Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Famous People From Kentucky

There are a LOT of famous people who were born in Kentucky. Here are just a few.

Abraham Lincoln - The 16th U.S. President was born in Hodgenville in 1809. I visited his birthplace a few weeks back.

Kit Carson - American Frontiersman was born on Christmas Eve 1809 in Madison City.

Carrie Amelia Nation - Temperance Leader was born in Garrard County in 1846.

Muhammad Ali - The "Greatest of ALL time" was born Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr.in Louisville in 1942.

Jefferson Davis - President of the Confederate States of America was born in Fairview in 1808.

Patricia Neal - Actress of stage and screen was born in Packard in 1926.

George Clooney - TV and Movie star, as well as world philanthropist, was born in Lexington in 1961.

Robert Penn Warren
- Author and poet was born in Guthrie in 1905.

Crystal Gayle - Grammy Award-winning singer was born in Paintsville in 1951.

Loretta Lynn - Singer and older sister of Crystal Gayle was born in Butcher's Hollow

Diane Sawyer - Broadcast journalist and co-host of Good Morning America was born in Glasgow in 1945.

Hunter Thompson - Journalist and author was born in Louisville in 1937.

There are many, many more that you can find here, here and here.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Happy St. Patrick's Day

Monday, March 16, 2009

Top 100 Photo Sites

Web100 has posted their Top 100 Photo Websites list, featuring the best photography-related sites in categories such as, "Advice, Tutorials, and Community | Blog | Camera Reviews | Gear and Equipment | General Interest | Image Editors | Mobile | Museums | Photo Printing, Books, and Gifts | Portfolios and Photoblogs | Professional Resources and Tools | Scanning | Sharing, Storage, and Social Networking | Slideshows | Special Interest | Stock Images and Photo Archives."

See if you agree.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Louisville Firefighter Training Photos

Friday I went to an event in Louisville, KY at their Firefighting Training Academy and was able to take these photos.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Daily Misfortune

My homepage has a "Daily Fortune" widget that I seldom even notice, but the one for March 13, 2009 caught my eye:

"You are interested in public service and would make an outstanding statesman."

Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.

Ahh, no.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Happy Friday The 13th

There are three of them this year (a frequency that occurs only every 11 years) and I missed the one last month. One coming up in November will round out the thrice.

MSNBC has a "Five Facts About Friday The 13th" piece up on their site with some interesting nuggets for those who put stock in such things.

And I also want to wish a "Happy Wedding Day" to my step-son and his lovely bride who are getting married this afternoon in my in-laws' beautiful garden, just as I Cindy and I did almost 12 years ago.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

The Next 10 Newspapers To Fold

Print newspapers across the country are looking death in the eye. Some will close completely, like The Rocky Mountain News, while others will cease printing hard copies and publish only online versions, like The Christian Science Monitor.

Whichever way it goes, print newspapers are an endangered species. Like dinosaurs of old, they cannot adapt quickly enough to the Internet and the digital climate change it has brought to their world.

Time magazine has an article entitled "The 10 Most Endangered Newspapers in America" in this week's issue. See if your local newspaper is one of those predicted to cease publication in the next 18 months.

Read An E-Book Week

Read An E-Book Week (March 8th - 14th), sponsored by e-book industry leaders like E Ink, Sony Reader, Lexcycle and others, is observed "...to inform the public about the pleasures and advantages of reading electronically."

Formerly feasible only to those who wished to read them on their desktop or laptop computers, e-books are now available on specialized readers like the Kindle or Sony Reader, among others, and on Smartphones such as Blackberries, Palms and iPhones.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Memo To Medical/Pharmaceutical Industry

I would like for you to create a medicine that will simply dissolve congestion in the lungs, turning it into useful oxygen. I'm tired of using medicine that causes you to cough up said lungs, trying to expectorate the congestion like a hairball. It is painful and unpleasant.

Please get on this right away, before I hack up some other major organs.

MAD's Monday Muse

If you've looked around this page, you've seen the MAD About Words Lounge membership graphic over on the right hand column. MAD About Words is the brainchild of Winter Park writer and writing coach Mary Ann de Stefano (M.A.D., get it?), whom I've mentioned here before.



