Archive - 2010
October 25th
My Update Adventure #N900 PR 1.3, NitDroid, Titan, and MeeGo
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 10/25/2010 - 15:19So, the latest update to the firmware for the Nokia N900 came out today, and I figured I’d give it a shot to see what works and what doesn’t. As I did for my experiments installing NitDroid on the N900, I am writing this as a log so people can see what worked and didn’t for me. It will be geeky, so non N900 users may want to skip this post.
The Package
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 10/25/2010 - 08:30Last night, I had a strange dream that has stuck with me into the morning. I suspect that it is pulling in themes from various things going on in my life, but instead of attempting to analyze it, I want to write down as much of it as I can.
I was working at a hospital and received a large manilla envelope. It was full of various clippings and artifacts. One of the first things I found was a note. It was addressed to Aldon Hynes, so I felt quite clear I was the intended recipient. The exact address was unintelligible, but it was in Adarnton, KS. I don’t believe there is a city named Adarnton in Kansas. However, it struck me that Adarnton was the first initial and the last name of my first wife.
I haven’t had my ex-wife show up in a dream in a long long time, and that seemed really weird. Yet the whole thing seemed weirder still. It was an unexpected package and I wondered how it found its way to me. As I read some of the notes it became apparent that an elderly widow had given the package to a hospital administrator in Texas and asked that he get the package to me. Somehow, he managed to find the hospital I worked at and got it delivered through some sort of inter-hospital mail.
My job at the hospital was unclear. It wasn’t a medical job, nor was it an administrative job. It seemed to have some sort of therapeutical role related to helping people use social media.
I knew a little bit about the elderly widow. A few weeks ago, I had led a conference call on learning to use social media. The plan had been to do it as a webinar and to explore various aspects of social media. However, the group I ended up talking to was not especially experienced with technology and a webinar was too complicated, as was going beyond anything other than simple blogging.
The participants were long time friends and they took to the idea of using blogs to stay better in touch with one another during their final years. They would share stories of their present day lives, visits from grandchildren and great grandchildren, memories of their past; perhaps a little online scrapbooking or sharing other crafts they were working on.
The woman who sent me the package was, for lack of a better term, the queen bee in waiting of this small social group. Unfortunately, the queen bee herself was ill and could not join the discussion. A few weeks later, the queen bee died, and the package was various clipping and memories of the queen bee.
I started to look through the package. I knew that there was a lot in there, a lot of deep personal memories, and something of great value, if I could figure it out. There were pointers to the beginning of blogs of various members of the group, and I was pleased to see the progress they were making.
At this point, waking life intruded on my dream. It was time to start the day. Yet waiting for me in my dreams is a packet with an important secret.
October 24th
Fiona to Interview State Comptroller Candidate Kevin Lembo
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 10/24/2010 - 09:10For the past two and a half years, my daughter Fiona and I have done an Internet based radio show using BlogTalkRadio. She was about six and a half years old when we started and now we have over a hundred recordings of the two of us talking together on Sunday evenings.
Our typical shows have been about what she has done over the past week. Visits to Papa’s house, trips to orchards or to pick pumpkins, playing with puppies; the stuff of childhood. Yet on various occasions Fiona has interviewed special guests. Last November, Fiona interviewed Connecticut Gubernatorial Candidate Dan Malloy. She was born in Stamford when Dan was mayor there and they had a good chat. I wrote about the interview back then in a blog post, Fiona Interviews CT Gubernatorial Hopeful Dan Malloy on Internet Radio Show. It provides a summary of the discussion and some context on other people she has interviewed.
She has also interviewed State Representatives and candidates for that office. This April, Fiona interviewed Connecticut Secretary of State Candidate Denise Merrill. Both Denise and Dan are on the ballot this November.
At a discussion between bloggers and State Comptroller Candidate Kevin Lembo, I asked Kevin if he would be interested in being on Fiona’s show. With just a few weeks left before election day, I wasn’t sure we would be able to get him on as a candidate and was prepared to have him as a guest sometime after the election. However, the campaign has managed to make time for him to call this evening.
As I’ve explained to candidates, if they can explain what the job is and why they think they would be good at it to a nine year old interviewer, they are probably more than sufficiently prepared to speak with other members of the press and public that might be having difficulties grasping what the campaign is all about.
So, I hope that you consider tuning in this evening at 6:30 PM, U.S. Eastern Daylight Time to here Fiona interview Kevin Lembo.
At the end of the introduction of the show each week, I say, “I encourage all parents to find time to talk with their kids, perhaps even recording the discussions or, as we do, sharing them on BlogTalkRadio.” I was glad to hear people from PodcampCT talking about doing that very thing, so I also hope that over the coming weeks, I can highlight shows similar to Fiona’s and encourage you to listen to them as well.
October 23rd
Earworms, Halloween, Babbit and Picking Up The Pieces
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 10/23/2010 - 18:27I’ve been suffering from an earworm infestation recently. Earworms,those snippets of songs you get into your mind and can’t get out. For people of my generation, Minnie Ripperton’s “Loving You Is Easy because you’re beautiful” lyrics may come to mind when we think about earworms. If you have a kid at home who likes Degrassi High the words, “Maybe there’s a shark in the water” is likely to come to mind.
There’s a blog called something like “Picking up the pieces...” that I’ve been stumbling across a bit recently and every time I see it mentioned, Gordon Lightfoot’s “Carefree Highway” comes to mind:
Picking up the pieces of my sweet shattered dream
I wonder how the old folks are to night
This morning, I read the latest on Facebook from Sarah, a friend who recently lost her father. Yesterday, in the middle of the night, she wrote
Massive flight delays, flight changes, hotel vouchers, and one LONG middle seat flight later, I'm in Phoenix.
