Apr 142006
 

This is one of those times when I wonder if the media’s reporting or being used to prepare us. It’s hard not to bring out the conspiracy theories when gas companies are reporting record profits.

The Statesman reports that gas prices jumped 17 cents here in Austin with some stations already charging $2.87/gallon, up from $2.53/gallon a week ago. I stopped to get a bottle of water yesterday at a gas station on Ben White as one of the employees was heading out to change the prices on that store’s sign. I asked him if he did this daily now and he responded “Pretty much”. I tried to hang around so I could snap a camphone shot, but he went back inside and didn’t come out for longer than I wanted to wait.

I’m already scoping out bus routes between work and home. Looks like it’ll take me an hour by bus with one transfer, which is probably about twice as long as it would by car. The nearest stop is a short walk away. Taking the bus during the summer is an option because I won’t have to take The Boy to school. It also has the added benefit of keeping me from going out for lunch, another money saver.

What’re you planning to do to cope with above $3/gallon gas prices?

 Posted by on April 14, 2006 at 1:32 pm

Living with War

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Apr 142006
 
Image from CorporalTunnel on Flickr

Image from Corporal Tunnel on Flickr

One of the few panels that I attended during SXSW Music was the Neil Young / Jonathan Demme Keynote Interview on Thursday, March 16th. I’ve obviously missed the boat on having a timely recap on this, but I saw a bit of news today that made it a little more relevant again.

I arrived at the Convention Center only a few minutes late and a little hungover as my band’s showcase was the night before and this interview was relatively early (10:30). I was herded into the “overflow room”, a room adjacent to the actual interview room with a large screen video feed. Turns out that I should’ve paid attention to the item on the schedule preceding the interview, “Prelude Music: Palm School Choir”, which started at 10am in the same room. The SXSW organizers decided that in order to sit in the same room as the interview, you’d have to endure 30 minutes of elementary school kids singing, a particularly sadistic torture for a group of people who generally rise late with some sort of hangover and who don’t, as a rule, voluntarily sit through children’s choirs. The overflow room quickly filled to capacity though, impressive considering that the room housing the interview was quite large itself.

Young and Demme were introduced by Louis Black and Roland Swenson, SXSW organizers. Swenson incorporated references to Kent State and Young’s song, “Ohio”, and ended his intro saying, “We need a new song.” As Harp magazine, home publication of the Young/Demme interviewer, Jaan Uhelszki, pointed out yesterday, he’s gotten his wish. Young has apparently completed an entire album in three days, entitled Living with War.

Seems like a quick turnaround, but during the interview, Young described his current writing process. He said (and I may be parphrasing a bit here), “I used to write all the time, but now it comes like a dam bursting.” He described songwriting as stream of consciousness thing for him, something that you can’t try too hard to elicit. He talked about simply trying to create a space where he can let his inspiration come on its own time. My favorite quote from him on this topic was “commitments are one of the worst things for music making”. I’ll have to remember to use that one the next time I’m asked to mow the lawn or reminded that I need to make a dentist appointment.

Young spent part of the interview talking about what a mistake it is to try and revisit the past. He’s always tried to move forward. Young said, “You can’t be who you were. You can’t be who you’re gonna be.” “Going back, doing it again, don’t do it. It’s death.” He mentioned that he knew he was on to something when USA Today wrote an article accusing him of ripping off his fans by not playing some of his older songs. He also talked about the balance between what he writes for Crazy Horse and the acoustic stuff such as the songs featured in Heart of Gold.

I’ll be interested to see what’s included on Living With War. I’m guessing it’ll be acoustic. In keeping with the theme of the interview a month ago, it’s a fine line between letting something flow organically and come together on its own and trying to make it appear. I’m sure Young’s been thinking about of a lot of the issues that are facing us now and what we were facing 36 years ago when he wrote “Ohio”. Here’s hoping he got it right again.

Update: More info appearing saying that the album’ll be out in 6-8 weeks and that it was recorded as a three piece, so my solo acoustic guess was apparently wrong.

 Posted by on April 14, 2006 at 10:45 am

Feingold, Sheehan, Van Os, Clinton, Oh My!

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Apr 132006
 

Burnt Orange Report reports that Cindy Sheehan, the anti-war activist mom, will be on the east mall near the MLK statue at UT on the 17th at 11:30am as part of a CAMEO (Campus Antiwar Movement to End the Occupation) rally.

David Van Os will hold a 24-hour filibuster for education (he held one last month to commemorate Texas independence) that’ll start at noon at the Capitol on the same day.

Senator Russ Feingold will visit the next day (Tuesday, April 18th) to support Texas Congressional Candidate John Courage. There’s a free event at 12:30pm at the UT Student Union Quadrangle and then a $25 admission event at Jovita’s that night at 7pm called BlueGrassRoots! featuring:

South Austin Jug Band
Grassy Knoll Boys
Texas Youth Word Collective
Jim Hightower

See our ACL post if you’re wondering why you got a server busy message trying to buy tickets.

