Blogger Meetup

I went to the meetup yesterday, found a very interesting group of people. There were two govenatorial candidates, a liberal activist, several webdesigners, a gun nut, reporter, two librarians and one poor guy that got caught in the corner that we trapped in.
Basically, one of the Seven Day's reporters started a weblog called 802 Vermont, and started a list of Vermont blogs. The list is quite extensive, and the first time that she tried this, she only got three people to come. This time, there was nearly twenty five, all with various backgrounds and ages. I knew one person there, Philip Baruth, who taught at the Champlain Writer's conference when I went there. I was only there for about an hour, but people exchanged names and web addresses, and what their weblogs were about, what they used for hosting, complained about comment spammers and some other random things. One of attendees I found worked at Norwich University, where I go to school, which was a funny coincidence. Overall, a very fun group of people there. I was the youngest there.
Here's Cathy's writeup, (she organized this entire thingy): Nice ta meetcha. I even made it into a couple of photographs.

EDIT: Here's one of the pictures I made it into. Got several compliments for the shirt at the meetup:

Artist of the Month: Amos Lee

Let's see if my memory will allow me to continue with this on a monthly or semi-regular basis: I'd like to highlight various artists that I enjoy listening to, ones that fewer people have heard about, or know little about. So, this month, I'm going to recommend a new artist named Amos Lee. Lee has just released his first self titled Album, which has resulted in some good sucesses thus far.

He grew up in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and attended the University of South Carolina, where he became interested in music while he studied history. After he graduated, he returned to Philidelphia and taught elementary school. After a while, he left to pursue a career in music, releasing a self produced EP that did fairly well in the area. The real break came when grammy winner Norah Jones heard his music and asked him to open for her 2004 tour of America. Between 2004 and 2005, he recorded his debut album, which features Jones on two songs- Colors and Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight. Since that first tour, he has opened for two more musicians, Merle Haggard and Bob Dylan, which went over very well. One of his songs, Arms of A Woman, has been filmed as a music video, which can be seen on Yahoo's Launch. His official Website is
http://www.amoslee.com , which has some information about his CD, song lyrics, band and tour details.

Discography:


Amos Lee

1- Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight
2- Seen It All Before
3- Arms of A Woman
4- Give It Up
5- Dreamin'
6- Soul Suckers
7- Colors
8- Bottom of the Barrel
9- Black River
10- Love In The Lies
11- All My Friends

Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight EP
1- Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight
2- Jails And Bombs
3- Speed of the Sound of Lonliness

My Thoughts:
I first heard Amos Lee's song, Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight, on 104.7, the Point, the only good radio station in the area, mainly because they play a lot of music like this: new and upcoming, good stuff. It's a very catchy song, with a laidback beat, good vocals and lyrics. I try to keep paper on my at most times, and for once, I remembered the name of the artist enough to look into him on the internet. Later that night, I bought the song on iTunes, and it's quickly shot up onto my top 50 most played list. Later, when I was in Best Buy last week, I found a copy of his debut album for around $10. It's since proved to be a great album, with a number of great songs on it. Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight, Love In The Lies, Black River, All My Friends and Give It Up are my personal favorites on the album, but the entire thing as a whole is extremely listenable. A number of people have compared him to the male Norah Jones, and there are some similarities, not just from her role producing and appearing on a couple songs. Lee's music is a wonderful fusion of Jazz, Folk and Blues, coupled with a great hand at writing and singing. The songs are both simple, but have some weight to them. He just played up here in Vermont, at the Higher Ground, something that I'm still kicking myself for missing. I'm really hoping that he's going to return here, with a new CD. He's got a very promising future, and hopefully his future stuff will be up to the same level that his first album is at.

