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      <title>So I&apos;m Marrying a Mac Geek...</title>
      <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/</link>
      <description></description>
      <language>en</language>
      <copyright>Copyright 2008</copyright>
      <lastBuildDate>Tue, 17 Jul 2007 21:20:38 -0500</lastBuildDate>
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      <item>
         <title>Marriage Mythology</title>
         <description>Two months and a couple of weeks until the wedding. I&apos;ve been silent for a long time, I admit, but there&apos;s been a bad combination of stress and stress and more stress making me tired and unable to do much more than come home and paint and pretend that it&apos;ll all go away.

Today, for the first time in months, instead of looking at the pile of crap I&apos;m wading through, I&apos;m looking ahead to where it thins out, and the road opens up, and there&apos;s fresh air. I&apos;m finding that, for the moment, the stench is tolerable, I just need to keep moving forward and stop standing in it and sulking.

We sabotage ourselves in so many ways. 

Semi-obligatory wedding updates: My dress arrived on Thursday last, I go to pick it up on Friday. No I&apos;m not showing you. Yes it&apos;s pretty. We&apos;ve mostly sorted out what the attendants are wearing--although sadly we decided we needed to cut back the number of them. Five each seemed a little bit of an overkill for a simple backyard ceremony, and besides, some of our friends just couldn&apos;t afford it. Now they can sit and enjoy the ceremony and not worry about how they look in their dresses/suits, etc--which I think, were I in their shoes, I&apos;d certainly prefer. I&apos;m finishing up the invitation designs, will probably print them sometime in the next week or so, and start sending them out by the end of the month. Tables and tents have been rented. Need to talk to the catering company, order the cake, etc. 

It&apos;s coming along.

There are a lot of myths revolving around weddings: what colors to wear or not, what time to get married or not, what to carry, what to put in your shoe, who stands on which side, what everyone throws, etc.

There&apos;s one myth I want to talk about right now though, one that bothers me a bit. Some person John knows keeps telling him that as soon as we&apos;re married I&apos;m going to clamp down on him, change him, and make him stop looking at other women.

She&apos;s utterly convinced that I&apos;m going to start picking out his clothes for him. She thinks I&apos;m going to stop him from doing things he likes. She tells him almost every day that once he&apos;s married, he&apos;s never going to be allowed to look at another woman again.

Now, while I may not always like what John wears (c&apos;mon, he&apos;s male and utterly straight, which makes his fashion sense somewhat questionable at times), I&apos;m not his mother. If he&apos;s wearing something embarrassing in public, it&apos;s his ego, not mine. I might get the itch to hide his checkered Vans, or toss out those tapered leg jeans that I loathe, but I probably won&apos;t do so. Why? Because as I said: I&apos;m not his mother. He&apos;s an adult. If he chooses to walk around looking like the poster child for &quot;What Not to Wear&quot; that&apos;s his business, not mine. I might make suggestions, but I&apos;m not going to toss half of his wardrobe. Mine, however, is another story. 

I&apos;m also not going to force him to give up the things he likes. That&apos;s just asinine. I love John: for who he is. And part of who he is, is what he enjoys doing. That includes martial arts (even though I have visions of him loping off bits with pointy objects with scary regularity), drinking more coffee than seems humanly possible, playing video games, and arguing with his son. Okay... maybe I&apos;m gonna work on that last one. There&apos;s only so much bickering a woman can take.

As to the last... On what planet do you snap your fingers and all of a sudden every other female turns invisible to your mate? He&apos;s human. He&apos;s male. He&apos;s gonna look--and nothing I can say or do is going to change that. In fact, I think I&apos;d start worrying if he STOPPED appreciating pretty women.

The key word here, is &quot;look.&quot; I have no problem whatsoever with him looking. When it crosses into touching, then we&apos;re dealing with another problem altogether. But looking? Hell, I look at other men all the time. I&apos;m an artist. I spend more time than most women looking at photos of hot guys with rippling abs and bulging muscles wearing jeans that look like they&apos;ve been painted on (and in some cases, have been). I look. I appreciate. I enjoy. I&apos;m not gonna touch, though. 

Why? Because in the end, those muscular Adonis&apos;s aren&apos;t John. They&apos;re not the warm, sleepy, slightly sweaty man with questionable fashion sense who tucks me against him at night and pets my hair like I&apos;m something precious to him. They&apos;re not going to wake up and leave their coffee mug sitting on my counter half full until midafternoon when they reheat it in the microwave. They&apos;re not the man who reaches out and wraps his big hand around mine and argues with me, patiently, about the existence of ninjas. 

And I know, that he knows, that all of those busty, slutty, bimbo babes out there aren&apos;t me--and they wouldn&apos;t let him wear those checkered Vans in public at all. </description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/07/marriage_mythology.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/07/marriage_mythology.html</guid>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">John</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">love</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Wedding Planning</category>
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 17 Jul 2007 21:20:38 -0500</pubDate>
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      <item>
         <title>Why I should never be forced to dance in public...</title>
         <description>In preparation for the wedding I decided that it might be time for me to seriously think about losing some weight.

By &quot;seriously thinking&quot; I mean: telling myself repeatedly that I should go grocery shopping for some healthier food, and that, no, a market fresh sandwich from Arby&apos;s doesn&apos;t count. Especially not with mayo on it. And bacon. And curly fries. And a pepsi.

I think about these things VERY seriously. 

But like Alice, while I might give myself very good advice, I very seldom follow it.

Then there&apos;s the matter of exercise. To put it bluntly: I don&apos;t. My life could be measured by the chairs I sit in. Exercise is something that other people do. I don&apos;t understand aerobics, can&apos;t get excited about jogging, can&apos;t afford a gym, and have no room in my apartment for an exercise bike or treadmill. I don&apos;t like walking or riding bikes alone, and I have no one to go with me. So... what&apos;s a girl to do?

