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    « May 2008 | Main | July 2008 »

    June 2008

    June 28, 2008

    Back On Track-Saturday a.m. in Kari's Paradise

    This the first weekend in three or four where I've been able to get up at sun up at home and go outside with MacBook Pro and catch up on the beauty of a sunrise in our backyard, which I dubbed "Kari's Paradise" last year.  This is the garden I've spent so much of the past winter and spring working on.  As you might recall I started with a series of miniature picket fences to keep Molly, our Great Pyrenees out of strategic areas of grass because she was digging in them.  That then progressed to bulding the well in the garden area of the pool near our gorgeous rock "weeping" wall, that springs water from the pool over them and back into the pool.  Then came the pergola and bench/fence wall across the back of the yard in the deep end.  Then came tons of flowers; some bulbs, some from seedlings we planted in the garage in trays and grow light areas, and then plants. Some of the bamboo I planted late last June is just going nuts, which was the plan.  And then we planted some Texas Hibiscus, some Texas Lavender, and some Carolina Jasmine.   It's all come togeter to the point now of where I can just bring MacBook Pro out here with me and take it all in without having the desire to get out the tools and head to Home Depot to do more.  That's an incredibly wonderful feeling.  Peace.  Satisfaction. 

    So here I sit now at 6 A.M.on a Saturday.  I'm taking my beautiful wife into Dallas for a "Getting Started" workshop offered for new Mac owners.  Last night another image that I'd contemplated many times and even wrote about here happened.  As Ashleigh and I played in the pool for about an hour, Kari sat on the chase lounge with her MacBook and got things done she could not have done if she'd still been strapped to that archaic PC she had running WinDoze. 

    Molly and I are enjoying a beautiful sunrise and as I sit here under the fans, the temp is pretty nice for a summer morning in Dallas in June. 

    The work I've done out here in the past 12 months offers such an infinite variety of color to enjoy.  We have established structural focal points that are complimented by the elegance of the flowers we've added.  There are purples in several shades, pinks, reds, yellows, whites, and oranges.  Coupled with the colors of the rocks, the greenery, and complimented on the color wheel by the blue of the pool water, there is a visual feast for the eyes out here. 

    It is mornings like this that I wish my maternal grandfather was still around.  Grandpa would have enjoed being here this morning and no doubt would have been sitting here with me, or out on the pergola swing. So many of his artistic influences are upon me and visible here in the garden. 

    It is amazing the times I spend remembering him and wishing he still were around.  I've said before here in this space that I didn't realize the level of influence he has had upon my life until he was taken from it.  And I miss not being able to pick up the phone and tap into his wisdom. 

    When I began my work in oil painting, I was setting up florescent lighting for working indoors.  I was asking about what kinds of light to put in them, as there are more than one types of this lighting.  ONe is a warm rich light, the other is a brighter light.  Both offer different benefits and instead of using one or the other, grandpa solved the question--get one of each and put it in the same light. 

    He is the one who instilled in my life the philosophy of looking at life from more than one angle.  When we would look at art, he'd challenge me to turn it sideways, even upside down to see what could be seen.  Maybe that is why I can look at a problem or opportunity nowadays and see things for what they can be rather than for what they are.

    I've been on a steady diet of Mozart and Bach lately.  Mozart has joined us in the garden this morning.  Divertimento in D is our entertainment.  This music just fascinates me in the aspect that a couple hundred years ago someone had the time and ability to construct such heavenly themes with so many instruments, no tape recorders to be had, and to be able to write such wonder. 

    Kari has spent the better part of the past couple of days seeking out the appropriate carry bag for her MacBook.  This morning after the workshop at NorthPark Center I think we'll hit the Super Target off Northwest Highway in Dallas.  We've been to the Apple Store, Best Buy, Wal-mart, and looked online.  Last night as she sat out here, she said that maybe we should try Target. 