I took this from Sarah- Take your music list - put random on and write down the first line of the next 20 songs.. then leave it up to the people who read your LJ (if they can be bothered) to guess them. If not - just have 20 songs stuck in your head at once and implode. 1- Every day, every day with you, every letter, every way you do. 2- I ain’t no wide eyed rebel, Oh, but I ain’t no preacher’s son 3- The wind blew and her hair stood still 4- An address to the golden door, I was strumming on a stone again 5- Last night I dreamed, while I was walking that I died looking up... 6- Don't call me hippy cause the way that I look 7- Where can a sick man go, when he can't choke down the medicine, the old Doc knows... 8- Up and Down, puppy's hair, fleas and ticks jump everywhere... 9- I am driving, 85 and the kind of morning that lasts all afternoon... 10- Load up on guns, Bring your friends, It’s fun to lose, 11- It's 9 oclock on a saturday, the regular crowd shuffles in... 12- That Cuban Girl, that brought me low... 13- Live a life less ordinary, life a life extrordinary with me. 14- I am thinking it's a sign, 15- There was a decorated General with a heart of gold... 16- Fine, I understand, Okay with me, if that's the plan... 17- So long ago, I don't remember when 18- The evening was long, my guesses were true... 19- Waiting for the break of day 20- Lights go out in a carry safe, tides that I tried to swim against.

Excitement

"Dear Diary: Today, I was pompus and my sister went crazy. Today we were kidnapped by hill folk, never to be seen again. It was the best day ever."

I just got home to a phone message that was waiting for me. It was the Lexia program- I've been accepted for the 2006 Spring semester session in London! I'm actually going!
I don't know what else to say, just that I'm extremely happy!
Wee!

VT Bloggers: Meetup

7 Days Newspaper has an online blog section, 802 Blog, lots of links to VT blogs, various new articles from around the state, all in all, an interesting site to read. They're apparently doing a get together:

Vermont Blogger Meetup II — it's official
Date: Saturday, November 5
Time: 3 p.m.
Place: Langdon Street Cafe, Montpelier
Cost: Free, but you might want to get somethin' to drink while we're there.
Who's invited: Vermont bloggers, blog-readers and the people who love them.

Spread the word.

I might head out to this, if I'm not doing anything hugely important, which I don't think that I will be.

Happy Halloween

Happy Halloween everyone.
Hope that people are having fun and all that, I haven’t had the occasion yet… I’ve got some back homework that I’m trying to plow through, plus writing up a presentation on Drumlins for tomorrow that’s loads of fun, let me tell you…
And, I was distracted by my sister watching SG-1. I’ve gotten her hooked on the show, so when it’s playing the next room over, there’s no way that I’m going to sit around doing homework…
As I was sitting, watching the last episode of Season 8 and the first episode of Season 9, I realized that Halloween is the premier geek/fanboy/fanatic holiday. 1- It gives us an excuse to dress up as an alien, monster, hero, you name it, without having people question it. Granted, we have things like conventions, where no one will look twice (in dumbfound curiosity) at a group of storm troopers walking down a hallway or some such thing. 2- Free candy. This is the best holiday for geeks, on just those two alone. Now, I’m a little annoyed, because I’m sitting at home working on homework (and, incidentally, this), instead of running around in my storm trooper armor. Usually, I’m hesitant to have it on in public, mainly because I feel extremely out of place, but for something like this, I’m actually in the mood to wear it.
So, I’m stuck at home, but doing things to make doing homework easier. I’ve got the Battlestar Galactica Miniseries, Season 1, Children of Dune, Firefly, Halo, Halo 2, Hitchhiker’s Guide, Jurassic Park, Republic Commando, Serenity, Star Wars (Selections from all), Stargate, Atlantis, Taken, The Island and War of the Worlds soundtracks, as well as a couple other random songs thrown in, to listen to, shuffling. Great music selection. Coupled with a cup of tea and a blanket, I’m comfortable for now.

Also, the SciFi channel printed one of my recent letters in their weekly newsletter:

The Book Isn't Broken
I'd like to respond to a couple of the letters regarding the future of publishing, about the material and the
medium. First, I believe that there is no need for the medium to change—why fix something that's
not broken? Books have been around for hundreds of years, and best of all, don't require batteries or anything but a good pair of eyes. E-books require a reader, electricity and that they don't get erased by mistake somehow.
Material-wise: There are a number of good books coming out that seem to have a fairly "updated" view of the world. Specifically, I'm a big fan of Karen Traviss' Wess'Har series, which has really taken a very different view
of first contact and humanity, and which employ some extremely complicated plotlines before you get to the second book. (Book three being released this week.)
The other is Karin Lowachee's War Child trilogy, which have employed some more adult themes and views that differ from anything that I've read from Asimov's era of writing. I've found both trilogies to be extremely well written, with outstanding storylines and very complicated and mature concepts that wouldn't have been written a long time ago.
Times are changing, and what needs to be changed has been, and will continue.
Andrew Liptak
JediTrilobite(at)gmail.com

Now, back to homework. Enjoy the candy!

