maiki (maiki)
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Yeah, I found the same. I probably turned it off when I stopped using #Google for search (I use #DuckDuckGo).
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#Emma is 13 pounds, 14 ounces, and 25.75 inches long. ^_^
about 5 hours ago from mustard -
Which I promptly spilled all over the desk. It is a wonder they let us open an account.
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RT @OKFN: The Open Data Handbook v.1.0 is here - the why, what and how of open data! Read all about it: bit.ly/Ahqo2R #opendata
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#Standup: Didn't get either of those things done yesterday, but then again, it was an abnormal day. Today we are going to get Emma's shots. @susan and I are getting ready for the coming storm of screaming and holding Emma for hours on end. I should drink some tea.
about 9 hours ago from web -
black history month: William T. Shorey
"When most people think about early black history in Oakland, they think of the Pullman Porters. Less well known is William T. Shorey, who was captain of a whaling ship in the 1880s, the only black captain operating on the west coast at that time. He was known to his whaling crews as the 'Black Ahab'."
about 9 hours ago from web -
#Standup: Two goals for today, though maybe only get one done. I want to get #Booktype running on my local machine. I am deterred by the 3GB RAM requisite. Gonna see what that is about. Then I want to start hacking at #SMW extensions. I just realized I could probably do that locally, as well.
about a day ago from web -
I am kinda obsessed with this set of site ideas that all involve detailed relationships between data sets. I've been hacking at #Drupal, with Node Reference, Relationships and other entity/node modules, but I can't find one I like, nor can I figure out which is going to "win" (which means it will stick around). Now that I have some other projects out of the way, I think I am going to start playing with the #SMW extensions + Semantic Forms (http://semantic-mediawiki.org). Brain is overflowing.
about 2 days ago from web -
An argument I can get behind! Eternal Copyright: a modest proposal: http://prkr.ph/eyx
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Those lazy #Occupy hippies took a break from drum circling to write a detailed 325-page comment for the SEC. http://prkr.ph/7ws
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I am glad you pointed that out. Whenever someone says brunch I just think they are trying to be pretentious. Short of playing cricket afterward until tea time, I don't think most people mean brunch. It just sounds better than, "I skipped breakfast."
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Just picked up the Game Music Bundle 2 (http://www.gamemusicbundle.com/). Great music for RPGaming. ^_^
about 2 days ago from web -
For work stuff, also a lot of documentation. A lot of today will be spent in a variety of wikis. ^_^
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#Standup: Today I am migrating the last sites I host at DreamHost to other servers, and pinging folks about transferring domains to them. Which means I should document that process for easy linking.
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Were you looking for another federated social network to contact me on? You could try https://solanin.net/u/maiki. ^_^ #Diaspora
about 3 days ago from web -
#Snapshot of web software I currently host (non-work related), by instances: #WordPress 10, #StatusNet 7, #DokuWiki 2, #Redmine 2, #Drupal 1, #Piwik 1, #MediaGoblin 1, #ownCloud 1. I am sure I am missing some.
about 4 days ago from web -
Okay, got someone's blog going on their own domain (always cause for celebration), and the wiki installed for my fiction bible. Gonna look at getting #Mediawiki installed for a different project, and go over the prereqs for #Diaspora real quick, hopefully tackling that tomorrow.
about 4 days ago from web -
Lost Type Co-op
The Lost Type Co-op is a collaboration between Tyler Galpin and Riley Cran. It was founded with the intention of providing unique and quality fonts based on a pay-what-you-want model. All designers get 100% of the donations their font receives.
about 4 days ago from web -
"Sometimes there’s an expectation in technologies that they’ll be perfect, without any flaws or bumps. Of course, such expectations have no bases in experience so it’s not clear where they come from. CSS vendor prefixes are no different in this regard. They’ve actually been quite successful—many browsers experimented with iterations on various features for years, eventually standardizing what works."