I got a video game. 

Well, John got me a video game, at my request. 

Dance, Dance Revolution is supposed to be a great way to get some exercise and lose weight. Since it&apos;s a video game, I know I&apos;ll play it, because, well, I like video games. I like the challenges they present, and it&apos;s far more interactive than a treadmill. Lots of people have lost weight playing DDR. 

This was supposed to be fun.

They forgot to mention, in the little warning thingies at the beginning of the game, that along with the possibility of straining a muscle or your eyes or epilepsy or whatever, there&apos;s another side effect.

Blind, incoherent rage.

Road Rage meets video games.

There I am, frantically stamping my feet on the stupid arrows and a stream of curse words are filing out from between my clenched teeth, inventively detailing exactly how I&apos;d like to beat the skinny, anime 3D chick in the hotpants who is currently gyrating on screen to a bloody, boneless pulp. 

My hips do not move like that. My feet do not seem to know the difference between up and down, right and left. My arms are not waving around in time to the music, but instead are clenched in Lord of the Dance fists at my sides, blood threatening to start welling from the places where I&apos;ve gouged my nails into my palms. 

This, I think, is fun. (C&apos;mere you little cartoon bitch and I&apos;ll break your skinny legs in twenty pieces...)

Coordination is something that belongs to other people, (something I keep telling John, though he refuses to listen). We&apos;ll see how he feels during our first dance... when I&apos;m cursing a blue streak behind my grin and stepping on his feet in high heels. </description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/03/why_i_should_never_be_forced_t.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/03/why_i_should_never_be_forced_t.html</guid>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Wedding Preparation</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">DDR</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Exercise</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">video games</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">weight loss</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sat, 17 Mar 2007 17:24:07 -0500</pubDate>
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      <item>
         <title>Pride Before the Falls</title>
         <description><![CDATA[A little reminder for myself, and for anyone who has ever been in over their head.

<strong>Pride before the Falls</strong>
by M. Findley

One fine day, Lion was walking through the Jungle, when he came to the great and mighty River. It was hard work, being King of the Jungle, he thought, and the River looked cool and inviting, so Lion decided to go for a swim. 

Now, Lion had never been swimming before, but since he was King, and was good at everything he did, he assumed he must be good at this, too. So he lept from the bank and landed in the River with a mighty splash.

Of course the water went up his nose and into his ears, and when he finally managed to find the air again he was coughing and spluttering. 

"Hello, Your Majesty," called Turtle, from where he was lying on the bank, basking in the sun. "Do you need any help?" 

"No!," Lion growled, "I'm just enjoying the cool water." The water was cool, but he wasn't enjoying it, however his pride was wounded and he didn't want Turtle to know.

"Are you sure, Your Majesty? I could show you how to swim."

"Of course, I'm sure! I'm the King!" said Lion, and he bared his teeth at Turtle and growled so fiercely that Turtle was frightened and ducked back inside his shell. 

Lion tried walking in the water, and found that his feet almost touched the bottom. If he kept his head tilted as far up as possible, he could still breathe and see. This wasn't so bad, thought Lion, trying not to smile and let the water in his mouth. He knew he'd be good at swimming. Who needed stupid Turtle to teach him anyway? He was King!

So Lion gingerly walked around a bit and then decided he'd had enough and wanted to go back to the bank. Eagerly he set toward it, but discovered that the water grew deeper before it got to the bank, and he could no longer touch the bottom. The current here was stronger, too, and before he knew it, it had swept him away from the shallow water and into the middle of the River.

Frantically, Lion tried to paddle his feet, but it didn't seem to be doing any good.

"You're doing it wrong, Your Majesty," said Duck, who was swimming merrily along, smiling her cheeky smile. "Do you need some help?"

"No!," Lion growled, "I'm doing just fine. I'm just enjoying the beauty of the River." It was beautiful, but Lion couldn't see much of it, since he could barely keep his head above the water. However, his pride was hurt, and he didn't want Duck to know.

"Are you sure, Your Majesty?" asked Duck. "I could should you how to swim."

"Of course, I'm sure!" Lion sputtered. "I'm King!" And he bared his teeth and snapped them at Duck, who was so frightened that she quickly swam away.

What did Duck know, anyway, Lion thought. She had only two legs, and he had four. So thinking, Lion tried to imitate the way Duck had been swimming, and found that at least this way he could keep his head above the water. This wasn't so bad, thought Lion. See, he knew he'd be good at this, after all, he was King.

The water was moving faster now, though, as he went farther down river, and there were logs and rocks in his way. It was hard for him to manuever around them, and he soon found that he was bruised and battered from being knocked up against them.

"Hello, Your Majesty," called Monkey from the trees along the side of the river. "Do you need some help?"

"No," panted Lion, "I'm just surveying the River. We really ought to clean it up here." And  with that he slammed into another rock and got a fresh bruise on his thigh. However, his pride was hurt more than his body, and he didn't want Monkey to know.

"Are you sure, Your Majesty?" asked Monkey. "My brothers and I could pull you out, if you want."

"Of course I'm sure!" Lion growled. "I'm King!" And he roared so loudly that Monkey was frightened and scampered back into the trees. 

What could Monkey do, anyway, thought Lion. Monkeys can't swim. 

Up ahead, the water was getting rougher, and the rocks getting more and more frequent. Oh no, thought Lion. A waterfall! Frantically he tried to swim for shore, but he was too tired and battered, and it was getting harder and harder to keep his head above the water. In his struggle, however, he managed to wrap his paws around a rock, and clung to it with all of his might. But his strength was waning and he wasn't sure how much longer he could hold on.

"I see," thought Lion, "how it is. When I'm doing just fine, everyone wants to butt their heads in, but when I'm really in trouble, they all desert me." 