Random Acts

One of the things that I really like about some of my friends is the extremely random things that we do. Take my friend Eric for example- One of the many things that we completely agree with is that we should never plan anything out. A) It never works, and B) it's never any fun. I think that we both like seeing where randomness takes us.
This is about what we did today- I ran into him today when I went in to drop my sister off at her piano lesson. Eric and I decided to hang out for a while. We then decided, that after I dropped my sister off at her friend's house, we'd go up to Burlington, just for the hell of it. So we did. We stopped up at Bestbuy, where I found a copy of Amos Lee's newest Album, which is outstanding, and that Best Buy was giving out copies of HBO's newest series, Rome's pilot episode. Pretty cool. We then went up to Church Street, walked around for a while there, in Borders and Quarterstaff. Ran into Rachel and her friend Kara, talked with them for a while.
It was good to be among proper villians again- Eric and I are extremely alike, and it was great just to talk for a while about everything. We don't see each other much, so it was good to catch up again.
On the way home, I picked up a hitchhiker, dropped her off down the road. Never done that before, felt good to help someone out. She was kinda weird though. Large vocabulary for a highschool girl.

Edward Hopper

On the message board that I frequent the most, someone's got a thread going about the top 100 works of art. Came across Edward Hopper's work through it- some really fantastic stuff there. Ever since Humanities class in High School, I've kept my eyes out for good artists. There's a very simplistic and visually appealing quality to his works. Here's a couple of paintings that I came across that I liked:


City Sunlight


Chop Suey


Nighthawks


Gas


New York Office

More information on him here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Hopper

Nightfall

It's amazing what happens to a group of people when the power is cut to something like a college campus. Vermont recieved several more inches of snow last night, and as usual, the power cut out. I was over the for the night anyway, because my car doesn't have snow tires yet, and that's a bad thing, especially here, with soft, wet, heavy snow falling. So around 10, everything went out. Lights, computer network, everything, except the library, which for some odd reason, was completely powered, except that it didn't have internet. Nothing came on until 6 this morning. So, no progress on several projects, and no returning home to get things that I needed.
What was also disturbing was the amount of trouble that the blackout caused. First, there were two injuries that I heard of- one broken arm, caused when someone was sliding down a hill and smashed into a railing. The second case was someone doing the same thing and slammed into a tree with their back, and couldn't walk afterwards. The other thing that I heard about was that the UP (Upper Parade Ground) turned into a huge snowball fight, but also that some people were carrying around rapiers and baseball bats, trying to order Civilians around. Probably exaggerated, but who knows.

It was funny, because my friend Matt voiced the same thing that I was thinking: It's just like in Nightfall.

It came!

Woohoo! It came! I'm now the proud owner of a shirt emblazened with the Serenity logo! A while ago, I joined the official message board and fan section, and through various contests and polls, I gathered points. Four weeks before the movie was released, the powers to be opened up the official store- and I found that I had enough points to get a shirt with the logo. So, four weeks go by, doesn't come, movie hits theaters, don't have it. I was a little worried that it wouldn't come. Then today, I come home to pick up some work and walla! It's on the door. I'll try and get pictures.
In other news, Karen Traviss's latest novel, The World Before, is due out today, according to her and Amazon.com, although the local bookstore that I called said that it's not due out until November. Gah! I'm really looking forwards to this book, because the last two have been amazing, right at the top of my favorites list. At least it's not being released next year like I thought that it was earlier...

Snow

It snowed here. Seems a bit early, but winter is coming. It's kinda scary. Now, everyone's going to complain about it, and how cold it's getting. I can't wait for a change.

Having trouble sleeping again- I keep getting awoken by a dream- similar most of the time, where I'm in a car accident. But it's not the accident that I keep seeing- it's me in the hospital afterwards, with various injuries and visitors, some welcome and some not so welcome. It's beginning to creep me out.

