Musings from Brian J. Noggle
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Friday, May 09, 2003
Dick Gephardt Brings Daughter Out Of Closet, Into Campaign Dick Gephardt has announced his daughter is a lesbian and will now serve as an important tool in his campaign to woo the homosexual vote, which apparently does not vote on issues but on symbolic gestures. Next week, it is expected that Gephardt will announce that some of his best friends are black. Also, is it just me, or do homosexual-friendly candidates often cough up gay daughters, but not gay sons? Is this because they're playing on the current lesbianism-as-non-threatening-and-titilating-homosexuality cultural vibe, er, more? Discuss. Future Internet Entrepreneur Squelched by Authorities Well, not exactly, but one young man in the Northwest R-1 school district, from which I matriculated, was busted for videotaping the girls locker room. Now, he's going to get it. Looks like possible punishment might fit what used to be called "hijinks." A suspension and a slap on the juvenile wrist. Entire movie franchises were built on kids doing this sort of thing, albeit before x10 made it easy. (See also Meatballs (I-IV), Porky's (I-III), and American Pie (I-III).) So spank the boy, send him to bed before dinner, and maybe raise him, but let's not deny him the right to vote, lock him up, and brand him a sicko-for-life yet. Youthful "exuberance" is not a felony yet. Maybe I am just a softy because Northwest Valley used to be Northwest High School, and I have fond memory of it. Just one, graduating. Thursday, May 08, 2003
Suh-Weet Disclaimer Heather's gone off on her new bike many times on her blog, but as a certified Reel Gud Dock Righter, it's up to me to critique the Owner's Manual (Version 5.0). Okay, not the whole thing. I focused on the sweet disclaimer at the front:
While researching this blog entry, I saw the new Version 6.0 Owner's Manual on the Giant Bicycle's Web site (marketing message: "Cycling Solution Provider for everyone" which would seem to indicate everyone has a cycling problem, dilemma, or conundrum). Still, the upgraded doc says:
Dogs and Cats, Living Together, Mass Hysteria! Not quite. Apparently, the Supreme Court of the fine state of Utah has officially determined that dogs and cats are not equal in the eyes of the law. How should animal rights activists reactivist to this news? A whole new separate-and-unequal controversy! Wednesday, May 07, 2003
Who Needs An Intercom? In my previous days as an experienced Estate Sale Con-E-Sur, I spent a lot of times scavanging the homes of the well-to-do who acquired their, well, to-dos in the 1950s and 1960s. One thing that struck me besides, and often beside, the ovens built into the walls at an ergonomic height, was the hard-wired intercoms within some of the ranch homes, many of which could have fit the 13 x 65 mobile home in which I spent a couple of years into their basements. What a remarkable concept, I thought. But the idea died out in the 1950s, perhaps fifty years before these homes' owners ended their retirements. My beautiful wife and I bought a home that lacks one, and the house was built when Lyndon Johnson was president. Never fear, IM is here! Although my wife's office and my office hide on opposite ends of different floors of our split-level home (no coincidence), we can get the benefits of the anachronistic knob-and-speaker assemblies in the Ladue and Town and Country homes. "Honey," she types, "I am going to bed," and I hear her voice within my imagination more clearly than I would through fifty-year-old vacuum tubes. "I'll be right down," I type carefully, examining each key carefully as I peck out the response to make sure each letter is where I left it. And I go, to kiss her good night and ensure the bed is adequately feline-occupied for her slumber. The TCP/IP packets leave not detritus, though, and somehow it's somewhat less satisfying to think our communication leaves no residue, unlike those lines hard-wired and ostentatiously-wrought in 1954. Doing It in Style Guides After a period of time at the start-up for whom I work, I've decided it's time to create a style guide. With the revenue sugarplums dancing in our heads, maybe I can convince the assorted VPs of our need to hire a second technical writer eventually. A style guide would help break in, or maybe just break, the untamed new person. No longer would he or she struggle against the bridle of "Do it because I do it that way." The style guide offers me the cover of "Do it because it's in the style guide" (because I do it that way and put it in the style guide that way). Too much exposure to the marketers, and suddenly I am crafty. So, instead of relying upon guidance from previous employers, which meant falling into the "Do it because it's in the style guide" (because I do it that way because all of my previous employers did it that way, so I put it in the style guide that way) trap, I struck out to research style guides, delving into the obscure and Byzantine style guides developed by true geniuses in their fields. Some of the results startled me. Ever had to look over a press release devised by your marketing department? Or worse, have you seen them in print and wondered what fluke or computer virus introduced random capitalization into their text? It's no fluke. Here's the exact rule, courtesy of the Emily Dickinson Style Guide for Prose Writers:
When Writing, use Judiciously your friend the Capital Letter to add emphasis to Common nouns, adjectives, and verbs to discriminate and add Emphasis to Key Concepts. Sometimes, unfortunately often when proofreading my own work, I come across that sentence that features not only a dangling modifier, but a dangling everything. You know, the sort of I usually expect the writer has been deflected from his or her duty, whether a subject matter expert had to actually write some software, a salesman had to actually cold-call a potential client, or an overworked technical writer actually had to play defense in the important mid-morning foosball game. I understand how hard it can be to pick up where you left off, if you can even remember that you left off in the first place. So I often excused the offender with a pointed bit of Nogglesque humor that has alienated me from peers everywhere. That is, however, until I encountered the Official Manual of William Carlos Williams Style:
per breaks So much depends upon the brea king point of your sentences and lines. Judic ious use of improper grammatic al constructions lends itself to greater reader comprehension as the greater reader paus es to ponder the interface. I even found the software developer's favorite guide, the Elements of Riboflavin Style. The popular Riboflavin Style of writing is that to include the verb "to be" two times each to be clearer. Before this, I assumed it was weak writing, but now I know that the Riboflavin Style is officially sanctioned and that it leads to a healthy manual metabolism and mucous membranes in the gizzard. My research yielded a harvest more fruity than my wildest imaginings. Essentially, I can carve my own foibles, such as overuse of the word "Judicious" just because it sounds like a combination of Judicial and Delicious, into the style guide. Once I compose it, I can rest assured the style guide will stand, a HumaBrian Stone for the masses, or for the technical writer or intern I can acquire. The style guide will exist not just for now, but for all time, or at least until half way through my farewell luncheon, or until someone has a better idea. The Marvel Universe, Online, Almost Officially Oh, bay bee! I don't know if you all remember the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe or the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Update '89, but they were encyclopedias of the almost all characters that had appeared in Marvel comic books since the beginning of time. Looks like the Marvel Directory, a fan site with some claimed support from Marvel, has brought the whole thing online. I am weeping happy geek tears. Which reminds me: I forgot to look for Stan Lee in X-Men 2. Sorry, honey, but guess where we have to go this weekend? Ted Nugent Says...Something Naughty! The AP wire is a-twit-ter after Ted Nugent apparently said, how delicately they put it:
What we do have for context is this:
Sorry. I understand these "special" words have magickal significance to aggrieved covens of the afflicted, but they are just words. Perhaps Ted Nugent was using them to draw attention to the fact that they're just collections of glyphs on the page or voiced velar stops, alveolar coronals and other articulations and not anything more. Actus reus without mens rea. As our society fundamentally shifts from criminal intent to strict liability template, it's no longer necessary to mean harm with words, just speaking the words is the offense. We'll probably never know how Ted Nugent meant to use the words or how he really used the words. It's not like the inflammatory news article presents the context or a transcript. Don't bother going to the the Web site of the radio station 103.5 The Fox, or the dee jays with whom the Nuge was communicating, Lewis and Floorwax. Instead of information about this heinous crime, you'd just see the "sunken treasure chests" contest in which one woman with small breasts will win free breast augmentation! At least these holders of the moral high ground took the opportunity of this new-found celebrity to