| Related sites for http://www.bluehighways.com/ |
| Amp_Services Head relapping, motor rebuilding, and general parts and repair of pro audio recording equipment including reel to reel, DAT, ADAT, DA88, and carts. | | ATR_Services,_Inc_ Worldwide sales, service, restoration and support for Ampex ATR-100 and MM-1200 series tape recorders. | | The_Audio_Specialist Repairs vintage and current audio equipment, with a focus on turntables. USA. | | Audio_Technical_Services Expert repair, installation, and maintenance of all pro and consumer audio gear and equipment. Los Angeles, CA. | | Audio_Technologies-MBS Speaker Repair Services,custom speaker and upgrades to name brand speaker systems | | Audiomod Provides service repair and modification of old tube or solid state equipment. | | Austin_Stereo Audio and video equipment repairs in the Austin, Texas area specializing in high end and vacuum tube audio. Also, sales of vintage equipment. | | Barry\'s_8_Track_Repair Repair and restoration of 8 track players and recorders for home and classic cars. All repairs guaranteed for life. | | Brainchild_Audio El Paso, Texas based audio service center. All types, makes and models of musical instruments repaired and modified. Custom designs. Specializing in vacuum tube technology. Sovtek amps and Electro Har | | Car_Radio_Code Obtain your lost car radio code here. All makes and models of automobiles. | | Cimple_Solutions Service and repair of most makes of modern pro audio equipment, musical instruments, and effects. East Acton, London, UK. | | CIMPLE_Solutions_Pro_Ltd_ Our online store provides spares for the entire JBL Professional and AKG range of spares. Plus TC Electronic, Akai, Ensoniq and some secondhand gear. | | Davidson_Electronics Repair of Professional audio, including PA's, synthesizers, amplifiers and recording equipment. Long Island, New York | | Electronics_Service_Labs Factory authorized stereo audio service specializing in repair, restoration and modifications of Nakamichi classic cassette decks. Wethersfield, Connecticut. | | Everything_Audio_Ltd_ Service and repair of professional audio equipment for broadcast, video post production and recording. Also equipment sales, distribution and hire. UK. | | Factory_Car_Radios_Direct Repair on all factory stock car stereo's and amplifiers. All makes and models. One year warranty and free return shipping on all repairs. Norwell, MA | | In_House_Service_Company Stereo, receiver, car stereo, car amplifier and vintage audio repair. Solid state and tube audio repair, on all makes and models. | | Joe_Stumpf Reel to reel tape recorder repair service for Tascam, Akai, Teac, Technics, Sony, Sansui and Robert. Also buy and sell. | | Liberman_Sound Audio equipment repair, calibration, testing, and design for the pro audio, film, theatre, and radio industries. DAT, cassette, open-reel, and mixers. Audio Precision System Two Cascade test set. | | Schematic_Connection Vintage and hard to find schematics and service manuals for the audio professional. | | Scott_Holderman\'s_Studio_Maintenance_Page Repairs for pro recording studio equipment in the Los Angeles area. Site includes tech tips, items for sale and links. | | South_Street_Service Specializing in turntables. Offers cartridges, stylus, belts and other parts. Southold, New York. | | Techni-Serve_Industries_LLC Pro audio repairs on amplifiers, keyboards and recorders of all types. Authorized service center for most name brand musical equipment. Paramus, New Jersey. | | Thermal_Relief_Design,_Inc_ Repair of professional audio equipment used in recording studios. Repair of vintage guitar amplifiers. Authorized service for Drawmer, Focusrite and SPL Electronics. | | True_Sound_Systems Repair of PA amplifiers and DJ equipment. Offers PA equipment rental services. Located in UK. | | Wizards_Electronics Factory authorized repair on JBL speakers and other brands of audio and video equipment. Buy service manuals online. Junction City, Kansas. | | Directors_Register Experienced outside directors prepared to serve on the boards of startup companies. | | QuickMBA_com Collection of tutorials and frameworks in the various subjects of business administration, as covered by a typical MBA program. | | UNCP Information about staff, mission statement and contact sources for the Regional Center for Economic, Community, and Professional Development at UNC Pembroke. | | Accredited_Management_Organization Directory of firms and vendors that service the industry in the United States. | | AMB_Property_Corporation Owns and manages commercial properties in the US, France, and Mexico. Includes property portfolio, alliance partner center, and investor center. (NYSE: AMB) | | Beacon_Property_Management Listing of apartments and information on services from this management company offering construction supervision and brokerage services. | | Boston_Capital Fully integrated, diversified real estate investment firm with multifamily housing and commercial holdings in 49 states, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. | | Buckhead_America_Corporation Owns, franchises and manages hotel properties. (Nasdaq: BUCK). | | Camden_Property_Trust Residential real estate company that owns develops and manages apartment home communities. (NYSE: CPT) | | Camelot_Property_Management_Ltd_ Specialists in the protection of vacant property. Includes FAQs, downloadable brochure, and employment opportunities. Offices in the UK, the Netherlands and Belgium. | | CB_Richard_Ellis_Hotels Provides consultancy services for the sale, valuation, financing, development and asset management of hotels worldwide. Includes properties, the team, services, events. | | ChrisKen Specializes in the acquisition, development and management of residential communities in the midwest and southeast US. Includes portfolio plus resident and investor services. Based in Chicago. | | Common_Wealth_Realty_Advisors,_Inc_ Provides fiduciary investment management for institutional investors. Manages properties across the US. Based in Chicago. | | ContraVest,_Inc_ Residential real estate development and property management firm with multi-family rental properties in California, Arizona, the Carolinas, Colorado and Florida. |
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Free Range Librarian › K.G. Schneider’s blog on librarianship, writing, and everything else, since 2003.
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Free Range Librarian
K.G. Schneider’s blog on librarianship, writing, and everything else, since 2003.
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Labor day cheesecake at Costco
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Nothing spells Labor Day like a CostCo cheesecake?Though the snacks were particularly toothsome today… right down to mini-sundaes with brownies, ice cream, and chocolate syrup.The damage to our roof and bathroom ceiling turned out to be relatively minimal. We had a tiny hole in the roof repaired for $100, and we have about $900 in bathroom ceiling repair, insulation replacement, etc… plus finally that stupid blue paint will be gone. So, you know, that’s nice.I’m still processing McCain’s choice of “Dan Quayle in a skirt” while I try to finish an article for an academic journal (which is the kind of writing I do because I must) so I can revise an essay for the writing workshop (the kind of writing I do because I can).Happy holiday, all… enjoy your cheesecake!Bookmark to:        
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T-Mobile, and Forthcoming Contributor
Thursday, August 28, 2008
First, do you live in or around Tallahassee, and use T-Mobile? I ask because I could go on a corporate cell phone (which would be a nice thing, all said) but I’m unclear how good T-Mobile is here in town.Second, Ninth Letter noted that I am a contributor “forthcoming in Fall/Winter 2008,” which pleaseth me greatly. That’s a while away, and my essay is so topical I worry everyone else will exhaust the issue of gay marriage by then. But in any event, the plug for The Best Creative Nonfiction Volume 2 — now with a grand total of 9 OCLC holdings — was quite welcome.I’m on the road this week and part of next, but when I’m home I plan to send out a pile of postcards to libraries to encourage them to buy Best Creative Nonfiction. It’s a really easy book to book-talk, and it would make a fabulous reading-group book because you could pick several short essays and have fun with that.Bookmark to:        
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Fay-be-Gone
Sunday, August 24, 2008
We had been considering ourselves super-super fortunate — we didn’t have a tree crash into our house, we aren’t in a flood plain (maybe in a 1000 years, but right now our house is on a hillock in an elevated section in the west part of Tallahassee), we didn’t have to drive in this mess… when we heard a loud crash, which was part of our guest-bathroom ceiling falling in.(The guest bathroom is “my” bathroom, sort of — we are a bit territorial that way. Except now that there is a giant hole over the bathtub, we are Sharing the other bathroom.)Well, I had been wondering what the third thing was. You know how things come in threes. There was Sandy’s car, then there was the microwave oven/kitchen fan (far too boring to blog about), and then This.I may have brought this on by finding the $120 FM traffic receiver that goes to my GPS, which was actually never lost but was just camouflaged among the the 8,000 other cords I had placed in my new glove box, all tidily rolled up, perhaps too tidily.These cords are all black and about the same length, but one of them conversationalates with traffic conditions in big cities (n.b.: that would not mean Tallahassee) and has already saved my bacon on one trip by asking me if I wanted to avoid a traffic jam (yes! I did want to avoid a traffic jam, as a matter of fact) and steering me out of Atlanta through what a friend who lived years in Los Angeles calls “surface roads” and what reminded me of several scenes in The Bone Collector, but it worked and that’s what counts.