GRWifi.net launched

Our latest site, grwifi.net, is now live. The site is an index of wifi locations in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Such a list was previously maintained on a blog, and then a simple text listing. This new version of the site is searchable, and allows trackbacks for comments.

November 23, 2004

It's good to talk

With a couple of weeks now between us and the election, it seems everyone involved is on a feedback kick. Moveon have just held their house parties and now the Democratic Party is asking for feedback. I’ve spent the past quarter-hour enjoying the opportunity to hold forth on the numerous mistakes I felt like they made. It’s quite cathartic. My main comments were about language (in a nutshell: “be assertive”) and about my perception of their failure to properly take advantage of local volunteers. I offered to help early on, specifying that I was available during the daytime most days, but the calls were always looking for evening telephone support. I mentioned in the feedback that they should do more to use volunteers outside of the traditional door-knocking/cold-calling/fundraising space. It certainly seems to me like one of the reasons moveon has been so popular is that its members really feel a connection and they’ve utilised skills beyond those. ...

November 23, 2004

Wedding Photos Part. I

Kari has written up a report on our celebration on October 22nd and Matt now has his photos on the web, thanks to the wonders of flickr.com. Our ‘official’ photos are gradually making their way online. One more batch to sift through and I should be ready to admit to the URLs.

November 17, 2004

Contrasts

this vs. this.

November 15, 2004

The other political cheek

We, like many, have found ourselves granting a probably-undue amount of time to thinking about the ‘religious right’ of late. Having looked hopefully for this year’s election to break the strangehold in which right-wing politics has held evangelical faith in the US, it was a considerable blow to hear report after report on how ’evangelicals’ won the election for Bush. My instinctive reaction was denial, and with reflection I still don’t believe very much of the hyperbole that has surrounded ‘moral’ voting. Certainly gay marriage and abortion were key issues for many voters and there are likely many people who turned out to vote simply because it was their one chance to reconfirm Christianity’s bigotted image (though I suspect they’d phrase it a little differently), but Bush’s win was multi-causal and at least as much the result of the failings of his opponent and the national media as his apparent opposition to gay marriage. ...

November 11, 2004

US Censorship, BBC Goodness

On a tangentially related note, I hadn’t been aware that American companies are banned from publishing books by authors in Iran, Cuba and Sudan.. The BBC has the story. The BBC are also to be applauded for making this documentary about Barack Obama available as an MP3. Thanks to City of Sound for the link.

November 3, 2004

Fear and loathing

It’s hard to avoid trying to rationalise the voting behaviour of the United States’ population. Whoever wins overall, it looks like Bush will take the popular vote, a thing otherwise inconceivable to most of the rest of the world and a good chunk of those living within the USA. No doubt the coming days will be filled with dissections of voting trends, discussions of whether Osama Bin Laden’s tacit endorsement of Bush helped him at all, and such things. But we’ll all be left groping for answers that aren’t easy to find. ...

November 3, 2004

Not over till it's over?

By midnight I sensed it was time for sleep. Lying awake with the TV on mute watching the middle of the country turn red was a little too depressing and already it was clear that nothing was going to change before this morning. By 5am sleeplessness declared victory and the laptop brought us the news that, unsurprisingly, everything is still inconclusive. I’m sure it’s not long before the GOP start lambasting Kerry for being “a poor loser” just as they did to Gore four years ago. I’m hanging onto a little hope that the Kerry campaign has the strength to stand up to that and maintain their entirely correct stance that all the votes must be counted. Perhaps they could start by criticising the white house for claiming statistical certainties when the number of provisional votes in Ohio are far from clear. ...

November 3, 2004

Site Updates (grwifi.net / uncharter.org / sarahmasen.com)

A little housekeeping work has kept me occupied for most of the day. UNCharter.org now has a feature that allows you to bring up two articles next to each other, so as to compare related articles of the charter. It was a quick addition, but with so many cross-references it seemed a natural option to add. GRWifi.net has also received some attention. As well as placing reviews through ’trackback’ users can now post comments directly onto the site using a nice easy form, and there are XML feeds ( Atom and RSS 2.0) of the locations and comments. ...

November 2, 2004

Returned

We got back to Grand Rapids on Thursday but stayed under cover until yesterday. The time away was great, despite both ending up a little ill (Kari more so than me, we’re both pretty much recovered now) as being ill forced us to stop, watch some DVDs, and not try to explore every town within two hours’ drive. We did make it to Mackinac Island, Charlevoix and Petoskey, and would highly recommend Lulu’s restaurant in Bellaire. ...

November 2, 2004