Thursday, December 04, 2008

Typecasting

Don't know why I'm posting this, as it's very random...

Moon Bloodgood is an actress I first saw in the great but short-lived tv show Day Break, which centered on a cop (played by Taye Diggs) who relived the same day over and over again - think Groundhog Day, but drama rather than comedy.

The following season, she shows up on Journeyman, which was about a journalist who would randomly travel back in time to fix something in someone's life - very similar to Quantum Leap, except every episode of Journeyman involved several leaps to different periods of the person's life, and he would always return to the present in between.

She is now working on Terminator: Salvation, the upcoming prequel/sequel in the Terminator franchise.

Apparently, Moon Bloodgood only takes roles in projects that somehow involve time travel.

Friday, November 28, 2008

Ellie's song and dance number



Bridget filmed this Thanksgiving night.

I hope everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving, and that it was spent in good company, be it friends, family, or both.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Do want...

I know I'm a much bigger Trek fan than Star Wars fan, but this is awesome.

The new job is going well. I get up at 430am to be at work for 530am, and get off of work at 215pm, and am usually very tired when I do. That'll change once we're done with the classroom training period, which ends next week. Then eight weeks of hands-on training, a week of specialty training, and they'll let us loose.

Wee!

Friday, August 15, 2008

Ellie Loves Pasta



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Monday, August 11, 2008

Ellie In The Pool



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Saturday, August 09, 2008

Ellie's First Doll



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Job's Done

So, I lost my job a couple of weeks ago. I'd been pretty stressed out for quite a while, both work and home related, and it made me practically useless. So I fell behind on stuff at work, and was fired for it. Right decision, really; I'd have fired me too.

I've taken one of the Louisiana state civil service exams, and did pretty well on it (though not as well as Bridget or her sister). I've applied for a few positions, a couple in Natchitoches, one in Shreveport, and one in the Lafayette area. Yesterday I took an assessment exam at a call center in Lafayette, and they seem excited to hire me.

We're looking around at other possibilities, too. Keep your fingers crossed for me.

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Wednesday, August 06, 2008

The case

Since none of the jury ended up being sick or anything, they sent us two alternates home when the jury retired for deliberation, so I don't know how the case ended.

It was drug case, defendant charged with "Possession of a Controlled Dangerous Substance, Schedule II, namely crack cocaine, With Intent to Distribute." Seems that in early 2007 he had the unfortunate chance to be driving around with 1) a guy who was the subject of an arrest warrant the local drug task force was attempting to effect; 2) another guy carrying 40 rocks of crack cocaine; and 3) $1121 in his wallet, mostly in $20s.

When the vehicle they were in was stopped by law enforcement, he and the crack-carrying guy jumped out and ran into the house they'd pulled in to. An officer followed them to the house, which was full of people, and asked them to step back out. He located the homeowner, asked if he could search the house, and then searched the area where the two had been seen, and found the bag of crack. He then searched the two and found the money on the defendant.

The state alleged that the two were involved in a "major drug organization operating in Natchitoches Parish." They put on the stand the state trooper who had followed them in to the house, the sheriff's officer who was in charge of the operation, the officer who pulled over the vehicle, and another sheriff's officer who was allowed as an expert witness in drug trafficking and distribution. The expert testified about the general operations of low- to mid-level drug dealer's - namely, that usually the one with the drugs didn't carry the cash. He just accepted it, and then carried it to his boss. He also explained that usually rocks of crack were sold for $20 or $40; in his experience, finding someone with a lot of $20s with someone with drugs meant a connection between the drugs and the money.

The defense said that the money had come from winnings at the casino a few nights prior. The defendant's fiancee stated that they had won about $1800, and he had given it to her to hold for him. The night before his arrest, he came to her for some of the money to help bail a friend out of jail. The man who had been holding the crack had plead guilty to possession with intent to distribute, and testified the drugs were his, and his alone, and that neither of the other occupants of the vehicle had any knowledge of his carrying it.

There was some conflicting testimony over where the defendant was in the house when he was arrested, and over the location of a cooler he may or may not have been sitting on. None of that, in my opinion, really mattered, because where he was didn't matter in relation to his actual possession of the drug. None of the testimony had him ever in actual contact with the drug; what the state was actually trying to prove was something called "constructive possession," which is, essentially, when you have power or control over someone who possesses drugs, or can control what they do with it.

The case came down to where the money came from: was it drug money, or gambling money? The defendant and his fiancee testified that they went to the casino about 3 times a month. The state wanted to know how a man with no car, who cut hair in his carport, and cut lawns on the side, could afford to go to the casino 3 times a month - obviously, it was drug money. The defense argued that it was a lifestyle choice of young men in the black community. The state argued that the defendant was a repeat offender - previously he plead guilty to distribution of marijuana, distribution of cocaine, and possession of cocaine. The defense argued that previously, he had plead because he had been guilty, but that now he was fighting because he was innocent.

The case only took one day; kind of wish I'd been able to stick around for the deliberation and verdict.

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Jury Duty

I got a letter about a month ago telling me I was being subpoenaed for jury duty. My reaction to this was actually "Yay!" as I've been wanting to serve on a jury for some time now.