(Nota bene #2: I have never placed gloves in a glove box.)Or maybe I made this happen by figuring out that my iPod’s butt-hole (as I think of its syncing port) may have gone slightly off-kilter when I landed full-force on top of my iPod during a bad fall while running in Provincetown, and if you have to fall anywhere and any time, it might as well be P-Town in May.I have had trouble syncing my iPod ever since then (I also tore up my elbow, but who cares about that), and more than once had to coax pins back into place with a sewing pin. Then I decided to try to ease the interface board more centered to the butt-hole by gently but firmly pushing it with a strip cut from an old hotel room swipe card, and that has worked beautifully. So the iPod couldn’t be “three.”Continuing the “I don’t want to bore you” motif, I won’t tell you all about hurricanes and deductibles in Florida, except to say I am glad we are fiscally conservative and I never liked blue in that bathroom anyway. But I am very, very glad the ceiling chose to fall in two hours after my shower, because the plaster and nasty stuff that rained down might not have so much have scratched me, but just the sound and surprise would have given me a heart attack!So, my apologies for not giving you a savvy link-roundup or astute insights into our latest writing workshop. Even after a bracing glass of grape-flavored nerve medicine, I still feel rattled. Crawling into the ceiling with a flashlight, this appeared to be the only damage, and compared to what others have experienced, it’s not very much. But I resent that this storm has crammed its hands into our wallets. Fay, be gone, good riddance, don’t let the door hit you in the butt!Bookmark to:        
Filed in Family Values
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Theme changed, feeds appear fixed, WordPress upgraded
Sunday, August 17, 2008
I switched to a very simple two-column theme for Free Range Librarian on the theory — correct, it appears — that the theme I was using had broken my feeds, probably when I upgraded WordPress a couple of releases ago.So this morning after reading the Styles section of the New York Times — the first thing I do every Sunday morning is look for same-sex marriages in the back of Styles — I began upgrading. The theme (VeryPlainText) is a stopgap, but it works for now.It’s a nice quiet time to be doing this. These days Sandy has the luxury of sleeping in most Sundays. We could go visit churches, and might be seen at services now and then, but I’m frankly enjoying the secular life for the first time in decades. I will resume church life again — most likely when we leave here — but I see why people use Sunday morning for Church of the Brunch.I brought up the idea of leaving Tallahassee to a friend on Friday who shouted in a restaurant, “You can’t sell your house!”Well, you can sell anything, depending on what you’re willing to be paid for it, and this isn’t Miami nor is this house a condo. But we don’t have to sell our house to leave Tallahassee. We can rent it out (it’s in a great area for that, in a pretty park district next to the Capitol) or we can leave it empty while we show it for a while and wait out the upturn. We’re both good at scrimping, and if that’s how it has to be, so be it.The other thing we hear is that Sandy could get some other church or line of work in the area. (These are all well-intended suggestions.)This idea is predicated on several misunderstandings. First, there are no other churches in her denomination — not for quite a few miles around. It’s not as if she can show up at the Methodist church and find a job.Second, the suggestion implies that we want to somehow find a way to stay here.I’m glad people love to live in Tallahassee. I don’t loathe it, and I hope my comments here don’t inspire some of the “Yankee go home” comments I’ve had on my blog in the past. But this isn’t our home, and we both feel that way.We’re not supposed to be here. We get it. Before Tallahassee, Sandy had a string of good church experiences, I had jobs I liked (I again have a great job, but it isn’t tied to Tallahassee), and then we came here, and it was never a good fit. We tried; oh, how we tried. Some of it wasn’t bad, some of it was even very good (I think of my writing friend Lisa and the critique group I founded, and the string of friends I’ve made at two jobs in the area), and we’ll keep trying until we leave. But we’ve relaxed into planning a future away from here — wherever that may be.It’s been a good lesson-learned about where we belong — or at least where we don’t belong. I no longer wake up with tears in my eyes missing California — my life is too happy and busy for that — but it will be all right when Tallahassee is in our rear-view mirror.Bookmark to:        
Filed in Family Values
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Should I write about This? Should I write about That?