    I just completed a visual survey of the yard.  It's hard to believe I once used to walk through this entire lot when there was nothing here but tall grass and dirt.  Then came the house and a mess.  Then came sod and trying to water it as it water logged.  Then came the mess from building the pool (preceded by days of waiting for the pool people to show and get started.)  And then came the clean up afterward. And now this.  All in just two years.  Now that's amazing. 

    Okay, time to get moving.

    June 27, 2008

    LA Times says iPhone more of a fixation than Britney, Obama

    Think the iPhone is a way cool deal?  Well, the LA Times has done some checking.  Turns out searches for information about the iPhone, way back when it was still just a rumor, topped searches for information about Britney Spears and Mr. Obama.  Perhaps one of her agents will get her a phone, and one of his aides will put one in his hand and let him be seen in a car or getting off the plane or behind the pipe and drape at a rally talking on an iPhone.  The cross marketing would help all three parties.  Not to mention that Brit and Obama would have the world's best phones in their hands.

    iPhone fixation vs. Britney Spears fever and Barack Obama mania

    10:16 AM, June 27, 2008

    Back in April, as rumors began to swirl about a new iPhone, 1.3 million people conducted nearly 7 million online searches for information about the iPhone or iPhone-related terms, according to a new study by comScore Marketer, a Web traffic measurement service.

    Britney_spears_2That works out to about 5.3 iPhone searches per person...

    At&T iPhone 3G Sales Locations In Dallas

    I've done a little research today and called a couple AT&T stores here in Dallas.  They confirm that they will have the new iPhones on sale that day in these stores.  Activations will be required before you are permitted to leave the building with the phone. (AT&T rep at one store said they will limit to one per person. "If everyone in the family is getting one, bring the whole crew," he said.)  In addition, they're making changes in the text packaging and data packaging for the new phones. 

    But in our case, where we already have the unlimited family texting plan (teenagers) there will likely only be a $30 change in the unlimited plan to have Internet on the new, fast, fast, fast, 3G phone.  If you want more information, you can look here.  I tried to do the "be the first" entry where I put in my email address and they'll send me more information, but the link wasn't working..... 

    I asked one store if they were going to open early, and the rep didn't know.

    For more about what I've learned, look here

     


    AT&T

    3311 OAK LAWN AVE
    DALLAS, TX 75219

    • Apple iPhone

    (214) 599-9302 1.92 Miles

    AT&T

    2952 N STEMMONS FWY
    DALLAS, TX 75247

    • Apple iPhone

    (214) 589-7700 3.66 Miles

    3.

    AT&T

    6807 W NORTHWEST HWY
    DALLAS, TX 75225

    • Apple iPhone

    (214) 265-1005 5.73 Miles

    4.

    AT&T

    1030 NORTHPARK CENTER
    DALLAS, TX 75225

    • AT&T Internet Services
    • Apple iPhone

    (469) 232-9233 6.19 Miles

    5.

    AT&T

    9100 N CENTRAL EXPRESSWAY
    DALLAS, TX 75231

    • Apple iPhone

    (214) 346-2000 6.45 Miles

    6.

    AT&T

    1152 NORTH BUCKNER BLVD
    DALLAS, TX 75218

    • Apple iPhone

    (214) 660-2200 6.65 Miles
    7.

    AT&T

    1818 NORTHWEST HWY
    GARLAND, TX 75041

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 613-6612 9.71 Miles
    8.

    AT&T

    1645 TOWN EAST BLVD
    MESQUITE, TX 75150

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 613-0207 10.47 Miles
    9.

    AT&T

    13710 DALLAS PARKWAY
    DALLAS, TX 75240

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 239-6043 10.52 Miles
    10.

    AT&T

    4900 BELT LINE ROAD
    ADDISON, TX 75254

    • Apple iPhone

    11.

    AT&T

    2701 N BELT LINE RD
    IRVING, TX 75062

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 257-1414 11.93 Miles
    12.

    AT&T

    1001 N BECKLEY AVE
    DESOTO, TX 75115

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 228-2321 12.35 Miles
    13.

    AT&T

    7601 N MACARTHUR BLVD
    IRVING, TX 75063

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 444-9147 12.7 Miles
    14.

