Top of the mornin’

I don’t know, once all the construction on I-30 is done, will it be a better thing that I can get to work earlier in the morning?

The bridge at I-30

Posted April 5, 2016, under:

I thought you died alone, a long, long time ago

I’m a big David Bowie fan, but not because I got into David Bowie. The first song of his that I liked was the collaboration with Queen “Under Pressure,” and even then (early to mid-80s) I associated that song more with the supergroup than I did with just Bowie. Radio hits of the 80s that followed (“Let’s Dance,” “Blue Jean”) were a welcome splash to the otherwise repetitive string of pop put out at the time.

Because pre-internet times demanded to do so, I was a member of the Columbia Records and Tapes Club, and one fine day, after failing to reject the album of the month, I received a copy of “Nirvana Unplugged in New York,” which I diligently listened to, it being the 90s and surely anything by Nirvana was worth listening to. The truth is, only one song stuck in my head, and that was “The Man Who Sold the World.” I couldn’t quite understand who Kurt Cobain credited the song to, although I was able to figure it out in not-too-long a spell (I actually had several conversations with friends and co-workers — pre-internet days, remember?).

It was during those times that I also frequented driving to the big Metropolis (Houston) to visit the big stores (Barnes & Noble) and I was able to secure my own CD copy of Bowie’s The Man Who Sold the World, and suddenly, maybe 20 years too late, I became a big Bowie fan. I don’t know that I can easily rattle off the names or melodies of the rest of the songs in the album, but “The Man Who Sold the World” is enough to fill a library of memories, hopes and doubts that were otherwise filled with synthesized chords and other regrets.

After my initial approach to “The Man Who Sold the World,” slowly I absorbed the rest of the Bowie library, which lives with me even without the help of Spotify or any other recorded medium.

Nirvana’s cover was a faithful rendition of the song, and I guess that any artist that attempts to do so will triumph in his or her or their own way, which is why that accidental CD delivery made up my mind once and for all that performing a cover song is indeed the most sincere form of flattery. If I had any talent at all, I would pick up an instrument and record R.E.M.’s “Find the River” and call it a life.


Posted March 31, 2016, under:
music

Once Upon A Time

I always wanted something.

And at one time, that meant I wanted to be a writer.

I didn’t know what that meant. Not one bit.But then, there came the time when the keyboard was faster than my mind.

And it all changed.

Posted June 17, 2015, under:

The Stitcher Scare

So my Sticher Radio stopped functioning this morning, and as I panicked at the lack of content, I realized that nowhere have I written down my playlist.

##The Daily Grind

  • Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Day link
  • CBS What’s in the News link
  • AP Radio: Updated Hourly link
  • Fox News Radio link
  • NPR News Hourly News Summary link
  • NPR Topics: Technology link
  • APM: Marketplace Morning Report link
  • APM: Marketplace Mid-Day Report link
  • APM: Marketplace Tech link
  • TWIT Bits link
  • Geek Radio Daily link
  • TWIT Tech News Today link
  • TWIT Tech News 2Night link
  • Daily Tech News Show link
  • Current Geek link
Posted June 8, 2015, under:

The Digital Calculator Blues

Ye Olde Calculator

Last night, as I was tippy-tapping on my iPad and retweeting weather updates and listening to voicemails and reviewing information about the next day I thought about how mundane the whole experience was. I was suddenly reminded of that time in 1973 or 1974 when my father showed me what was then an absurd purchase, a pocket calculator with bright green digital numbers, that could add, subtract, multiply and good grief, divide with the push of a couple of buttons.

From TV and movies I hear that the first heroin high is the best and probably the only one you’ll ever enjoy. Other than the first 10 hours of “Combat” on the 2600 and the joy of BASIC programming, I’m not sure technology will ever again excite me as much as that little box with glowing numbers.

The Story of the Race to Develop the Pocket Electronic Calculator

Posted March 5, 2015, under:
meta