I first became aware of Mary Ann at a Florida Writers Association meeting in Maitland a few years ago when she gave a seminar that impressed me enough that I made note of her website. Later I subscribed to her e-newsletter, then joined the writers online lounge she created and we have become acquainted over the years through our blogs, e-mails and the lounge. To this day we've never actually met in person, despite being only a few miles apart. One day we'll remedy that.

Last week she asked me if I would submit a short piece for her new MAD's Monday Muse e-newsletter, which I was extremely honored and happy to do, about how I deal with the challenges of writing when I'm traveling for my regular job. This past Monday I sent her the piece and she tells me that it will be published in the upcoming Monday, March 16th edition.

I'm telling you all this so that you can go subscribe to the e-newsletter. Not only will you get some great writing advice and information each and every week, but you'll be able to read my submission in next Monday's edition.

If you're not interested in subscribing (though why wouldn't you be?) then you can also read the MAD's Monday Muse e-newsletter on the web by going to her website and clicking on the "Monday Muse" link on the left hand column.

If you go now, there's an intriguing article in this week's newsletter by Winter Park writer and artist Kären Blumenthal that was a joy to read.

Don't forget; subscribe to MAD's Monday Muse e-newsletter.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Granting Permission

If you've read this blog for a while (or gone back through all the archives) you know that occasionally I get asked for permission to use photographs I've taken and posted on the Internet. And you know that I'm always happy to have them used.

A couple of years ago, before I went on the road traveling a lot, I used to write camping and outdoors articles for Suite101.com. I enjoyed the gig and my editor, Jill Florio, was great. My content is still up on their site and they are good about making sure everything is marked as being copyrighted by the author (all rights revert to authors after a year) and I continue to get occasional small checks when page views are enough to warrant that.

Monday, in a new twist for me, I was asked for permission to use an outdoor article I had written. A trainer in Ontario sent me an e-mail asking if he could use my article "Gear Care - Camping Tent- How to properly care for your tent" in a class he was teaching to Scout Leaders. I appreciated that, because obviously he could have used it and there's small chance I would have ever known. So I was happy to grant him written permission to use the article for such a good cause and I hope it's useful to the trainer and the students.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Genuflecting With Purell

Different respiratory ailments continue to rage through our office. Stuffy noses, coughing, sneezing and body aches are the norm for most of the staff. In spite of spending every day genuflecting with Purell (I keep a bottle like the one seen here in my pocket and use it liberally), taking my vitamins and eating well, I felt the onset of chest congestion this past Saturday night. Sunday I awoke with a runny nose and the joy of coughing. So far the OTC medication I bought is holding its own; I've not gotten worse but I've not gotten better either.

Our office is like an illness incubator.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Facebook Funny Names

Last week the Washington Post had an interesting article of people with unusual names being rejected by Facebook because they felt anyone using a last name like "Batman" had to be faking it.

Personally, if I married a woman whose maiden surname was "Batman", I'd be taking HER name.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Happy (Belated) National Grammar Day

I feel like a failure as a writer and person who loves the proper use of words and grammar. I've been so busy here in Kentucky that I completely missed National Grammar Day this past Wednesday, March 4, 2009.

I hope the rest of you celebrated it in the correct manner, with all the pomp and circumstance due this important observation.

P.S. Don't forget to get up at 2am tomorrow (Sunday) morning and turn your clocks AHEAD 1 hour!

Friday, March 6, 2009

Winter Waterfalls

Here in Central Kentucky there are quite a few of the roads that were cut right through small mountains of rock, like you see in the photo below. These are not tunnels through the mountain, but more like they were just sliced through the entire mass of rock.



As a result, you can see some very beautiful designs in the rock, both in color and arrangement, that can be downright distracting to a Floridian like myself who is not used to such a thing.

However, even more mesmerizing to see are the frozen waterfalls that form in the cold temperatures on the exposed rock facings up here when rain falls or snow melts.





Even more interesting is the fact that these frozen pieces of nature's art are not formed by water running off the top of the rock, but from water seeping through the cracks of the rock strata itself.





They are really quite beautiful to see as you're driving along the roads that cut through these small mountains of natural formed rock.





I just wanted to try and share these gorgeous winter waterfalls with you. I hope you enjoy.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Death Of A Hard Drive

Tuesday morning the hard drive on my work laptop bit the dust. I tried to boot up and it kept stalling during the VPN connection process. I tried 3 separate times to re-boot (with the same hanging up results) before calling over IT. They worked on it for a while and eventually declared the hard drive to be "non-responsive" and let me know I'd have to turn that one in and go get a new one issued to me. I was asked if I had much data on that one that I would need.



