Adventures on the Metro

Standing on the corner, I saw a bus coming down the street. Damn — “Ryerson Base” scrolled across the front, marking it as an off-shift bus going back to the base, so I turned around and wandered back to the bus stop to keep waiting.

Then I heard the sound of the bus braking and pulling over to the side of the road. The doors opened, and the sweet smell of pipe tobacco wafted out as the driver beckoned me in. “Hop on!” So I did.

“Just smokin’ down the road,” said the driver as the bus pulled out and I sat down. “I’m heading into the base, but I can get you that far, or if you see another bus that’ll work, just holler and we’ll get you on that one.”

A few blocks later, he pulled to the side again, and picked up another two guys waiting at their stop. “Jump in and hang on,” warned the driver, and the bus roared back to life, taking the next corner faster than I’ve ever seen an articulated bus corner before.

“So here’s the deal,” said the driver. “We’ve got about three more streets to cross, then there’s a stop just before the base. There’s a ton of buses that go through that stop, so I’ll let you off there, you’ll get downtown, and I’ll be on my way home.” Sounded like a good plan.

As we got closer to Ryerson Base, the driver pointed out the other two bus bases in the area (three of the five or six bases are in the south downtown area). Distracted by being able to play tour guide, though, he suddenly realized that he’d passed up that last stop that he was going to be dropping us off at.

“Well, that was my mistake. How about this — when we stop, just stick with me,” he said, and pulled the bus off the street and into Ryerson Base. He pointed off to the right side of the bus. “See that sign? That’s the parking assignments. This is a sixty-footer, so I park in lane 27 or 28.” Another quick turn, and the bus pulled to a stop in the midst of thirty or forty other members of the Metro Transit bus fleet.

The bus went dead.

“Okay, guys. Stick with me. You don’t want to get hit in here.” We all got off, and followed him out of the base and across the street into the employee parking lot. “Normally you wouldn’t be allowed in here, but it was my goof up. I don’t want to send you walking down that corridor,” and he gestured down the narrow road, obviously intended only to allow bus access to and from the base, “so I’ll just have to give you a lift to another stop.”

A few moments later, we all piled into his little Geo Metro. He waved his employee badge at the gate, the crossbeam lifted, and we drove off down the road. Not long afterwards, we pulled to the side of the road at the corner of Fourth and Jackson, in the International District. “That’s it for tonight, guys, I’ve got a ferry to catch.” We thanked him, got out, and he drove off into the night.

The other two adventurers wandered off to wait for the next bus to take them the rest of the way into downtown. I looked around, figured that it wasn’t that far, and started walking home through the Seattle night.

iTunes: “Helium” by 29 Died from the album Sworn (1995, 3:59).

It’s still not my fault…

Okay, first things first.

This is a personal website. I speak for myself, and myself alone: not for my employer, my friends, my neighbor, my government, my country, or anyone else. Just lil’ ol’ me. And, me being me, I will occasionally be a bit — or even more than a bit — of a boneheaded, ranting ass. I might even enjoy it. That’s just the way it happens every so often.

Now, I don’t mind at all if someone calls me on it — matter of fact, it’s a good thing that there are people who will call me on it when it happens. I’d hate to see where I could end up with an entirely unchecked ego! ;)

That said, IE still sucks, and it’s still not my fault. ;) However, progress has been made on that front, thanks to the absolutely mindblowingly incredible technical wizardry of Dean EdwardsIE7 hack, which uses CSS and JavaScript wizardry to beat IE into behaving like a modern, standards-compliant web browser. The hack has been installed on the main page of my site (with the rest of the pages soon to follow), and the difference it makes is a beautiful, beautiful thing. Many thanks to bethlet for reminding me of that piece of code.

Last night’s post was written in a fit of frustration (and really, one that I go through just about every time I work on a redesign when I get to the point of battling with IE). While my “screw it” attitude was a bit extreme (and probably wouldn’t really have lasted more than a couple days — I just shot my mouth off this time instead of stewing quietly until a solution was found), I fully stand behind the sentiments behind it. Other people have said it before me, and will say it again later on (though possibly with more tact). Outside of corporate-decreed lock in, there’s really no real reason to be using IE as your primary browser anymore, and there are plenty of benefits to switching to a modern browser.

