Combs Spouts Off

"It's my opinion and it's very true."

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Posts Tagged ‘blogging’

Site alert: weirdness imminent

Posted by Richard on March 7, 2007

Here’s a heads-up for regular readers: On Wednesday, from 9:00-11:00 AM GMT (2-4 AM MST), Blog-City will be shut down for the upgrade to version 6.0. They’re describing this as "a MAJOR upgrade," so don’t be surprised if the outage lasts longer or if there is residual weirdness afterward.

Combs Spouts Off faces an additional potential problem: Blog-City version 5 introduced new ways of laying out pages, adding bits and pieces, etc., based on what they call "widgets." But they let existing users stick with their existing setups (based on similar but different tools called "portlets"). I’m of the "it ain’t broke, don’t fix it" persuasion, and I found the instructions for converting to the new system a bit less than intuitive. Plus, I was put off by the apparent need to "take the plunge" and convert the actual live site without being able to preview the consequences first. So I did nothing.

Well, now push has come to shove. My old blog layout is no longer supported in v.6. In the next few hours, I’ll either have to undertake the conversion I’ve so far avoided, or let them convert me automatically when they upgrade. They’ve warned us that the automatic conversion will result in "a basic predefined layout" — which I interpret as meaning "it won’t be pretty."

I’m still thinking about it. Stay tuned.

UPDATE: OK, I bit the bullet. And I’ve been futzing with it for what seems forever. I don’t like it. Expect more changes. Later.
 

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Best wishes, Bert

Posted by Richard on February 27, 2007

Bert Wiener is a very smart and funny man who never blogged enough, but did it well when he did. He just posted again after a five-month hiatus. I’m really, really sorry he did — well, what I mean is I’m sorry that this was the reason:

What I thought was a back problem since October turns out to be a return of my leukemia. It manifested as soft tumors on my spine. Just finished the first course of chemo, will have some more, and then a marrow transplant. With success I’ll be completely cured within 12 to 18 months. I’m staying optimistic and seeing this as a series of tasks to complete. That’s all for now.

That really sucks. I certainly wish Bert the best, and I’m sure he’ll get through this. He’s always struck me as a pretty tough guy, and he’s got a couple of things going for him. For one thing, he’s got a good attitude, and that’s so important. For another, he’s already bald. 😉
 

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Egyptian blogger sentenced

Posted by Richard on February 22, 2007

Egyptian student and blogger Abdelkareem Suleiman was sentenced to four years in prison today. For writing things on his blog that were critical of the Egyptian government and fundamentalist Islam. Outrageous.

This site wants freedom for Kareem When I wrote about Kareem in November, I urged readers to sign a petition (click Help Free Kareem in right sidebar) and to call or write the Egyptian embassy/government. I echoed Tom Palmer and Jason Kuznicki on the need to keep it polite:

It’s enormously tempting to heap contempt upon a country that imprisons people for blogging while urging mercy for Saddam Hussein, a country that takes billions every year in U.S. aid and claims to be an ally, but does everything it can to undermine the spread of democracy and freedom. But Kuznicki and Palmer are right — be respectful and polite. You can curse them under your breath later.

Now that countless respectful and polite pleas, rallies around the world, and at least three petitions have all fallen on deaf ears, I’m inclined to be somewhat less respectful in expressing my displeasure to the Egyptian government. I’m not going to curse them openly — that would still be counterproductive. I think "polite contempt" is the tone I’ll aim for.

For embassy contact information, click the Palmer or Kuznicki link above. For links to other petitions, reports on rallies for Kareem, and other news and information, visit FreeKareem.org.

Here is the press release from FreeKareem.org:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Free Kareem Coalition
+1-617-661-0053
free.kareem@gmail.com

Interfaith Coalition Condemns Jailing of Egyptian Student over Blogposts, Calls on Egyptian President Mubarak to Pardon Abdelkareem Soliman

CAIRO – The “Free Kareem Coalition,” an interfaith group of human rights activists from around the world, condemned the sentencing of Egyptian student Abdelkareem Soliman for expressing his opinion on his personal blog.

A judge in Egypt today sentenced Kareem to four years in prison for the alleged crimes of “defaming the President of Egypt” and “insulting Islam.”

