You are here (or not).
I’m not there, anymore – back in suburbia.










Paul Merrill
I went to our little safe to get my birth certificate. (I needed it for some business relating to my mom’s recent death.)
Low and behold, there was an envelope containing two little extra passport photos. I love Ben’s photo. He must have been all of 8 years old. And it was fun to see my goatee. (Missing in action, about four years ago. My kids want me to grow it back.)
When we lived abroad, we always needed extra passport photos. When you’re an alien in other countries, you are required to prove your identity over and over – to many different governmental agencies. The complexity of bureaucracy does not relate to how “modern” a country is. In fact, normally the more modern a country is, the less the bureaucracy. (Maybe that’s a lesson for developing countries!)
So anyway, it’s good to be back home.
Yes, all you Mac users out there, Snow Leopard is available Friday.
The most significant reason to upgrade is that if you have an Intel Mac, it will run faster (or at least that’s what they say).
If you buy it from Amazon, via these links, yours truly will get a few pennies commission: Single User ($29), Family Pack (5 licenses for $49). Thanks!
Even if you’re not an early adopter (my friend Dave is not), buy it anyway. Wait a few months and then install. By then the bugs will have been worked out.
Last month for our family vacation, we camped in Mesa Verde National Park. (We tried to go eight or nine years ago but couldn’t, due to a massive forest fire.)
Seeing the famous cliff dwellings was indeed interesting. A fascinating fact the park ranger told us is that only about 5% of the cliff dwelling sites in the area are visited by tourists. The rest are simply to hard to find or to access.
Obviously the most picturesque or grand scale sites like this one are hit by the average visitor. But I wondered what visual treasures lay just out of reach!
I bought this cereal because it was half price.
I like the “natural” cereals because they are sometimes less sweet than the mainstream brands. (I can’t stand that ultra-sweet stuff, though ironically I love some pastries.)
I also liked the fact that the packaging was simple – few inks, unbleached cardboard and a good view of the actual product. I would love it if package designers and marketing people “de-escalated” the in-your-face-ness of all the bright colors and brashness in most normal food product packaging. Simple can be better.
Sadly, Back to Nature was pretty sweet. Also sadly, it’s too expensive for me to buy for normal consumption.
Most of my readers know that I cling to the credo, “short is sweet.” This relates to “less is more” concept.
Most of the time, computers get better. Apple updated their MacBook Pro line in October 2008. This was their first significant visual redesign since the first PowerBook G4, which came out in January 2001! And it was better in almost every way. They made some of the design elements smaller. You can see the power button and speaker holes shrunk by large percentages. I think it was a positive move.
Takeaway: When you write for your blog, magazine, newspaper, or whatever – see how few words you can use to make your point. Your readers will silently thank you.