However, as in the real world IE is (unfortuately) not likely to go away anytime soon, all ranting aside, I will continue to at least make an attempt at supporting it. I won’t code for IE, but I’ll at least do my best not to code against it, either.

That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it. ;)

Happy birthday, Kevin!

It’s day two of the May birthday extravaganza — my brother Kevin turns 28 today!

Happy birthday, Kev!

iTunes: “I Sit on Acid (Remix)” by Lords of Acid from the album Lust (1991, 6:22).

It’s not my fault IE sucks. Get a real browser.

I expected this, of course, but it’s still a bit disheartening. I spend a lot of time working up a change to my site design, get the basics up and running, just have a bit of tweaking to do…and then I take a few moments on a break from work and take a look at it under Internet Explorer 6 for Windows.

And cringe.

And you know what? I don’t care. I’m not even going to bother fixing the various oddities that crop up under IE. It’s not worth the time, trouble, and headaches that it would entail.

No Internet Explorer

It comes down to this, quite simply: Internet Explorer sucks. It’s buggy, shares responsibility for many of the security issues in Windows, offers far to many ways for people to compromise your system, and doesn’t support modern web standards. Sure, I know that IE makes up somewhere over 90% of the web browser market, and I know that because of that, it’s quite likely that somewhere over 90% of the people who stumble across my site won’t be seeing it the way that they should.

I don’t care.

Thanks in part to the fact that I do pay attention to modern web design techniques and standards, people using IE are quite able to read my site. All the information is there, it’s just not presented how it should be. But that’s not my fault — it’s IE’s fault — and that’s not worth me worrying about.

Use a Better Browser

As proposed by Tim Bray, Eclecticism now joins the “Use a Better Browser” campaign.

If you were looking at this in any browser but Microsoft Internet Explorer, it would look and run better and faster.

Microsoft’s Internet Explorer may currently have the largest market share, but it has been stagnating for a while. There will be no new Internet Explorer version until Microsoft’s next operating system. It won’t be available for several years and you’ll need to pay for Windows to get it.

Meanwhile, other web browsers have been innovating and are becoming more and more popular. Today, these browsers run faster and look better than Internet Explorer.

By using a better browser your experience will be better. Plus, you will help to foster a competitive environment in which browser technology can continue to innovate and make everyone’s web experience more pleasant and exciting.

So that’s that.

Get Firefox. Get Opera. Get Konqueror. Get a Mac and use Safari.

Just get away from IE.

iTunes: “Glory (Cajun Dub)” by K.M.F.D.M. from the album Glory (1993, 5:31).

Happy Birthday to me, new site design

First things first: I’m 31 today. Woohoo! Go me. :)

Now that that’s over with, I’m also turning on the “new” site design. As I mentioned before, visually it’s only a partial redesign, in that I’ve moved it from a single-column layout to a two-column layout. Code-wise, however, it’s been redone from the ground up. The majority of the work is done though, aside from some work on fleshing out the sidebar and fine tuning things.

Of course, that means that there are very likely bugs. Feel free to post anything you might notice in comments, and I’ll get it taken care of as soon as I can.

(TypePad’s caching mechanisms may be playing games with my stylesheet — while the new stylesheet is in the system, they seem to be serving the old stylesheet. If things look completely wonky at the moment, that’s likely why, and there probably won’t be much I or anyone else can do until the servers catch up with the changes I made. Sigh.)

iTunes: “Difficult Listening Hour – 02v2” by Various Artists from the album Difficult Listening Hour (2000, 1:04:41).

List of Dangerous Bloggers

Twilight Invasion recently posted a list of people who’ve been fired because of their weblog. Interesting to read the stories other than mine.

Apparently, this list should also include Stephen Stewart, though with only a post-by-post method of trawling the archives, I didn’t attempt to dig backwards through 18 months of posts to see if there’s a more specific mention on his site.