Dalia Ziada of the Cairo-based Arabic Network for Human Rights Information explained that Kareem’s conviction remains the first time an Egyptian blogger has been arrested for writing on his blog. “It sends a chilling message to bloggers of all persuasions in Egypt and across the Middle East. We are not free to express ourselves openly on our websites.”

Kareem criticized Egyptian authorities for failing to protect the rights of religious minorities and women, and expressed views about religious extremism in strong terms.

Bahraini blogger Esra’a Al-Shafei, who launched the website FreeKareem.org to coordinate the international solidarity campaign, noted the basic human rights violation. “I was offended by some of Kareem’s blog writings. But I cannot support his imprisonment merely because he said a few things that insult my identity. Freedom of expression and open exchange of ideas must be respected.”

In November, Kareem was detained after being interrogated by prosecutors. He was held for over two months without trial and has remained in solitary confinement without access to his lawyers.

Kareem’s conviction comes despite global rallies on Kareem’s behalf, including demonstrations outside Egyptian embassies in Washington, Rome, London, Paris, Stockholm, and New York. Over 2,000 people have sent letters to Egyptian authorities demanding Kareem’s release.

Opinion editorials in the Washington Post, International Herald Tribune, and Beirut Daily Star have all also called for Kareem’s release, along with a bi-partisan coalition of US Congressional leaders, European parliamentarians, and Costa Rican representatives.

“We call on the appeals courts in Egypt to listen to international condemnation and do the right thing,” stated organizer Mohammed Shouman. “Kareem’s right to free expression has been violated and his conviction should be overturned.”

In the meantime, activists fear Kareem’s life is in danger and hope for high-level intervention. “We hope President Hosni Mubarak will pardon Kareem and allow him to start a new life outside of Egypt,” noted Al-Shafei. “We won’t be silent until Kareem is safe.”

See www.FreeKareem.org for the latest updates.

Do what you can. At least take a moment to sign the HAMSA petition.

Free Kareem  

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Career suicide by blog

Posted by Richard on February 21, 2007

Outdoor Life’s hunting editor, Jim Zumbo, has had a blog at the Outdoor Life site. Apparently, Zumbo thinks only "sporting firearms" in the hands of "gentleman hunters" should be legal. I suppose he means bolt-action rifles and over/under shotguns with lovely walnut stocks and maybe some fine filigree — the kind of weapon one would be proud to show off at the country club while sharing cigars and brandy with one’s chums.

On Saturday, Zumbo posted a rant against hunters who use "assault rifles" — you know, self-loading, semi-automatic rifles with detachable magazines and ugly black plastic stocks instead of fine wood. In fact, Zumbo called them "terrorist rifles," thus linking the legions of fans of the AR15 and other "ugly black guns" to terrorism. The post is no longer available — in fact, Outdoor Life has removed his blog:

Due to the controversy surrounding Jim Zumbo’s recent postings, Outdoor Life has decided to discontinue the “Hunting With Zumbo” blog for the time being. Outdoor Life has always been, and will always be, a steadfast supporter of our Second Amendment rights, which do not make distinctions based on the looks of the firearms we choose to own, shoot and take hunting. Please direct any comments you have to OLletters@time4.com.

On Sunday, Libercontrarian came out of retirement to post Zumbo’s rant, along with his own highly appropriate critique and some interesting links. Apparently, Zumbo’s ignorant, elitist, and anti-2nd-Amendment attitude ignited a firestorm of protest. On Monday, Libercontrarian posted an update — Remington has terminated its sponsorship of Zumbo:

As a result of comments made by Mr. Jim Zumbo in recent postings on his blog site, Remington Arms Company, Inc., has severed all sponsorship ties with Mr. Zumbo effective immediately. While Mr. Zumbo is entitled to his opinions and has the constitutional right to freely express those opinions, these comments are solely his, and do not reflect the views of Remington.

Good for them. And good for Outdoor Life. And three cheers for ugly black guns. Hey, Zumbo, here’s a suggestion for a mea culpa that might save your sorry ass:

"The other day, I said some very stupid things, and I want to apologize. I’ve been reminded that the 2nd Amendment is not about duck hunting. And I realize that my personal aesthetic and emotional reactions to a particular type of firearm are totally irrelevant to your right to own and use it for any honest, peaceful purpose. I’m very, very sorry for suggesting otherwise."

