Month: April 2005

  • Music doesn’t actually taste that good.

    Hey, it beats reading more about my crappy work situation… (For the record? I’m beyond sick and tired of “flat-screen envy.”)

    Your Taste in Music:

    Progressive Rock: Highest Influence
    80’s Alternative: Low Influence
    80’s Pop: Low Influence
    Classic Rock: Low Influence
    Dance: Low Influence

    Thank you, Lisa.

  • Unusual Commuting Day

    It’s not every day that one catches the 8:07 #9 Broadway bus downtown, twice in the same day.

    This odd little musing is brought to you by the crashing of this very webserver, due to my completely failing to learn one particular lesson from the aforementioned “last year’s debacle.”

    That’s right! Not only did I arrive at work at 9am, I also arrived there at 9pm. This time it was to set the webserver to boot with a uniprocessor kernel instead of the SMP kernel, which was the previous default, and which the hardware in question is dangerously unstable on. Ugh.

    While I was there I fixed a few other things, then came home. Again.

    Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to finish my long-delayed dinner and go to sleep. Bah.

  • It wasn’t so bad in the middle.

    Walking in the door, almost no sleep under my belt (for various reasons), I was immediately thrust into a tricky and delicate hard-drive swap operation as part of a swap of studios for Charlie and Kisn (AM). That came off remarkably well, but it did involve three very intense hours of work.

    The middle part of my workday wasn’t so bad.

    Almost at quitting time for the day, most of everything went dark. Yep, the UPS for the main part of the building went kerblooey. Again. (Long-time readers may be familiar with the troubles that damned piece of equipment has given us. Yes, indeed, I hate it a lot.) Cue a solid hour of running around, desperately trying to get things working again in the shortest possible time.

    Luckily, I learned a lot of lessons from last year’s debacle. For one thing, I’ve upgraded a lot of the Linux servers so that services generally start on their own. I also know exactly which systems are troublesome, and how to get them back to life again. However, one new problem reared its head: Our main file-and-print server wouldn’t let most folks sign on until I thought to run a ‘DSREPAIR’ routine. Ugh.

    I’ve already accumulated enough stress to last me the entire week. Powers that be, if you’re reading this, please take note. Thank you.

  • Adobe and Macromedia Merger, Translated

    Posted to Pool by its lovely lifeguard, the following translation of the Adobe/Macromedia merger FAQ

    Translation from PR-speak

  • Gaming, sleeping, gaming, eating, and more gaming.

    A milestone was reached last night, after many months of playing City of Heroes: With Dawn’s help, my main character (a sword-slinging scrapper who goes by the improbable name of Woods Cutter) reached Level 26, which allowed him to get the Stamina power. (Yes, I know you can get it earlier than that. My build required that I get some other powers first.)

    Why is this so special? Well, Stamina helps you recover Endurance faster… and (almost) everything you do costs Endurance. Once I slot up Endurance a bit, I’ll be able to fight more effectively and keep my defensive toggle powers running more reliably. This is a very good thing.

    I celebrated this achievement by getting my butt handed to me by a very nasty boss. Ah well. Them’s the breaks.

    Today, I rolled out of bed around ten o’clock, and for some reason decided that trying out my recently-purchased (go ahead and laugh) Civilization III would be a good idea. One install and two patches later, I was in.

    Three hours after that, my phone rang. Oops, I’d totally lost track of time, and there was a get-together at Mari and Doug’s to go to. So a quick shower and bit of packing later, off we all went. And by “we all” I mean Lilith and Geoffrey and the demonspawn and the boyfriend of one of the demonspawn. (Yes, it was quite a carload trekking west today.)

    We had a lot of fun, including watching of DVDs, dining out on Chinese food, and playing Carcassonne. Yes, I’ve suckered even more people into playing my new favorite non-electronic game. Today we tried out the “Traders and Builders” expansion that Mari gifted me with a few weeks ago, and once we got the hang of it we got quite a kick out of the game. Geoffrey made a very good showing out of his first couple of games, while Mari absolutely obliterated us in our first go-around.

