The legend is true!  If you send a self-addressed-stamped-envelope to System76, a Denver-based company that sells Ubuntu-based machines, they will send you four stickers for your computer and four tiny stickers to cover the Windoze key.  Proudly display your love for free software!

Haven’t tried Ubuntu?  You can try it on a live disc/usb without changing your machine.  And you can always dual-boot, if you really and actually need Windoze or Shmapple sometimes.

I put these on Mrs. P’s and my minis last night, albeit crookedly. You’d think Dell might think of it, but they only put an “N Series” sticker on there, very very crookedly, like they are upset that you didn’t want Windoze on your computer. Their weird version of Ubuntu came off right away, in favor of the official Ubuntu Netbook Edition, which is beautiful and fantastic.  The Dell remix was Okay, but it was maintained on Dell’s servers, and that’s weird.  Plus, the new Netbook Ubuntu is damned sexy.

Okay. So it’s windy. I live in a four-story brick apartment building shaped like an “L”. I live on the outside of the right angle. This is a sturdy building. Three blizzards this year. Wind was a sound shaking the storm windows and trees. Tonight, it is a vibration. Wow. I hope all the apartment roofs in lower Roland Park can take this. Everyone’s got some rain spout hanging off, or worse.

Also, Walmart’s coming to Remington/Old Goucher.  Wow.  I don’t know how I feel about this.  But I know some “buffies” who love the Walmart in Cockeysville who are celebrating.  They moved that fucker from the lightrail in Hunt Valley because, you know, people from “the city” were coming up and stealing shit.  I’m sure none of these little white boys get off soccer practice and steal themselves a Red Bull, right?  And of course we all know that the best get-away from crime is a mass transit train that leaves Hunt Valley station very slowly.

But at least it’s better than a car dealership.  Yes.  I said it.  We have enough cars killing pedestrians in this fucking city, thank you.

My second AmeriCorps VISTA year is up in less than six months.  I do not have a job lined up.  I am currently freaking out about this.


I’ll spare you the photos, not that I took any. It could be washing more dishes than usual or not wearing gloves. I generally don’t wear gloves unless I’m cycling, and I’ve been outside far more on foot than on pedals this winter. It could also be that I keep forgetting to drink water. Or the breakdown of my bass-guitar calluses, since I have not been playing my bass. Or a combination. Or I’m getting old.

Oh, and in case you’re wondering. Yes. This Lemon Butter Cuticle Cream does, in fact, taste like lemons, too. I ate some.

I am on the phone with my wife, who called me at work to chat.  We have a friend who is ill, and my wife wondered what is worse when you are sick: upchucking or buttchucking?  I think constant pooping is worse; she thinks knee-grinding vomiting is worse.

“I think pooping is worse.”

“What?  No way.  Puking makes your whole body hurt the next day.”

“What about explosive diarrhea?  You’re bung burns for a week.  You’re shitting all over the place.”

“But you can’t control puking.”

“I repeat: What about explosive diarrhea?”

“At least you can aim it.”

“Oh, fuck.”

“Yeah, dude, puking is the worst.”

“No, worst would be double-barreling that shit.  Blowing out of both ends.  You’re like painting the walls in bile and dooky.  That would be hell.  Holy fucking shit.  That’s nasty.”

“Oh, my god.  But puking is way worse than shitting.”

“No, not necessarily when you’re sick.  I mean, only a truly fucked up individual would like to puke more than taking a big dump, like after you have after a nice pasta dinner in any given Thursday or especially after Chinese food.  But when you’re sick, it’s no holds barred with that shotgun ass.  Brown birdshot everywhere.  You get all chapped back there, I’ll bet.”

“Geezus.  How do you know?”

“What?  I don’t know.  I imagine.”

“Bullshit.”

“I’m saying that sick squirts are terrible because the whole thing ruins something that is normally pleasant.  Normal people poop, and most of us like it.  It’s not like you ever puke when you’re not sick.  It always means something’s wrong.”

“You should put this on Facebook.”

“No, the person who’s sick is on Facebook.  That’s just mean.  How about the B L O G?”

“Heh heh, you should totally do that.  I’m going to check.”

“Let me get this fucking poll thing to work….wait a minute….shit.  I hope this works.”