Anyone else?

Jason Webley Birth Day – Only Just Beginning CD release

My birthday weekend started off with this year’s Birth Day for Jason Webley, his annual “resurrection” show, this year combined with the CD release party for Only Just Beginning. A full writeup will have to wait for later — it’s a gorgeous spring day today, and I want to go out and play in the sun — but I’ve posted my photos from the concert (and the after-concert revelry in Freeway Park).

As always, though, a wonderful show. Got to meet Mike and ~~his wife, and…well, here, I’m going to have to grovel for forgiveness, as while I remember Eric and his wife, I’ve completely spaced out on Eric’s website~~ Viv and Eric [and Rose and Adam — we all sat together during the show, then the five of them went off to a local bar while Prairie and I followed the asparagus into Freeway Park for the after-show]{.underline}.

(Mind like a steel trap, I tell you.

Rusty and illegal in 37 states.)

In any case, photos are up, a good time was had by all, and I’m off to enjoy the weather. :)

iTunes: “Music That Puts Everything Together” by Jason Webley from the album Only Just Beginning (2004, 4:54).

Poem in Your Pocket

First off, a quick explanation for things being so quiet around here lately: I’m working on a redesign of the site. In some ways, nothing major, as I’ll be keeping the same basic visual style, and I’m “just” transforming it from a single-column back to a two-column layout. However, that’s caused me to re-code from the bottom up in order to get everything working the way I want it, which has been keeping me busy over the past few nights.

The new design probably won’t go up until sometime next week at the earliest (this being birthday weekend and all, spending hours in front of the computer is fairly low priority), but it’ll go up as soon as I can manage it.

Today, though, is Poem In Your Pocket day. Originally started by the New York Times and the City of New York, someone on Orkut’s blogger community suggested turning this into a meme.

“The City of New York and The New York Times invite you to join us on April 30, 2004 for Poem in Your Pocket Day… New Yorkers are encouraged to carry a poem in their pocket and share it with friends, family, coworkers and classmates.”

I thought it would be a great idea if bloggers did something similar on April 30th:

To commemorate the end of National Poetry Month, blog about your favorite poem and provide at least one link to other poems and/or a bio of the poet.

Now, admittedly, I’ve never been much of one for poetry. For one reason or another, it’s an art form that has consistently failed to capture my interest much at all. However, there is one poet that I absolutely love, and have quite a few books of poetry (including one wonderful collection of his complete poems): e. e. cummings. Something about his style has always grabbed me, and he’s been the only poet ever to peak my interest.

While it’s difficult for me to narrow down one particular favorite, there are two that consistently pop into my mind when I’m trying to pick a favorite.

This first one I love because it’s so wonderfully un-subtle. Just my style. ;)

she being Brand

-new;and you
know consequently a
little stiff i was
careful of her and(having

thoroughly oiled the universal
joint tested my gas felt of
her radiator made sure her springs were O.

K.)i went right to it flooded-the-carburetor cranked her

up,slipped the
clutch(and then somehow got into reverse she
kicked what
the hell)next
minute i was back in neutral tried and

again slo-wly;bare,ly nudg.     ing(my

lev-er Right-
oh and her gears being in
A 1 shape passed
from low through
second-in-to-high like
greasedlightening)just as we turned the corner of Divinity

avenue i touched the accelerator and give

her the juice,good

                    (it

was the first ride and believe i we was
happy to see how nice she acted right up to
the last minute coming back down by the Public
Gardens i slammed on

the
internalexpanding
&
externalcontracting
brakes Bothatonce and

brought allofher tremB
-ling
to a:dead.

stand-
;Still)

This second one that always sticks in my head is much sweeter, and it’s primarily the last nine lines (starting with “what’s wholly”) that really get to me.

because it’s

Spring
thingS

dare to do people

(& not
the other way

round)because it

‘s A
pril

Lives lead their own

persons(in
stead

of everybodyelse’s)but

what’s wholly
marvellous my

Darling

is that you &
i are more than you

& i(be

ca
us

e It’s we)

(Incidentally, trying to translate e. e. cummings’ poetic formatting into workable valid HTML/CSS is not easy to do. Hopefully I managed to pull it off…)

(via Phil)

iTunes: “Lust for Life” by Pop, Iggy from the album Trainspotting (1977, 5:13).