    AT&T

    7979 N MACARTHUR BLVD
    IRVING, TX 75063

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 409-6700 13.11 Miles
    15.

    AT&T

    17489 PRESTON RD
    DALLAS, TX 75252

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 407-3000 14.31 Miles
    16.

    AT&T

    352 N HWY 67
    CEDAR HILL, TX 75104

    • Apple iPhone

    (469) 272-0412 15.42 Miles
    17.

    AT&T

    5345 N GARLAND AVE
    GARLAND, TX 75040

    • Apple iPhone

    (214) 227-4514 15.54 Miles
    18.

    AT&T

    2305 W I-20
    GRAND PRAIRIE, TX 75052

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 606-8885 15.76 Miles
    19.

    AT&T

    601 W PLANO PKWY
    PLANO, TX 75075

    • Apple iPhone

    (972) 422-6600 16.4 Miles
    20.

    AT&T

    3600 SHIRE BLVD
    RICHARDSON, TX 75082

    • Apple iPhone

    June 26, 2008

    Buying a new 3G iPhone? Get in line, Dude

    Apple always seems to be learning from it's past issues and making things better the next time around.  From all news accounts, they don't comment or publicly acknowledge their issues very often, but they do listen.

    Today I was waiting for help with a Genius, I won't say which store, and I learned a lot about buying the to-be released iPhone on July 11

    For starters, on July 11 it doesn't sound like you're going to be able to get one in the mail.

    You're going to have to line up at the Apple Store or AT&T store of your choosing and get one there.  There will be a limit of two per customer.  They're going to activate them in the store.  Once people have the chance to make their purchases--that means they're going to do what they can to keep scalpers from getting the phones like they did last year and then trying to sell them for twice the original value--they will sell them without limits per person. 

    So it sounds like first-users are going to be camping out, and that the news media will be doing stories of people sitting out at Northpark, Knox Street and probably a half dozen area AT&T stores here in Dallas interviewing blurry-eyed Macies who can't wait to get the next best thing from Mac.  Let's see, when was the last time anything like that happened with Microsoft or a PC?..... 

    Need I say more?

    Kari and I have been very pleased with our old iPhones and I'm finding I'm not much in a hurry to get the new one, but I suppose after the first week of people seeing me with my old one and asking, "Is that the new iPhone," I'll be compelled to go get the new one.  I noticed the other night that I'm somewhere around 7.25 gigs full on the 8 gig phone, so that 16 gig is starting to sound appealing, if for no other reason.

    For information on where to buy the phones at Dallas AT&T stores, look here.

    Gloucester High Principal Very Bold Or Very Nuts

    I can't decide whether the principal of the Boston-area Gloucester High School is a brave man or an idiot, but he's now pitted himself against his mayor and superintendent by defending the accuracy of his comments to Time magazine.  There is an old political saying about PR Hacks, that there are usually three stories ever written about you in an organization.  The first one is your coming to the group, a second is some feature of you or something you say, and the third, is your termination or resignation because you've contradicted someone or overshadowed them. 

    As you know, I did 5.5 years as the communications director of Dallas schools, and I can only imagine the ire of the mayor at this point after having jumped out in front and having said there was no pact surrounding the girls who got pregnant at Gloucester High School, and now the principal coming out and all but saying "bull." 

    The media is captivated over whether or not there was a pact.  Maybe there was, maybe there wasn't.  We'll leave that to the mayor, superintendent and the principal.  The real issue now is what is being done to support these young girls who are or have recently become mothers, and who is responsible for this procreation and what are they going to do to support it. 

    As educators, here is the real chance to find a teachable moment in school districts all across America and to zoom in on the real issue here.  Not whether or not there was a pact.  Perhaps city officials should stop worrying if parents across America are going to avoid moving to Gloucester because there might have been a pact, and be more concerned about encouraging their local kids to make better choices.  And let parents from around the country and world use this as an opportunity to talk to their kids about the perils that befall girls who get pregnant while they still are teens, etc.