"Hello, your Majesty," said Fish, scaring Lion so badly he almost let go of the rock. "Do you need some help?"

"What does it bloody look like?" growled Lion, baring his teeth. Fish's eyes grew wide and she darted back up river. Lion sighed. What could Fish do anyway? 

He was wet and cold and tired and bruised, and the current was tugging at him so hard he feared he'd lose his grip. Everyone had deserted him, and he was feeling very sorry for himself indeed. Just then, Fish returned.

"I've brought help!" she cried. "Hold on just a little longer!" Surprised, Lion looked up at the bank to see Monkey and his brothers forming a long chain, and Turtle and his brothers making stepping stones for them to get across to where Lion waited. Duck flew over head, calling out instructions, and before too long, they hauled a wet, tired, and throughly shamefaced Lion from the River.

The other animals grinned, but they didn't laugh, and Lion thanked all of them for helping him out. Sheepishly he admitted that his pride had been hurt, and that was why he'd chased then away. He promised, in the future, that when he was in something over his head, he would listen to advice, rather than insisting on learning the hard way. "After all," he said, looking at the faces of those who had rescued him, "even a King needs friends."]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/03/pride_before_the_falls.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/03/pride_before_the_falls.html</guid>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Writing</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">apology</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">friendship</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">pride</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">stories</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Story</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 04 Mar 2007 08:45:55 -0500</pubDate>
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      <item>
         <title>I did a dumb thing...</title>
         <description>I&apos;ve never won in life&apos;s little popularity contests. Never much cared. Never tried that hard to win either, since I figure it doesn&apos;t really matter.

Still, the cut hurts.

I knew that the opening post to this blog had been put up on Digg (not by me, no I&apos;d never willingly submit myself to that kind of crap). I&apos;d avoided it because I knew that the likelihood of anyone on there even giving a shit about what I had to say about anything was pretty slim. 

But there are days when you&apos;re bored and you do dumb things. I went and found it.

In 19 comments I was called: 
Shallow
Sad
Lame
an iTard
a stupid prude
a fucking sheep
a stupid twat
and compared to Katie Holmes

Wow.

Can&apos;t tell you how much that made my day. 

Are people always this rude? Or does Digg just bring out a special brand of fucktards? Did they bother to read anything beyond my first post? Did they bother to even read my first post?

If I don&apos;t like it, (I can hear the fucktards now) then why do I even bother with a blog? Good question. One I can&apos;t really answer. Suffice it to say, I do. I still don&apos;t think that gives you a license to be an asshole. If you want one, c&apos;mere and I&apos;ll tattoo it on your forehead: Asshole. Then you can say whatever mean stuff you like and people will just blow you off because, well, hey, you&apos;re an asshole. 

For those of you who somehow got the mistaken impression that I wasn&apos;t a geek, please consider: I&apos;ve been a geek my ENTIRE life. I&apos;m talking big glasses (long since gone), bad hair cut (also gone), mother dressing me (no more of that), acne (cleared up), theater geek (and proud of it), gaming geek (proud of it), art geek (make money from it), and book geek (ditto on the proud and the money). 

For those of you who think that the ONLY reason I love John is because he introduced me to computers: Get a fucking clue, dillholes. 

This post, this is called a bad reaction, and yeah, I&apos;m pissed. Wouldn&apos;t you be?

Personally, I think popularity sites like Digg should be taken out, shot and buried in the cesspits from which they arose. What good do they do? What purpose do they serve other than to attract all the assholes of the world and give them a place to take a collective dump. I&apos;ve never seen anything nice on Digg--admittedly, I never looked that hard, since if there is anything nice it&apos;s buried under a load of crap.

If you don&apos;t like me, don&apos;t like what I write, fine, keep it to yourself and get the fuck out of my blog. 
</description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/02/i_did_a_dumb_thing.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/02/i_did_a_dumb_thing.html</guid>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Pissed</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 25 Feb 2007 14:33:14 -0500</pubDate>
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      <item>
         <title>Things My Boyfriend and I have Argued About (Part one)</title>
         <description><![CDATA[John and I have argued about a few things over the last few years. Surprisingly, (for some of you, anyway), we're not big arguers. 

Stop laughing. Really. I swear it.

Anyway, we argue so seldom that it makes the few small skirmishes we do have stand out a bit more. Luckily, they're almost entirely silly fights. For example:

<strong>The Holy Land Experience:</strong>
For those of you who don't know, Orlando has many, many, many theme parks and tourist attractions. The Holy Land Experience (or HoLE as we shall call it henceforth) is one of them. Essentially it's a Christian theme park, with exhibits featuring events from the bible, a few small attractions, and several stage shows, including the story of the Crucifixion. 

Personally, I'm agnostic, and even I'm mildly embarrassed by the place. I mean, we're willing to stoop fairly low in Orlando, to earn a few bucks off the tourists, but this is sinking to previously unplumbed depths. 

John, however, is fascinated by the HoLE, in much the same fashion as my cat when she sees a lizard. There's something unholy in the way his eyes light up at the mere mention of the HoLE. He's wanted to go from the moment I first mentioned it.

I'm wise enough not to take him. I can just picture him, snapping photos during the Crucifixion and commenting that there's not enough flagellating or something. It would be bad. Very bad. Tempting fate Bad. I love my fiancé. I'd rather he wasn't a crater in the earth.

So, our first argument was about the HoLE. I didn't want to take him. He kept pestering me about going. This went on for a long time until, unable to stand it any longer, I lied.

There, I admit it. I lied. 

I said "Yes, John, we'll go, the next time you come down to visit, we'll go."

What else was I to do? He wouldn't let it go, and I was tired of saying no. So I lied. 