So very true

This is too nice a time of year to be fighting a war.

Taken this morning at the war memorial in downtown Seattle.

iTunes: “Time After Time (S.F.E.)” by Morice, Tara from the album Something for Everybody (1997, 3:58).

iTunes 4.5: Major iTunes Music Store update!

iTunes 4.5

The iTunes website hasn’t been updated yet (as of 0:17 4/28/04), so I can’t download it yet, but if you open up iTunes and go to the iTunes Music Store, you’ll see a badge for iTunes 4.5.

Update at 0:29: The iTunes website has been updated with iTunes 4.5.

This looks huge.

Clicking on the badge leads to a page with a quick rundown of the new features. As it’s all within the iTMS interface, I can’t link to anything, but here’s what I’m seeing:

Free Downloads/Single of the Week: Great music from emerging artists each week. Check back every Tuesday for the latest. (Currently, clicking on the “Get Free Single” link just leads back to the main iTMS page. [Update:]{.underline} The Foo Fighters‘ “My Hero” is the first free single.)

iMix — Publish Your Playlists: Be a tastemaker on iTunes. Publish your playlists for all the world to see. It’s easy to send lists to friends and family via “Tell-A-Friend” to boost your ratings and top the charts. (Playlists can include music from your personal library along with songs available in the iTMS. Drag selections into a playlist, give it a title and description, hit Publish and it’s in the iTMS for a year, then hit “Tell-A-Friend” to send the link to friends.)

[Update:]{.underline}

In the spirit of experimentation, I’ve created my first iMix. Since I listen to a ton of non-mainstream music, I was curious just how good the iTMS was. I fixed my “Recently Played” smart playlist to only list the last 250 songs that I have listened to (as that’s the upper limit for what you can submit to an iMix in one playlist) and sent that in. Of those 250 tracks, 61 were recognized, and I’m rather surprised at some of the ones that made it in. Nifty!

Music Videos Page: Now there’s a whole area dedicated to music videos, with new ones added all the time. Buy the songs you like with just one click. (Currently there are 72 available, free to watch, with a link to the iTMS song underneath.)

Movie Trailers — Now in iTunes: The ultra-popular movie trailers from Apple’s QuickTime site are now available on iTunes. (This section is live, includes both trailers and soundtrack iTMS links.)

Radio Charts: Check out the most-played tunes on your favorite radio station. Updated weekly, there are more than 1200 stations across hundreds of cities nationwide. (Nine stations are listed for the Seattle/Tacoma area: Mix 92.5, KUBE 98, KMPS, KWJZ, KISW Rock, Star 101.5, The Mountain, KISS 106.1, Warm 106.9, and The End. Eight are listed for the Anchorage area: KFAT, KAFC, KYMG, KGOT, KMXS, KBRJ, KNIK and KWHL.)

Party Shuffle: Playlists just got even easier. Party Shuffle is a new dynamic playlist that’s always on and ready to party. It shuffles songs from your library or playlists, and you can add or delete on the fly. Be the DJ you’ve always wanted to be.

CD Insert Printing: Once you’ve burned your CD, print a jewel case insert for it right in iTunes. Choose from several cool designs using a mosaic of album cover art or just a single cover. iTunes also lets you print a list of all the songs or albums in your music library.

Wish List: Found a zillion songs in the Music Store you want to buy? Save the previews by dragging them into a playlist and download them later with a single click.

Import WMA Files (Windows): Along with your AACs and MP3s, you can now import WMA (Windows Media) files (unprotected files only).

Lossless Encoder: Using the Apple Lossless Encoder, you can import CDs into iTunes with sound indistinguishable from the original recording but at about half the size.

Links to Music Store: Your own music library now links back to the Music Store for a seamless connection to the artists you love.

Schweeeeeeet…!

(via Phil)