Eight hours later, she posted
Westward bound, to San Diego and Dad's funeral mass. Gonna be a tough day; feeling very grateful for the support of family and friends. And hugs. Always grateful for hugs!
Then, earlier today, she posted another the lyrics from a song that has also seemed to be an earworm for me recently.
"And He will lift you up on eagles' wings, bear you on the breath of dawn-- make you to shine like the sun, and hold you in the palm of His hand."
I remember singing this at many funerals, most recently my cousin’s. I also remember the way it was twisted in a stunning production of Richard 3, and depending on my mood either version becomes my earworm.
When Sarah’s father died, she posted
Our cowboy just rode on to more peaceful pastures. Godspeed, Dad. You will be missed each and every day.
On Thursday, State Rep. Mike Lawlor wrote:
Its happy hour in heaven. Eileen Purcell McNamara Lawlor had a great run. She loved her family and her friends. She will certainly be missed.
When I wrote about my uncle’s passing, a friend commented about how Roger was always the perfect gentleman. Somehow, I could easily see him waiting at happy hour ready to offer Eileen a drink. I imagine Flo Woodiel being there as well, along with Kim’s mother and grandparents. A year ago, a friend named Carol ended her battle with Leukemia as did Irv a year and a half ago. I imagine them there and perhaps even Rocky, my high school classmate that was murdered thirty four years ago this October.
So, it was with an eagle’s wing’s earworm that I took my daughter the the Beecher Road Parent Teacher Organization’s big fundraiser of the year, the Halloween Hoot. Fiona quickly found her posse and ran off to the haunted house and other attractions. She is old enough to do that fairly well, but I felt it was important to stay at the school in case she needed something. We agreed that I would sit in the corner of the cafeteria where I could quietly sit and read.
A while ago, I had loaded an eBook of Sinclair Lewis’ Babbit on my cellphone. I sat down and read for a while. Babbit’s growing disillusionment with the American Dream and the vacuous lives of himself and is friends mingled with the hymn about death and the Halloween Hoot.
I looked around the room. These are good people in a small town. Many were focused on their little cats, cows, ladybugs, witches, or princesses. There were several Mario’s this year joined by a sumo wrestler and a taco. The taco costume was pretty cool. The kids all seemed to be having a great time, except for one toddler who had been overstimulated and was melting down. If the parents got a chance, they would exchange a few simple words with other parents. Some were in mourning because the Yankees lost last night. Others talked about getting pumpkins or even politics.
And He will raise you up on eagle's wings...
Halloween, All Hallow’s Eve, or All Saint’s Eve, comes from the combining of two traditions. One is Samhain, a Gallic harvest festival. It is celebrated at the end of the harvest as the border between this world and the otherworld grows thin. All Saint’s Day, in Western Christianity is November 1st. It is a day to remember the saints who have gone before us. A hymn that I’ve always loved from All Saint’s Day is For All The Saints.
For all the saints, who from their labors rest,
Who Thee by faith before the world confessed,
So, the Halloween Hoot: I sat in the corner, reading George Babbit’s disillusionment with the world around him. I looked at the good people around me, and thought how I could likewise be disillusioned. Yet at the same time, I was aware of the thinness between this world and the next, of how we are all born astride the grave, and the earworms crawled in, the earworms crawled out, the earworms played pinocle... No, another earworm.
Fiona returned to drop off her bag of goodies and run elsewhere. The Super Mario’s blithely ran around the cafeteria. Maybe Babbit is right, or maybe there’s a shark in the water. Maybe we are all just picking up the pieces of various sweet shattered dreams.
Analyzing Entrecard
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 10/23/2010 - 08:25Entrecard is giving away 5000 credits to anyone that writes a review of their service. They typically sell credits at $3 per thousand credits, so in theory this is worth $15. That said, I have never bought credits on Entrecard. Instead I earn them a couple different ways.
First, I have an Entrecard widget on my site. Other people pay credits to advertise. Entrecard keeps half of the credits paid and I get the other half. As one of the more busy sites on EntreCard ads on my site typically cost around one to three thousand credits a day. That gives me between 500 and 1500 credits each day for my advertising on Entrecard.
Entrecard members also get a credit for each site that they visit and drop a card on. You can get up to 300 credits this way. There are a few things that this results in.
First, the quality of Entrecard visits are not all that high. Google Analytics shows the bounce rate from Entrecard on my site is currently 92.77%. That’s pretty high. Normally, I don’t worry too much about bounce rate. It can mean that people are finding what they look for on their first page view. It can also mean that they are not really paying attention and simply moving on. I suspect this is often the case with Entrecard visitors. Yet even with that, I get over 100 visitors from Entrecard each month that stop and read more than one page on my site.
Many of these visitors end up being people that become regular readers and that I read regularly as well.
In terms of incoming demographics, a little less than half of my EntreCard traffic comes from the Americas. A little over a third comes from Asia. It often seems like it is a much higher percentage that comes from Asia. Drilling down more deeply, regions that drive the most traffic to my site from Entrecard are Manilla, Cebu and Jakarta. For U.S. traffic the regions driving the most traffic are from Texas and Florida.
There are some people from Connecticut that use Entrecard. I get more traffic from a local news site and from Facebook than I do from Entrecard, but I do get some Connecticut traffic.
Is Entrecard for you? Hard to tell. It can be a useful way of getting some new readers and joining some discussions. However, for it to be useful, you need to agree to have their widget on your website and really, you need to spend time connecting with your readers. On the other hand, you really should be spending time connecting with your readers anyway. So, do you use EntreCard? How’s it working for you?