Test Drives

2010 Ford Taurs SHOIt’s been a rather interesting weekend. Went out with a few friends last night to GW’s in Chester, NY and got to drink a few nice cold pints of Guinness. It’s been 250 years since Sir Arthur Guinness founded the brewery in St. James Gate; which is in the city of Dublin in Ireland and brewed his first stout that would eventually evolve into the drink we consume today. To mark the anniversary of this momentous occasion we drank a few pints, told a few stories, and debated about music. Due to health reasons, I have restrict my alcohol drinking amount and that added a bit of extra air to the event. I feel that you always enjoy a good beer more when you consume it in moderation. This being a good example of why I feel that way. We ended the night appropriately enough with the infamous Chickenette sandwich at the Monroe Diner in Monroe, NY. A good time was had by all needless to say.

Skow and I managed to skip over to Washingtonville, NY and catch the Casket Architects as well during the course of the night. They were playing as the opening act for another band’s record release party. As usual, they were absolutely amazing live. We made sure to pick up their new album “Future Wounds”.

Today the local Ford dealer, Leo Kaytes, participated in the Ford Education Donation program call “Drive 4UR School” where you get a chance to test drive a Ford vehicle. Every test drive netted a $20 donation to the local school system in Warwick, NY from Ford and helps support the sports program. It’s a worthy cause (have to support the youth and help keep those kids fit) and how you can you go wrong with getting a chance to drive a Ford of your choice? I choose the brand new 2010 Ford Taurus SHO. Over 350bhp flows from a 3.5 liter direct injection dual turbo v6 engine to 19″ tires driven with AWD. The power delivery is smooth (I easily nailed 50 mph in about 4 seconds) though a six speed automatic. The roar of the engine is meaty and reminded me of my 2006 v6 Mustang on steroids in engine note. I was overall very impressed. So five minutes of incredible driving fun in a car that isn’t even available for sale yet, $20 to the school, and a win-win for everybody.

I also stopped by to watch my oldest daughter’s soccer game this afternoon along with my wife and youngest daughter, as well as, M’Weezy. She got to play goalie for the first time and made two nice saves. Her team lost 3-0, but overall they did pretty good (they won last week 2-0). The other team was a bit older and more seasoned. This is my daughter’s first year playing soccer and only her second game so she’s still a bit green, but she is learning fast. I noticed her defense skills were getting better and she actually played the whole game end to end without any rest (God knows I wouldn’t last 60 minutes). We’re all really proud of her in my family and I think it’s great she’s trying something new. She seems to really enjoy the game and is having a good time (which is the most important thing of all).

My youngest daughter has randomly (and seemingly out of nowhere) started saying the phrase “I’m nuts”. She must have picked it up on Noggin (she really watches nothing else). Nevertheless it was slightly funny to randomly hear her blurt it out without warning.

My wife, youngest daughter, and myself joined Skow, DJ SlipK, Aeryn Heather, and another friend at Cheryl’s Fried Fish and Soul Food in Middletown, NY. This was my first time up there, but Skow and SlipK have been raving about it for months. We were not disappointed. I had smothered pork chops, beans & rice, and potato salad. My wife had fried pork chops, mac & cheese, and beans & rice. My youngest daughter had the mac & cheese. The side orders filled a whole plate. Our pork chops were both huge. The food overall was amazing. The mac & cheese is the best I’ve had since my Mom’s homemade take on it. Outstanding. Definitely recommend it if you’re ever in the area.

M’Weezy stopped in today. We briefly talked about Pirate Radio. We’ll be lining up recording soon and starting to hash out a guest list. What’s holding us up is my orthopedist visit tomorrow. I want to know roughly how my schedule is going to look for surgery before I line a bunch of things up. Once I understand that time line I can start working on staging production around my downtime.

And that was my mundane, but very satisfying weekend in a nut shell.