The next time he came down, I did not take him to the HoLE. I took him to Universal instead. And when he called me on it later, I admitted that I had lied.

He has not, to this day, let me forget this. 

Today I drove past the HoLE, and from a great height, I looked down at that grandiose testament to man's ability to milk money from a stone and thought how peaceful it seemed, sitting there in the sunlight. I thought about all the lovely workers, and their sheep (there are sheep) and their donkeys (there are donkeys) and their matinée showing of the Crucifixion (and vaguely wondered if in the winter they let Jesus wear something warmer than his diaper when he's hanging from the cross, like they do for the characters at Disney), and I vowed once more, that while I may love John enough to do almost anything for him...

there are still some things that must remain sacred in this world.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/02/things_my_boyfriend_and_i_have.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/02/things_my_boyfriend_and_i_have.html</guid>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">John</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">arguements</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">HoLE</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">love</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 18 Feb 2007 23:01:27 -0500</pubDate>
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      <item>
         <title>Crap</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>I'm sorry.</p>
<p>
I'm sorry I let Shawn get to me. Sorry I let him get under my skin and piss me off. Sorry I said what I said last night. There are lines, and then there are lines. I normally ignore lines, but sometimes I'm aware that I've crossed them and maybe shouldn't have. Last night I crossed one, and I'm sorry.
</p><p>
The thing is: I started watching Shawn's show because it was a way for me to get a glimpse into John's life. It was something I could do, that he was part of, even though we are so far apart. Long distance relationships don't allow for much social interaction, sometimes.
</p><p>
Unfortunately, most of the things discussed on Shawn's show either don't interest me, or go so far over my head that I'm waiting for the sonic boom on their reentry into the atmosphere.
</p><p>
It's rare that he brings up a topic that I'm interested in. Rarer still that it's something I feel I can contribute something to, either externally (such as here) or in the discussion in the chatroom. So when he did, I pounced. 
</p><p>
And then he shot me down over and over again. Refused to give any validity to my arguments, and did so in a very public manner. Last night he brought up the same subject again in a way that I thought was baiting me to react. I did.
</p><p>
Shouldn't have. But did. 
</p><p>
Only to be patronized and condescended to. Which pissed me off the point that I overreacted. It doesn't happen often, but there are a few things that really push my buttons: people who don't listen to me (and I don't care if they disagree, but at least listen to what I say and acknowledge that while it may not fit with your view of the world, it's still valid), and people who patronize me. And people who call me "Sweetie." 
</p><p>
For the record: I hate that term. It should never be applied to anyone over the age of ten. It's the most condescending, insulting "endearment" and I start grinding my teeth when people start throwing it in my direction. I'm not your "sweetie", and there's nothing fucking sweet about me. 
</p><p>
But I'm still sorry I overreacted so publicly. What I should have done was left the chatroom, turned off the show, and gone and done something that wouldn't have pissed me off. Which is what I did do after I lost my temper. I just wish I hadn't let it get that far. 
</p><p>
So I'm sorry, Shawn, that I overreacted. Sorry I crossed the line. Sorry, too that I'm probably not going to join the chatroom for awhile, since I really don't have any opinions worth contributing to the show. I joined it for John's sake, and I think he'll understand if I back away. </p>
]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/02/crap.html</link>
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Angry</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">apology</category>
        
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Shawn</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Your Mac Life</category>
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 08 Feb 2007 06:35:53 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Because Neil Gaiman told me to...</title>
         <description><![CDATA[and yes, I do quite a few things Neil tells me to. I often pick up books in the bookstore, and eye them speculatively, wondering if they're worth the money. Then, on the cover, I will see, as if by magic, a quote from Neil Gaiman recommending it, and I start digging to see if I have exact change. 

It's one of the reasons I bought "Sunshine" by Robin McKinley, which is my reigning favorite novel and has been for the last two or three years.

So because Neil told me to, I'm linking to his blog here:
<a href="http://www.neilgaiman.com/journal/2007/02/and-in-time-it-took-to-say-that-neil.html">http://www.neilgaiman.com/journal/2007/02/and-in-time-it-took-to-say-that-neil.html</a>

Which talks about National Gorilla Suit Day, mostly.

Wedding progress is actually happening, slowly, because I'm stressed and don't quite know where to start. 

John, however is wonderful, and talked me out of a complete panic the other night, then spent last night going over a possible song list for our reception with me. My parents are going to have a fit, and several other eyebrows will probably try to crawl off of their owners foreheads, but I think it's more important that WE like the music playing and that it means something to us.

Although I may be vetoing a few of John's choices (and vice versa, I'm sure), because the man has no concept of "Wedding Music."

Also, I want to kick his ex for choosing one of my favorite songs for their wedding dance, which thereby negates it as a possibility for mine. I intend to wear steel toed shoes, when I do the kicking. Not fair. (Although considering the movie it comes from, I should probably stop complaining about life not being fair.)

Speaking of: it is a hideous morning, with rain and thunder and lighting and tornadoes. Mother nature isn't happy... 

but at least she washed my car.

]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/02/because_neil_gaiman_told_me_to.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/02/because_neil_gaiman_told_me_to.html</guid>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Books</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Neil Gaiman</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Weather</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Wedding Planning</category>
        
         <pubDate>Fri, 02 Feb 2007 07:22:32 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Bones to pick, and other dead things...</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<a href="http://www.yourmaclife.com">Mr. King,</a> I have a bone to pick with you. 

In a <a href="http://ymlmedia.com/media/audio/ArtRage.mp3">recent interview</a> with Andy Beardsley of <a href="http://www.artrage.com/">Art Rage</a>, you commented that <a href="http://www.corel.com">Corel Painter</a> was “dead” as an application for digital artists.

