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Looking for GPS

I won’t let myself get too distracted with the new iPods, because I’m actually in the market for a different kind of gadget: a GPS device for my car. I have a 2000 Toyota Corolla. It belonged to my late dad, who kept it in very good condition; it had been my car de facto for a long while, and earlier this year my mom transferred the registration to me. Although it’s not the coolest car in the world, it runs just fine, and I can at least move it into the twentieth-first century with some added technology. (By the way, the stereo plays cassettes. Remember those?)

When I first started looking at GPS units, I thought I’d go for something simple and relatively inexpensive, but once I saw the ones with high-end features, I thought, why not? Now I’m especially looking for one with Bluetooth, so I can pair it with my cell phone to make hands-free calls in the car. After doing some research on various sites, my current top contender is the Garmin nüvi 660, and I’ve also looked at the TomTom GO 720, both of which can be found in the $500-$600 range.

If anyone has any advice, let me know!

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Dude, get your own

You know the PSP commercial with the two guys on the plane? I’d only ever seen the “cluster bomb!” one on TV, so I had no idea until yesterday that there is a whole series of them.

The rest are available on the PlayStation website. Oh, and the guy with the PSP is kind of cute. Belt check, anyone?

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Book notes: ’40 Days and 40 Nights’ and ‘Hero’

When I attended the American Library Association midwinter conference in Seattle earlier this year, I picked up advance copies of several books, which publishers give out to promote their upcoming titles. It makes for pretty good swag. I’m finally getting around to reading them; I admit that my procrastination does defeat some of the value of an advance copy, since most of these books by now have already been published and released to the retail market.

One of these books I recently read is 40 Days and 40 Nights by Matthew Chapman, who happens to be the great-great-grandson of Charles Darwin. The book tells the story of the intelligent-design case in Pennsylvania, Kitzmiller v. Dover Board of Education. Obviously there’s a slant to the book, but it does provide an interesting look at all the people involved in the case. Here’s a quote, which basically sums up how I’m feeling about religion right now:

I would not be against any religion that had the humility to admit that it was just one of many equally valid “fairy tales of conscience” (to use philosopher George Santayana’s definition of religion) or, in other words, “just a theory.” But I fear all religions that claim sole ownership of absolute truth. With no evidence except that of ancient hearsay, they can only persuade through appeals to the most vulnerable aspects of the human mind, through menacing insistence on blind faith at the cost of reason, and ultimately through violence.

Tina, one of my former co-workers, was at the most recent ALA annual conference a few months ago in Washington, D.C., and picked up a book for me: Hero. She even had it signed for me by the author, Perry Moore, who was there promoting the book. Aimed at the young-adult market, Hero is about a gay teen superhero coming to terms with his sexuality, his family, his powers, and so forth. It’s a good story, though I have to admit, with so much of what I read lately being nonfiction, I think I’m out of practice reading and judging fiction. Anyway, it’s definitely refreshing to see gay themes treated this way; I wish there were more books like this when I was growing up!

There’s an article about Moore in yesterday’s New York Times: “A Novelist’s Superhero Is Out To Right Wrongs” (via Jeff).

By the way, advance reading copies are usually uncorrected proofs, which means they can contain several typos. I have to fight the urge to get out a red pencil and mark up my copy!

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Here be daemons

Help choose a dæmon for me!

This is from the website for the upcoming movie The Golden Compass, based on Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials (quiz via Erik).

Hmm, “Vyena.” If anything, that can be my drag name.

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Early fall

I know it’s only the first day of September, but my annual sign that fall is practically here came when Thom and I passed by Starbucks today, peered through the window, and saw these magically delicious phrases on the menu board: pumpkin spice Frappucino and pumpkin spice latte.

It’s been a relaxing, sunny start to the Labor Day weekend. Earlier today we went to the Westlake mall, where Thom got his hair cut, and then we had lunch at the good old Westlake Coffee Shop. We shopped around for a bit (DSW is a constant siren calling to us … but lately I’ve been looking for boots, and why, oh why does this location not carry men’s boots?). Not that I need more shoes. Recently I was rummaging through the dark and scary warren of dust bunnies under our bed and found several perfectly good pairs of shoes I had totally forgotten about.

Later in the afternoon we drove to San Mateo and revisited the Peninsula Humane Society to take a look at the cats available for adoption. Yes, we’re planning to get a new cat (or two?) in the near future!

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Music for airports

I saw this commercial a while ago and have been meaning to post it once I found a video clip. It’s for Extra Supermint chewing gum, but given this ad they might as well go ahead and call it Chewphoria:

Love it. The guy has all the right moves … until he walks through the metal detector. OK, fine, it’s adorkable. The commercial was produced by Energy BBDO, and the song and the tag were composed specifically for it by Spank Music and Sound Design.

Speaking of music and airports, see also the video for Maroon 5’s “Makes Me Wonder“:

Air travel isn’t glamorous anymore, but at least we can dream (about Adam Levine, too).

While that doesn’t look like any airport I’ve been to lately, you can approximate the feel at that tunnel at the Detroit airport. Lastly, I couldn’t leave the title of this entry without mentioning Brian Eno: Music for Airports.

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LiveJournal crossposting, again

OK, let’s try this LiveJournal connection again. I’m trying out a new Movable Type plug-in, CrossPoster, to mirror my MT posts onto my otherwise dormant LiveJournal account. CrossPoster’s output isn’t customizable (unlike an older, but non-MT 4.0-compatible plug-in, MTLJPost), so it’s pretty basic for now. I’ll still keep comments consolidated at rebelprince.com, but you can now log in and comment using your identity from any of the Six Apart services, including LiveJournal, if you so choose.

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Beach howl

Beach Howl


Beach Howl

Originally uploaded by ARKNTINA

Congratulations to RK! He won second place in this year’s Washington Post Travel Photo Contest with this photo taken at St. Simons Island, Georgia. I love the composition of the shot and of course the expression on the dog. Hoowwl!

» See also the Post article and photo gallery.