Friday, August 15, 2008
I’ve had a very full week in many ways… got back to Tallahassee 11 p.m. Friday (detoured through Vidalia for a library visit), on Saturday afternoon conducted a creative nonfiction workshop (excellent turnout!) at Leon County library, plunged into piles and piles of work, went to Cairo yesterday to visit the Roddenbery Library (listening to free CDs from the Florida Folklife Collection while I kept one eye on the mpg meter), and so forth.Right now some of my writing rules are shot out of the water. When I wake up, my brain is buzzing with work. When I go to sleep, that’s the case, as well. It’s as much as I can do to focus on this month’s submissions for the critique group. I have a manuscript that’s this close to being ready to submit; I don’t have the focus for it, and since it’s a holiday theme (an essay about a Thanksgiving meal, long ago and far away), I’m losing the last window of opportunity to find a home for it until next year.I have other ideas that aren’t even scratched out on paper… just the blather of a writer saying, “I should write a piece about…” or “This would make a great story.”It’s all part of the ebb and flow… I may have my focus 100% in one direction right now, but I’m having fun. I also try to note what I see as I drive around Georgia. I may get a recorder for my iPod so I can observe things like the spindles of cut hay on a shorn field, stacked like back-to-school pencils, or the one-room clapboard churches with hand-lettered signs announcing special prayer services, or the particular dusty yellow light of late afternoon filtering through trees that curtain a quiet two-lane road.(Anyone else noticing how SUV and truck drivers are suddenly driving much slower?)My office is a comical disaster — an unpacked suitcase, piles of stuff tossed on the futon that was perfectly clean two weeks ago, thick stalagmites of paper and detritus.Leon County library got back with me about my program not being on the library calendar. It’s because it wasn’t a library-sponsored event. I understand that from the library’s point of view; I assume it means that then no one thinks the library is endorsing the program. From the presenter’s point of view, it’s a different perspective. Nice for them to respond, of course, and the room was just right. Next time I’m sneaking in candy — nobody would have noticed.Bookmark to:        
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GLBT-friendly accident insurance plans?
