Archive for September, 2004

When the weather plays god with politics

Tuesday, September 21st, 2004

Just so you know, the hurricanes are apparently voting for John Kerry.

Firefox Nears 1.0 Final Release

Saturday, September 18th, 2004

Mozilla Firefox is rounding the corner on a 1.0 release. I’m pretty much in love with Live Bookmarks. The new Find Bar is exactly what it should be. Integrating FoxyTunes‘ media player control and a Gmail Notifier into Firefox has also been great fun.

Ben Goodger on Market Dominance:

Netscape had it by being first.
Microsoft has it by being everywhere.
Firefox will have it by being best.

We’re coming.

That’s truth well said.

I Know What I Did This Summer Part 2

Thursday, September 16th, 2004

I read! And drank coffee!!

I love to read and I always carry around a blue backpack crammed with books. It occasionally drives my wife crazy when we go places and I have to take books with me. And what really gets her goat is when I go to Starbucks 25 days a month and sit and read while drinking a four-dollar coffee, which I did most of the summer. (Double-tall, extra-foam, vanilla latte, please.) It kills her to imagine spending a hundred bucks a month on a non-flammable liquid. But what’s she gonna do? She already married me! Ha, ha, sucker!

Sheesh! I was kidding! Ouch! Stop throwing portable electronics devices at me, Kristi!

Most of the time I read books, they are work / ministry related. but I do throw in some for-pleasure only reading in every once in a while. Here are two of the books that I really enjoyed and what I thought about what I read:

The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

In The Idiot, Dostoyevsky set out to place the ideal of Christ into the person of a modern man, his character, Prince Myshkin. Through hundreds of situations, Dostoyevsky seems to use this interesting concept not to give us a cheesy Russian “What would Jesus do?” but to demonstrate how radically juxtaposed our modern culture is to the teachings of Jesus.

Sometimes Dostoyevsky executes his goal masterfully, as he does in an early account of Prince Myshkin and a poor outcast girl named Marie. Occasionally he’s not so masterful, but overall, he gives a great deal to think about. A multitude of powerful statements are made throughout the novel.

This book took me longer to read than any novel I’ve ever read. Yes, it was a lengthy book, but the greatest difficulty was in understanding who was who. Russian names were invented for the torture of Western minds. Simply getting through the first forty pages took me two weeks and extensive note-taking in the margins to track who was who.

Once I had done the work in those early pages, the rest seemed to flow quite well. I had the wonderful joy of reading this book and discussing it with my grandfather as he was also reading it.

Dostoyevsky was an interesting character. Most of his books were published as serial novels and he was paid by the page, leading to quite lengthy descriptions of people and events as well as some additional plot lines that weren’t essential to the story. Reading this book was very much entering into the world of 19th Century Russia, as the extent of the descriptions made for an immersed view of Russian life, culture, and society.

A New Kind of Christian by Brian McLaren

If you are a Christian and are up for a challenge in your thinking, read this book. Although instead of challenging my thinking, it really affirmed some of the thinking I’d already been doing. It was great for me to come across this book because it actually helped me to articulate many things that I have come to think and believe.

I’m personally so exhausted with the little games that Christians play or with politicizing what was a completely non-political movement. I personally can’t stand how much time, energy and money is wasted on what really comes down to Christian “entertainment”, when there are far greater needs in this world.

McLaren gives a discussion of some of the deep, troubling questions of modern Christianity in the form of a novel. He offers so much hope for new thinking in Christianity — which is really a return to old thinking.

I Know What I Did This Summer Part 1

Thursday, September 16th, 2004


I rode a motorcycle!

Finally!

Remember this and this a few months ago? [“Adventures in Not Buying a Motorcycle” by me and “Adventures in Not Getting a Motorcycle to Run” by Eric]

It all started with almost blowing up my engine but soon I was looking for a new ride - or at least a temporary one while I waited for my car to get fixed.

Eventually, after looking at a number of different options, I went with the free one. My friend John offered to let me ride a bike of his that he wasn’t using. I tried really hard to say no, but I really didn’t come close at all. I said, “Holy shmokes! Heck yes!” (Shmokes?)

It did take a while to get the crazy thing to work, but eventually Eric got the darn thing to run! And run it did! I was cruising up and down the streets. Sometimes I even drove in the correct lane!

Woo! It was fun!

Some Time Off

Thursday, September 16th, 2004

You may have noticed that mathcaddy.com has been running a little “light” for the last couple of months.

This was, in fact, intentional.

By about the middle of June, I was starting to feel sick of feeling “expected” to write something on a regular basis. I don’t think anyone was actually expecting me to post regularly, but I sometimes felt like I should be posting regularly. I can’t explain it. It was like this nagging thought, like “Why haven’t I emptied the garbage in two weeks?” Or “If I haven’t fed the dog for a month, what’s the chance it survived?” Or “I haven’t seen my wife for a few days. I wonder if she’s alright.”

You know. Those sorts of nagging thoughts.

With the exception of a mid-summer Mathcaddy Radio session, I haven’t touched the site in almost three months.

Well, that’s not quite true. I did have to start de-spamming the comments on a constant basis as MTBlacklist broke. (It’s still broken and at this point I’m getting very angry and or desperate.) Not. Amusing. At. All.

But what is amusing is that people may have completely stopped checking for updates on this site over a month ago. There is actually a good chance that no one will ever read this post. Except spammers. Hi, Online Poker! Howdy, Ultimate Video On Demand Solutions!

But the summer proved to provide consistently interesting writing from everybody’s favorite part-time geek, lo-fi sketch artist, the Romeo of the DMV, Mr. 30-second shaving cross-country trackstar, the frosting connoisseur, himself, Steve! Well, I guess all those adjectives sort of make him everybody’s favorite by default. But he’s great nonetheless.

By the way, Steve has some great shirts for sale. One of his wonderful shirts insists that The Portal to Hell is the letter “Q”, but he’s totally innapropriate in making that statement and theologically incorrect. It’s actually the letter “C”. Pretty sneaky, huh? There it was all along, hiding under the “F” and the “D” on your qwerty, directly above the space bar.

So, uh, Adam… what did you do on your summer vacation?

Oh! I’m glad you asked.