posts.  I have been in contact with the plugin author and he is aware of the issue.   He did some massive updating last night, let’s hope this got corrected.  I was also kind enough to hide these daily posts from the front page of the blog.   I didn’t want to make it seem that all I did was do daily updates of myself.  I’m not that vane to broadcast on the front page of my blog.   There is a link at the bottom of my lifestream to direct you to my lifestream archive.

The other thing to notice is the multitude of items.   It makes me look like an internet posting maniac.  Ok I am an Internet posting maniac, but not as much as my lifestream shows.  I thought it apt to try to get information on where my stuff is being posted and pull in the RSS feeds from here.  This will allow readers to see everywhere I crosspost to how frequently they are updated.

We’ll see if this is the magic bullet for my life vaulting.


My Parents and the Sex Talk
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

The sex talk, it’s something teenagers dread and so do parents.   I think I was a pre-teen the first time my parents tried to broach the subject.    I had already been aware from enough TV shows were a parent attempted to have a sex talk with their child that it was not a good thing.   I avoided it like the plague, just not wanting to deal with it.

The first time my parents were watching the show Dallas and we’re all aware how much sex is shown non explicitly on prime time soap operas.    My parents were discussing and wondering if I understood what was happening and if it would effect me.   Now I’m not going to say I understood completely, but I knew enough to understand where this conversation was headed and I didn’t want any of it.   I replied that they were just going to bed and getting ready to fall asleep.   That was the first time I avoided this conversation.

It was a tight end-run in sixth grade when I scored the highest in class on a sex education test.   Actually it was more a genetics test, but I got both the extra credit question correct, plus 100% on the test - this brought my score to 106%, the highest out of the whole 100 students in the sixth grade.

Over the following years I mastered avoidance of the subject, until the week before I was going to leave for college.   My mother sat me down and started to explain sex to me, at this point in time why bother.  I realized for some reason my avoidance tactics were not going to work this time.   I told my mother point blank, “I don’t want to talk about this, I lost my virginity three years ago and I don’t think there is anything you can tell me.”   That shut her up, she mulled around and I went back to my day of packing.

Now I have ot start planning down the road how I’m going to talk to my kid about sex and when.   I understand the avoidance tactics so they won’t be able to pull that one.   Of course if it was only my decision I would let them learn the same way I did, school gossip, school education, and practicing it themselves.   Sadly I’ve already been told it isn’t going to work out that way.


Drafts I Don’t Need No Stinking Drafts
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

I’ve found that I don’t work well with draft posts.   I stare and stare at them and can’t get the effort to actually finish the post.   So if I do a draft it just stares at me, mocking me, wondering why I can’t finish it.   I punish myself and beat myself up over it.

Recently I’ve worked around this by writing weeks in advance.  If something timely comes in tat I want to write about, that doesn’t stop from writing about it then.  I do know that I have future posts waiting in the wings that will be automatically published.   By doing this it forces me to focus on the writing at the time, instead of coming up with an idea nd pushing it off to a later a date.

Can you work with drafts?

If so how do you stay and clean out those drafts regularly?


Original From: Drafts I Don’t Need No Stinking Drafts</p>

Is There a Strong Future For Community Bands?
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

I’ve done the community band circuit for a year now and I’ve played with two community bands.  The one thing I have noticed is that the bands don’t really seem to be growing.  When they do grow it’s usually by an older member decides to join in the band.  The youth market seems to be completely disenfranchised.   I can understand part of that, though I declined to the join the VCMA when it was first formed due to not liking the director.   It wasn’t because I didn’t want to play, I still had the yearly Vermilion Alumni Band to play in, then I moved to Oregon.   While there I hardly ever pulled out my trumpet and when I did it was just for a half hour stint every few months.   My lips didn’t have the range or stamina they once did.   After blowing out my lip the last couple years at Alumni after moving back to Ohio, I decided I need to bring more regular playing in my life.  This led me to community band.  Since I am young(er) I have a different perspective on the band.

