29 December 2008

Observations : A List in No Particular Order

These are some things about myself that I've recently noticed and have found interesting.
  • Of the 3 major crushes I've had since seventh grade, all 3 are vegetarians.
  • I find it difficult to stay awake between 5 and 8 pm.  I find it difficult to stay asleep between 8 and 11 pm.
  • I do not like to capitalize or full-stop the post- or ante-meridian abbreviations (in other words, I don't do PM or p.m., as is technically correct—rather, I prefer pm).
  • Strict-ish-ly structured music with a clear bass (like Cake) is oddly lulling.  Bombastic classical is like ... well, like strong novocaine, I guess.  Especially between 5 and 8 pm.
  • I tend to prefer numbered lists.  This one's not a great example.
  • I'm a sucker for grammar/usage.  I will listen to any musician who uses "whom" properly.  Aimee Mann won me over with her proper use of "agendum".
  • I like glasses.  I wish I had some.
  • When I pick a new favorite word, I tend to use it far, far too frequently.  "Lame" is my new favorite word.
  • I use the exclamation point to emphasize a clause or phrase, but not necessarily to end the sentence of which that clause or phrase is a part.  I don't mind writing something like, "Wow!, dude, are you serious!?".  On a related note, I almost always place the exclamation point before the question mark if both are necessary to communicate the thought.  This is because the shape of {!?} is better looking, I believe, than that of {?!}.
  • Holiday Special!:  I like to do a casual week of Christmas, rather than one morning.  That way, the gift itself can be a surprise, but so can when you get it!

25 December 2008

Snowflakes

I love making paper snowflakes.  But hey, if you're going to make any, make sure you fold it first in half, then half again, then—here's the key—thirds.  That'll result in a snowflake with a pattern based on sixes, rather than based on fours or eights.  This is important because that's how water crystalizes.  Hexagonally, I mean.  It's because of the shape of the water molecule I believe.

It's a peeve of mine; I don't believe in "Creative License", especially with reality!  I mean, a level of inaccuracy is to be expected, because, heck!, I'm not God.  But something as simple as 4 instead of 6?  C'mon!

In elementary school we made snowflakes all the time, y'know?  I remember getting so annoyed in, like, 2nd grade (or maybe 4th or something like that), we did snowflakes during recess, 'cause it was snowing or something, so we couldn't go outside.  Everyone was folding quarters, then going for it, and I was like, What on Earth are you doing!?  Have you ever seen a quarters-snowflake!?  No!!  And it's a friggin square!!!

I got all worked up over the stupidest things back then, huh?  Isn't it funny that sometimes people don't change at all?

(By the way, if you have flash player 6, and you want to make some online—no mess!, no folding!—you can go to snowflakes.barkleyus.com).

18 December 2008

Double-U Tee Heck!?

So, uh … Sean just called.  The Sean.  Of 'EVERettLASTING LIFE'.  He called me.  On my phone.  Not even my house phone.  Just the cell phone that Josie usually has during the day, but I have at night, y'know?  Sean's old phone (well, phone number).

He called.  I know, huh!?

He was all "Hello?"  Like, three times, just to mess with me.  Then we were like, "What's up?", and all.  And he was like, "I was just curious whether you still had this phone."
And I was all, "Yeah."
And he was like, "Does Olivia have a phone."
And I was all, "Yeah," and I told him her number.
And he said, "Oh, yeah."
And then I was like, "So why are you calling?"
And he was all, "I was just thinking, 'I have a phone, I should call'.  So I did."
And I said, "..."
And he was like, "Yeah."
And then we hung-out for, like, 17 seconds.  Then he said he'd call home tomorrow.

Weird.

A Joke I Made to Myself

So, about a year ago, at BYU, the following poster on display somewhere in the Carl F. Eyring Science Center:


My immediate thought was, But not with zombies!

15 December 2008

A Doodle


I like my tablet.

13 December 2008

Take vs. Have

It's interesting, I think, that there are some things that we have by default, other things we have to take, and a few things can go either way.

For instance,

Patience is a good example of something we start out having.  It's like in video games, you have a life meter; as things happen that are irksome or frustrating, the patience level decreases, until you don't have any.

Naps, however, are things we must take in order to have them.  We start with no nap, then we take it and we have it after that.  Or had it, I guess.

The most intriguing part is what this shows about how we think about different things.  Those in the Have category are modified or altered passively.  By that I mean, we tend to outsource the responsibility of those things.  In the case of patience, we don't generally decide when something happens, "Oh, wow, that was rather frustrating; I think my patience just lost 10 points."  No, instead, we lose our patience.  In the Take category, on the other hand, we tend to assume that we aren't going to get it any other way.  If we don't take it, we'll never have it.  This is often true, although it is somewhat pessimistic.

This raises the question of time.  Where does it fit?  There is an unlimited supply, but we only have so much warehouse space (our warehouses being plans, goals, hopes, and dreams), so it's a finite quantity for each individual, y'know?  For most of us, I think it's generally a Have commodity.  I don't believe it should be, though, because what we do is our choice.  We need to take time to do things, because it will most likely not fall in our laps.

The word of the day today is intriguing /ĭn·trēg'·ĭŋ/.  I like it because it has three Is (responsibility does, too, and the echo of the B's vertical line in the L is pretty cool, but intriguing is both more useful and more fun).  It's intrigu- + -ing: intrigu- <= intricare = Latin for "to entangle" (also the root of intricate); -ing = the gerund indicator.