Sore

Full field day yesterday in Glacial- we went out looking at varves and deposits in a proglacial lake system, which was pretty interesting, and helped take my mind off of things. Site number one was in Warren, where we got to cross a pretty cold stream and then up a wet, clay rich enbankment, which was lots of fun. The entire thing was composed of varves, which was really cool to see for the first time, after learning about them over the past two years. Varves are a glacial deposit that are linked to melt seasons in a pro-glacial lake. Basically, Glaciers dump a huge amount of sediment into a basin, and after the larger things settle out, such as sand, silt is carried further and deposited. During the time that the lake then melts over, currents essentialy stop and clay is deposited. Then the melt season comes and the cycle is started over again. The result is a silt-clay layering that represents an annual cycle, as accurate as tree rings. And when it's wet, it's really slippery. We had one person fall and bash his head, and I slipped a couple times. Got my boots soaked when we crossed back over the stream. The second site was different, a huge sand deposit that showed ripples and other lake bottom structures, with a few varves thrown in. Fell there too. We also got kicked off the property, because some idiots decided to build houses on top of the enbankment, which is about 60 ft high, and eroding back fast. Then comes the annual haunted hayride. First night was last night, went off pretty well. We had just a couple people from the club come, but we had a couple of rooks help us out. We ended up running a flying monkey, which was interesting, but we were also given a chainsaw, and someone brought their airsoft M4 and a paintball gun. Basically, they were soldiers on patrol, and I was a chainsaw murderer, who gets shot, comes back to life and killes them, then takes off after the wagon. Worked pretty well. But know my knees and back is pretty sore, and my voice is starting to go. Two more days...

iTV: Internet Television

Apple has gained an enormous amount of popularity for it’s iPod, Apple’s version of the MP3 player. It’s success has boosted Apple sales by large numbers. Each version has been a relative improvement or is socially appealing enough to become very popular- The iPod Mini and iPod Shuffle being some of the more recent examples when it comes to music. Color screens, improved click wheels and more space crammed into a small case comes with each new improvement.
It comes as little surprise that Apple has ventured into the video market with the latest version of their iPod. Not only can you store a large number of songs on the hard drive, you can now download music videos and television episodes to the latest versions of iPods, which can be purchased through iTunes at a relatively cheap price of $1.99 per episode, in line with their $.99 per song or $9.99 per album.
But this is not the first time that television has ventured to a new medium: the Internet. In the past year, more and more websites are placing pilot episodes, teasers and other extras on their official web pages. Just this last month, Yahoo allowed users to watch the entire first episode of the WB’s new show, Supernatural, online, the day before it aired on regular television. The SciFi channel has done similar forays, offering the first episode of their own hit show, Battlestar Galactica online through their website. Recently, they had also placed the season finale online as the second season aired.


SciFi has done more than just place episodes online. SciFi became one of the first websites to offer downloadable commentary tracks for each episode as it came out from their main website- so that the viewers could watch along. In addition, SciFi has also placed a number of behind the scenes features to view online. Other shows have popped up online, with preview clips from Smallville appearing on Filmforce.net, among others. Television is starting to make an evolutionary jump to the internet.
Why the move? Most likely the sheer number of people who use the Internet, and given the advances in connection speeds since the mid-90s, people are able to download videos and music faster than ever before. This has caused some problems legally- especially when the BBC and Sky-One in England aired the new Dr. Who series and new Battlestar Galactica series before they hit the airwaves in the US. (Or not at all in the case of Dr. Who.) The numbers of illegal downloads of these programs skyrocketed, and for the second season of Battlestar Galactica, it was the US who got to watch the new episodes first. It would also seem that television executives, faced with the capabilities of the internet nowadays, are starting to see this as an opportunity, not as a problem, as is what Apple did with iTunes, which revolutionized online music sales, which have recently surpassed 500 million.
The next question is: How is this going to affect the television market? Already, people are able to download episodes online, which can affect both the ratings of a television show and it’s eventual release on to DVD. When programs begin offering DVD material on their own websites, this is undoubtedly going to affect DVD sales of a given program. Producers are going to have to find new features to place on DVD sets, and to be selective with what material is released online, while still using features and behind the scenes videos to generate interest for the show, without compromising the show’s ratings or profits.
As Apple has showed that downloading music can be profitable, its opening one market that could very well lead to the end of another: the DVD. At the current prices, one can buy the entire 1st Season of LOST from Apple iTunes for approximately $35, which is far under the DVD boxed set that’s available in stores. (Apple also sells episodes of the show Desperate Housewifes). Not only that, one it’s possible to download the episodes right after the show airs on television- which can also bring in new profits for studios right away.
So, where is TV going? Most likely, the Internet, through new downloading methods and systems. However, I would predict that the DVD sets will be around for a while yet- Some of us don’t have high speed internet.

