July 07

Long time, no see

Well hello, dear blog. Few notes:

  • Finally completed 2.5.1 upgrade. Relatively painless, albeit backups are having some odd issue at the moment.
  • Yes, I’m still alive.

And now, for my rant:

I’m tired of this place. I’m tired of this house, this town, these people. I promised myself that this summer I would do everything I wanted to do, to live the summer the way I thought it should be lived, and I absolutely have - which has brought me to the realization of how much this place truly sucks.

I have friends, most of which who’s aspiration is to see how drunk they can get on a Friday or Saturday night. Friends who don’t go in to work until 4 in the afternoon, and then work til 8 and tell me how hard their day has been.

I like to tell people I feel old, and for those of you who have heard me say this, you know that your response is “Kris, you’re not that old.” No, I’m not, but damn do I feel it. I don’t give a damn about who can chug a beer faster or who can play that damn basketball game better - if those two things coincide with me having fun, then so be it, let them be. But if they spend more time aggravating me than they do providing enjoyment, well, yeah.

One of my friends just told me that he’s going to be staying here an extra semester. When questioned, he told me he could finish it up in the regular amount of time (without overloading) but prefer to take a few easy semesters. What a load of shit. Yeah, college is the best time of your life and all that, but when the hell are you going to grow up? I sure as hell don’t see it happening anytime soon, and that’s sad.

Moreover, your girlfriend needs to grow the hell up. She graduated, stop dating college guys and move the hell on with your life, and while you’re at it, get the hell out of my hair, because I can’t stand your guts.

So, in conclusion, I miss one of my really good friends. He’s mature enough to not annoy me, yet knows how to have a good time. I want out of here. I really appreciate my older friends. I really appreciate one of my newest friends in particular, even if she is younger. I want to get on living my life, as opposed to having to live mine and clean up after someone else’s.

Only 313 more days. I can do this.

EDIT:
I actually am really happy this summer. I’m having a blast, and just not spending much time at home. Betty Bring Down is done for the night.

Posted at 10:57 pm | Comment » (0 comments) |
May 11

The proliferation of life-hacks

Editor’s Note: This post is not directed at anyone in particular, despite it’s relevance to some of our readers and personal experiences mentioned. The use of the term ‘you’ is a generic, despite bearing resemblance to Dustin Hoffman. Kidding.

There has been a new trend recently, this so-called ‘life-hacking’, which is defined by Wikipedia as:

Productivity tricks that users devise and employ to cut through information overload and organize their data.

Let me blunt: what a load of shit. If you’re so incredibly disorganized that you can’t control the flow of information in and out of your life, you need to change career fields; I hear McDonald’s is hiring.

A simple analogy:
You watch TV all day Saturday. At the end of the day, your eyes are tired, and you say to yourself “whoa, television overload”, you turn the TV off. Simple.

Are you really that addicted to your computer that you can’t turn it off? If so, stop reading this entry right now, close your browser, shut down your computer and go the hell outside. These people who read hundreds of blogs per day drive me insane - there is not a chance in hell that all of those entries are relevant to your life or work. Of those entries you read, how many do you really make use of? (Gaining some useless knowledge is not making effective use of a blog entry.) I’m willing to bet it’s far fewer than is worth all the time you’re investing in reading those entries.

I read THREE blogs on a SEMI-regular basis, two of which are authored by friends, and I read them only so I can keep abreast on their lives. I was recently informed of this new ‘life-hack’ called `going dark` - getting away from all blogs, emails, internet, etc. for some period of time. Another erroneous crock of dog crap. While this may be ‘great’ for managing your addiction to your computer, you fail to realize that all the people that normally know you as a well connected, savvy internet user now just see you as failing to respond to them in a timely manor, furthering your ‘information overload’ by sending an extra 10 emails saying “Did you get my last email?”

‘Life hacking’ does not simply apply to the digital world, or so lifehack.org claims. It’s about “living life to the fullest” - you’re telling me I need someone else to tell me how to live my life to the fullest? Come on people.

I skimmed (I couldn’t bring myself to read) this article. Again, who the hell are you to tell me how to life my life?

Originally, this post had a lot more anger, and a lot more valid points to argue that life-hacks are quite possibly the most useless thing since the fish pen:

Point being: take a couple of hours, go outside, and avoid living your life on your computer.