The first thing is that the music (at least over the summer) is extremely heavily weighted to music written before I was born.   If we play anything done after I was born it was an arrangement of a pre-existing piece.  I hear the director say things like, “we’ll play this piece because everyone will know it”.   Most of the time this is said, I neither know it, nor do I recognize the melody.  I feel attached and not a part of something I can recognize.  This is not to say that I think the old music should be ignored, no matter how much I dislike traditional marches.  I think we should play a wider variety of music that encompasses all eras.  Young people that really aren’t in to band music should have something that is recognizable to them and not just something that there parents kind of remember or their grandparents danced to on their first date.    There needs to be a mixture.   A mixture that should appeal to all those involved.

Rules I would follow to achieve this if I was choosing the music:

1.  Choose at least one movie/television theme song- preferably something recognizable to all ages.   While we are playing Moonriver in the VCMA and I adore, it is not something that the majority of under-forty crowd would recognize.  I think you would have to go to the over fifty crowd to truly appreciate and remember it.  My wife said she would forever be in love and be inspired to work harder at learning an instrument if she hears The Muppet Show Theme Song.  My personal favorite is video game theme music, something as traditional as The Legend of Zelda Theme Song or a number from the Final Fantasy series.   There is a national company that tours and just does live concerts on video game music, it sells out pretty quickly.  These types of concerts have a great deal of appeal to the under forty crowd and that should be taken into consideration.

Some TV themes I would like to hear:

  • Batman the Animated Series Theme
  • The Muppet Show Theme
  • The A-Team Theme
  • The Adam’s Family
  • The Star Trek Theme
  • Farscape Theme
  • Benny Hill Theme
  • Monty Python’s Circus Theme
  • Futurama Theme
  • The Incredible Hulk Theme
  • Inspector Gadget Theme
  • Macgyver Theme
  • Mission Impossible Theme
  • Quantum Leap Theme
  • Bonanza Theme
  • Scooby Doo Theme
  • Twilight Zone Theme
  • X-Files

Movie Themes I would like to hear:

  • Anything by John Williams
  • Anything by James Horner
  • Harry Potter
  • Anything large movie made in the last 20 years.

2.  Choose at least one pop arrangement - the VCMA did the Beatles and this would fit into this category.  The real problem with pop music is that so little of it actually sounds good for a concert band.   The fifties and sixties popular songs actually sound the best, though there are a few later pieces that sound quite good also.

3.  Choose one classical piece that easily recognized, so far in neither of my community bands have we tackled any classical music.  We have done some “traditional” pieces, but nothing classical.   Where is the Bach, Beethoven, or Chopin?  There is an abundance of this that has been arranged for concert bands, but the bands I belong to seem to overlook anything pre 1880 and post 1960.  Christmas music doesn’t really fall under “classical”

Out of these 3 areas community bands should be able to play one piece from each of these genre’s through out there year of performing.  I’m not saying it has to follow that one of each of these pieces get played every concert, but out the forty or so pieces I have played in both bands, they should be able to accommodate one of each of these in their play rotation.

There are other rules I would follow also.

4.  No more then 20 percent of your music can come from any decade.  If it was all arranged in the eighties, that’s fine but the melodies and original music was composed according to this guideline.   I’m not going to pick on arrangers for doing a modern arrangement of In the Mood, its swing era song.   With this rule you could also still fit in easily a whole concert and still have music written from before I was born.

5.  No more then 40% from any single genre.  Whether this is marches, swing, classical, theme music, etc., etc. - variety makes more people take notice unless you’re doing a theme concert.

6. Theme concerts (usually X-mas concerts for community bands) - In a theme concert you should play a maximum of 80% of the music that follows the theme.   One or two pieces should be reserved for something unexpected and interesting that doesn’t fit the norm of a particular theme.  Whether this is a Christmas march or a summer playing of Sleigh Ride, the unexpected brings peoples attention by breaking monotony.

7.  While conductors normally choose the music in most circumstances, there should be one or two pieces chosen by the band members themselves to work through and play.   These people are there to have fun, play something they really want to play.

8.  Encourage your members to compose or arrange something for your band to play.  This makes the music all their own and gives your band something special.

