links for 2008-05-06


Remembrance




What's the goal?

Josh Harris:

Moments like this are reminders for me that the songs and trappings of Christian culture are not the hope of the world--Jesus is! We need to make him known. We need to love and seek to serve the world around us through prayer, through faithful evangelism, and through Christ-like service of those in need. Our goal is not building a more air-tight evangelical bubble. Neither should our goal be hoping that our subculture will burst out into the broader culture to great acclaim.

Instead, our goal should be to proclaim Christ and him crucified to the people we go to the school with, work with, and live next door to. Our goal should be to preach the gospel and live lives worthy of that gospel. Our goal should be to use our gifts in every sector of society so that God is glorified.


The theme yesterday was "fire"

I mean to post this yesterday, but totally forgot... Jonathan Wight asked how many covers of "Ring of Fire" one had in one's iTunes library. For me, the answer is two: Joaquin Phoenix's from the "Walk the Line" soundtrack, and the oldie but goodie from Social Distortion. This led to the following random tracks being played after shuffling the results of a search in iTunes for "fire": 1. "Ring of Fire" -- Joaquin Phoenix, Walk The Line Original Motion Picture Soundtrack 2. "City of New Orleans" -- Johnny Cash, Ring of Fire, Disc 2 3. "Consuming Fire" -- Third Day, Offerings: A Worship Album 4. "Ring of Fire" -- Social Distortion, Social Distortion 5. "Fire Woman (N.Y.C. Rock Mix)" -- The Cult, Fire Woman EP (import) 6. "Far and Gone" -- Day of Fire, Cut & Move 7. "Waiting" -- Fireflight, The Healing of Harms 8. "Shine" -- By The Tree, World On Fire 9. "Reborn" -- Day of Fire, Cut & Move 10. "Wake Me" -- Day of Fire, Cut & Move Apparently, my copy of iTunes has a thing for the Man in Black and Day of Fire. I can live with that.


ATPM 14.05

The May issue of About This Particular Macintosh is now available for your reading pleasure. Wes has a great round-up of the Mac blogosphere's reaction to the Psystar Mac clone, as well as bits on Adobe Creative Suite, e-mail clients, Apple's proceeds from Google referrals, profitability of potential iPhone software sales, and user interfaces. Finally, the blog about the column returns as Son of Bloggable. It's about time, Wes! Mark's understandably unhappy with actions of the MBG (Britian's RIAA), and notes the fallacy of DRM in light of the closing of MSN Music. Ed has a revised list of GTD applications in this month's Next Action, while Lee dodges and burns up Photoshop for the Curious. This month's desktop pictures are courtesy of David Siebecker, and are from a six-day hike through New Hampshire's White Mountains. All seems lost for Cortland and company as Lisa makes a last bid for victory, any way she can take it. Yours truly pounds out a review on Apple's latest keyboard, while Linus grills Blue Crab. Sylvester is impressed with Drive Genius 2, while ATPM's Official Pilot™, Flight Officer Lawson, puts the Flipp Premium Leather Case for his iPod through its paces. ATPM is a labor of love, with no staffer receiving compensation, so we really can't complain when Paul takes time to play with SpacePig. As always, About This Particular Macintosh is available in a variety of formats for maximum reader comfort. Thanks for reading!


links for 2008-05-01


Today's First 10 Shuffled Songs

  1. "Have You Ever Needed Someone So Bad" - Def Leppard, Rock of Ages: The Definitive Collection
  2. "The Big Chair" - Tears For Fears, Songs From The Big Chair
  3. "Joe Bean" - Johnny Cash, At Folsom Prison
  4. "Blue Train" - Johnny Cash, The Complete Sun Singles, Volume 2
  5. "The Cross Has Said It All" - Matt Redman, The Friendship And The Fear
  6. "It's So Easy" - Harvest, 41 Will Come
  7. "Call Back When I'm Honest" - The Almost, Southern Weather
  8. "The Planets: Mars, The Bringer Of War (Conclusion)" - London Symphony Orchestra, Heavy Classix
  9. "Flashpoint" - Whitecross, Triumphant Return
  10. "Never Been Unloved" - Michael W. Smith, The Second Decade 1993-2003 As with yesterday, all links are to the Amazon MP3 store, with the exception of Heavy Classix, which is only available on CD.