Posted at 4:16 pm | Comments » (2 comments) |
May 04

Discovery

My random discovery of the evening: a huge stack of DVDs that were unlabeled, and that I hadn’t seen before, or so I thought. I thought I’d provide a brief synopsis of my findings:

  • Atlas, Live at the Freeman Center - a promo DVD I did for them many years ago, with Cody on Bass and David on Drums. Wow, what a time
  • A copy of “The Hazy Zone” - a film done by some friends for the roast of another friend, Matt Haselton. Holy shit was it funny.
  • 10 Things I Hate About You - a chick flick. The only reason it made the list is because I remember scouring all of Santoro Hall trying to find a girl that owned it so I could copy it and have a romantic movie date with my girlfriend of the time before she got there for the weekend. Heh.
  • My Public Speaking Final - a copy of the movie we made for my public speaking project back in 2005. Wow, how times have changed.
  • A sports segment from the 2005 season of The Navigator. Hey, at least the Captains were doing well back then.
  • The original, never aired pilot of The Navigator - With Eric Harkins and Emily Schwab as our anchors. Joey Kirchgessner at the sports desk. A hilarious reminder of our humble beginnings.
  • h0t sh*t - A DVD I filmed when some guys stopped me outside the Freeman Center one night and asked me to film a commercial for their new record company. Comedic gold.
  • Black Betty Extended Edition - for those of you that don’t know, you can go to YouTube, type in CNU black betty, and see myself and a bunch of my friends making a fool of ourselves and CNU. I found the extended edition, which features a bunch of things not seen in the YouTube version. Good thing, too.

I need to get in to campus to download the rest of my work onto disk before someone over there gets hot fingers and erases it. Funny stuff, though. It was nice running down memory lane for a bit.

Posted at 9:53 pm | Comment » (0 comments) |
April 20

Thanks Jenn…

Jenn shared this with me, so I thought I’d share it with all of you:

DISCLAIMER: Lyrical Musings takes no responsibility for suicides caused by this post.

Posted at 11:16 pm | Comment » (0 comments) |
April 15

A few small changes…

For your pleasure and benefit, a few small changes/fixes to the site:

  • Topics are now working.
  • Permalinks are now enabled and working (http://www.woodsmoke.net/postname)
  • Bio updated, albeit not complete.
  • Added Twitter status to all pages/search results

Need to get around to that bio, but I’ll do it soon.

Posted at 9:21 am | Comment » (0 comments) |
April 14

I can (up), can I (up), partner let me upgrade you

Ah yes, cheesy lyrics for a post title. I love it.

As the title suggests - I finally got around to completing the Wordpress 2.5 upgrade. No real change in look for you all - but some fun stuff for me. I’ll get around to all of that stuff I promised, maybe sooner now than before.

It’s starting to dawn on me a year from today I will be making a transition. I don’t really see it as “entering the real world” - I’m already in the real world. I have a house that requires maintenance, I have bills to pay, a car to pay for, insurance that’s required, yada yada yada. Will it be any better? Eh, it’s hard to say. I am excited to be done with ’school’, even if only for a short while.

Things at the job are well - still relatively quiet, although I’ve now made my trips to the ‘kill floor’, rendering and casings, all of which are a once in a lifetime experience (at least I hope).

Notes of late -

  • Switched over to a BlackBerry last week. The Sprint Simply Everything plan suckered me in. Between that and the killer deal I got on the phone (made $75 on the deal) I’m quite happy.
  • Had some friends come in this weekend, we had a pretty good time. Ended up with some members of a pretty famous band at our house. It was pretty sweet.
  • The end of the semester doesn’t look to be any worse off than any other year - but being organized with to-do lists and a calendar sure do make it look scary.
  • Twitter STILL hasn’t fixed the delete tweet bug. That really annoys me, especially when I make a typo.
  • Exploring some new options for managing/dealing with my money. Perhaps have some opportunities to do some better things with it.

Placeholder for post ideas I want to write but haven’t done so yet:

  1. 100 Things to Do Before I Graduate
  2. The Perfect Female

That’ll be all for now. Look for the above ideas to propagate sometime in the near future.

Ladies and gentlemen please, would you bring your attention to me? For a feast for your eyes to see, an explosion of catastrophe - like nothing you’ve ever seen before, watch closely as I open this door. Your jaws will be on the floor, after this you’ll be begging for more.