    Obliterated, I say. As in, there are 50 points on the score card, and the Meeple in your color indicates the score by position on that card. As you lap the score card, the general practice is to change the position of the Meeple to show how many laps he’s done. He starts out standing, then goes face down, then sort of sideways (“flying like Superman” is one phrase heard during that first game) and then… well, we decided that once Mari had done enough laps on the score card we just went ahead and stood her Meeple up again. Yes, that’s right: Mari racked up over 150 points in a single game. Nobody else even came close.

    In the future, I’m definitely seeing about finding some better way to keep score. Yes indeedy.

    Anyway, it was a fun afternoon and evening full of laughter, food, good-natured competition and all of that good stuff. Thanks to Mari and Doug for inviting everyone over!

  • Sorry, Charlie.

    (This entry is pieced together from things I’ve said in chats, private emails and comments to other websites, edited together with some new material and reworked phrasings. It is but one insider’s opinion, and should not be taken as gospel, let alone an informed view of how the business actually works. In other words, take all of this with as large a grain of salt as necessary.)

    You know the adage about how only a fool fights a multi-front war? We’re now fighting ourselves (on the FM and AM dials, no less) and at least two other FM signals in town, one of them rather well established.

    It leaves me shaking my head, wondering what the hell the Powers That Be were thinking. This is a questionable, if not just-plain-bad, idea and it’s being rolled out by several large companies nationwide in a great big hurry. Basically it’s a race to “establish” this new “anything-goes (as long as it’s all-hits)” format in every market in America, and whoever gets their signal flipped first, wins. Did I mention that every single one of these stations apparently must be named as if they were guys? Anthropomorphize much?

    Henceforth I’ll be referring to this as the “$GUY” format, where $GUY is a variable you can fill in with the likes of Charlie, Ted, Bob, George, Steve or any number of other options and you’ll probably find a station with that name somewhere in the country by year’s end. I’m not kidding.

    The format itself is strikingly, staggeringly uninteresting. It’s chart-topping hits from a wide time range. That, and only that. There’s no such thing as “deep cuts” (that is, partly-forgotten musical gems) in this format. So, music I got sick and tired of ages ago, on continual repeat? Thanks but no. I’d almost rather listen to the country station. (I said, “almost.” No offense, folks, it’s just not my cuppa.) Our CEO says, “It is not too strong a statement to say that each of these brands has already begun to electrify their respective cities.” Uh, yeah, the electrification here? It’s in the form of cattle prods, sir.

    I believe Charlie won’t remain automated. Major radio companies are putting a lot of weight, in a very big hurry, behind this “new format” (they’re seriously thinking of it in those terms, I kid you not, even though it’s what back-country small-town stations have been doing for decades). They’re going to pour money, and therefore talent, at this thing hand-over-fist. At least, that’s my take so far. Mind you, I just heard that there are stations that have been on this format for months and haven’t yet added DJs. One can appreciate the appeal for the Powers That Be of not having to pay jocks’ salaries. I have absolutely no idea how they’re going to make these stations stand out without personalities, but what do I know?

    So, the changeover. I heard about it at about 12:30pm yesterday, from my (local) boss. Mind you, I’d predicted it about three hours beforehand, based on bits and pieces I picked up over the last week, and the news that the sales managers responsible for KKSN-FM had been meeting with the GMs the previous night until 10pm. Various people obsoleted by the two station changes have been saying their goodbyes and cleaning up their stuff (physical and electronic) for the last 24 hours, and I expect a steady stream of “goodbye” emails for a few days yet to come. That part’s never fun, and after over a decade it still saddens me, every time. Maybe I’m just a SNAG at heart, after all.

    Hmm. Naaaah. I’m just a softie.

    In other news, Seattle’s seen its own format shakeup today. The station that formerly competed directly with KNDD “The End” has flipped to $GUY, thus ending a competition for the lead “classic alternative” (don’t get me started, just don’t) station in that town.

    They’re calling theirs Jack, eh? Oh, the comedic possibilities! Of course, they’ll “sell” the format change to clients as being a “bold move into a hot new format” instead of “giving up on fighting KNDD.” Heh. I love this business, I tell ya.

    Mind you, the spin from our side is equally insane… so, Entercom wants to win nationwide with the $GUY format, but when Infinity gets there first in Seattle it’s a “big win for Entercom,” solely based on the fact that The End no longer has a direct competitor? Riiiiight.

    Radio. Come for the illusion of glamour, stay for the regularly scheduled insanity.