So I ask my kind readers which bodily [mal]function that you find LESS pleasant when you’re sick — not in normal time?


Experimenting with healthier breakfast, in search of more energy. I think it’s better today, though I certainly need more coffee. And I need to stop staying up late reading, I guess.

Everywhere in Baltimore, we hear the sarcastic phrase, “Piles of Global Warming.” I just thought I’d clog up the internetz with the correct adage:

Piles of Climate Change.

Snow doesn’t disprove Global Warming.  It proves (or at least works toward it — I realize that it does not constitute a real proof) Climate Change.  Sorta.

The refusal to acknowledge the “new” popular terminology for how we’re fucking up the planet does go a long way toward proving that denials of Climate Change have nothing to do with science and a lot to do with habit, politics and curmudeonliness — maybe even frustration that this state and city lean to the left just a little, sometimes. But I think I’m overstepping myself there.  Aside from spending a lot of money and our high taxes, you’d think we didn’t live in a blue state sometimes though.

So Mama didn’t pass the screening test for gestational diabetes.  So we have to go this week for the three-hour, multiple needle, fasting-required, version that really and conclusively (?) tests for gestational diabetes.  This is not quite as scary as when they hooked Mama up to monitors last month and when we thought we might have a very premature Baby on our hands.  But it’s still nerve-bending, and it’s unpleasant.  Mama has to fast and get several needles over the course of the day spent at the lab.  No fun.

I wish I could lend my arm, but the OB says that won’t work.

I just want to point out that when I boot my office PC at work (Windoze XP on a very fast machine, way faster than my new mini or my old desktop), it takes fifteen minutes for me to be able to check my email and do ANYTHING.  In that time, I hit the potty to make room for coffee, get the coffee, check my paper planner and then still have enough time to be annoyed by this big slow box.

So, in the name of productivity, I don’t always turn it off at night and thereby waste power.  They want us to turn them off, since we’re in the midst of a 30% energy reduction plan.  I know all the naysayers like to point out that running a desktop computer uses “only” the amount of energy of a lightbulb. I like to ask: do you leave  your stupid damned lamps on all the time?  No.  And if you do, you’re a poopface.

I realize part of this slowness and waste of time is my job’s network crap and probably also them spying on me (I work at a state university, and they warn us, yadda yadda — HI, GUYZ!).  But still, this happens at home, too.

My home desktop with two hard-drives (one Windoze, one Ubuntu) does something similar, on the same freakin machine.  Ubuntu getting ‘er done time (power button to writing an email in Yahoo! webmail): a minute tops.  Windoze (power button to writing an email in Yahoo! webmail): 3-5 minutes on a good day, and I don’t use it enough to update my VP software anymore, either.

Ugh.  I think I need to start bringing my mini to work?  Or maybe boot Ubuntu on a live disk, since my work machine is so loaded with RAM?

Paper, a phone and a typewriter?


After doing a lot of work this weekend toward cleaning up Baby’s room (especially the huge closet holding twelve years of two people’s notes), etc., I am relaxing with a delicious sampler I treated myself to last Friday.  My recycling bin is doubled and then still overflowing, and I am covered in papercuts.  I’ve been offline most of the weekend, and it feels great.  Felt.  Great.

With Baby this close and so much left to do, I’m finding it difficult to really care about much else. My hair looks terribly.  Seriously.

Aside from getting ready for Baby in practical ways, all I find myself interested in is hanging out with Mama, listening to music for Baby, watching the Olympics, “Gilmore Girls” and movies from Netflix.


We’ve been kinda shut-ins for a month now, from Mama’s bedrest. I mean, we were never exactly socialites or anything, but we haven’t gone to dinner or even out for coffee or a walk in a very long time.  That’s one thing.  But a lot of my friends have new kids, kids on the way, and we’ve all been blocked in with this freakin snow.  No one’s been able to go out. I miss my pals.  I can’t wait for spring and this crap to melt away.


The world’s largest search engine and the largest entity that spies on you and I might team up, according the Washington Post.

Under an agreement that is still being finalized, the National Security Agency would help Google analyze a major corporate espionage attack that the firm said originated in China and targeted its computer networks, according to cybersecurity experts familiar with the matter. The objective is to better defend Google — and its users — from future attack.