Fortunately, I back up my work on my own personal flash drive and on the network common drive. Except for one thing.

"Can you try and salvage my .pst file? I have work-related e-mail that I really, really would rather not lose."

"We'll try, but it doesn't look hopeful."

It was better than "No way, Jose!", especially since my name is not Jose.

So, I was 2 hours late just getting started working that morning, by the time they decided "it was dead, Jim" (again, NOT my name but you know how IT people are) and I got my new (new to me) laptop. The .pst file was a different matter. It was another 6 hours (4pm) before the tech returned, but they were successful in retrieving my .pst file. After a short import function, all my e-mail files were sitting back in my respective mailbox folders and I was a smiling drone.

Now I'm wondering if I should get in the habit of backing up my .pst file to my flash drive every evening before shutting down.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

This & That

Here's a lot of little things that aren't lengthy enough to warrant their own blog post.

There is a guy up here who does a syndicated traffic report for several of the radio stations and his voice sounds just like Zephyr, a friend of Cindy's and mine in Orlando. Zephyr has a pretty distinctive voice and I wouldn't characterize it as a "radio voice", but this guy sounds just like him in tone, timbre and enunciation. It certainly "woke me up" the first morning I was driving to the office and heard him do the traffic.

I was driving down to Somerset, Kentucky last week for a meeting and I noticed that the closer I got to Nashville (which is only 170 miles from Somerset) the more the radio dial filled up with country music stations. I was so glad I had brought my mp3 player with me. Fair warning.

The Watchmen movie opens this Friday night. I've already got my ticket from Fandango for the 7pm showing, which I SHOULD be able to JUST make after getting off work. It lasts almost 3 hours, so I didn't want to try to go to the later show and be getting back to the hotel at 2am when I have to be back at work at 8am Saturday morning.

Monday I ate lunch at a place I had never tried before called Qdoba Mexican Grill. I ordered the chicken grilled Quesadilla which was 3 times the cost of a Taco Bell chicken Quesadilla but at least 10 times better. Thicker, with more chicken, cheese and fresh pico de gallo. It was delicious and filling! Do they have these in Florida? I can't remember seeing one.

And here's a couple of things that I found I had written in my old mini-composition book when I cleaned it out Monday evening to begin using my new moleskine notebook:

Competing Hotel Commercials

I was sitting in the lobby of the Comfort Inn Suites in Cedar Falls, IA on a Sunday afternoon while housekeeping was cleaning my room. I was reading and occasionally looking up at the TV as "Kill Bill 2" was being aired. Twice there were commercials for other hotel chains; once for Best Western and once for Hampton Inns. I wondered if hotels ever think of trying to find a way to block other chain's commercials to guests while they're staying in their hotel? On the other hand, unless someone is already unhappy with their current lodging, does anyone really see a commercial for a competing hotel and say, "Damn, I'm packing up and moving over there"?

A Child's Smile

I walked into the men's room the other day in a restaurant. There was a dad with his toddler son and the son was just finishing up a man's "business" and obviously pleased with himself. As I walked in and he saw me he smiled the biggest smile of happiness. I smiled back, smiled at his dad and then thought about how there is something so pure and unpretentious in a child's smile. No agenda, no ulterior motive, no making a mask of the smile to hide anything behind it...just an honest expression of happiness. It's a shame we lose that as we get older.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Amazon And Text-to-Speech Feature on Kindle 2

I've only peripherally been paying attention to this issue that came about when Amazon released the new Kindle 2 with a "read aloud" text-to-speech feature. I read Neil Gaiman's and Wil Wheaton's blogs and Twitters about the subject and think I am probably in agreement with them; that this is not the same as an "audio book" read with feeling by a real person, but rather an electronic rendering much like the computer on Star Trek or your GPS. No feeling, no sense of timing. Just words pronounced by a synthesizer. Not something most of us would want to listen to for hours on end.



This seems to be a great feature for the visually-impaired, but I'm not sure ANYONE would want to listen to a synthesized voice for the length of a typical novel. Perhaps a newspaper or magazine article (which Kindle 2 allows you to download), but not a novel.