That covers my notes from music selection.   So how do you attract new members?   Other then people moving into the community or the rare person finding out about you and showing up, there is little in the means of growth.  Community bands are competing with the Internet, Social Networking, video games, hanging out with friends, going to the bar, or clubbing.   Having lived through my twenties already most of these are more fun at that age then community band.  You need to hook members while they are still young.

I’ve always played for the love of playing.  I really started when I was a sophomore in high school, by my junior year you couldn’t keep me from auditioning or volunteering to play for whatever group was available.  This alone helped me grow into a much better musician.  I used to be able to transpose music from the key of C or the Key of F in my head automatically and play along from that sheet music.   My range and stamina were much better then they are still today.   My technique today is better in a lot of ways, but I feel I was a better player in a larger scope back then.  That was after only a year of playing back then, I have some of that memory still in my head and I’m old enough to have gained wisdom.  My knowledge should have grown.   After my single year of college I stopped playing with any group outside of Alumni band.  It wasn’t out of disinterest as much as effort.   If I didn’t love playing I wouldn’t stay with the community band, there is no one in my peer group and for a large part of it it’s not really “fun”, at least not in the sense it was fun back when I was in high school.

Most players fall off because they are not engaged early enough into the community band cycle.  To give an example what non engagement with playing can do, for alumni band out of the 160 of us that went through 3 years together, only 5 showed up last year to Alumni Band, only two of us regularly play now.  That’s hovering around a 1-2% rate of a player likely to stick with their instrument after school form my personal experience.  Almost all community bands explicitly state that will accept members that are in high school with their band director’s permission.   Now while I would have gladly played with a community band when I was in high school I was not going to go up and have Mr. Henry sign a permission slip or call to ask if I could join the band.   This is a turn off.   What should happen is that community band should be actively engaging the high school and middle school band directors for members every single year.  If community band members are worried about middle schoolers, then they should make a junior community band where the regular band can show up if they so choose and the younger players can show up.

Younger players are looking for people to emulate, to try to sound like.  Having mentoring by accepting is only going to raise their skill level.   Players that show up are not getting school credit, they are not getting paid, and so why have any stipulations.   If the music is too hard for them they are not going to stick around.   If they don’t really enjoy playing and are only in the school for socialization or the fun from that they are not going to show up.   If community bands are there to make its own members better, then the younger the better, they can make the band as a whole be better.  The older players get the benefit of mild teaching and understanding of what they are doing and the younger players gain a mentor.

Once the younger players are hooked they are more likely to stick with music, since they then have a place to play after they graduate.  They will be informed about the community band and will be regular members.   If they are anything like I was they will find a great relief about having some place to play over the summer.  Older members may even make a little bit of side cash by giving lessons, even if they aren’t as good as a true instructor they could still impart wisdom and teach a student to the edge of their abilities, at which point the student could move onto someone else. My high school self could play rings around my present self. I think community bands under estimate the skill levels of these players.

Is there a strong future for community bands?  It depends.   The older generations need to realize that playing in band is not “cool” at least not until your in your thirties, and I still get the occasional snicker about it - I just don’t care.  A community band is considered a tired thing by the younger generation who would prefer most of their live music to contain electric guitars.  The ability to evolve and bring new members in is essential for most community bands to last another twenty years.   Showing players it can be fun by playing music they can identify with and accepting them as peers within their membership.  You could still have a stipulation where the younger members couldn’t vote in elections, I’m sure you wouldn’t want your board run by four sixteen year olds - but having one of them in a position with a voice may give you greater possibilities then someone like me who is already twice that age and out of touch.

I’ve gotten the VCMA website in a stable place.  I can quickly edit it and make changes, so before any radical redesigns I’m now working on moving them over to Google Apps for internal paperwork.  I plan in the near future signing the VCMA up for a Myspace page and a Facebook account.  People in the younger peer group will be able to see it as an organization to identify with.  The older members need to realize why they started a community to begin with, which includes - hanging out with friends, playing for people, becoming better musicians, and having fun.  None of what I have written breaks any of that.  It may take them a little bit out of their comfort zone, but the mantra of business these days is to embrace and extend.   Growth happens once some of these things are followed.  If the bands I play with don’t start embracing this I’m not sure they will last another twenty years and things will get shaky in another ten.   Growth has not continued, but rather it has stagnated, unless there is something done to counter-act this, the downward trend will continue.