Google and the NSA declined to comment on the partnership. But sources with knowledge of the arrangement, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the alliance is being designed to allow the two organizations to share critical information without violating Google’s policies or laws that protect the privacy of Americans’ online communications. The sources said the deal does not mean the NSA will be viewing users’ searches or e-mail accounts or that Google will be sharing proprietary data.

The ACLU is urging its members and supporters to speak out:

The partnership is supposed to help protect Google’s networks, but the ramifications of companies like Google working with the NSA are frightening.

The NSA — a component of the Department of Defense — is an intelligence collection agency with few effective checks against abuse, and no public oversight of its activities. The NSA sucks up the equivalent of the contents of the Library of Congress every six to eight hours, every single day. In the last decade, the NSA’s dragnet, suspicionless surveillance has targeted everyday Americans, in violation of the law and the Constitution.

Google’s never won much praise from folks concerned about their privacy (do your own web searching on that if you’re interested), not that other search giants are exactly revolutionary in this area.  And maybe this  means nothing.  But it’s sure creepy, to me, too.


The Mrs. P-designed Moleskine case to which I eluded earlier is finished. Thanks to the two blizzards this week, UPS was behind with deliveries, and then couldn’t get to our building (though of course USPS did). As such, our small Valentine’s Day gifts never came. A set of giraffe hair clips I bought on Etsy did come. So my sweet little wife set about knitting me a case to hold my pocket Moleskine and planner, with a pen to boot.

It’s a perfect fit. Nice and snug, without having to bear-grease the two books get ‘em in there. Holds a pen, probably a few to boot. The opening is slightly tapered in, to keep it all in and together. Wonderful! The wool she made it of is very nice and feels durable.  I almost can’t wait to go back to work this week, to get to carry them around.  Almost


I am on my Ubuntu Mini, with the laptop speakers hooked up, playing music that makes Baby dance inside Mama (The Doves, Frente!, The Smiths).  Mama is on the couch, knitting me a sleeve for my Moleskine/planner/pen.  Very swell evening.

I’m dehydrated enough that my fingertips are like sharkskin.  So I’m having tea instead of coffee.  I am eyeing the nice Guinness pub cans in my fridge, though, and the pint glasses I keep in the freezer.  Hmm.


I am not venturing out on my bike or on foot, and my bus line’s not running, either. Not that I’m upset to work from home, on my tiny laptop/netbook.


Now, I don’t write about software and hardware because there are bloggers and regular people who know way more about this stuff than I do. But, in formatting my dissertation and my new netbook/mini Dell box, I’ve come across some issues for which there are many possible solutions on the internet. Some are dated. Some conflict. Some are round-about. Some are on public forums where: person A has a problem; person B offers a solution which does not quite work; person C offers a solution; but person A never writes back to say if it worked or not. So you’ll have to excuse my temporary overstepping of my usual boundaries in this exercise in open source Pragmatikism.*

Okay. You have, literally, hundreds of endnotes that you need to make into footnotes in Open Office. You have committed to writing your entire dissertation (or essay or novel or whatever) in open source software, down to the fonts. Maybe you already entered your notations as footnotes that just appear at the end of the document, rather than the end of the page. In the current version of Open Office Writer, go to Tools–>Footnotes/Endnotes. Under “Position,” click either “End of page” or “End of Document” under the “Footnotes” tab. If nothing happens, you have endnotes. If they move, they are footnotes.  Put them where you want them.

Mine did not move. So. Most guides tell you that you’re either screwed, that you have to resort to Windoze MS Orifice, or that you have to do them one by one. Well, you do have to do them one by one, but at the rate of about one second (or less) each. Do this:

1) Find the first endnote anchor (the little number or symbol). Right-click it, and click “Footnote/Endnote,” third from the bottom.
2) When the little box appears, click the dot from “Endnote” to “Footnote.” Instead of doing them all like this, however, DO NOT hit “OK.” Rather, hit the arrow to the right. This will take you to the next endnote. Click the dot again, arrow again, and you can get through a few hundred of these in a very very short time.
3) Need to move them again? Now that they are footnotes, you can make them appear at the end of the page or at the end of the document (like endnotes) via Tools–>Footnotes/Endnotes.
4) The lesson here: NEVER USE ENDNOTES IN OPEN OFFICE!
5) Hint I’ve found for editing them all: Make them appear at the end of the document. Then you can edit them more easily and then revert to having them at the bottom of the page with the touch of a button. Easy-peasy!