Still, from my limited point of view, it seems more than fair of Amazon to allow the author and/or publisher to decide whether they want to block or enable the text-to-speech feature on their own works.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Sunday Bloody Sunday

So as much as I wanted to just hermit myself in the hotel room Sunday I just couldn't see spending the entire day holed up like a prisoner.

To begin with, I woke up earlier than I intended because of a nightmare. Something is going on with that and I'm not quite sure what it is, but I have a theory.

I don't usually have nightmares. Dreams yes, nightmares, no. My dreams are almost always very realistic, and unfortunately so are my nightmares. Still, as I said, I don't usually have nightmares. But for the first time in years I had one while I was in Missouri last November and now this one Sunday morning. Like the one in Missouri, this one was so painful that I woke up crying uncontrollably, just as I had been doing in the nightmare itself because of what had happened and even in the same physical position; huddled in a ball on my knees, my body racked with pain from crying so hard I could not get my breath. This was the kind of crying that physically hurts you inside with its intensity, like your guts are being twisted. The kind that comes from a total despair that you think you will never recover from for the rest of your life. I don't recommend it as a way to be awakened.

My theory, though totally unsubstantiated by ANY professional psychologist, is that it has to do with a story idea I've been working on in bits and pieces for several months that involves some pretty intense and gruesome scenes. I'm wondering if my mind is rebelling against what I've been putting it through, or if this will somehow augment the work I'm doing on a certain character in the story. Maybe I'm just not cut out to be a fiction writer because I get too involved, or at least a writer of this kind of fiction, but the story idea still feels like a good premise.

Anyway, after a shower and then breakfast at a nearby Perkins Restaurant using a 20% off coupon, I headed out for the closest Waldenbooks (which was at a mall not far from the University of Kentucky campus) to use a 25% off coupon to purchase something Cindy encouraged me to buy several months ago. But being the skinflint that I am when it comes to most things for myself, I went with the cheaper idea I had and it didn't hold up.

I usually use a digital voice recorder to make note of ideas or things I want to be sure to remember. I love my digital recorder. But sometimes you're in a situation where it just is not polite to use it. There are times when it is much more unobtrusive to jot a note down. I had toyed with the idea of getting some moleskine notebooks, but after finding the little pocket-sized composition book for .99 cents as opposed to $4 for the moleskine notebook in a comparable size, I opted for the cheapest item.

Mistake.

The pocket-sized composition books are just not sturdy enough to withstand the beating I give them in my typical usage. I had to tape this one back together when the glued cover and some of the pages started coming apart. I decided that it would be in my best interest to go ahead and spend the extra money for the moleskine notebooks, which have a sturdier cover and pages that are stitched in rather than glued.



But, still being the cheapskate that I am, I was reluctant to buy them in their standard 3 for $12 packet until I got this 25% off coupon and decided I could knock $3 off that price and feel better about buying them.

I'm so easily manipulated, as Cindy well knows.

Driving to the mall I passed through downtown Lexington. I had been wanting to see "The Wrestler", but it was only showing at one theater in the area, The Kentucky Theater, and I mistakenly thought that theater was somewhere else. Driving down the main street of Lexington I passed the old theater (it still has the pointed marquee so traffic from both directions, though this is now a one-way street, can see the advertised movie) and realized I could see the movie on my way back to the hotel. And I did. Plus it was only $4.50 to see a first-run movie before 6pm, instead of the $6.50 other theaters in the area charge.

Downtown Lexington is an attractive area with a mix of old and new architecture. It was WAY too cold and windy Sunday to do a Photowalk and I was too tired anyway, but I hope that the weather gets a little warmer on one of my days off so I can get some shots before I leave.

After the movie I returned to my hotel room and, after a little reading and writing and some soup for dinner, was back in bed sleeping soundly.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

The Wrestler

I went out for a bit today to run a couple of errands. Decided while I was already pretending to be alive like the other people I saw that I would go catch a movie I have been wanting to see since it debuted, but just haven't had the time. "The Wrestler" was showing at an old downtown Lexington theater (those old movie theaters are SO cool) in the early afternoon and I arrived just as it was starting.



Mickey Rourke gave a great and believable performance. I enjoyed it and it brought back a lot of memories.

Going to bed. Another long week ahead. G'night.
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