You’re right. It’s a goddamn zombie. Just like Keith Richards, it's dead but still ticking away, doing what it does best, and has always done best: providing a damn good simulation of natural media for the digital artist.

And like so many other dead things, those of us who poke around in the fields of fantasy, horror, and sci-fi illustration just can’t help but play with it. After all, we like dead and outdated things: medieval knights, dragons, zombies, androids, Windows 98... 

All joking aside, I’d like to point out a few things:

Exhibit A: <a href="http://www.ballisticpublishing.com/books/painter/">Painter</a>. A book (another dead medium, if you believe that kind of gossip), put out by Ballistic Publishing, featuring the best artwork produced in Corel Painter by some of the top digital artists working today. This book is, you will note, rather thick, and features more than a few artists. I happen to know a few of them.

Exhibit B: <a href="http://apps.corel.com/painterix/home/index.html">Corel Painter IX.5</a> released in 2006. That’s awfully recent for a “dead” program.

Exhibit C: <a href="http://apps.corel.com/painterix/masters/profiles.html">A list of Corel's Painter Masters</a>. Make sure you check out their galleries, it's worth your time. You'll note that they work in all different kinds of fields, as well, from fantasy illustration to concept artists to graphic design to animation. 

Exhibit D: <a href="http://www.corel.com/servlet/Satellite?c=Content_C1&cid=1153321430604&lc=en&pagename=CorelCom%2FLayout&pressId=1166553983095">Corel Painter IX wins a “Hot One” award from Professional Photographer Magazine for 2007.</a> I’d like to point out this paragraph in particular: 

<blockquote>“This latest honor adds to the extensive list of Corel Painter IX and Corel Painter IX.5 industry awards that include two PC World World Class Awards and Editors' Choice awards from PC Magazine, CNET® and MacAddict.”</blockquote>

If that’s not enough to convince you, I’d invite you to take a stroll through sites like <a href="http://www.epilogue.net">Epilogue.net</a>, <a href="http://www.cgsociety.org">CGSociety.org</a>, and <a href="http://www.conceptart.org">ConceptArt.org</a> where you will find some of the most beautiful, incredible digital art being produced today, and more than a few artists who are proud to say they use Painter.

But it’s so expensive, you whine. Of course it is, Shawn. This isn’t a tool for Mr. King to sit down and doodle with. This is a tool designed with the professional in mind, and it gives so much control that, yes, it can be intimidating for first time users. But I picked it up and started producing art that was ten times better than what I was doing in Photoshop within a few weeks. 

That’s not to say that Photoshop isn’t a good tool for digital artists. I know many who swear by it. But it depends on how you’re comfortable working, and what tool works best for you. I know people who use only one or the other, and some who <a href="http://http://www.furiae.com/index.php?view=gallery">bounce back and forth between.</a> It’s all in how you work. Painter isn’t a good photo editing tool, and I would never even think of using it for that, although their photo tools are slowly catching up with the industry standards. But as for digital painting and drawing... it’s the best out there.

I do intend to download Art Rage and give it a try. Maybe it’ll change my mind. From what I’ve seen, Art Rage is a great product for the beginning digital artist. But someday, when they’ve explored everything Art Rage has to offer, it’ll be time to graduate to Painter. It’s the difference between a community college and an art university: eventually you want to learn to play with the big boys.

And I assure you, the big boys use Painter.  
 
