Archive for September, 2006

This is Just a Place Holder

Tuesday, September 26th, 2006


All day I kept thinking about making a post. The problem was that I couldn’t actually come up with anything to say. Nothing potentially interesting anyway, but in the interest of getting myself in to the habit I figured I’d just babble, making this nice little place holder post. I know there’s no reason I need to post every day, but until I actually start writing anything interesting here I just want to keep reminding myself that this blog exists.

September is a slow month at work so I’ve been trying to fill it with a lot of little random tasks. Of course there’s only a finite number of things I can do while also having to keep an eye over the retail front. Fortunately I’m going to be doing a lot more with the company website so that will at least give me something to play around with from time to time. It was originally set up by some other company, so I’m going to spend some quality time going over the code and cleaning it up as necessary. I’ll probably also comment the hell out of things so that if in the future someone else takes it over they’ll at least have some concept of what the hell was going on. That’s always the worst, taking over someone else’s server and then having to decipher everything that they did. It’s yet another on a long list of things I don’t miss about working in tech for a living.

Picture Pages!

Monday, September 25th, 2006


There isn’t much there at the moment, but now that the server is back to its old self I’ve started bringing the gallery back online. All I have on it at the moment are some of the pictures from my 31st Birthday party. I should be putting the pictures from North Carolina, and my big road trip from last summer back up in the next few days. I’m making that slow progress towards things I really want to do with this webserver.

The new season of TV

Sunday, September 24th, 2006


I have to say so far the Fall season has been underwhelming. Even shows that I enjoy have been sub-par thus far. Sure, there’s several that I have enjoyed, but last season for many shows set the bar pretty high and it seems for the most part they are falling short this time around. I know there are one or two shows (ER for example) where I haven’t seen the new episode(s) yet so maybe they are going to thrill me. In the case of ER though I kind of doubt it. I mean I acknowledge that show lost whatever edge it had long ago; but for me its still a soap opera, as much as it pisses me off what they have done to the show I am still hooked on it. Oh well, I guess we all need that little bit of fluff.

I’ll be sad to see Stargate SG-1 come to an end. I’m curious to see how they’re going to say good-bye to the series. I can only hope it doesn’t happen like what happened with Farscape. They need to give it some form of closure. It doesn’t even need to be some huge cataclysmic fighting to save the fate of the universe kind of ending (though knowing SG-1 that’s what they have in store), but I’d like to see some kind of wrap up that does the show justice.

I am excited for the new season of Battlestar Galactica coming up. It’s just a couple weeks before the new episodes begin and the trailers really have me pumped for it. Hopefully it’s not going to deflate me when it finally airs. I have to say that it’s one of the only sci-fi series that can use modern music in their trailers and not have it come off as being at all cheesy.

The one thing, however, that has remained a gem is the Venture Brothers. It continues to be one of the most twisted shows on television. At times it makes no sense at all, it disorients all rational thought, but it makes me laugh so hard at times that I have to remind myself to breathe. We all need a little twisted break from reality now and again.

The Domestic American Beer Drinker.

Friday, September 22nd, 2006


Nothing frustrates me more at work than the classic American beer drinker. This is the person who has spent their entire life drinking watered down, absolutely flavorless American style pilsners that we are all familiar with (Budweiser, Coors, Miller, etc.). I could care less that people enjoy these beers and drink them on a regular basis, that is certainly there right and they are welcome to all of that swill they can lay their hands on. I’ll admit there are times I’ve sucked back more than my fair share. What drives me crazy about that variety of beer drinker is when they come waltzing in to a microbrewery knowing full well there is nothing they will enjoy. They come in expecting you to be brewing some Budweiser clone so that they can buy it up and tell their friends they only drink microbrews. Well my apologies to them, but there are already breweries that brew that style of beer with amazing attention to detail and who replicate that tainted water flavor to perfection - they are Budweiser, Coors, Miller, etc. There is a reason the craft brew industry doesn’t make these kind of beers (well okay, there are many reasons, but this one is focused specifically on the business end of things), they are already done in a higher volume and at a far less expensive price than a small industry can compete with. Our industry exists because we offer an alternative to the mass produced brews. There are a growing segment of people who have come to realize that beer is allowed to have flavor.

One hundred years ago making beer in the style of the mass produced American lagers of today was unheard of. During that time the industry in this country was still ruled by German immigrants who had fled Europe because of political turmoil. They brought with them high standards in brewing and a discriminating taste for ingredients. These brewers, while no longer compelled by Germany’s Beer Purity Laws, still held true to them as best as they could in their new homes. Sadly this would all be brought to an end by Prohibition. The governments attempt at regulating morality and decency not only brought about the rise of organized crime, but it laid the groundwork for the production of bad beer. When Prohibition was brought to an end the demand for beer was through the roof. Breweries struggled to keep up with the ever growing demand, and things that once would be unheard of started to become common practice. One of these was instead of using only barley malt, they would add what are known as adjuncts. Adjuncts can be things such as corn, rice hulls, etc. While these will add fermentable material, they do not lend to flavor. Thus by cutting back on the volume of barley used a lighter flavor beer was being produced. After so long a time without legal brew the country was thirsty for whatever the breweries would produce. Big breweries grew bigger and pushed the small regional and local breweries right out of the pictures with the advent of methods to transport beer across the country. The American palette would soon be accustomed to the styles of beer that dominate the market today.

This leads me back to those people who come in here, try all our beers, and proclaim that they only like lagers. I’ve been told on numerous occasions our beers are “too much” (not in reference to price, but to flavor). It’s just another sign of how the average American consumer prefers quantity over quality. Fortunately there are those of us who fight to change that. Who want to educate the average beer drinker on the bounty of quality beers available with a diverse range of tastes. Sure, Budweiser will always be king, but the craft brew movement goes back to the earliest heritage of man, when real beer was king.

All dressed up with no place to go.

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006


Well the server is back to full functional mode. There is memory galore and all the running processes are happy and playing nice with one another. There was some tweaking that had to be done as Apache decided it wanted crash all over the place, but fortunately it didn’t take long to solve that one.

I’ve been playing around with a few themes. I started working on my own, but I realzed all I was doing was duplicating effort - my base layouts were very similiar to things that were pre-existing and under the GPL so I figured it’s easiest to try out a few themes I like then modify them to suit my needs. This one is very green. Bright green. Almost offensively so, which of course means that I was really drawn to it. It’s fairly simplistic yet has a lot of polish which I really like. I’m going to be gearing away from the darker themes. Not only is it overdone on the web, I also don’t want to look like some emo kid.

We’ll see how it all unfolds.