If that doesn’t work for you, Zumbo, you’d best look into a career change. I’m sure that any of several gun control organizations, which lately have been trying to conceal their real agenda behind "safety" and "violence prevention" smokescreens, would be happy to hire you. They’re always looking for another "sportsmen for more gun-control" spokesman.
 

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Trying to shut up the troops

Posted by Richard on February 2, 2007

The "chicken hawk" meme that’s long been popular with the left is bad enough. It’s the contemptible claim that only those who’ve been in combat are entitled to support the war, and that those of us who support the war and haven’t served either need to enlist or shut up. But now we have a new anti-war meme — courtesy of Bill Arkin, a journalist and "military analyst" for NBC News who blogs at The Washington Post — that’s stunningly vile and disgusting.

Apparently, Arkin noticed that the vast majority of military people do support the war (we Fighting Keyboardists pointed this out a long time ago). He’s sick of listening to them and thinks they should shut up. He cited a few examples —  soldiers in Iraq speaking out in a recent NBC Nightly News report — and responded with ill-concealed contempt and loathing (emphasis added):

These soldiers should be grateful that the American public, which by all polls overwhelmingly disapproves of the Iraq war and the President’s handling of it, do still offer their support to them, and their respect.

Through every Abu Ghraib and Haditha, through every rape and murder, the American public has indulged those in uniform, accepting that the incidents were the product of bad apples or even of some administration or command order.

So, we pay the soldiers a decent wage, take care of their families, provide them with housing and medical care and vast social support systems and ship obscene amenities into the war zone for them, we support them in every possible way, and their attitude is that we should in addition roll over and play dead, defer to the military and the generals and let them fight their war, and give up our rights and responsibilities to speak up because they are above society?

I can imagine some post-9/11 moment, when the American people say enough already with the wars against terrorism and those in the national security establishment feel these same frustrations. In my little parable, those in leadership positions shake their heads that the people don’t get it, that they don’t understand that the threat from terrorism, while difficult to defeat, demands commitment and sacrifice and is very real because it is so shadowy, that the very survival of the United States is at stake. Those Hoovers and Nixons will use these kids in uniform as their soldiers. If it weren’t about the United States, I’d say the story would end with a military coup where those in the know, and those with fire in their bellies, would save the nation from the people.

But it is the United States, and the recent NBC report is just an ugly reminder of the price we pay for a mercenary – oops sorry, volunteer – force that thinks it is doing the dirty work.

First of all, only a postmodern leftist worshipping at the feet of Chomsky and Said would interpret a soldier’s simple criticism of his viewpoint as a demand that "we should roll over and play dead, and give up our rights …"

It’s clear that Arkin despises people in the military and suspects that many of them are bloodthirsty goons who enjoy murdering and raping civilians and would be happy to turn the U.S. into a military dictatorship. His hatred has become so intense that he can no longer heed the advice he gave himself when he began the blog (emphasis added):

My basic philosophy is that government is more incompetent than diabolical, that the military gets way too much of a free ride (memo to self: Don’t say anything bad about the troops), and that official secrecy is the greatest threat citizens actually face today.

Mind you, I think he was off to a bad start with that philosopy. It starts out all right, but "official secrecy" (whatever that means) is our biggest threat? Not the people who want to blow up our airplanes, trains, and buildings? Not the movement that wants to subjugate us all under its 7th-century laws, turn women into chattel, and stone homosexuals and adulterers to death? Interesting perspective you have there, Arkin.

So, according to Arkin and his leftist friends, who has moral standing to comment on the war? Those of us who haven’t served have no right to speak out because we’re chicken hawks, hypocritically asking others to do what we haven’t done ourselves. The troops have no right to speak out because they’re mercenaries lusting for blood and ready to institute a fascist dictatorship. The people who served in the past and support the war have no right to speak out because … well, I’m not sure, exactly, but I think it’s because they’re still mercenaries at heart, lusting for blood and dictatorship.

Apparently, Arkin and his friends think that only those who’ve served in the past, but who now oppose war, are entitled to voice their opinions — people like Jack Murtha and John Effin’ Kerry.

And he has the gall to worry about us silencing him?
 