]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/bones_to_pick_and_other_dead_t.html</link>
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Digital Art</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">link mania</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Painter IX</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Rants</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Shawn King</category>
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 17 Jan 2007 18:58:10 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Wrap Up</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>So, I'm home now, after being delayed in San Francisco long enough to miss my connection in Kansas City (although it was the storms in KC that caused the delay). Sadly this meant spending a night with John in KC. :) Can you see me pouting? 
</p><p>
There is something fundamentally wrong with a place where ice falls from the sky and your car turns into a ve-sicle. Just saying. 
</p><p>
10 degrees (F) in KC when I left at around 9 a.m. A balmy 86 degrees (F) in Orlando when I landed just after noon. There was green grass, and sun glittering on the water, and glistening in the palm trees. People wore shorts and everyone was carrying their jackets. It was paradise. 
</p><p>
I love Orlando.
</p><p>
But now I'm home, and I've picked up my car and my cat and I'm sitting and decompressing after the last week and a half of Macmadness, and I find there's a few things I want to say, in summary. 
</p><p>
On Tuesday, when John had just come down with his bout of stomach flu, and was curled into a ball of misery in the hotel instead of watching the Keynote, I caught myself doing a Bad Thing:
</p><p>
I was sitting there, at the desk, reading Peter Cohen's live updates of the Keynote, following along as Steve Jobs announces that this year Apple is going to make history, and I was thinking how awful it was that John was missing that moment. This has the potential to be huge, I thought. This could change everything. He might regret missing this for the rest of his...
</p><p>
...then I realized. I was doing the Bad Thing. So I stopped. I backed away from the computer. I looked out the window at the cars going by, and the homeless people begging for change on the corner. At the Bloomingdale's across the road. At the taxis and the construction and all the noisy, crazy, crush of San Francisco. 
</p><p>
And I thought: this is nothing really. It's a moment. A gadget. A new toy for the techno kids. In the end, it's not going to change my life significantly. It's not going to change that taxi driver's life. It's *really* not going to change that bum's life, and I wonder if he ever got the $.98 he needed to ransom his wife from her kidnappers.
</p><p>
The way everyone gears up for it, you'd think that Macworld was a meteor that every year impacts the earth and changes it in drastic ways. But really, the effects are pretty minimal. The iPod creeps in, the Mac computer slowly draws some of the market, Apple TV will slowly corner it's share, and the iPhone will, for better or worse, have it's time in the spotlight, and then become just another phone. New things will come out to replace these in a year or 18 months or so, and next year we'll all get together again, the hush will fall, and everyone will brace for a meteor when really, it's more like a pebble being dropped into a pond. The ripples spread, seemingly huge waves at first, but eventually fading out until they're barely there. Then someone tosses in another pebble.
</p><p>
Don't get me wrong. I really enjoyed Macworld. But it wasn't for the gadgetry, or the geekery, or the toys (and really, guys, that's what all of it is: toys. iPod is the new Barbie doll, complete with clothing, accessories, car, house, stereo, computer, and socks). It was meeting so many fascinating, brilliant, incredible people who are all in their own ways uniquely talented. For one week out of the year they descend on San Francisco to play with their toys together, and get roaring drunk, and then they go back home to brag about their toys for another year and argue over who beat who and who had the coolest what. 
</p><p>
I loved that aspect. I loved meeting John's friends.
</p><p>
But to the man who sat there the other night and told me how he woke up one Saturday morning after having his Hi Def TV installed and turned on a crappy football game between two crappier college teams and found it to be a "Life Changing Experience" and an "Epiphany;" and to all of his ilk, who think that their pebbles really are meteors, to them I have just one thing to say:
</p><p>
Get over yourselves. </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/wrap_up.html</link>
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">My First Macworld</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jan 2007 20:08:04 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Appetite Supression isn&apos;t always a good thing</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>I’ve been quiet for a few days. 
</p><p>
Unfortunately, that was less because I was busy being social, and more because I was busy fighting off whatever the hell it was John gave me. Turns out it wasn’t broccoli after all, but some incredibly nasty stomach bug that I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy. If I find the person who passed it to John, I’m gonna flush their head once for every time I had to throw up, and then a few times more for good measure.
</p><p>
You made me miss the YML party. 
</p><p>
‘Nough said. 
</p><p>
So I spent Thursday shopping with Sly and spending money on clothes for a party I wasn’t destined to go to, and Thursday night curled up against a toilet bowl. Friday was better, in that I was no longer heaving up air, and the fever broke around 2 in the afternoon... sadly not early enough for me to make it back to the Exhibit Hall to check out the stuff I wanted to check out: I’m sorry Art Rage. I had high hopes.
</p><p>
Last night was Lesa and Shawn’s anniversary dinner, which I’d forgotten about thanks to all the quality toilet time, (probably a good thing, since it was supposed to be a surprise), in a VERY crowded bar somewhere on Sacramento. It’s interesting the things your stomach does after a bout of ...whatever. Much like having a baby armadillo inside you, alternating uncurling and sniffing about curiously, then ducking back into a tight protective ball at the merest mention of scary food. Sadly, I barely managed two bites (if that) of my chicken sandwich, which looked awesome and smelled incredible, but made my armadillo stomach sad.
</p><p>
Today was even better, which was good, because we met with the Scobles (Robert and Maryam) for lunch, and they took us to the Cheesecake Factory. It’s at this point that my stomach uncurled and went FOOD! Robert, for those who are interested, reminded me very much of Phillip Seymour Hoffman, only slightly more put together. Maryam was just adorable, in the kind of way that makes you want to be her best friend. She asked about the wedding, and I did my best “Trying not to look like a deer in the headlights” impression. I’m pretty sure I failed miserably.
</p><p>
See the thing is, while I’m looking forward to getting married, and I can’t wait to be married to John, there’s a big part of me that keeps saying “Eloping is always an option.” Of course, this is the part of me that convinces me every night that of course, the dishes really can wait one MORE day before you put them in the dishwasher. It’s not that I’m lazy, I’m just a procrastinator, and this is such a HUGE thing that I’ve already kicked into procrastination mode. Luckily I have a mother. Mothers are very good at getting excited for you and making you do things that you would otherwise put off till the very last minute. I wish she’d do that about the weight thing, but if I keep tossing my cookies that won’t be an issue.
</p><p>
(No, I’m not bulimic. I HATE throwing up. Don’t be stupid.)
</p><p>After the Cheesecake Factory (and can I just say: whoever their interior decorator was had both a perverse sense of humor and a fucking field day), we went to the 39th floor of the Marriot (why 39? Why didn’t you just make it an even 40?), and had a spectacular view of San Francisco and a glorious sunset. 
</p><p>
I also learned a few things: 
</p><p>
1.)	Geeks need wives. Preferably, wives that are solidly grounded in reality so they can wander off into geek world and still have a tether back to normal. 
</p><p>
2.)	When you put more than two geeks in the same room together, they react like feedback loop: one goes geek, the other goes geekier, the third gets geekier still, until it’s just one major screeching blast of geekdom that sends anyone not tuned to their frequency scurrying for earplugs. 
</p><p>
3.)	John and Robert, side by side, could be brothers. (And I’m sure one of them might kill me for that statement.)
</p><p>
After the sun set, we wandered back to the hotel and watched the last few episodes of “The IT Crowd” which was hilarious, then met up with Shawn, Lesa, Sly, Bill, Steve, Aaron, and Kelley for drinks and a late dinner at a very pretentious bar (pretentious in this case being defined as: you’re a bar, you don’t need a menu that requires a translator, for pity’s sake. Really, people don’t require unpronounceable food when they’re getting drunk, unless it’s for the sober people’s entertainment value.)
</p><p>
Then back to the hotel for the night.
</p><p>
There’s a few things I want to say about my first Macworld experience, but I think I’m going to save the wrap up till I get home and have had time to digest it.
</p><p>
Without my stomach going armadillo on me again. </p>
]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/appetite_supression_isnt_alway.html</link>
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">My First Macworld</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Cheesecake Factory</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">food</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Lesa</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Maryam Scoble</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Robert Scoble</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">San Francisco</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Shawn</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">sick</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Sly</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Your Mac Life</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 14 Jan 2007 04:23:12 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Overwhelming and unwieldy...</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>You enter the Moscone Center through a wall of glass. It’s sleek, the Moscone, modern and glittering in the sunlight. Inside, however, it’s a different story.
</p><p>