I Hate Stupid People

It's a well known fact that I really dislike math. And this semester, I'm taking Math 101, which is pretty boring. I get most of the material, but it's presented in a way that's extremely un interesting.
What really gets me, that even though this is an entry class, there are a good number of people in my class that just don't get the material. Actually, they don't get much of anything. Every single class, I get to hear about how hard the material is, how the teacher isn't spoon feeding them enough and how he's never in his office. PLEASE, shut up and stop complaining!
The main thing that gets me is that every class, instead of listening to the teacher, a lot of the students spend their time sleeping, or second guessing the professor, asking pretty basic questions before he's even finished, and not thinking their questions through to get the answer to what they're asking on their own.
Today, one of the rooks (Freshmen Cadets) stood up and basically told the teacher that he was impossible to reach and that he couldn't get a tutor to teach him the material. 1- Even though he's got office hours, he's still got e-mail dumbass. 2- Tutors don't teach, they tutor. You have to do the work yourself, we don't babysit you though the material while you sit there. 3- Try respecting the teacher a bit. Listen to him explain an answer and don't interupt him. You might learn something if you're not always preoccupied on failing.
Man, if Professor Dunn was in there, he'd rip those students apart for being rude...

//Rant

Charge!

I learned how to play Warhammer tonight. Or rather, started to learn. It's a complicated game.
I'm used to playing Dungeons and Dragons, a fantasy roleplaying game, where the player is essentially an actor in a story, ruled by how well you can roll dice. For the past six years, I've played at camp, a little at school, but not too much. Warhammer is similar, but it's a miniatures game, where you have a small figure that represents a soldier on the battlefield, and you roll attacks, and move based on preset stats. It's interesting, a bit fun to play. I've been slightly turned off of the game due to some of the obsessings over it by some members of the Tactics club, but I'm coming around a bit. Hopefully I'll be slightly more competent next time. I got beaten pretty badly this time around.
Found a new band- Great Big Sea. They've got some really good stuff, right up there with Carbon Leaf in sound and texture.

Rainy Weekend

It's been raining for the past week. Not really outright downpouring, but it's been close at times. It's gone from drizzling to pretty heavy stuff most of the time. While I don't mind rain much, it can drag on at times, which makes everyone cranky here. I'm always surprised at how annoyed people get with falling water. Most of the time (When it's not really really cold out) it's great to walk in. It's just water, and I'm not really afraid of melting.This week is the annual Haunted Hayride at Norwich, which is both good and bad. Good, because it's fun to scare the crap out of everyone who goes through it. Bad, because everyone running the thing thought that the entire Tactics club (The Norwich games club for which I'm the president for) wasn't coming this year. Big communications breakdown, and my NUAC rep for the club was giving us bad information on what was going on. So I got to spend a good part of this weekend trying to figure things out. Fortunently, we were able to get a site and thing to do. I helped out this morning setting up. Learned how telephone poles were put into the ground and gave one of the other guys a brief lesson on why the entire campus is essentially built on a huge sandpile. (Campus was at one point under 200 feet of water, about 10,000 years ago due to glacial stuff) But, we're doing the event, and hopefully I can get some people from the club to actually help out. And, I got my midterm grades back! As and Bs, which is really good, because I've been needing a boost in the GPA. I've noticed that I've been working better on things this year, most likely because of the two jobs that I've held over the summer, and the things that I learned from them... And with that, back to Nation Building homework...

Imagination

Imagination, everybody has one. It's your inner voice that asks: What If?
Imagination allows you to see the invisible and explore the impossible.
It can be a trip to the middle of nowhere, leading to the center of everything. Or it can deliver a message of peace, that brings death to all that listen.
Imagination could bring a dead planet to life or it can mean that feeling no pain is not the same as feeling no fear. What if it could lead you to a room full of mysteries guarded by a single key? Or a place where tomorrow arrives early - Everyday.
Imagination can give you something to fear or something to hope for. It can transport you to different worlds or transform the one you're in.
Imagination is...us