Welcome to the show, please come inside ladies and gentlemen…

Posted at 5:11 pm | Comment » (0 comments) |
March 31

Lists

Lists are a personal favorite of mine - I use them all the time, to keep track of things I want to do, need to do, or simply want to keep track of. You’ll see them featured here from time to time - some facetious, others of a more noble nature. Tonight I feature a new one:

The Top 10 Things I’ve Learned About Smithfield, Virginia

10. Dirt roads are abundant. To get to work, it requires traveling several, whilest only being a few miles from a major city. How odd.

9. Speed limits are optional - unless you’re somewhere near a certain company’s plants. Most roads don’t even have one posted.

8. The smell. There is no way to describe ‘the smell’. Just…go with it.

7. It would be faster to travel to Smithfield by boat than car for most.

6. You can easily pick out the locals from the employees of a certain company.

5. There is a pig on the water tower. Or so I’m told - I haven’t seen it myself yet (due to the direction I travel).

4. Don’t speed around a certain company’s plants. This deserves a second mention due to the fact that the Smithfield Police spend their lunch hour betting on the number of employees of a certain company they can catch between the hours of 1 and 5 PM.

3. There are an inexplicable number of attractive women employed by a certain company. Most are in the form of interns, some foreign exchange students. Why they choose to work there, I have no idea, but, all the better.

2. There are some really nice fishing piers there. Check them out if you’re in to that sort of thing.

1. Man, this list had a point when I started….damned being tired all the time.

Ah well. When I originally thought up this post, it was supposed to be funny….so much for that idea. Time to go study for a useless Physics 152 exam.

Oh, one more thing - as the title of this blog is lyrical musings, I thought it important to explain why that is so. I frequently set lyrics to events in my life, and so it seems appropriate. Occasionally, I’ll close a post with lyrics that have some sort of meaning. So, here we go:

“I don’t want your advice, because you never win. Peer pressure - I don’t give in.”

Posted at 7:18 pm | Comment » (0 comments) |
March 23

Easter Weekend

I figured since I had some post-work time this evening I’d get around to writing that introductory post I’ve been promising myself I’d write for some time.

Over the years, I’ve had a whole slew of blogs/online meanderings I’ve either worked on, co-authored, or originated. I was never very good at keeping up with them, and in some cases (LiveJournal), took an incredibly opposing viewpoint on them. (My rant about LiveJournal will come up at some point, I’m sure, but to summarize: change LiveJournal to BitchJournal, and you’ll have it’s day-to-day usage).

With that in mind, I’m going to use this space a bit differently. I have no intention of forcing regular updates - they’ll come when I feel like it and will be sporadically timed. They won’t all necessarily be in the post format as this one is, you’ll see below a posting of some BS homework I was working on.

If you’re wondering, this blog will be primarily tag driven, save the MX6 category. I own another domain (prosixmotorsport.com) which I use for keeping people updated on the progress of my Mazda MX6 that I’m rebuilding. That domain points to the MX6 category page.

I’ve got notes in my mind as to what this blog is, and what it isn’t, which I’ll share at some point. I promise I’ll also get around to fixing the tags and writing an about page - just as soon as I get to it.

In the mean time, feel free to comment on anything you see here, or use the contact form to get my attention should I ignore you for some extended period of time.

Posted at 8:26 pm | Comment » (0 comments) |
March 20

Google Case Study

1. Would you be comfortable working in a hyper-flexible organization like Google, or do you prefer a more structured environment?

I would be quite comfortable working in a hyper-flexible organization like Google. I frequently find that I can be most efficient when I am allowed to adjust my schedule/timing/task as new information comes in, ‘roll with the punches’ if you will. Having this fleibility would allow me to complete more work in less time, making me more effective personally and for the organization.

2. Do you think Google will be able to retain its organization informality at 10,000 employees? 20,000? Microsoft has 61,000 employees.

Google being the incredible growing organization that it is will always maintain some resemblance of informality. That being said, I would be surprised if they are able to maintain their current level indefinitely. Their management structure has been designed to allow them the ability to make people feel as if they are free to go about their business, and for the most part they are, yet still gives upper management someone to hold responsibility should a deadline be missed or a product not up to standard.

3. Draw a corporate structure diagram for Google.

Not pictured.

Ugh….I hate BS busy work assignments.

Posted at 11:24 pm | Comment » (1 comment) |