You’d think, with all the computer equipment, the new technology, the iPhones and iPods, and innovative accessories for all of it, that we were progressing as a society. Until you start noticing that the people are more like sharks that smell too much blood in the water, pushing and shoving and jostling one another for position in front of this booth or that. Free stuff? Gimme! A new cover for my iBook? I want one! Register to win a free iPod? YES!
</p><p>
(It’s no surprise that iPods cost as much as they do. We’re paying for all the free ones that everyone is giving away. I swear, I’ve been offered so many chances to win a free iPod you’d think they were giving away candy.)
</p><p>
The next thing you notice is that there are themes running through the booths. Bigger. Taller. Weirder. The more colorful and interesting, the more eye catching, the better. Everywhere you look, they’re going out of their way to catch your eye. And if they can’t do it visually, that’s all right: they have small troops of black clad professionals ready to grab your attention in some other way. Have a flier. Free sample. Want to try? Go ahead!
</p><p>
My first trip through the Exhibit Hall was just that: a trip. I wanted to look at the big picture for a while before I narrowed down on what I wanted to see. It might not have been the best plan because the big picture is really overwhelming. I’m also not the kind of person who just approaches and starts asking questions. And if I’m approached my first response is “no, thanks.” John was in an IT session this morning, so I was pretty much on my own, and the “no, thanks” response was definitely winning over any curiosity I might have felt in any of the booths. 
</p><p>
Note to self: don’t go alone. Bring someone who will at least start asking the questions. 
</p><p>
Shocked by that statement? You’ve probably met me and realized that in many ways I’m not a shy person. Whatever I’m thinking tends to fall out of my mouth on a regular basis without time for mental editing. But put me in an overwhelming situation on my own and I go into defensive mode. 
</p><p>
Took a break and hung out with Sly this afternoon. Found shoes that I can wear to the YML party tomorrow night that will be comfortable and warm (case the ones I brought definitely didn’t qualify for either). Still no bag though.
</p><p>
That’s another thing. I have two laptop bags. One John bought for me: a lovely, sturdy black Brenthaven messenger style bag with enough padding to protect my laptop in the event that it is backed over by a semi, or dropped off a 30 story building, and compact compartments for all my shite. The other my mother bought for me: it’s a $25 iPack from Target, messenger style, not as much padding, but it does have a compartment for my iPod that allows me to plug the headphones into the strap and use special buttons on the strap to control it, and enough room for me to carry a LOT of stuff as well as my laptop without it getting too bulky or awkward.
</p><p>
I brought the Brenthaven, thinking that it would be better for banging the laptop around in, but I’m starting to wish I’d brought the other instead. I like the Brenthaven, but it’s HEAVY, not something you want to be carrying for extended periods of time. And the shoulder strap, even at it’s longest, is just a little too short, so it bangs against my hip when I walk. It’s uncomfortable and unwieldy, and it makes me feel wretched cause I know how damn much it cost. But shouldn’t something that costs so much be at least comfortable to carry? 
</p><p>
We’re going to the Brenthaven party tonight, and I’m going to be biting my tongue the whole time, trying not to bitch about it. I don’t have to carry a laptop most of the time, thank god, but there’s no way in hell, unless my shoulders were broader, that I’d be able to carry that bag more than just to the airport and from. Not unless I wanted to dislocate an arm.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/overwhelming_and_unwieldy.html</link>
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">My First Macworld</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">bags</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">complaints</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Macworld</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Sly</category>
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 10 Jan 2007 18:22:56 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>What goes down...</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>The Smile on My Mac people were having a get together last night, in a tiny, sweet little house that must cost a fortune, buried in downtown San Francisco. Getting there involved a cab, a VERY steep hill, a nearly hidden iron gate, a steep flight of brick stairs, and a path through an overgrown garden (in the dark gardens are always overgrown).
</p><p>
The people there were very sweet, and very nice, even though we all spent a great deal of time eying one another and wondering who the hell everyone was and what we were doing there. (Except for Shawn, of course, because everyone knows Shawn.)
</p><p>
Then John and I tried not to fall down the steep hill, managed to catch a cab, and headed over to the Beale(sp?) Street bar for the Mac Managers party. I never knew that Mac Geeks were so LOUD. It was wall to wall geekdom, let loose from its natural habitat and gorging on fried food and free beer. If there was music, I couldn't hear it. Conversation was conducted mainly by yelling and leaning over pointing at your ears in the universal "Sorry, I can't fucking hear you, speak up!" signal. 
</p><p>
I met a lot of people, most of whom were named Mike or some variation of the name "Shawn/Schoun/Sean." I wish my insomnia was as bad as it was in college, because I could have cheerfully stayed longer, but for my damned eyelids.
</p><p>
So John kindly brought me back to the hotel, and then wandered over to Dave's bar to talk to someone. I don't remember when he got back, because I was too busy having a strange dream involving Microsoft paint and clipart of chinchillas. (No more Jalepeno poppers for ME before bed.)
</p><p>
I woke myself up laughing, with John leaning over me going "Are you okay?" I was fine, but he quickly became not fine. Apparently there was broccoli in something that he ate last night, which he happens to be allergic to. I won't share the gastropyrotechnics that occurred after that.
</p><p>
This morning was the Keynote, which I had no ticket to, and I wasn't about to wait outside in the cold at 4 a.m. to be trampled by the masses, so I slept in. John crawled out of bed, took a shower, packed his gear and headed out. 
</p><p>
Apparently they released an iPhone today, and appletv. I read Peter Cohen's play by play over at MacCentral from my hotel room, to John, who stumbled back in about the time the Keynote was starting. He's currently curled into a ball of misery behind me. I ventured out long enough to find him some ginger ale, but otherwise... I love the man. My place is here.
</p><p>
I just wish here included either room service or a large plain cheese pizza. </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/what_goes_down.html</link>
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">My First Macworld</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">parties</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">sick</category>
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jan 2007 16:21:14 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Hoarding swag and drinking rum wine</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Yesterday Shawn and Lesa rented a car, and along with Sly (and John of course) we all headed up (down?) to Napa Valley and Sonoma for a tour of wine country.
</p><p>
Confession: I don't drink. Not beer. Not vodka. Not gin. Not wine. Especially not wine. And  I could give you several reasons that all pretty much boil down to: don't like it. Does that mean I'd pass up a trip to see these places? Hell no. I'm sober, not stupid. 
</p><p>
We set off fairly early, and spent a rather large chunk of the day in the sunshine under one of the bluest skies I've ever seen, going up and down mountains along winding roads, and looking at vast acres of property covered in sticks.
</p><p>
It's January. They don't have grapes, they have sticks. 
</p><p>
It was still beautiful though, and the wineries themselves are well worth the trip. We stopped at two: The Rubicon Estates Winery (used to be called Neibaum-Coppola), and the St. Francis Winery. The first was simply beautiful. The winery itself is an old chateau style building built in the 1800's by a sea captain, and currently owned and run by Francis Ford Coppola (of movie fame). The second was nice, but not as impressive, and, I'm told, the wine mostly sucked compared to the first.
</p><p>
It was a good day, the kind that makes you happy just to be out in the sun and doing something fun with friends. 
</p><p>
Afterward we met up with more people than I can possibly remember, and went out for Indian food, and then came back to the hotel early. I'm told this is the calm before the storm, and that there won't be too many other opportunities for relaxing like this, so I'm glad I got a chance now. 
</p><p>
This morning we went over to the expo hall and picked up our badges/passes, and John got his Bag o' Swag, which made me wish I was smarter or more famous, or something, so I could be a speaker. Cause, well, DAMN. 
</p><p>
Made it back to the hotel at a run, and hopped on the YML bus trip to Cupertino, where I got to see Mac fans in a feeding frenzy. I've never seen people swarm a store like that before, and that's saying something, because my mother is a master shopper. Grabbed lunch and headed back. 
</p><p>
The phone calls have started up again, and John is currently on the phone doing a podcast interview with...er... I've lost track. We're heading out in a bit to two separate parties, and then tomorrow: the Keynote. 
</p><p>
The debate on the bus was raging fast and furious, and even now John's fielding questions about the speculations on what's coming out. You'd think that whatever they're releasing was going to revolutionize the world, somehow, the way everyone talks about it. In the end, however, unless Steve Jobs gets up on that stage and demonstrates a teleporter, it'll just be another cool gadget that will be well put together, intelligently designed, and better than whatever else is out there. It will probably surprise people for awhile, everyone will argue about it for a few years, but by next year there'll be something better.
</p><p>
Cynical? yes. I'm not a Mac Mac. I'm Jane Public. I'm a consumer. I prefer my Mac over my PC at work. I prefer Apple products because they're better put together than anyone else's. Has it changed my life: yes, in small ways. Technology does that. Am I going to go and try and sneak into the front row and hope Steve Jobs sweats in my general direction?
</p><p>
No. 
</p><p>
Emphatically, no.
</p><p>
Photos follow: </p>