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New council member

Posted by Richard on February 1, 2007

Congratulations to Bookworm Room, the Watcher’s choice to fill the vacancy on the Watcher’s Council. Looks like a worthy choice, too — check out this post, for instance. Or this short one. Bookworm’s post in this week’s council voting is also well worth reading. Or just browse Bookworm’s main page for a while — there’s lots of good commentary and links.
 

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Council vacancy

Posted by Richard on January 26, 2007

Oops, I meant to post a heads-up a couple of days ago and forgot: Andrew Olmstead opted to return to active duty and to Iraq (best wishes, Andrew!), and therefore has given up his seat on the Watcher’s Council. The Watcher wants to choose a replacement before Dick Cheney’s 66th birthday, so if you’re a blogger who’s interested, toss your hat into the ring in the next day or two. Check out the rules first to see what you’re getting into. 🙂
 

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Watcher’s Council vacancy

Posted by Richard on December 29, 2006

The Watcher of Weasels has announced another vacancy on the Watcher’s Council:

Due to a decline in posting frequency, Dymphna of Gates of Vienna has chosen to vacate her seat on the Watcher’s Council.  It’s been great having Dymphna on board for all this time, and I sure hope she continues blogging, even if she doesn’t manage to be as prolific as she would like.

That’s really too bad, and I share the Watcher’s hope that Dymphna will keep blogging. Choosing a worthy replacement will be tough. If you’re a blogger who’s interested, or if you’d like to nominate someone else, check out the rules for Council membership and get your nomination into the Watcher before the end of the year. (How often do you get to use that phrase to convey a sense of urgency?)
 

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Five things you don’t know about me

Posted by Richard on December 25, 2006

Jeffrey Haemer gave me a Christmas present. You shouldn’t have, Jeff. No, you really shouldn’t have. It’s one of those weird presents that I’m not at all sure I want: he tagged me with the meme indicated by the title of this post. OK, I’ll play. If you’ve known me quite a while, you probably know at least some of these things, but if you’re the average blog reader, probably not:

1) I’m a naturalized citizen. I was about 7 when it happened and don’t remember the event, but I don’t think I had to take the test. Later, I was quite disappointed to learn that I could never become President.

2) I’m a bastard. My late father, Col. Sam Combs, wasn’t my biological father. That was some doctor in Vienna. After my mother died, my dad told me about it (actually, my grandmother had let it slip several years earlier) and gave me my biological father’s name and address, but I never looked him up. He didn’t mean anything to me. Probably a mistake. I could have gotten useful health history — maybe even an inheritance.

3) I had my appendix removed in a German hospital when I was 5. Most of my early childhood is vague, but I have a clear memory of being anesthetized: they put a folded-up cloth over my nose and mouth and dripped ether onto it.

4) I learned to ski in St. Moritz, Switzerland. I was in high school at the time, and we lived in Izmir, Turkey. Three friends and I took the Orient Express (2nd class, along with a bunch of "Gastarbeiter" going to work in Germany) from Istanbul. The whole trip — rail travel, a night in Zurich, a week in St. Moritz, a week’s ski rental, meals, and Corviglia cog train tickets (that’s how you got up the mountain) — cost me about $300. I paid most of that with the savings from my after-school job at the Air Force library, and my grandmother helped out, as usual.

5) I was a Young Americans for Freedom chapter chair in college and attended the famous 1969 YAF convention in St. Louis where the traditionalists and libertarians split. I remember Dana Rorabacher (yes, the California congressman) playing guitar and singing pro-freedom songs — mostly, his own libertarian lyrics for some folk favorites. Some of those lyrics had distinctly smoking-herb-related double entendres. I’m sure Dana’s glad there were no video recordings.

OK, that’s it for me. Now, the rules of this game not only allow, but require me to re-gift Jeffrey’s present: I have to tag 5 bloggers with the same meme. So, Merry Christmas, Walter, David J, Thomas, Hathor, and Steve — what 5 things don’t we know about you? 🙂
 

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Vacancy on Watcher’s Council

Posted by Richard on December 12, 2006

The last time that there was a vacancy on the Watcher’s Council (just a couple of weeks ago), the Watcher of Weasels had already chosen a replacement before I got around to noticing. He did a fine job, too, by choosing Andrew Olmsted.

