Author: Karel Kerezman

  • Radical Bender’s Rogue Playlist

    What happens when the guy with the most extensive and varied music library I know of gets a wild hair? You get Radical Bender’s X-Men Playlist: Rogue. It’s chock-a-block full of surprisingly good tracks, considering that southern-ish rock isn’t among my favorite musical styles, and my blues exposure is somewhat limited to say the least. (Fear not, friends. There’s more than just that on offer. Take a look, take a listen.)

    The scary part, of course, is that I can’t look at a project like this without being quite tempted to try my hand at something similar… bah! Not that I’d use an X-Men character, of course, but still.

    Hmm.

  • Lovely morning so far…

    It was a fine, fine morning. I woke up, bathed, dressed in one of my nicer shirts, put on my overcoat, grabbed my umbrella and went for a walk. Along the way I stopped for breakfast (at Burgerville, if you must know). After a while, I turned around and came home.

    The fact that I walked, in the rain, to the Convention Center an entire week early has only marginally dimmed my overall mood.

    Make of that what you will.

  • Fell out of the habit, didn’t I?

    Goodness gracious, it’s been a while since I wrote anything substantial here, hasn’t it? I guess I fell out of the habit of writing. That’s not to say I lack at least one good excuse, but I really shouldn’t neglect this thing so damned shamelessly. It’s not that I’m worried about “my readership,” but more that the therapeutic value of the journal-writing itself is being lost through my quiet inactivity. Nevermind that the longer I put off writing, the more I forget to write about, thus rendering useless the concept of this site as a journal, an “aide-memoire” for future use.

    So, let’s recap events of the last nearly-a-month, shall we?

    During that first week, I accomplished quite a bit, albeit entirely along the lines of cutting ties with my former workplace. (I hasten to point out that in almost all respects, my former bosses and coworkers behaved with the utmost professionalism and courtesy, and operated within guidelines laid out by Sarbanes/Oxley protocols. My only complaint is with the amount of time it took to get full closure and retrieve all of my possessions.) I got a new number and phone (much like the old phone… this one’s a Treo 650, and I am almost wholly thrilled with it), I moved the six websites I’m responsible for (to Infinity Internet, who by-and-large have provided excellent service; the occasional downtimes have been due to not enough damned RAM, a problem scheduled to be resolved next Monday), and put my resumé together (with considerable help from The Imperial Princess of Cute, which is to say “all I did was provide the info, she did the heavy lifting”).

    Somewhere during all of this excitement, my dearest came down for a week-long visit. The ostensible reason was to do job-hunting prep, but it mainly ended up being a recovery period for us both. We were both way, way too damned stressed and depressed and what-not to function very well. I know I’m certainly feeling better about things now, even if I’m still thoroughly terrified about my job prospects. (I’m not a database admin, and I don’t have strong Microsoft-centric SysAdmin skills. Apparently that cuts my options way, way down. Argh.)

    So, apparently this is a time of change and growth for me. (“Oh, goody, another learning experience!”) All that remains is to land a job and see how I can stretch & improve myself in the process.

    Anything’s possible, right?

  • Interesting Things about March 8

    So, here’s the deal. It’s not a Google meme this time, but rather a Wikipedia meme. Cute, no?

    The Rules:
    1. Type in your birthday (minus the year) in the search bar at Wikipedia.org
    2. List three interesting facts, two births, and one death that happened on your birthday.

    Righto. Let’s see… “March 8” gives us such interesting tidbits as…

    Events:

    1782 – Gnadenhütten massacre: Almost 100 Native Americans in Gnadenhutten, Ohio had their skulls crushed with a mallet by Pennsylvanian militiamen in a mass murder.
    1911 – International Women’s Day is celebrated for the first time.
    1948 – The United States Supreme Court rules that religious instruction in public schools violated the Constitution.

    (I was tempted to go with all three of the massacres available, but, no.)

    Births:

    1918 – Alan Hale, Jr., American actor
    1969 – Andrea Parker, American actress, ballet dancer

    (The Skipper and Miss Parker. Go figure.)

    Death:

    1999 – Joe DiMaggio, baseball player

    (Thus answering the immortal question from that Simon And Garfunkel song, I suppose.)

  • Still here. Just not writing much yet.

    In between efforts to get my things (physical and virtual) from my former office, trying to get my mood back on an even keel, getting (and keeping) the new webserver running, gearing up for the job hunt and so forth, I simply haven’t had energy or willpower enough to write about what’s happened.

    Maybe that’s for the best. Anything I’d have written in the last couple of weeks would’ve come across as dreadfully maudlin.

    My goals as of now are simple, yet daunting: To find a job that pays comparably to the last one. (No choice, there. Child support + rent + other bills + eating = serious money.) To avoid slipping into a major depression. (If I fail this goal, I fail the other. It’s that simple.) I keep telling myself “I can do this,” and sometimes I even believe it.

    I’m not really built for serious life challenges, you know? But I can either mourn the life I had or get the hell on with finding out what the future holds. Again, it’s that simple. And when you get right down to it, I’m a simple kind of guy.

    Going to the office yesterday to get the last of my computer files, though, damned near broke me. Dammit.

  • Fun with RAM

    Twice in the last twelve hours I’ve called the (polite, efficient, helpful) Dedicated Hosting support techs at Infinity Internet (our new hosts!) to reboot this webserver. As near as I can tell, running six websites (no matter how low-traffic) and an email rig on 128 megabytes of RAM just isn’t going to cut it.

    I’ve tweaked some settings here and there to (hopefully) cut down on the chance of another server lock-up between now and Monday (which is the earliest I can talk to someone about upgrading the memory), but if you see my little family of websites go “poof” between now and then… well, now you’ll know why.

    Unless, of course, the server vapor-locks before you can read this. In which case you’ll be able to read all about it next week when I get this resolved…