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Flashbacks & Flash Forwards

With over 189 news posts in the blog even I am amazed at how much stuff I was able to dig up. For those of you who haven’t followed my written posts before, I have never until this point kept a record of what I’ve written past five posts. With that in mind, this is the first time that the majority of df.com’s major blogs have ever been collected into one unified chronological piece of written work much less one that spans ten years. The latest trove of entries comes from my old work computer where I found the original 1999 web site with several gems. They all revolve me arguing with basically everyone in site. How I ever had any friends is beyond me– looking back it seemed I was constantly arguing with someone at any given point during the course of that year.

There’s been a lot of reflection during my travels collecting my own history. It’s amazing how much we both forget over time and more so how much we choose to forget even when we could recall. There is definitely a sense of history here and I almost feel like I’ve just collected my memoirs after two terms as the President of the US. I have to reflect on my short failings and my victories– something that is sometimes wonderful and other times painful to do. In the grand scheme of history mine is, but a small part of humanity’s overall course of time. I can say though the times have changed me in some way much about me is still the same. In many more ways I just finally have clarity of mind that for whatever reason I never possessed before.

The tenth anniversary was supposed to be about amassing the history of this grand project we call df.com, but in many ways it became my own personal journey of recalling who I am and where I come from. In the end, I feel exonerated to know that I have matured in many ways, but am a lot more easy going in so many important other aspects of self. Is that part of growing? Who knows. I leave the psychoanalysis to the pros. I’m just happy to have been able to take the ride and survive it all, as well as, to have the family and life I have now. I have been reminded these past few weeks of how truly blessed I am in oh so many ways whether it be my daughters, my wife, my mom, or my siblings. Not to mention all my friends and acquaintances.

On another note, I did get my MRI this past Monday (9/21) and the results were delivered to my orthopedist yesterday. With no emergency phone call coming in it appears all is good thus far. I will know definitely more this Monday (9/28) once I visit the orthopedist to discuss the results. I do think I’ll need at least minor surgery; but my hopes are high for a quick recovery. My arm is out of the sling and though I cannot bear any real weight with it– it does work and I can type. All in all, that’s all I can ask for considering the situation.

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Week in Review – 3/27-4/3/09

I figured I’d catch up for this week (3/27-4/3/09) on a few items that you may or may not have been following:

  • Time Magazine published its Top 100 Influential People this week. Particularly interesting is the “Builders & Innovators” category being lead off by the Twitter Guys (Biz Stone, Jack Dorsey, and Evan Williams) with commentary by Ashton Kutcher. Kutcher, whose main claim to fame is some bad movies and marrying Demi Moore, recently reached a milestone on Twitter by beating CNN.com to one million followers. For those of you who don’t know what Twitter is, it’s a micro-blogging site similar to WordPress or Blogger. You’re limited to 140 characters and thus brevity is somewhat required. The idea is that you can in short updates let people who subscribe to your Twitter feed know what your up to and what’s on your mind. I personally don’t get the attraction around Twitter. My guess is that if you either have enough spare time while sitting around waiting to update your micro-blog via your cell or if you’re that bored that you want to see what other people are doing it may have some attraction. I’m otherwise at a complete loss as to why you’d even bother using it. I’m sure that is a certain sign that I’m too old and starting not to get it… or maybe I just don’t care what Kutcher is eating today– probably a little of both. I can tell you this much, it is becoming a hacker’s dream to crack into (see the latest break in here) and put words in some rather famous people’s virtual mouths.
  • “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” came out this weekend to much fan fair. Mostly because experts were weighing in onhow a leaked unfinished version of the film would effect viewership. The anti-piracy set jumped right into the fray saying that early version could deter viewers from going to the cinema even if they knew the final special effects and production work was not done in the pirated version. I think the real fear is if the plot itself stunk then why would anybody bother to show up even if the special effects were unbelievable? That of course was not the case in this particular release, but the MPAA and other anti-piracy groups were really trying to make a stand. Particularly it was important to further push the envelope in light of the $3.6 Million victory over Pirate Bay this week. What better timing could there be to let would be downloaders know that stealing would not be tolerated? Well, how about getting RapidShare to hand over its list of uploaders on top of it all? All-in-all it was a bad week to be a virtual pirate.
  • Bandwidth caps took a major step back this week. First there was Time Warner Cable being forced to repeal its 40GB/month cap. Subscribers swamped TWC with complaints and for the time being the caps are off. TWC does plan to move ahead with reinstating caps after a “customer education program” is initiated to explain to subscribers why caps are important. On the other side of the spectrum is Cablevision who announced its new 101/15 Mb/s “ultra” tier of service. Included is a promise not to cap. The underlying argument is that as subscribers continue to migrate their multimedia viewing habits away from traditional medium and instead flock to the Internet for access to movies, TV, radio, and news that the cable divisions of providers will lose revenue. The easy way to make up loss for that is to charge for throughput on top of the traditional speed tiers. With record profits being cited by the big cable providers I’m not sure this is the case though. The sad truth is the big three (Comcast, TWC, and Cablevision) all own the majority of cable TV content. So even if they loose the subscriber on the cable side they will still have the eye balls on the stream. Ad revenue is ad revenue so in the end, except for small providers, I cannot personally see how they’re losing out. It seems like double dipping to me and just another angle for the big guys to milk every last dime from the subscriber.
  • Microsoft made several big splashes this week that were notable. The first is the release of Internet Explorer 8 as a mandatory critical update. The second is Windows 7 hitting the MSDN as a release class (RC), which means it’s probably about six months or less away from final release. A little birdie cites a mid-October 2009 release (just in time for the holidays might I add) according to a leaked company email. The third and final was Office 2007 SP2 finally being released. The neat part of this is that the popular ODP open document format is now supported, as is export to PDF. That particularly is important as the open source competitor to Office (OpenOffice) supports those right out of the box today with much acclaim and it means that Microsoft is finally admitting this combo is a serious threat to their pay product. A minor side note announcement was that Windows 7 will support emulated Windows XP if you happen to have a legal extra copy of that OS lying around. This should address issues that Microsoft with slow adoption of both Vista and Server 2008. Even if it means that their Virtual PC may go the way of the dinosaur in lieu of built in emulation support, but let’s face facts– the 30%+ plus of revenue loss Microsoft saw year over year is enough to convince the top dogs its time to do just that. Lest it face mass migration to Linux or (*gasp*) Apple.

Thanks for reading and I hope you check back in soon as we’ll be updating regulary.

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We Got Lost… *ahem*

I’ve never been the most punctual individual. Ask anyone who knows me. I’m perpetually at least five minutes behind schedule and notoriously known for estimating being somewhere in an hour to only show up five hours later with nothing more than a “that took longer than I thought”. So there should be no surprise to most of you that this week’s episode took four months to be produced. We recorded the episode back in November of 2008 and yes– it is only now ready for release. Needless to say production was not long because of the intricacy of the work, but more along the lines of that I moved at a snail’s pace. Distracted by chores, hanging out with the kids, beer, and “Family Guy” reruns on TBS; there was simply no time for the Pirate Radio. Over the last week though I felt the “special sauce” and “had at it like a rabid wolverine on Diet Tab”. So here we are, the latest digitalflood Pirate Radio we fondly like to call “The Lost Episode“. “Lost” roughly translating to “Me So Lazy, Me Love You Long Time”. Enjoy!

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Celebrating 2009 With A Bang

It’s that time of the year– well actually two months ago it was that time of the year, but we’re late. Either way, here is the “2008 Beat Feast” mix filled with all sorts of surprises and new DJ tricks bound to make you wonder how much free time I have (ironically not that much). Hop on over to the Pirate Radio section to download it now. Also, check out this week’s value special in the Merch Shop. This week we have the N parody DF logo tee on sale for $9.99. Grab it while you can. Happy New Year!

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