Category: Memes

  • I use words good.

    According to the Commonly Confused Words test…

    Advanced

    You scored 100% Beginner, 93% Intermediate, 100% Advanced, and 66% Expert!

    You have an extremly good understanding of beginner, intermediate, and advanced level commonly confused English words, getting at least 75% of each of these three levels’s questions correct. This is an exceptional score. Remember, these are commonly confused English words, which means most people don’t use them properly. You got an extremely respectable score.

    Not bad, all things considered. Go ahead and try your hand at it, won’t you?

    (Got this one from Lisa.)

  • You remember Led Zep, right?

    According to a little quiz I found at J-mo’s:

    You Are

    Tangerine

    You are a beautiful person, in a wistful kind of way. If you could, you would spend all your time daydreaming and writing poetry. You are a tragic beauty.

    You are sensitive and caring, and you don’t take insults well. You don’t smile much, but when you do, you really mean it.

    People like to be around you because you are a calming influence. You have an appreciation for all things beautiful, and you probably have some potted plants. You also most likely own a cat.

    You like Sundays and hot tea. You will spend your entire life yearning for quiet beauty, which is a rarity in this world, so you read a lot.

    Everyone you know thinks you’re “nice.”

    Take the Which Led Zeppelin Song Are You? Quiz

    It figures that I’d get one of the songs I’m not all that excited about, huh? Jen at least got When The Levee Breaks…

  • For the graphing-calculator set, mostly.

    Dawn got a 79 on this thing. Me? I didn’t score so highly


    I am nerdier than 70% of all people. Are you nerdier? Click here to find out!
    I got a whopping 70 out of 100. Mind you, there were a lot of questions pertaining to graphing calculators and elements of the periodic table rather than just a bunch of computer-geek stuff. I guess I shouldn’t feel too bad about it.

    The idea was to score as high as possible, right?

  • 2004, sentence by sentence.

    As per Glimpse of a Girl, taking the first sentence of the first post of each month and glomming them into a single paragraph. So here goes:

    I woke up this morning with the alarm. Well, other than the parts early in the morning I only vaguely remember, the day was taken up mostly with trying out the Return Of The King game on the PC, and having Geoffrey over for chit-chat of the idle and not-so-idle variety. Why haven’t I been updating lately? Went to lunch at Chang’s Mongolian Grill with Wendi, and the title of this entry is what the fortune cookie I received had to say. Saturday, other than some Diablo II before I left the house, consisted almost entirely of spending time over at the kids’ place. Via The Average Bear, I give you The Day After Tomorrow In Fifteen Minutes. Marlon Brando, dead at age 80. In lieu of content, linkage. Under no circumstances whatsoever should I be drinking iced tea after 10pm on a work night. Mount St. Helens is, literally, just blowing off some steam. I had an idea. So I sort of blew it on my original plan to post each and every day in November.

    (For you nitpickers out there who fact-check this, yes, I know I deliberately failed to count the PPF as my first post of the year, even though it technically is. All I have to say to that is… well, bite me. If you’re bothered by the fact that some of those sentences actually aren’t, too bad. And yes, I selectively included links instead of faithfully reproducing the original content code for code. And, ah, in one case I deliberately skipped over a one-word sentence fragment in favor of something with actual content. So there.)

  • 2004 In Review: A Questionnaire

    Lil’ did it, so of course like the geeky fanboy I am, I had to do it…

    1. What did you do in 2004 that you’d never done before?
    Moved to a home that didn’t have my children in it.

    2. Did you keep your New Year’s resolutions, and will you make more for next year?
    Yes, I kept my desktops at 1280×1024 all year. Next year I might try for 1600×1200. (That there’s geek humor, folks.)

    3. Did anyone close to you give birth?
    No, but just you wait ‘til next year…

    4. Did anyone close to you die?
    My father-in-law passed on at the start of the year. He’d lived several years past when all the experts expected him to, and enjoyed what he could of it. That’s all anyone can do, I think.

    5. What countries did you visit?
    A jet-setting world traveller I am not.

    6. What would you like to have in 2005 that you lacked in 2004?
    Bookshelves and other similar furniture. No, really. I’m still living out of my packing boxes, for the most part.

    7. What dates from 2004 will remain etched upon your memory, and why?
    Hah! Clearly you have no idea how lousy my memory really is…

    8. What was your biggest achievement of the year?
    It’s a toss-up: Learning to handle life on my own -or- recognizing that a new relationship wasn’t going to work out, no matter how enjoyable it might have been until it eventually imploded, and backing away from it as gracefully as possible.

    9. What was your biggest failure?
    (I’m so glad I didn’t do this meme in 2003…) I don’t think I had any truly big failures this year. Instead I failed in myriad small ways. Note that I didn’t say “inconsequential,” because several of those small failures caused major problems. If I have to put one thing down here, I’d say that I’ve failed to improve my communication and scheduling skills the way I set out to do.

    10. Did you suffer illness or injury?
    Thankfully, no major physical suffering took place this year.

    11. What was the best thing you bought?
    My Neuros. No doubt about it.

    12. Whose behavior merited celebration?
    All of my friends and loved ones should be celebrated, but without a doubt the very top prize goes to my children, Alex and Erica. They weathered a monumental life change, not without some stress and calamity, but definitely with open minds and compassion… in addition to huge amounts of loving support for both of their parents. I have, without a doubt, the very best children any parent could ever hope for.

