Kuna Glacier circa 1975

The Kuna Glacier circa 1975. It no longer looks like this.



I Ching Trigrams

"Face it Tim, we’ve broken the sky, and we will have to pay for it.", Martin Cohen

Just put your lips together and blow...

I just noticed that the Bogart/Bacall film, To Have and Have Not, is a hot search topic. I can't really imagine why. After all, it's been around for a few years now. I own a VHS copy and like all my other Bogart films it gets played every few months. I've often wondered if making the film was an attempt to duplicate the success of Casablanca. Unfortunately for that, no one has ever come close to Ingrid Bergman. I think that one stand out aspect of this film is Hoagy Carmichael. Howard Hawks knows enough to let him play his tunes all the way through.

Global Warming Redux, or who cares

What follows is a brief exchange from the anthro-l email list. I'm including it here because it sums up why so little is actually being done to reduce the factors causing out current climatic changes and I believe it needs a wider audience than just the list.

Eiríkur Hafberg:
>> What has become of the modern man? Wasn't he/she/it supposed to be
>> educated? Has the education system failed? Or is the market oriented
>> media to blame for being too strong and loud and misleading? What has
>> become of the Homo sapiens sapiens (did he ever exist?)?

jan matthieu

Portland Bookends

I truly love the city of Portland, Oregon but it seems Portland didn't like me much. I moved there, with my college girl friend, in March of 1978, upon taking a career job with the US Army Corps of Engineers. The position seemed an ideal fit with my recently acquired Masters in Geography. The move proved disastrous, however, for my relationship. I stayed with my new found career and she returned to Los Angeles. It's impossible to tell from this distance but I suspect my life would have been much more stable had I stayed with the relationship rather than the job.

James Bond - Quantum of Solace

Daniel Craig is not James Bond and this is not really a James Bond film, only the names have been used for marketing purposes. The film has high action scene production value but low story line value. I would say that it is fun to watch, as a series of set pieces. I admit up front that Sean Connery remains my preferred Bond and From Russia with Love my favorite film from the series. This latest Bond lacks any degree of sophistication, a trait that provided most of the humor and character found in earlier Bonds.

I Ching Hexagrams

I have added to my web site a spinning wheel of I Ching trigrams with the classic yin yang symbol in the center. Click the image and a random I Ching hexagram is selected and displayed in a pop-up window along with it's description and commentaries. I did this initially to practice animating gif images as well as incorporating javascript and ajax into a drupal site. I chose the I Ching because I've always found it to be a source of good advice on how to conduct myself, not as a religious tract nor as a soothsayer.

Kakapoo

I'm not particularly fond of small dogs as it's been my experience that all they do is eat piddle and poop. I was dealing with a lady today who wanted to put up a fence around her cockapoo in order to prevent it from "doing it's business" in inappropriate locations. It's been my thought that they were appropriately named creatures. Anyway, a few minutes ago I thought to lookup cockapoo and kakapoo and discovered that the name had already been taken, by a flightless parrot in New Zealand. See http://www.kakapo.net/en/index.html for more information on this bird.

Critical Transitions in Nature and Society By Marten Scheffer

This book was recommended by a member of the Anthro-L email list. I've subscribed to this list for more years than I can remember now. It's part of my effort to keep my brain active. This book was described as very readable with a lot of insight into the processes and conditions associated with those critical moments for life on this planet when everything changes. This link is to Google Books and not all of the book has been made available.

http://books.google.com/books?id=jYSZgaaxRv0C&lpg=PP1&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q...

Hunting the Aaardvark

For many years I've been intrigued by a sign painted on the outside wall of a small shop in Canoga Park. The sign belongs to a vintage clothing outlet, The Aaardvark's Odd Ark. Until recently I had no idea what they sold or any other thing about them for that matter. It was only the sign that held any interest for me. Since starting up my one page web site business, One Pagers, I've been looking for small businesses and other unusual and/or interesting businesses to add quality content to the site.

The Dreadnaughts

The Dreadnaughts is an action/horror movie, part live action and part computer animation. It is the first full length effort by writer/director Mark Newton. It struck me as a sort of Highlander goes to Kazah-Dum. The chief bad guy has bred an army of creatures known as dreadnaughts to replace a rather nasty race that, except for him, as disappeared from the earth. He is now looking for a successor to lead this army against the human race, enter the hero of the movie.

More on optimizing a site for mobile devices

As I've mentioned previously, my One Pagers site is optimized for mobile devices. While observing the shopping public I've become aware of how important search engines and mobile phones have become for consumers. If I'm to draw clients to my services One Pager sites must have utility as well as be viewable. Along with resizing fonts and images displayed telephone numbers must be usable. I've mentioned using mobile tools to switch themes when a site is accessed via a mobile device.

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