All the major news outlets seem to have picked up that Bill Clinton is giving the commencement speech at the LBJ School this year. I saw it mentioned on a blog a week or two ago. It’ll be May 20th, but it doesn’t appear to be open to the public.

 Posted by on April 13, 2006 at 5:27 pm

Charter Amendments Debate Tonight

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Apr 132006
 

There’s a debate tonight at St. Edward’s on the charter amendments that’ll be on the May ballot: Open Government Online and Save Our Springs

Here’s the info:

WHEN:

Thursday, April 13 2006, 6:30-8:30pm (doors at 6:00)

WHERE:

St. Edward’s Campus: Jones Auditorium in the Ragsdale Center–the debate will be in Room 100, on the west side of the bottom floor (Ragsdale is the long building in the middle of campus). Free parking for event. Campus Maps at their website.

WHO:

Speaking In Support:
Bill Bunch, Executive Director of Save Our Springs Alliance
Glen Maxey, former State Representative and Clean Austin Campaign Director

Speaking In Opposition:
Gus Garcia, former Mayor
Daryl Slusher, works for Austin Energy and former City Council member

Presenting the most passionate, informed, and open discourse on these crucial issues, Thursday’s forum is designed to thoroughly expose, educate, and involve the public in the “Open Government Online” and “Save Our Springs” debates.

For background, here’s the Chronicle’s take and the controversy over the language to be included on the ballot, which was resolved last week.

 Posted by on April 13, 2006 at 4:08 pm
Apr 132006
 

The $90 allotment of ACL Festival tickets are on sale now. The Wife heard it on 101x and I just saw a mention over on Austinist. I, of course, didn’t see an announcement e-mail. I expect that around 6pm today after they’ve sold out. The price after service charges and shipping is $112.50. The base price’ll jump up to $100 and then $115 as they sell through the total allotment. As with past years, kids under 10 are free with a ticketed adult. There’s a limit of 6 tickets per person.

I bought one for The Wife, who inexplicably loves going to the festival, but I’ve decided I’ve had enough ACL Festival after last year. It’s too expensive. It’s too hot. Most of the bands don’t play long enough, will play better shows on their own and I tend to only like about 15% of the lineup.

 Posted by on April 13, 2006 at 10:12 am

In the Event

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Apr 122006
 

That you haven’t looked over there at all that stuff on the toolbar to the right lately, there’s some new stuff over there. The Events button is now linked to upcoming.org and will give you a list something similar to what you get here.

Apparently, Jonathan Safran Foer will be at Barnes & Noble on 4/17. Didn’t know that. Cool.

Did I mention it’s refreshed hourly. No? Well, now I did.

 Posted by on April 12, 2006 at 12:03 am

Earth Day Computer Recycling Event

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Apr 112006
 

There’s a computer recycling event on Earth Day, Saturday, April 22nd from 9am to noon at Spansion (formerly the AMD campus), 5204 East Ben White Blvd. Austin, TX 78741. There’s a printable flyer available here.

Round2 Technologies will sell or recycle all donated items and the proceeds will be donated to Austin Free-Net. They evaluate the donations for usability and resale. Non-working equipment has the marketable metals and parts removed and the dangerous lead and mercury in monitors and other computer equipment are safely recycled.

So, you can save the environment, get rid of that 486 DX/66 that’s been cluttering up your office and help get more technology and services to those who need it and can’t afford it themselves. You know it’s the Right Thing To DoTM.

There’s a list of what they will and won’t take after the jump.
Continue reading »

 Posted by on April 11, 2006 at 3:15 pm
Apr 112006
 

I posted a couple of weeks ago that I’d lost one of the little marvels of technology that brightened my day when the Austin Public Library upgraded to a new online catalog.

Last night, I tried to access the catalog to double-check the due date on my latest read. Attempts to login to my account resulted in a “Unable to create socket: errno = 24”. After e-mailing the library about this, they translated the error from computer to english. Apparently, it meant

The catalog was down from 9:00 pm last night until almost 8:00 am this morning. It was necessary to run a full back up of the system because of changes to the server done over the weekend. Please try again today.
We regret the inconvenience.

That’s cool, although figuring out a way to have that message displayed on the site as opposed to the one I got would be even cooler. Since I was e-mailing them anyway, I offhandedly mentioned the broken Library Lookup and pointed them to a couple of links, asking if they could perhaps fix it?

I was pleasantly surprised this morning to get an e-mail from Carlos, APL Web Developer Extraordinaire. He’s fixed what I couldn’t pull off on my own (I was missing an extra “/x” in my attempt.) and I’m very happy to report that the LibraryLookup is functioning again. He even created a page for it with some instructions on the APL site. How cool is that?

Carlos, I’m telling Toby Futrell here and now that you deserve a raise. You rock.

 Posted by on April 11, 2006 at 12:59 pm