    13. Whose behavior made you appalled and depressed?
    Besides my own, you mean? There have been a couple of incidents through the year, but I’m not going to air them here. I don’t see the point in showing off other people’s dirty laundry, do you?

    14. Where did most of your money go?
    Living expenses, a bit of travel expenses and the occasional bits of geeky goodness.

    15. What did you get really, really, really excited about?
    Something that turned into a near-total disaster, actually. I don’t think I’ve been “really, really, really excited” since.

    16. What song will always remind you of 2004?
    Any number of anime theme songs, and possibly Duran Duran’s “Sunrise.” And probably a bunch of others, when you get right down to it.

    17. Compared to this time last year, you are:
    All kinds of happier and less stressed. Last fall/winter was not a very good time.

    18. What do you wish you’d done more of?
    I’m such a naughty boy, I’m going to say that it’s not so much “what” as “who,” but I’m not going to name names…

    19. What do you wish you’d done less of?
    Hiding. Looking away. Keeping quiet. Giving in to inertia.

    20. How will you be spending Christmas?
    With my family, opening presents and watching shows and eating and all that fun stuff.

    22. Did you fall in love in 2004?
    Yes. See #8, part two…

    23. How many one-night stands?
    None, actually.

    24. What was your favorite TV program?
    Fullmetal Alchemist. The subtitled version, not the dubbed version airing on Cartoon Network, though if you can’t find one you must see the other. It is without a doubt the best anime series of the new millenium. I’m not kidding. It also holds up against 99% of non-animated fare. Seriously.

    25. Do you hate anyone now that you didn’t hate this time last year?
    Hate takes way too much energy… and requires maintaining negativity that I just don’t need in my psyche.

    26. What was the best book you read?
    In terms of new books, I’d say it’s “Talon of the Silver Hawk,” by Raymond E. Feist. Yes, I know I didn’t review it here. I suck. Anyway, it’s the start of a new series set some time after the Serpentwar books, and I liked it quite a lot.

    27. What was your greatest musical discovery?
    I’m now addicted to Asian pop music. Well, not all of it. Some artists and songs annoy me to no end, but others I can’t get enough of. I’m that way with most genres, really… I don’t get into a style or sound, but if I find an artist I like I’ll tend to enjoy almost everything by that artist.

    28. What did you want and get?
    Have I mentioned my Neuros? Yes? Good. I also got a very nice stereo receiver, a big television (mostly to watch movies, CSI and anime on), and a new video card for my computer. And my new geekphone! I almost forgot about that!

    29. What did you want and not get?
    Bookshelves. A decent raise and/or Christmas bonus. And, er, other things I won’t go into here…

    30. What was your favorite film of this year?
    The Incredibles. Wow, what a movie.

    31. What did you do on your birthday, and how old were you?
    Why don’t I just give you the link, eh? This is a journal, after all.

    32. What one thing would have made your year immeasurably more satisfying?
    I don’t know. When you get right down to it, I don’t think pondering or dwelling on this would be a healthy use of my mental resources, do you?

    33. How would you describe your personal fashion concept in 2004?
    I’ve always joked that I’m “fashion mute,” which is a play on the idea that people can make a “fashion statement.”

    34. What kept you sane?
    The usual suspects… music, my children, my friends and beloveds. Not necessarily in that order, of course.

    35. Which celebrity/public figure did you fancy the most?
    Define “fancy.” Because, you know, if you mean what I think you mean… I didn’t.

    36. What political issue stirred you the most?
    Without getting too political here, I’ll say that I’m appalled at the direction our country’s going and also at the fact that my chosen home state elected to write discrimination into its Constitution.

    37. Who did you miss?
    Oddly enough, I miss my paternal grandparents. I don’t think I could explain exactly why, though.

    38. Who was the best new person you met?
    I haven’t actually met very many new people. Bah. Mark that down as a goal for 2005, eh?

    39. Tell us a valuable life lesson you learned in 2004:
    Oh, no. I haven’t learned anything big, new and profound. I’ve been trying to implement what I’ve learned previously, though… albeit with mixed results.

  • I bet you don’t…

    Thanks, Mari, for finding this one.

    Name a CD you own that none of your friends own: The soundtrack to Until The End Of The World. And if one of them actually does have it and hasn’t owned up, I can top it with the soundtrack to When The Wind Blows. Or any number of obscure imported Pet Shop Boys singles, for that matter.

    Name a book you own that none of your friends own: “Star Rigger’s Way,” by Jeffrey Carver. It’s a so-so bit of skiffy. (I didn’t promise you a good book…)

    Name a movie you own on DVD/VHS/whatever that none of your friends own: “Dirty Pair: Project Eden,” an unsubtitled and undubbed videotape copy. I know someone else who has one, but they’re not counted as one of my friends. So there. (He’s a nice guy, we’re just not buddies, you know?)

    Name a place that you have visited that none of your friends has: Lewis & Clark Caverns, in Montana. Hell, I bet there are several places along that road trip back in ‘83 that none of my friends has visited. Devil’s Tower, Wyoming, anyone?

    Name something you’ve eaten that none of your friends has: Uh… my special pasta-and-cheese dish? *shrug* I’m not an adventuresome eater, folks.

    Name something you’ve done that none of your friends has: Roadtripped from Tacoma to L.A. to attend back-to-back Genesis concerts, the first at the Tacoma Dome and the other at Dodger Stadium three days later. That, folks, was cool.