But now, there’s a new vacancy. ShrinkWrapped has gotten so busy it’s making him crazy, so he’s stepped down from the Council. If you’re a blogger who’s interested, or if you’d like to nominate someone else, check out the rules for Council membership and get your nomination into the Watcher before the end of this week. Here’s the announcement of the vacancy.
 

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B-list blogger

Posted by Richard on November 21, 2006

Harvey at Bad Example apparently was cruising the hip, trendy, pop-culture blogs, catching up on the latest fashions, gadgets, and celebrity news, when he came across an interesting little widget that can either stroke or crush a blogger’s ego:

You may have heard the term "A-list blogger" before. It’s the tag granted to that uber-cool clique of "been-there-done-that-buy-my-T-shirt" bloggers whose names are ubiquitous and who sit around talking with their uppity friends about how wonderful they all are.

Not that I’m jealous or anything.

But if you’ve ever wanted to find out just how inadequately you stack up against the rest of the blogosphere, well, now you can:

The Blogebrity Widget (aka the Total Perspective Vortex)

Just plug in your URL and find out how devastatingly unimportant you truly are.

Well, I couldn’t resist a temptation like that, so I clicked on over to Kineda and plugged my URL into David Ng’s Technorati-powered widget. Turns out I’m not devastatingly unimportant after all — only mildly unimportant:

With 459 links in the last 180 days, Technorati places rgcombs.blog-city.com in the high authority group.

That makes you a B-List Blogger!

B-List Blogger

Thank you, David — but couldn’t you come up with a better graphic? It looked lame enough at Kineda, sitting on a black background and surrounded by colorful text. But here, on a white page, it looks like something from the box that Barbie’s Dream Blog came in.

Oh, well — Ng’s Technorati widget prompted me to drop by David Sifry’s blog, refresh my recollection of the Technorati authority rankings, and check out the state of the blogosphere. Interesting stuff.

Being a B-list blogger can make you feel either proud or humble, depending on where you focus. Technorati tracks about 57 million blogs, but only about 1.56 million of them have been linked to by at least 3 other blogs in the past 6 months. 1.1 million of those are in the Low Authority group, with 3-9 unique links. Another 416, 000 are in the Middle Authority group, with 10-99 links. The High Authority group is the 26,000 blogs with 100-499 links. Finally, there are 4,000 Very High Authority blogs with 500+ links.

So, I can feel a bit dejected to realize that there are about 7,000 blogs that matter more than mine. Some of them much, much more:

With 6040 links in the last 180 days, Technorati places instapundit.com in the very high authority group.

That makes you a A-List Blogger!

Or I can feel rather smugly self-satisfied that I’m in the top 0.01% of all blogs and the top 0.4% of the 1.56 million ranked blogs.

Or I can just shrug, accept both perspectives as mildly interesting, but not very important, have a wee dram of Scotch, and call it a night. Think I’ll go with that last one.
 

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Free Kareem!

Posted by Richard on November 10, 2006

In Egypt, they imprison people for blogging about women's rights, freedom of expression, and "secular thoughts":

Egyptian security forces have arrested a student blogger whose writing was critical of Islam and the government, security sources and rights activists said on Tuesday.

Arabic blogger Abdel Kareem Nabil Suleiman, a 22-year-old aspiring human rights lawyer, was arrested in the coastal city of Alexandria on Monday.

His detention was the latest crackdown on political opposition by Egyptian authorities following arrests and beatings at street protests earlier this year, despite calls from Egypt's U.S. ally for political reform.

"The accusations directed against him are that he published opinions aimed at disturbing public order, insulted the head of state and defamed Islam," said Sally Sami, programme officer at the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (HRInfo), which is representing him.

Suleiman was the latest of several bloggers to be arrested in Egypt, where news of his detention came shortly after rights group Reporters Without Borders added Egypt to a list of worst suppressors of freedom of expression on the Internet.

His arrest was unusual in that he was arrested solely because of comments made on the Internet, activists said. Other bloggers were mostly picked up during anti-government protests earlier in the year.Several have spent weeks or months in jail.

According to Tom Palmer, Kareem is part of Cato's "Arabic liberal project" — I'm sure that "liberal" in this context means "classical liberal."