Monday, August 11, 2008
For libraries that have offered domestic partner benefits to their employees: does anyone out there have recommendations for accident insurance plans (similar to Aflac, or what Allstate offers) where domestic partners may be covered under their “family” plans? (I work in Georgia, if that makes a difference.)At MPOW, we interviewed Aflac and Allstate, and at least in Georgia, both companies define “family” as a legal spouse. I’ll make the pragmatic choice — it could be that in the end, once again, I go with a single-payer plan, if I select anything at all, depending on what’s offered, and I’m very glad MPOW cares about this issue — this is the first place I’ve ever worked that has made any effort to offer me DP benefits.But I’d like to at least talk to a company more enlightened than Aflac or Allstate, and have offered to do the research.Even if I end up using their services, I’ll never again enjoy those Aflac commercials…Bookmark to:        
Filed in Family Values
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Creative Nonfiction Workshop, Leon County Library: Follow-up
Saturday, August 9, 2008
As promised, here are the links from today’s workshop (plus any more I added AFTER the workshop). Thanks for showing up! I’m writing this in advance, but I’m sure we had fun.Here’s the link to Tallahassee Writers’ Association. Come to a meeting! Our next meeting is Thursday, August 21 at the American Legion. I’ll be there — feel free to sit with me and I’ll introduce you around.This is a wiki page for workshops I’ve taught about “writing for the web.” The handouts are particularly useful if you’re thinking about writing, and the syllabus lists some great examples of (online) creative nonfiction.It’s just one woman’s list, but here’s my LibraryThing collection of creative nonfiction. The library also owns some of these books and for materials they don’t own, they can get them for you through interlibrary loan.Bookmark to:        
Filed in Writing, Writing for the Web, creative nonfiction
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Say hi to Sparkle, my Civic Hybrid
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
I’ve been on this car-purchasing odyssey, made wild and crazy because it’s the summer when people will do irrational things to purchase fuel-efficient vehicles, including paying way above reasonable street value.I changed tactics to a new car late in the game, when I could not find a used Honda that met my specifications through dealers, Carmax, or anything else, only to find that I had now entered the long weird season where dealers are depleting existing stock in a year when they could be turning out small cars like waffles at Cracker Barrel on Sunday morning.So do not ask how I ended up (at a reasonable price) with a gently-used Civic Hybrid in a pretty sparkly silver (touched with just a hint of aqua blue) with navy cloth upholstery and oodles of time and miles left in its warranty (extended by Honda Certified).(The “Earth” magnet is one I found in Provincetown in June, with no other plan for it than I was tickled by the sentiment.)Even Internet dealers, including a very nice one whose mom reads this blog, expressed surprise I had found a hybrid. I suspect I could scalp this car on Peachtree Avenue (just so you know: every other street in Atlanta is called Peachtree Avenue) and with the proceeds buy a bookmobile or a warship. Though after getting over 50 mpg on the drive north (not bad for someone who thinks 65mph is the legal minimum on most highways), I don’t really want a bookmobile or warship. It’s much nicer to have gas in the car left over from the drive.When I test-drove this car I was puzzled by how much I liked it. I finally realized it’s because it feels like what it is — a Honda –and I’ve long enjoyed driving my 15-year-old Civic (still in the family and doing quite well at 170k, thank you very much). Things were in the right places and did the right things in the right way.Some things were new to me, though not new to anyone who has bought a car in the last few years. Two cupholders, with cunning prongs to ensure the cup fit just so! A seat I could raise up (and immediately did)! TWO accessory outlets! An MP3 plug! A whoop-whoop (as we call the fob’s homing sound, from Sandy’s dear departed Corolla)! Places to tuck things! A sliding armrest!But overall, I now understand why people buy the same car; it is for the same reason they sometimes marry the same spouse, several times over. Life is full of surprises. I could see getting used to a lovely green Prius, with its varied amusements and so forth, plus the joy of knowing I was driving an Obvious Hybrid, and there was a mad moment when I almost over-spent and bought one — even though it didn’t have the accessories I wanted and the local dealers are charging a hefty pile of cash above MSRP, which ain’t no peanuts to begin with, so it felt gluttonous and foolhardy and yet strangely underwhelming.There are even some things the Honda does unequivocably better than the Prius — remember I’ve rented and driven Priuses for very long (but pleasant) trips.The Civic Hybrid