In my band I’m still considered just a kid, though my father had his fourth child by my age.   I’m too young to them to be anything but a kid so what do I know.  I’m too old for any of the young people to truly listen to me, plus I’m over thirty so I’m to young to be trusted.  If we go by Cory Doctorow’s book Little Brother - they don’t trust anyone over 22.   Somehow I’m stuck in the adult version of the tweens.  So no one will truly pay attention, but that doesn’t mean this shouldn’t be said.

Picture from here


I Admit it, I Liked Archie Comics Growing Up
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

I know that I’m a boy and I should have liked high action comics with super heroes and big explosions.  Somehow until I was in my teenage years officially I liked Archie Comics the best.  I’m not going not say that I identified with Archie or anyone else in the comics, I just found them wildly entertaining.  I literally had hundreds of Archie comics (they were dirt cheap at the flea market compared to the action comics that cost 5 times as much).  I had a ton of the digests and “double digests”, though I can say when I see the occasional double digest these days at the super market aisle I am chagrined that it is the size of the old single digest.   What is the single digest a one sheet strip now?   I also can not tell you the last time I saw and actual Archie comic sold in a new comic books rack, though I don’t look that closely these days.

The age old debate that is probably older then Ginger versus Maryanne is Betty or Veronica.  I’m a Betty fan all the way (and Maryanne also).   The down home girl is the one for me in these scenarios.  In 1990 Archie was still still trying to decide between Betty and Veronica in a made for TV movie  Archie: To Riverdale and Back Again that takes place fifteen years after high school.  I can say even though I was fourteen when it came out I was excited and watched it when it came out.  I video taped it and watched it again and again.   This reminds me I need to hunt down a copy of that now.

Enjoy a couple clips from the TV movie:






My favorite character of course was Jughead - Nuff Said.


Do You Know How Your Significant Other Will Vote?
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

I can say that so far as I know, my wife agrees with me in this election on my reasons for non-voting.  However no matter how we discuss the elections there is no real way to know what the other person is truly thinking.   In the 2004 election we debated and discussed the election to death and thought that we both knew who the other wanted in the election.

In that November we were watching the election results and talking about our candidate, but as the results came in one of us was happy the other upset.  What??????  How can this be?  We were watching OUR CANDIDATE.  The candidate we had BOTH been behind the previous months.   The election didn’t go the way at least one of us wanted.   Miscommunication?  Maybe.   Unless you have a lawn sign out though that your spouse put up and you agree with, don’t take it for granted, it’s all in the wordings and in between the lines.  Sometimes you miss the forest for the trees.


Twitter Updates for 2008-08-13
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

  • Creative Commons Attribution: ….. Read More Tags: flickr, photos, Picture, Video Related posts Web Wande.. http://tinyurl.com/5vtv6x #

Creative Commons Attribution
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

I quite a few of my posts I use photos from Flickr that were uploaded with the Creative Common’s license.  Every single time I do I add the “Picture from here” link back to the original image.  This is important.   I release most of the stuff I write, the video I take, and the photos I upload with a Creative Common’s license.   I believe as long as I get the attribution, this is all I need.

Creative Commons is important, it’s the closest thing to getting objects into the true public domain as we can without proper copyright reform.  I just thought I would share with all of you why the “picture from here” is listed under alot of my images.


Netflix Streaming…..I Love You
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

A couple years ago we removed cable from our house.  We didn’t watch anything really besides Law & Order and it’s spin offs.   Law & Order was not worth $80.00 per month.  While we’ve gotten our TV fix from either Netflix or legal streaming from teh major networks something was missing, Law & Order.   We were both always annoyed that Law & Order was not on NBC’s website, but endured.  We could have received Law & Order disc by disc from Netflix, but that would have been a pain in the butt.

Recently we discovered that Law & Order is available for streaming from Netflix’s site , we are on season 4 of SVU - thank you Netflix for bringing back the normal TV fare to our lives.