*(As opposed to the much better Pragmatism of American philosophy.)


Being stuck inside from last weekend’s blizzard and staring down another one, it’s nice to have netbooks.  Mine has been a source of WORK that has kept me busy.  I took off Dell’s customised Ubuntu and installed the (much better, faster and prettier) Ubuntu Netbook Edition.  Not to mention transferring tons of music via my 4GB mp3 player. And, tonight, just when I thought I had done a good job putting an excellent selection of music on here from our desktop, I remember some bands I forgot but really feel like listening to. Doh.


While the snow is falling like crazy, and my belly is full.


We were up late talking about Baby names in the spring, when we first decided to, not only have a baby, but also to have one very very soon.  I’ve probably mentioned that I never ever wanted children.  Ever.  And Mrs. P knew all about it, before we ever got engaged or married or very married.  (I think she knew I’d change my mind, though she denies it.)  Anyway, we were up on a Tuesday night.  Thinking of names in our living room.  I think I might have been standing because my hands were still trashed from my bike wreck, and I was idle too often.

We had liked Magdalena for a girl — Maggie for short.  (See “The Simpsons” and its influence on our lives!)  But Mrs. P felt like it was a little….odd.  It’s heavy.  Biblical in a super biblical way.  Not that biblical is bad.  My “real” name is John after all.  But, you know her roll in the bible.  Made me think of the A Perfect Circle Song, too, from Mer de Noms:

overcome by your moving temple
overcome by this holiest of altars
so pure, so rare
to witness such a lovely goddess

i lost my self control
beyond compelled to throw this dollar down
before your holiest of altars

i’ll sell my soul, my self esteem
a dollar at a time for one chance, one kiss
one taste of you my magdalena

i’ve beared witness to this place, this lair, so long forgotten
so pure, so rare, to witness such a lovely goddess

and i’d sell my soul, my self-esteem
a dollar at a time for one chance, one kiss,
one taste of you my black madonna

i’ll sell my soul, my self-esteem
a dollar at a time

for one taste, one taste
one taste of you my magdalena

Yeah, not sure if we wanted to name our daughter that, assuming we had a girl. If we had a boy, the name was easy. I’m a Junior, and my wife always liked the idea of a Johnny 3. I’d change my name legally to The Second because it sounds cool. I have a moderately bizarre middle name, which I’d rather not inflict on another person, but I think Mrs. P’s mind was made up.

Girls’ names:  I’d always liked Vera, my paternal grandmother’s name, a woman I never met who died when my father was only 8 or 9.  It means “truth.”  Mrs. P didn’t like it.  Or Sophia.  I’d joked about having a girl named Sophia Vera, i.e., Wisdom and Truth — funny when her father spent his adult life so far studying [and trying to practice] philosophy.  Those were a little over the top, now that I think of it, even if they are both pretty names and even if Vera will always be special to me because of the woman I never got to meet.

My wife suggested some other names: Evey (British spelling, mostly from V for Vendetta), Zoe, Charlotte.  We felt like Zoe was pretty popular and came up with Charlotte Zoe as Baby’s first and middle names.  We’d call her Charlie.  When we mentioned this to folks later, the response was either, “Oh, fizzle, that’s adorable!” or, “I know a real C-word named Charlotte.”  Now, our daughter would  never be a C-word; I’m sure.  Adorable, yes; of course.

We were up so late that night that we didn’t  put the recycling  bin out before bed like we usually do.  When Mrs. P took it out the next morning (because  my hands were still too buggy to carry it), there was a sign on the poll right near where we put our recycling.  Someone named Charlotte had lost her cat named Zoe and needed help finding her.

So even if I’m not religious and usually tend to the sentimental and superstitious side of things much more than the faithful, believing or even hoping side, I knew we would have a girl from a couple of months before we officially starting trying to have a baby at all.  Maybe we’re reading way too much into a coincidence, as someone I know (who was, I confess, the biggest downer I’ve met recently) suggested.  Or, well, maybe, possibly, it certainly appears to us — this baby was….dare I say it….meant to be?


You know, I think I forgot to mention Baby G’s gender.  Me, I knew in April, before we were even trying.  Funny story.