Lots and lots of waiting. That's what happened the first day. The jury selection took ALL day. I ended up as an alternate. Bah. It's like the black sheep of the jury. They have to hear all of the evidence, but don't get. Real vote. How lame.

Anyway, we're on a break right now, waiting to be called back in for closing arguments. Then we get to deliberate. Then, finally, I'll be able to talk about the trial itself.

Court, btw, is just like ok TV. Sarcasm, glares, and drama, oh my!

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

New versions, new features

A couple of pieces of software I use recently released new versions, so I thought I'd talk a bit about a couple of the little touches added to them that, in my opinion, just make life a little bit easier.

Firefox 3

One of Firefox's new features is an updated location bar, aptly named the AwesomeBar. Firefox searches bookmarks, tags, and history as you type in the location bar.



This feature actually ties very strongly in to FF's completely redesigned bookmarking system, which fully supports tags and "smart bookmark folders," which are based on customizable database queries to the bookmark engine.

Bookmarking has also been made extraordinarily simple, for such a robust system. At the end of the location bar is a small star icon.



Click this icon, and the page is bookmarked - as simple as that. Click it again, and a dialog will pop up that allows the bookmark to be saved into a different folder, to add tags, etc. It makes bookmarking that much simpler. In my experience, it has also made sorting bookmarks easier, with the combination of tags and the AwesomeBar. Rather than having to manually add every martial arts page I have bookmarked to my MA folder, I can tag it with martial arts much more quickly, and find it with a quick search.



Another FF feature I've used extensively in previous versions is keyword searches. Save a search on, say, snopes.com, add a keyword, and I can search directly from the location bar. This involved bookmarking a search, and editing the saved URL, though - not always a fun proposition. Now, FF has added a context menu item when right-clicking on a search text field.



Makes setting these searches up SO much easier.

iPhone

This is a feature I was actually surprised wasn't implemented earlier on this device. On previous versions, when using the software keyboard, holding down a key will give options for that key - holding down the A key, for example, presents options of A with various accents.



When typing in web addresses into MobileSafari, there is a quick button for adding .com to the end of an address.



Holding down this button did nothing, despite how intuitive it would be for it to offere the options of .net, .org, .edu, etc. Finally, Apple added this little helper.



Simple little thing, nothing ground breaking... but I like it.

Of course, there's still no copy/paste.

Oh - and I can type in Korean now, too. Shows up as boxes when I send texts to people though. :/

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

My princess

Every morning, Bridget gets up and leaves for work before I do. She shuffles out of bed, fetches the baby, feeds her, and sits her on the bed next to me while she finishes getting ready for work. Sometimes Eleanor wakes up as Bridget is moving around, sometimes she needs to be woken up.

This morning, when Bridget sat her next to me, she looked like this:



Poor thing was so sleepy!

Inanity

Einstein vs. Ninjas

With trusty sidekick Richard Feynman. For awesome.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Our new kitchen floor

Landlady finished staining and varnishing our kitchen floors. Very nice dark brown/red stain. Unfortunately, meant we had to stay at the resort all week while it dried, but we survived. She'll be painting the trim this week, and we can move the table and chairs back in Tuesday night.

Monday, May 19, 2008

All clear

Bad gas, that's what the doctor said. Or maybe constipation. But she's doing much better now, and we bought suppositories in case it happens again.

Worst case of gas I've ever seen.

Drawing blood

We should get a "regulars" discount...

Ellie woke up this morning at 2 AM in a tizzy, completely inconsolable. She was crying and crying and shaking. Finally Bridget insisted we take her to the ER. She seems like she's in some kind if pain, we just can't figure out what. When she's had ear infections in the past, she's never really so much as peeped. Doctor seems to think it's either flu or strep throat. I doubt both, but we'll see.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

At hospital again

Well, here we are again. In half an hour the ENT will be perforating Ellie's ear drum and inserting tiny, tiny tubes to allow drainage. Hopefully this will stop the constant infections she's had.

And for the record, babies on Versed are funny.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Elephants


Eleanor can sit up by herself now - well, really, she's been able to do it for a couple of months now. She sits in high chairs by herself (as evidenced by the previous post/picture), we can sit her down on the floor with some toys, and she'll be okay for a little while, before she gets a bit grumpy and wants someone to play with her.

I love my little princess.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

My lovely daughter eating a highchair. Isn't she beautiful though?

Friday, January 11, 2008

My poor baby

That's our poor, 4-month-old child in a mist tent at the hospital. We had a doctor's appointment for her today, to get her 4-month vaccinations, but this morning she had a fever - not surprising since Bridget had been sick since Monday, and I since Wednesday. So we gave her some Tylenol to reduce the fever, and I tried my best to feed her, but she still won't take a bottle from me. By the time her appointment rolled around, though, her temp had reached 104. The vaccinations were called off, and they ran some blood work, which came back positive for influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)- apparently the most common respiratory ailment for children under 4 years. It can also wreak havoc on the lower respiratory system in very young children, though.

The doc was concerned that her immune system would be weakened enough by fighting two viruses already that it would make her prone to catching another; and he really wanted her to be where, if it was needed, help was very nearby. So he had her admitted to the hospital. Just as a precautionary measure, really.

Thus far, not much has happened, though a second test came back negative for RSV. Poor Eleanor, though, isn't handling the fever very well. She whimpers, and moans, and it's all so sad.