links for 2008-04-30


Today's First 10 Shuffled Songs

From earlier this morning, when I was in a music-listening mode: 1. "The Steward of Gondor (Featuring Billy Boyd)" -- The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
2. "Flicker" -- Audio Adrenaline, Some Kind of Zombie
3. "Invisible Sun" -- The Police, Every Breath You Take: The Classics
4. "Dirty World" -- The Traveling Wilburys, The Traveling Wilburys Collection
5. "I Hate Everything" -- George Strait, 50 Number Ones, Disc 1
6. "Big Yellow Taxi" -- Counting Crows, Hard Candy
7. "Before My Eyes" -- Tesla, Five Man Acoustical Jam (Live)
8. "Least of These" -- Justin Nevins, Nada One
9. "Hallowed" -- Jennifer Knapp & Phil Keaggy, City on a Hill: Sing Alleluia
10. "Raise Him Up (Electric)" -- Lost And Found, Something Different All links are to the Amazon MP3 Downloads store, with the exception of Tesla's Five Man Acoustical Jam, which is for the CD, as it's not available as a download. Why Amazon over the iTunes Store? For a lot of songs, Amazon offers the same or better bit rate than iTunes, which means a better listening experience, and there's absolutely no DRM on Amazon's songs. This is the case only with certain songs, not all, on the iTunes Store. And I've just been buying more music of late from Amazon than from the iTunes Store...


links for 2008-04-29


At least there was no "Ebony and Ivory"




Today's proud parenting moment

Me: Let's get your Crocs on so you can go play on your swingset while I scoop the dogs' poop. Him: No, thank you. (This from the child who hasn't met a slide he hasn't liked.) Me: (walking in to the living room where he is) Why, what are you up to? Him: I'm picking up the pieces of the puzzle that spilled out. Me: (aghast) Okaaayyyy.....


links for 2008-04-28


links for 2008-04-25


links for 2008-04-24


Phischmix

I've had this playlist since, well, since before there were playlists. It started as a mix CD I put together in the very early aughts, before the iPod was released. It has continued life as a playlist in iTunes, and I put it together today as a Mixwit mix to try out that service. Enjoy!

Unfortunately, the services which Mixwit uses to pull tracks didn't have everything in my original "Phischmix". Here's the full playlist, with the missing songs in italics: "Girlfriend" by Matthew Sweet
"Kryptonite" by 3 Doors Down
"Everything to Everyone" by Everclear
"My Hero" by the Foo Fighters
"Push" by Matchbox 20
"Closing Time" by Semisonic
"Man on the Moon" by R.E.M.
"Three Marlenas" by The Wallflowers
"Come On Eileen" by Save Ferris
"Walkin' on the Sun" by Smash Mouth
"Fire Escape" by Fastball
"She's So High" by Tal Bachman
"John Hughes 2000"by Menthol
"Heroes" by The Wallflowers One of the little eye candy things I like about Mixwit is the fact that as you go through the playlist, the tape moves from one side of the cassette to the other, just as its analog predecessor does. It's those little things developers pay attention to that make the whole experience. Enjoy!


One Gallon Axe

This is fairly awesome.

Doesn't that make you want to drink milk?


I don't want to be at war a hundred years from now, either, but...

Clifford D. May, A Hundred Years of War?:

A hundred years from now, Americans might still be fighting militant Islamists in Iraq and other places. What could be worse than that? A hundred years from now, America and the West could have been defeated by militant Islamists.

Al-Qaeda, Iran’s ruling mullahs, Hezbollah, and others militant jihadis have told us what they are fighting for. The well-known Islamist, Hassan al-Banna, described the movement’s goals succinctly: "to dominate...to impose its laws on all nations and to extend its power to the entire planet." He said that in 1928. Who would have believed then that his heirs would acquire the wealth, power, and lethality they enjoy today? Who can say where they may be 100 years from now? Who can say where the West will be? Survival is not an entitlement. Freedom must be earned by every generation.


links for 2008-04-19


Taking commercialization to the grave

Remember Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan? Yes, yes, it's still the best Trek film. But do you recall the end, when Spock is "buried" by being shot from the Enterprise within a photon torpedo? Did you ever think, "Man, that would be a cool casket to be buried in!" Well...

Star Trek Photo Torpedo Casket

Scheduled to be available "mid-2008", and pricing has not yet been determined.