remove the photo of one of the morning show participants vomiting into a trash can after smelling rancid dog feces as part of some morning hijinks. Some marketing flack must have known the attention the Web site was about to receive. Any publicity is good publicity, especially when you're enlightened defenders of feelings AND you don't have puking interns on the Web site. Ted Nugent's Web site probably won't glorify this "scandal" with a response. I cannot say I blame him. The whole thing smacks of a publicity stunt by a couple of drive-time losers with declining marketing share, deciding to pillory an outspoken conservative figure for fun and ratings. Unfortunately, it will probably work. Ted Nugent Trivia! And another thing, why does the AP article bear this line:
I guess the point is a free-association of racial slurs, and those who would use them to denigrate (author insensitivity alert!) other races, with the National Rifle Association, whose stance on the Second Amendment runs counter to that of the author of the piece, the Associated Press in general, and "enlightened" people everywhere. The sooner those louts are tarred with the same pot of pitch, the better to round them up and pelt them with animal entrials--no, wait, they might like that. And let's not let the facts step in front of an onrushing good Nexis-Lexis search phrase. Nugent's own biography does not list him as a former president, but he does sit on the board of directors at the NRA. Fact Checking The Onion Doh! In this week's issue, The Onion misquotes Alex Rogan, the main character of The Last Starfighter. The Onion's take is this:
Oh, sure, maybe the writer can claim that the joke is that it was Bush, the "pretender president," who made another one of his characteristic blunders. But I think the writer was playing slops with the cult culture of geeks and banked number four off of the eight ball, a bumper, and the thirteen ball without dropping it in the side pocket. You Onion guys used to have geek cred when you were in Madison, but since you've gone to New York, you've gotten taken in by the glamour of the east coast and you ain't down with us here in the heartland no more. (The doctors say I can overcome my dementia trivia with a prescription, but I declined.) Tuesday, May 06, 2003
Those Must Be Some Cush Prisons A Brazilian police station turned out a confessed drug dealer because they think he made the whole thing up for the free prison time. Perhaps he should emigrate to America. Although conditions might not be described as cush, the United States doesn't turn prisoners away. Our motto: Over 1.4 Million Currently Being Served! Apathetic Apotheosis Richard Roeper's got a point in today's Chicago Sun-Times. Laci Peterson is the latest member of the pantheon of people who were anonymous while alive, but became national celebrities after murder, eligible for emotional deconstruction upon which to project something of our own lives and losses so that we can all together regrieve. Shouldn't we just get the heck over it? It just depends upon what the meaning of closure is. When You Outlaw Paper Bonds, Only Outlaws Will Have Paper Bonds The Washington Post reports that the Department of the Treasury will no longer sell paper United States Savings bonds. Instead, all bonds will be maintained through electronic accounts. Wow, this is so much a bad idea that I can briefly foam at the keyboard in the scant minutes I have to refuel the Doc-U-Matic "Mr. Digestion" Portable Energy System (MDPES). It's undemocratic. People without computers or accounts can no longer just walk into a bank and buy a bond. The official explanation is that a large portion, as a percentage, of investment dollars that pour like a broken dam into the nation's coffers are done electronically. And by very large funds and corporations, no doubt. It's a bad symbolic move to suddenly make the common stock in America preferred, with only big investors or little investors with computer accounts eligible to participate. Monday, May 05, 2003
How Do You Really Feel, Financial Times? In the story about USA Interactive's acquisition of LendingTree.com, the author or someone misadvertently casts it thus:
(Thanks to /. for the link.) But I Read The Manual Honey, I know you recently found a pair of your nice slacks hanging in the closet in a state you characterized as "inside-out." However, I want to assure you that this must be by design, for I read the manual that came with these slacks, and I laundered them precisely according to the concise directions provided by my technical communication counterpart at his or her own sweatshop of indenture. The user's guide, or perhaps administrator's guide (as I was not so much using as maintaining the slacks), directed me to:
As a professional courtesy, I cannot even doubt that this documentation specialist would leave out important maintenance steps in this process. When developers compile documentation, they often operate with assumptions not readily apparent to the end user. For example, saying "Search for the record" is shorthand for:
With this respect for my counterpart in mind, I must point out that although the instructions indicate that the slacks administrator should turn the garment inside out, at no point do the instructions direct the administrator to once again toggle the setting of the interior/exterior aspect position. As I indicated, were it a developer who wrote this procedure, I might entertain the notion that the step was merely assumed. However, I defer to the technical writing authority. Of course, the fact that the instructions do not say turn garment inside in represents a marvelous innovation in slacks technology. I concentrated, using the ancient technique of Docus Ficta (Find The Feature In The Omission or Defect) which learned when I studied the Dark Forbidden Arts of Technical Writing in the verdant jungles of Cambodia (right down the road from those whacky guys at Angkor Wat who kept hitting their softballs over our fence and interrupting the meditations of we technical writing initiates to throw the softballs back). Of course! By alternating the exposure of both the interior and exterior surfaces of the garment, the user will experience more even wear upon the fabric, increasing up to 100% the life of the garment. No wonder this garment maker is the leader in the industry. Undoubtedly, it has filed a patent protecting this intellectual property. If not, certainly an entrepreneural dumpster-diving spirit like me will poach it. I am sorry to have to bring this squabble up publicly, dear, when all four of our readers can see it. However, you must now agree that the "inside out" nature of the slacks within the closet was not a mistake, but the direct result of intelligent information design. Even though I might shame you by this display, I promise I shall make it up to you by doing something special, such as ironing your slacks. I will, once I figure out which setting of the iron is reverse; the switch doesn't have a little R. Memo from the Department of Irony One of the commissioners of the Federal Trade Commission is named Swindle? In his column on CNet, Declan McCullagh says it with a straight face, his accompanying photo depicting his normal look of concern that indicates he fully agrees with Ridley Scott's Blade Runner vision of the future, starting about 2007. Me, on the other hand, I cannot. Orson Swindle! Orson Swindle! Haw haw! Plug for a Magazine P.S., if you like the fantasy genre, I can't recommend a magazine more highly than I do Realms of Fantasy. It's got nonfiction about the genre, about threads in folklore, and about other subjects slightly fantasy-lovers might find interesting. It's also got some speculative fantasy fiction in each issue. Don't just browse the Web site, buy the magazine. It's available at the Borders on Olive, fellow Creve Couer geeks, and you could always subscribe. Sunday, May 04, 2003
From our Department of Irony I received two unsolicited e-mail messages this afternoon, on my home account no less, from some punk outfit calling itself DarkSoft Group wants me to give them twenty bucks for an anti-spam remedy! Here's the message, courtesy of some other guy who thinks as highly of them as I do. The ad claims you can download the product from the #1 download site on the Internet. Let's be frank: I don't know how to discover any psuedo-scientific rankings, but I've always been a doubting Thompson, and I doubt that whoever www.sil00001.com is, they get a lot of casual traffic from people who type sil00001 into the Address bar to find software. Let me see, give my credit card number to one or more punks collectively known by a name more suited to some 733t h4x0rz than a software company, and probably then provide them with the names and passwords to all my e-mail accounts? What's not to like about that deal? I just don't have the twenty bucks. |
To say Noggle, one first must be able to say the "Nah."
"I will." Heather L. Igert, angelweave.mu.nu "Genuis." Neil Steinberg, Chicago Sun-Times "Some wanker." Kim du Toit, on the Noggle Library. "Brian J. Noggle apparently forgot that the proper design for a tin foil beanie calls for the shiny side out." Robb Allen, Sharp as a Marble. "I'm weeping openly right now. Thanks for hurting my feelings, pinhead." Bob Rybarcyzk, St. Louis Post-Dispatch Instapundit Protein Wisdom Ace of Spades HQ Wizbang! Outside the Beltway Robert B. 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