    Dear Mayor of Gloucester, there may have been a pact.  Move on from that point.  What is your city going to do to support these kids?  What is it going to do to encourage others to choose different paths?   Don't attack that principal now that he's made you look like a fool.  Or there will be more stories, more bad press for your city, and none of it will be about the real matter at hand.

    Old Songs of the Day: Snowbird, Danny's Song

    Okay, for you oldies out there, here are two songs that will drive you mad the rest of the day.  I never had looked at the lyrics for either, but it appears that Anne Murray was singing about a busy girl in Snowbird, (her love forever was untrue) and then in Danny's Song, (she's singing about being poor and with child.)

    SBC DSL Pop and IMAP

    Another thing we learned yesterday was that since we have SBC Global DSL at the house, we might see issues associated with emailing.  Why?  Because we were told that SBC Global/AT&T hasn't updated their servers yet and still use POP servers.  The new way to go apparently is IMAP.  Come on MaBell.  Let's get with the newness.  We're paying enough for it.

    My Bride and her Mac

    Kari, drinking the Mac cool-aid.  Kinda still sips at this point, but we both sat in my One-To-One session at the Apple Store yesterday with Adolpho, who is clearly one of the best Mac teachers in the world, and he began to open the door to an incredible world of making the computer work for us, not us work for the computer. 

    We learned how to double click with a Mac keypad.

    We learned how to do some great things with Apple Mail.

    We learned how to do some cool things with iPhoto08.

    And Kari's become a wizard with iCal, in just four days.  Oh, and check out iCalShare.  Way cool.

    I'm so proud of her, and have enjoyed the past four days incredibly.  We're walking down this Mac path together and able to share new things we find with each other.  And it's giving our relationship a chance to grow in ways we didn't know about. 

    June 25, 2008

    Nine-year-old girl taped to a Texas tree

    What can I say?  This is nuts.   Taping your step daughter to a tree because, because .... I don't know what could go here that would EVER make sense.

    Perhaps there should be a sociological and psychological study done of taping kids to things.  As the former communications director to Dallas schools, I had to deal with this before; except it was teachers taping a kid to his/her desk. 

    Of course, I have to wonder if the flight attendant on the AA flight the other day wouldn't have done the same if she'd had a roll on that tarmac before take off. 

    Nuts. In America, we seem to have lost sight of the fact that adults are supposed to be adults.  We're supposed to handle ourselves and our children in mature, loving ways.  Taping them to a stationary item doesn't get it.  Wouldn't it have been just as good to have tried a corner in the bed room, living room, den, where ever?  Shouldn't the mother here have been the one administering punishments to begin with?


    The Patience of Job--AA kicks Autistic kid, mother off plane

    I'm sure this story (Autistic child and mom kicked off AA flight) is going to make the rounds today on the Net, with both sides equally supported.

    One of our boys has a high-functioning form of this condition and I can see how this little boy on the plane would fast have become a handful.  And I would say at times that being stern back with a child who wasn't doing as directed would be the right approach.  But I've learned that often doesn't work. 

    Last night one our children and I went round and round again about computer time at home.  I've cut it in half each day and provided a requirement to do activities from The Dangerous Book for Boys.  The child has until COB Friday to learn how to tie three knots featured in the book.  And then until Sunday to learn two more.  This weekend, we're going to work on how to demonstrate tying these knots to the other children in the house as an activity for next week. 

    Kari said in effect that I was having the patience of Job last night in not getting bent out of shape with the youngster who was protesting that he was being punished because he couldn't spend all his time on the computer.  I've asked him to read and now do these different manipulative activities to really get his brain engaged in new areas of interest. 

    So I can see how a flight attendant who likely wanted to keep things on time so he/she could get home at the end of a long day, thinking this was a two year old and a two-year-old child should just listen when you be stern with him, that that would work. 

    Perhaps there should be some training at American Airlines about autistic children and how to handle them when meds or whatever aren't working.  For that matter, maybe all kids should just be born without it, should never acquire it in the first place, (immunizations????) etc. and all kids should be well-disciplined, and mind their parents and adults on the first command. 

    Right.