mpg gage is both understated yet positioned in line of sight on the dash, not off to the right on a glitzily distracting panel; after a while, I realized the gage was right above the battery-charge indicator, so I could eye both at the same time. (I’m sure this has been written about to a fare-thee-well, but you don’t drive a hybrid — it drives you, by managing your feet through the consumption data.) You can also see out the back of the Civic Hybrid, and it doesn’t whipsaw when a truck drives by. Plus however solid a ride is the Prius, nothing hugs the road with such eagle-taloned determination as a Honda.But those are mere quibbles. More to the point, there’s something comforting about not having to relearn my car, for heaven’s sake, in a life where since I last bought a car, I’ve lived in four states and six houses.Maybe that is why I kept looking for a Honda, and maybe that I got my hands on a hybrid is the best of both worlds. My car is my touchstone to the past, the continuity through homes I no longer live in, rosebushes I gave away, friends I buried, opportunities that will never come around again. Yet my new-to-me car is also, in its own small way, with its modest fuel habits and its alternative fuel technologies, a steppingstone to the future.One fellow at the dealership made a big case that though it’s a hybrid the Civic “looks like a car,” which made me smile, because I think the intimation was as opposed to that crazy-looking Prius those latte-drinkin’ Obama-votin’ Democrats drive. Beyond the obvious point that all cars look like cars — because they are in fact cars — the bottom line is that I, a latte-drinking, Obama-voting Democrat, am happy to have a sparkly almost-new horseless carriage with an excellent pedigree and well-tended life history, a vehicle that sips delicately of finite resources, has well-engineered cupholders, and feels, at once, both warmly familiar and brightly new.Bookmark to:        
Filed in Family Values, Uncategorized
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Hello, I Must be Linking
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
I am having a blissfully good time in my new job as Community Librarian for Equinox, and just spent a grand time in Idaho talking about open source — a session that was taped, and when it is online will unfortunately reveal, in a shameful moment, that I am unclear about exactly where Idaho is (we did establish that it’s east of California and west of New York) — and in Wisconsin, at WilsWorld Camp and WilsWorld proper, where many wise people, including Roy Tennant, David Lankes, and John Blyberg, shared good stuff, and where I ate some awesome 15-year-old cheese and had a great talk with a waiter who is writing a history of the Drum and Bugle Corps.But enough about work! I haven’t done a link roundup in ages, and have been tucking away goodies galore. Don’t forget I’m holding a creative nonfiction workshop at Leon County Public Library on Saturday, August 9! Except — hrmm — I’m not on the calendar. No, really, I am doing this 1-4 p.m. on August 9. I will begin by reading from my essay “Range of Desire” in The Best Creative Nonfiction Volume 2 (as well as several other short works), and this is not the last time I will ask you to buy this book, review it on LibraryThing or Amazon, or check it out from your library. It’s still not in WorldCat (I’m looking at you, fellow liberrians) and doesn’t have an Amazon review, but it is in LibraryThing, where it has had five really good reviews and averages 4.5 stars.As long as we’re talking up books, I read an early copy of Steinbeck’s Ghost, a novel for kids and other readers by Lewis Buzbee (disclaimer: former writing prof), and enjoyed it tremendously. Ghosts! Librarians! The Salinas library closure! Steinbeck! Boy protagonists! Friendship! Annoying parents! Action and excitement, a lot of it on bicycle! A trip to Monterey! Book suggestions galore! (I love a book that leads me to more books — and it takes a skilled author such as Buzbee to raise the shadow of other books amid his own.) And it’s being issued on my birthday, September 2! I love that.(If I had to name a car, I’d call it the Galore — a much underappreciated word. The Galore: 60 mpg, and more cupholders than you know what to do with! No, I haven’t bought a car. I’m waiting for the Creator to park one in my driveway. Yes, I know I need to pull myself together and do something about that — though we’re not doing too badly sharing a car right now.)Thinking about rethinking how you eat? I slapped together this bookbag of core books about food politics, the localvore movement, and sustainable/local/seasonal eating. What would you add? I don’t wish belt-tightening on anyone, but I don’t think it’s entirely a bad thing that we’re all far more painfully aware of what it costs to move a radish cross-country, and how we’ve been pawns of Big Oil and Big Agro. Read… and then VOTE. I just know you want to download your own Free Range Librarian “Read” bookmark. Victoria Horst, director at Tifton-Tift Library, took this picture and ginned it up with her ALA Read Poster software. (I’m reading