Wow, this post got a ton longer than I had expected it to be.

10 December 2008

Shoes

I've been told I need new shoes. What d'you think?





I know what I'm getting me for Christmas.

06 December 2008

What? and Website.

What is up with "Santa"?  Since when has "St." been a first name?  I mean, it'd be like saying that my older brother's name is now Elder Rez!  We've gotta do something about this.  I say we call him The Santa from now on.

Also, Olivia has an assignment for school.  Well, actually, she has a few, but I digress.

She has one assignment that is very important—as far as this post is concerned—and you'll see why.  She is supposed to make a website and put it online.  She's made the site in her head, but because she has a ton else on her academic/professional plate, she hasn't had much time to actualize her vision.

And that's where I come in.  I absolutely love web coding.  I love that you can save a bunch of letters and numbers and symbols, open the file in a web browser, and see something TOTALLY DIFFERENT*! (and more meaningful, no less).  And the best part about this situation is that I don't even have to worry about designing the thing (something at which I've never really been all that great).  I love learning CSS and HTML;  It's fun.

Well, I gotta get back to work.

*Yes, the capital letters do indeed indicate that I am shouting.  That's how excited I am about it.

02 December 2008

Vegetarianism?

I don't get it.

But that's beside the point.  I posted 'cause I want to know, If you are a vegetarian, what's your reason?

Also, the word today is
vegetarian /vĕg·ĭ·tĕr'·ē·ən, vĕg·ĕ·, vĕg·ə·/. Easily enough, it's veget + -arian; veget <= vegetable, -arian = suffix meaning "believer or advocate of something". Interesting tid-bit: Although the word has been in use since the 1830's and probably earlier, the Vegetarian Society claims to have created the word (here) "from the latin 'vegetus' meaning 'lively' (which is how these early vegetarians claimed their diet made them feel) in 1847".

01 December 2008

My New Toy

Here are some things I've done with Adobe Creative Suite 4:


Anakin's Podracer
This is a picture of a LEGO podracer I made a year or two ago.


Never ever.I never tease Josie.


Hello BatHello Rob
Some of my favorite guys.

29 November 2008

CS4!! Office, too.

I just got Adobe Creative Suite 4!  I'm very excited.  I've been missing Illustrator and Flash especially, although Photoshop will definitely be welcomed home as well.  The others (InDesign, Dreamweaver, and Fireworks) are cool, too.

I also got Office, which means my computer will soon be put to use as a Homework computer.  *Sigh* Oh well.

Literally.

The word literally is oft used improperly; This is a problem that literally eats me up inside.  That last sentence is a great example of what I mean.  What does literally really mean?  

literally: /lĭ'·tər·ə·lē/ (liter + -al + -ly.  liter <= littera = Latin for “letter of the alphabet" or "epistle”; -al = a suffix indicating an adjective meaning "of or pertaining to"; -ly = a suffix indicating an adverb based on an adjective).  Translated word-for-word, then, the definition would be:

   "In a manner of or pertaining to letters; by the letter."

Roughly synonymous phrases may include "to the T", "word-for-word", "by the book", "I kid you not", and "not metaphorically or exaggeratedly".

What I'm trying to say is, Please, please, please! stop using literally as an intensifier!  It's not one.  If you say that something "literally eats me up inside", there'd better be something actually consuming some part of the interior of your body!  If not, then you have misused literally.  Literally.

26 November 2008

A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y. And W. And R? And L!?

Isn't it weird that words like fire and tile are sometimes (by that, I mean "in some dialects") disyllabic? I mean, some people—myself included—pronounce words like those (see "List 1" below) with two syllables.  Let me show you what I mean.  

Many dictionaries show that word fire is pronounced /fīr'/, but that's not how I say it; I usually say /fä'·yǝr/.  I think most people I know say it like that (with 2 syllables, I mean), which leads me to my point and question:  Where is the second syllable?  I had answered, "Perhaps on the E?", but I'd rebutted with, "The E is silent, though."  At this point I didn't—and don't—know where to go.  Given that the F and the I are part of the first syllable (and given that I do not mispronounce words) we are left with two possible explanations:
   1 – The silent E is allowed to take a syllable, even though it's silent.
   2 – The R carries the syllable.

The implications of the latter option?  In the word fire, R is a vowel!  

This whole journey is moot, however, when considering the Rs and Ls of the words in List 2.

 List 1 – Words whose -ile or -ire I pronounce disyllabically.
   fire
   hire
   mile
   pile
   sire
   tile
   tire
   wire

 List 2 – Words whose -ile or -ire I pronounce monosyllabically.
   dire
   file
   gentile
   ire
   mire
   rile
   vile

P.S.  What do you think of the homophones Isle, Aisle, and I'll (all either /īl'/ or /ä'·yǝl/)?

25 November 2008

The Introduction.

New blog.  It may happen this time.  Or it won't.  Suspense is fun.

Speaking of things and stuff, the word of the day today is introduction /ĭn,·trə·dŭk'·shən/. Cool word, eh?  Intro- + duc + -tion.  Intro- <= inter = Latin for "into, within"; duc <= ducere = Latin for "to lead"; -tion = a suffix indicating the word's a noun formed from a verb (defined in dictionaries as "The act of..." or "The result of...").

So, quite literally, introduction = lead-in.