Oprah Show’s the Kindle Some Love

I get berated weekly for my admitted love affair with the Kindle by Shawn Collins, Jim Kukral and Lisa Picarille on the GeekCast podcast.

However, I stick to my guns that the Kindle is a HUGE game-changer and one of the most revolutionary devices of the decade (up there with the iPod and iPhone).

Today, Oprah professed her love for the reading device on her show. I think it’s a huge tipping-point moment for the device. Of course, I’m a little biased.

You can get $50 off the $359 Kindle
by going here
and entering “OPRAHWINFREY” as a coupon code.

Street Art as Societal Lens



(Gaia, NYC, 2008)

One of the things that is on my “to do before I die” list is flesh out a book on the history of graffito in terms of how it reflects on social conditions. Having been to Greece and Italy and exploring a number of the sites in and around Rome, Athens, Corinth, Pompeii, etc, the “writings on the wall” there tell an amazing story that often isn’t presented in the history books.



(The Alexamanos Graffito, Rome ca 200 CE)

And my own interest in Dura Europos (will be updating that place much more frequently soon) feeds into this obsession with graffiti as well. Much of what we know about Dura comes from the large amount of graffito spread across the city since many of the main buildings and their art were either destroyed when the city was sacked in 256 CE or deteriorated due to the building materials.



(Dura Europos Graffito Transcription)

All that to say, check out this great post of 40 contemporary street artists from around the world that you should know about. There are a number of things we can learn about our own selves and societies by looking to these artists…

Streetsy: 40+ Streetartists You Should Know Besides Banksy

McCain’s String Theory

Another one of those “wish I had written this” pieces…

McCain’s Cosmological Breakthrough: Unreality Is Expanding – Marc Ambinder: “The McCain campaign has broken through a heretofore impenetrable barrier in quantum physics, experimentally proving the existence of unseen dimensions and, in the process, setting three of its surrogates on a pathway towards winning the 2009 Nobel Prize in the physical sciences”

Head over and read the entire post…well worth your 3 minutes.

What a Blue NC Means for Berkely, or My Reply to Dave Winer

Here’s my reply to this post from Dave Winer (particularly the comment thread):

“I’m a white middle-class male who lives in Asheville, NC. I’m also a web marketing consultant that follows the techmeme world pretty closesly, so I get to travel out to the promiseld land of the Valley and NYC quite often.

I’m also a progressive. I also grew up in redneck-ville, SC. And I’m now a seminarian at a podunk little Baptist school near Charlotte, NC.

Next week, a group of 10 of us are taking off from seminary and heading to Charleston, SC (home of the first Synagogue in this hemisphere), Florida and DC to meet with rabbis and attend services in the hopes of finding more common ground on the question of Jewish-Christian relations. Baptists (particularly from the South) have a rocky relationship with Jews (as you know) bc of the bone headedness of the Southern Baptist Convention (of which we nor our seminary are a part), so there needs to be dialogue there. We’re trying to show another face of Baptists from this area. And the 10 of us aren’t alone down here in redneck-ville.

For the past 8 months, I’ve been working on the ground here in NC to get Obama through the primaries and now in the general election. I’m the vice-chair of our precinct and there’s so much excitement about Obama both here in Asheville (where he spent 4 days doing pre-debate prep and held a rally on Sunday that drew 22,000 in a town of around 70,000) and NC in general. After we return from our trip, I’ll be working non-stop doing last min voter registrations, canvassing neighborhoods and going door to door to get out the vote. And I’m not alone.

My point is that I’ve been a reader, listener and subscriber of yours for years (and agree with you 90% of the time) and this post makes me especially sad considering we are on the verge of seeing NC go Blue in just a couple of weeks. The enormity of that shift is incredibly important for my 1 year old daughter that will thankfully grow up never knowing a President Dubya but will certainly be charged with cleaning up his messes. The enormity of that shift (along with a potential Blue VA and shifting demographics in places like Columbia, SC) will change American politics as “the South” will no longer be safely Red in the coming years.

As a self professed Obama supporter, I’m shocked that you and the other commentors here would pre-judge an entire region of our country, where a number of people (even us religious folk) are working to cause change in the trenches (both for Obama and for better religious dialogue).

When Obama is elected because of a blue NC and Berkely erupts with celebration and “job well done” self lauding, don’t forget out us down here in the South. We will have worked hard for that change, and we will continue to be working hard for change everyday.

Now back to clinging to my guns, religion and Bible-
Sam”

Perhaps I’ve been reading too much from another Berkely resident, John Elliott, who is doing work on the ground.

It’s Over

I’m still in shock and can’t believe it’s over. This was our year. We had so much going for us. And I say us because my heart was out there on the field for every bone-headed mistake and every (rare) triumph.

Sad.

The Pulse: It’s over: “We want nothing more than to be on the team that gets it done. I would say almost to a man that’s why guys come here. They want to be a part of the team that wins it for the city of Chicago and for the fans. For us to play so well for six months and to come out here and perform for three days the way we did is just terrible.”