Kareem had been previously tossed out of al-Azhar University — described by Reuters as "Egypt's most prestigious seat of Islamic learning" (oxymoron alert!) — for expressing "secular thoughts," and they apparently urged prosecutors to go after him. Jason Kuznicki expressed well how outrageous this is:

A student dismissed from a university for “secular thoughts:” The very act makes the institution unfit to be called a university in the modern era. That it would then inform on the student and cooperate in a government inquiry only makes the situation the more deplorable.

HAMSA (Hands Across the Mideast Support Alliance) is gathering signatures on a statement demanding that Kareem be freed — please take just a moment to add your name. For other actions you can take, check the Palmer and Kuznicki links above. For complete background information and the latest news about Kareem's case, visit Free Kareem!

If you call or write the Egyptian embassy or other Egyptian officials, heed Kuznicki's warning:

Please be respectful and well-reasoned in all your contacts with the Egyptian government. Remember that our case is the stronger one, and that only the weaker party must resort to name-calling or abuse. As the ancient playwright put it, the very fact that Zeus must reach for his thunderbolts is proof enough that he has no argument.

Remember also that a man’s freedom is at stake here, not just in the abstract, but in the real world, and what you say might make the difference.

It's enormously tempting to heap contempt upon a country that imprisons people for blogging while urging mercy for Saddam Hussein, a country that takes billions every year in U.S. aid and claims to be an ally, but does everything it can to undermine the spread of democracy and freedom. But Kuznicki and Palmer are right — be respectful and polite. You can curse them under your breath later.

Free Kareem! www,FreeKareem.org

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Reports of my death exaggerated

Posted by Richard on October 14, 2006

Hi, there! Miss me? Sorry about the long absence (I can’t believe it’s been almost two weeks). I’ve been working toward a big deadline, and although I wasn’t really working killer hours (I don’t do that anymore — for one thing, my back won’t let me), I consistently found myself too mentally tired — or distracted — or lazy — or something — to sit down and blog. I finished up a couple of days ago, and have pretty much avoided the computer since.

I haven’t even been reading much or keeping up with world events during the last couple of weeks. I’ve been tossing most my newspapers in the recycle bin unread, and I’ve only glanced at a few blogs from time to time. Oh, I caught the news highlights, but I missed a lot of the details and follow-up stories.

For instance, I remember some Democrats suggesting that a gay man shouldn’t be permitted anywhere near a bunch of teenage boys. But somehow I missed the coverage of gay rights demonstrators demanding that those homophobes apologize. And did the Boy Scouts of America ever issue a statement of support for the Democrats’ position?

I heard a brief mention of Sen. Harry Reid’s illegal real estate dealings, but I never did hear details of the investigation that I’m sure was launched by the non-partisan Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW). And I missed the stories about legislators calling on Reid to resign.

And then there was that North Korean nuclear test. I heard how Japan immediately imposed a strict trade embargo. Surely, France denounced Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s unilateralism and failure to work with the international community, right? And John Kerry must have held a press conference to declare that if he were the Japanese P.M., he’d have deferred to the United Nations.

It’s really a shame that I missed such important stories. Why, by only hearing part of the news like that, I could easily get the impression that fairness, balance, and impartiality are sorely lacking nowadays.
 

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Yikes! Another blogger bash!

Posted by Richard on August 24, 2006

Rocky Mountain Blogger Bash 5.5Honestly, sometimes I don’t know where my head’s at. I meant to post a link to the official announcement of Rocky Mountain Blogger Bash 5.5 about 3 weeks ago — and RSVP, too. Oh, well, it’s not until Friday — plenty of time.

Here are the details: it’s Friday, Aug. 25, about 6ish, at the Moon Time Bar (formerly Minturn Saloon), 846 Broadway, Denver. David J said it’s "Open to bloggers, commenters, significant others, and random passers-by." I think that means you’re invited. Go to the official announcement to see who else is attending and to RSVP.
 

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Back soon, I hope

Posted by Richard on August 16, 2006

Nothing new here — sorry. I brought my laptop back to Tenn. with me, but a mysterious config problem is preventing me from getting online via modem from my dad’s condo. Maybe later this week, I can find an alternative for getting online — I have my wireless card, I just haven’t had time to deal with it. I’m borrowing a friend’s computer for a few minutes this morning while I take a break from sitting in my dad’s hospital room.

If you’re looking for some good new posts, check out the latest Carnival of Liberty. Or the latest Carnival of Cordite. Plenty of interesting reading at both, I’m sure. 
 

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