asides

Virtual home tour is online

The virtual tour of our house, for sale near Irvington, is online!

At Blog Indiana; Twitter

Sitting here at the Blog Indiana conference on IUPUI’s campus, in their new student center (nice!)

Also set up a Twitter account. Like I was with blogging, I’m very skeptical of Twitter and its uses. There’s no way I’ll be fanatical like many Twitter users who update about everything they do (”I’m in the restroom right now!”), but it might be a fun, free tool to work with.

SEO technique: name your children uniquely

As the administrator of a handful of websites, I’m often learning new techniques about SEO, or Search Engine Optimization. Basically, SEO is all about using web-savvy techniques to move your site’s ranking up in search engines like Google. So, for example, if I was starting a company to sell widgets (which I’m not, because - face it - who needs widgets?), but there were already 10 widget-selling companies on the first page of Google when you search for “widgets,” it would take an awful lot of work (and good content on my website) for my new widget company to even show up in a Google search result. So SEO is basically a mysterious set of quasi-scientific methods designed to help people find your site more easily by increasing the likelihood that it’s seen in a prominent space on a search engine.

Some say SEO is dead or dying, which likely enrages many who’ve built careers on it. This belief is built on the premise that Google, Yahoo et al are becoming better and better at filtering out worthless content and finding what’s truly good, whether it’s optimized for search engines or not.

At any rate, I have a proposition for those looking for more SEO techniques in the wake of Google’s continual evolution: name your kid something unique! Seriously: “Tristan Schmid” isn’t the most difficult search engine term to get a high ranking for (of course, now that I say that, people will probably try to knock me out of relevant searches just for kicks), and if I were to create a company called “Tristan Schmid Widgets Inc.”, all it would take would be some simple traditional marketing, and people could find my company online. Or not, since my name doesn’t have the additional T on the end that so many people would likely type.

Anyway, people like Lindsay Lohan’s mom have been cultivating their children to make them money for quite awhile, so it’s inevitable that someone follows my advice and names their kid Buydietpills.com Jones. Or not.

Comparing the candidates’ views on green policy

Care about climate change/the environment/our national energy policy? If you drive a car, eat food that travels via a gas-fueled vehicle, use electricity, or are alive today, you should.

Thus far, the presidential candidate debates have been sidestepping the environmental and energy-related issues. Not to say that the war in Iraq, health care, and the economy aren’t important, but everything’s related, so we should give consideration to other things. This handy-dandy chart from Grist compactly compares the candidates’ viewpoints on greenhouse emissions caps, fuel economy standards, renewable energy, biofuels, coal, and nuclear energy. Since few people in the mass media are talking about these things in the primaries, you might want to research it yourself before picking a candidate.

           

Open-source, affordable, green housing on the way

Everyone’s been talking the past year or so about global warming, going green, etc. In terms of housing, green construction standards (such as the US Green Building Council’s LEED) have been a hot topic in the U.S. and in other parts of the world (India’s wealthiest resident is building a 60-story “green” home in Mumbai). It’s all well and good that wealthy people like Al Gore are going green with their mansions, but what about the estimated 1/3 of the population that will be living in slums by 2030?

Architect Cameron Sinclair might tell you with a straight face that those people will make decent homes out of wealthier people’s “green” refuse. Sinclair, winner of 2006’s TED prize, started the Open Architecture Network to spread affordable housing throughout the world — a rather impressive goal. The projects in the network are rather interesting, to say the least. According to Sinclair, “Someone’s working on a $700 house. The Now House is a World War II retrofitted home that’s carbon-neutral… There’s a spinach-powered house, there’s a grow-your-own clinic, a clinic you eat. All of these projects have to be sustainable.” So even though the gap between rich and poor isn’t shrinking, it’s good to know that people like Cameron Sinclair are planning a future that’s better for everyone.

Testing lead testing kits

In the first episode of List-en up!, the Angie’s List podcast, Marion County, Indiana lead inspector Buddy Compton mentioned that store-bought lead-testing kits can be effective for testing surface paint, but they might not detect dangerous lead in deeper layers. The Consumer Reports on Safety blog tested several of these kits and posted their results here. You might find these results helpful before purchasing a kit yourself or deciding to have potentially poisonous paint professionally tested (hurray for alliteration!)

Can acting insane drive someone crazy?

Heath Ledger as the Joker in the Dark KnightJust a thought. Heath Ledger apparently complained of sleepless nights while playing the role of the Joker in the next Batman movie, Dark Knight. Could playing such an insane psychopath actually drive someone over the edge and cause problems in their personal life? Many actors talk about “getting into the character” they’re playing so intensely that they feel as if they’re actually the person they’re acting as. To people like me who aren’t actors or involved in the film industry, it’s easy to watch a film and discount the emotional toll certain rolls take on actors. But given the amount of stress most people’s jobs cause them, I can see how playing a super-freak (I listened to Rick James the other day :P ) could cause an actor to actually become one. But I guess I’ll never know, as I have no desire to act, nor acting talent, for that matter.

I wonder if Malcolm McDowell or Robert De Niro felt like they were minds were being negatively affected at any point while working on A Clockwork Orange or Taxi Driver, respectively…

BBC coverage of Japanese whaling; what’s the point of blogging, anyway?

I’ve written a few times about this season’s whale hunt by the Japanese, but have realized that the BBC’s Jonah Fisher is a much better source for it. He’s aboard Greenpeace ship Esperanza and is also keeping a journal of the events, so I’ll just link to his diary. Rather than me regurgitating what I’ve read elsewhere, you can go straight to the source.

That’s my problem with blogs: most of them are used simply for regurgitation of info that can almost always be found more easily and with better information elsewhere. This whole “news aggregator” phenomenon of Digg, Newsvine, Reddit, etc., etc., etc. often leads viewers/readers to blogs with summaries of other stories, so what’s the point? I guess blogs are good for diary-like entries; they’re good for friends and family to check out and stay updated; they’re good for illegally posting copyrighted content. But what else are they good for? My guess is absolutely nothing (UNHH - say it again!) Oh wait, they are good for one more thing: wasting time.

Taking your dog on holiday/vacation? Some things to consider…

Diva as a puppyThis is a little late (meant to post before the holidays), but good nonetheless.

Almost every time my wife and I take our three rather large dogs (Diva’s pictured, as puppy, to the left) to a friend or family member’s house, I grapple with whether or not I really want to deal with them (the dogs, not the people.) They can be a lot of hassle and work, but in the end, they usually win. So I try to be as considerate as possible to our hosts, though it’s not always the easiest thing to do. This New York Times article has some entertaining stories and tips about taking your pets on vacation with you, especially on holidays to friends’ or relatives’ houses. And though I do refer to my dogs as members of my family, I hope I’m not nearly as extreme as some of the owners in the story. An excerpt: Continue reading ‘Taking your dog on holiday/vacation? Some things to consider…’

Australia to monitor Japanese whaling

Australian whaling surveillance vesselA quick update on my post about Japanese whaling last year: According to the BBC, Australia has sent a large customs ship, as well as an Airbus plane, to monitor Japanese whaling activities and collect photos and video surveillance in preparation for a possible legal battle against Japan’s whaling practices. Go Aussies!