Pride and Prejudice.) (I’ll be darned — there’s a Flickr set for these posters. Go ALA!)As Roy Tennant announced in LJ, the festschrift for Anne Lipow is out, with my biographical essay about her in it. Naturally, being a writer, I am critical of my writing and see all the rough spots. But the collection has wonderful writings from a great group, and you can read it online or buy the print edition for a reasonable sum. Anne, we miss you, but this book helps. *Hugging Roy*I have a tin ear for poetry, so I am (sadly) poetry-ignorant, but this amusing post by poet Kay Ryan about attending a conference will ring a bell with even the most gregarious conference-goers from any profession. “What we have here before us is the exhilaration of bulk: bulk bags, bulk panels, bulk poets.”While I was in Boise, Jamie Larue of Douglas County Libraries in Colorado (which is surprisingly close to Idaho, it turns out), shared his eloquent blog post defending his library’s choice to retain the title, Uncle Bobby’s Wedding. I think about librarians who believe librarianship is all about the latest sparkly gizmoes and then I read posts like this and I’m reminded of the quiet steady work many librarians do defending the right to read — “kewler” than any momentary gizmo. I’m not anti-sparkle, mind you — I’m just ever-mindful of the long haul.Speaking of sparkly, I adore this Flickr set of Wii-playing seniors at the Skokie Public Library. My attitude about gaming is we hold programs on potting geraniums, so why not gaming? The library should be a big ol’ info potluck — books, computers, games, and yes, even geraniums.My buddies at My Former Place Of Work have revived their blog, The Centered Librarian. Some fun tidbits. I’ll tell you what I advised them, when they asked. When you begin or revive a blog, don’t post everything that you’ve been saving up right away. Pace yourself. Save some stuff for slow times. With a group blog, establish an editorial schedule and stick to it. If people get busy, recruit new voices.Speaking of Blogger (which I advised them to move from, as it is really cruddified — it will do for now, but I suggest growing an exit plan), TechCrunchIT has a resonant post about Google acquiring and then slowly suffocating interesting startups. The angle that made my ears wiggle was how the employees have to learn a Google-specific group of languages, which makes them less marketable.Sandy continues to interview with interesting churches. UCC has a placement process in which pastors file profiles centrally, which are then shared with regions the pastor is interested in. Some friends have contacted us to say they’ve heard about jobs but it’s in a church that isn’t ONA (“Open and Affirming”). Sandy has served well in several churches that weren’t (yet) ONA, but were open to change, seeking growth and leadership, and were very welcoming to us both. With the profile process, there’s a good chance we already know about the opening, but don’t let a label stand in the way of a tip-off.Bookmark to:        
Filed in Linkalicious, Uncategorized, Writing
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To Boise, to WilsWorld, and to Present on Creative Nonfiction
Sunday, July 20, 2008
I’ve been getting my sea-legs at my new job and staying very, very busy — blogging is just the tip of the iceberg. I got back from Norcross Friday night, and this morning, I’m off to Boise to talk about open source, and then to WilsWorld to just be there and I don’t know, let the goodness of open source ooze from my pores, and then back next Friday to scurry through piled-up work.But before I forget, on Saturday, August 9 from 1-4 p.m. I’m leading a creative nonfiction workshop at Leon County Public Library, through the aegis of the Tallahassee Writers Association. Three hours is actually a fun length for a local “taste of CNF” workshop. I can read a little from my own work and the work of others, we can do a couple of fun exercises… we’ll have a good ol’ time.I am going to brag more loudly next week, but The Best Creative Nonfiction Vol. 2 (Lee Gutkind, ed.) is due out July 28, and my essay, “Range of Desire,” is in it.What really humbles me is the list of authors in this volume. They’re like, you know, real authors. I can’t wait to read their essays.By the way, I don’t know if I’ve ever said this, but Michael, the editor at Nerve who worked on “Range of Desire,” was the perfect balance of good judgment and restraint. If I did say it, I’m saying it again. I like editors.No, I haven’t bought a car. I have been Away. Carmax’s suggestions have not been right, and the local Honda guy has so far been mum. Still waiting for the gummint to issue me a car.Now that I’m car-shopping I’m noticing that maybe it’s not such a terrible predicament to be in… my car leaks inside when it rains, it looks worn-out, and it is mildewy. I love my old Honda, but perhaps it is not so bad to be downgrading it to the Family Beater. A hard acknowledgment, like realizing a pet is getting old. (Or that we are getting old.)Bookmark to:        
Filed in Car shopping, Open Data, Writing
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