]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/hoarding_swag_and_drinking_rum.html</link>
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          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">My First Macworld</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 08 Jan 2007 19:19:16 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Arrivals</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>My first impression of San Francisco: it's like a really old library, where they've forgotten to weed out the books.
</p><p>
First off, it's HUGE. Now don't get me wrong, Orlando is a BIG city, but the land under it is as flat as a board, so you can't see a lot of it all at once. And because of the hurricane codes, Orlando is a short city, it's only downtown where things start reaching up toward the sky, and even then they don't get very high. It sprawls instead, for miles and miles, greedily sucking up it's suburbs until there's little to no definition. 
</p><p>
San Francisco is HUGE and crammed tight with people. The buildings are all tall and thin and squished so closely together that they're actually holding one another up, like books on a shelf. Helping the impression are the hills. They really weren't joking about the hills. So now you've got your line of books, and above it and behind it is another line, and then another, and another. And stuck in there, in some places you can see the old ones, that are more than a little shabby and falling apart, and probably ought to be pulled out and kindly deposited in the book sale or, not so kindly, in the dumpster. Even downtown, where you have stores, they're all packed side by side so tight that I'm surprised they can breathe. 
</p><p>
Our hotel is one of those places, tiny and antique looking, but clearly well preserved and loved. Our room is about the size of a postage stamp, but very pretty and efficient, with a great big bed, and old fashioned white wood furniture, and a big old clawfoot tub dominating the bathroom. I loved it immediately. The room, not just the tub. 
</p><p>
Checked in, napped a bit to recharge my dying batteries. Then went out to meet people.
</p><p>
Went to dinner with Shawn and Lesa (hosts of Your Mac Life), Schoun (who John says is running the Mac IT track for the conference), Sarah (Paul Kent's right hand, and mastermind behind the Macworld advertising), and Sly (YML's IRC babe and a good friend). 
</p><p>
Understand, please, that I have very little idea who some of these people are, and there are times when I'm introduced to people and the person doing the introducing is looking at me, waiting for the moment of awe or whatever, and I'm thinking: <em>Oh, okay. Another name to remember. What do you do again?</em> 
</p><p>
I've talked to Shawn and Lesa quite a bit, though, and it was fun meeting them for the first time and seeing them life size, as I'm much more accustomed to seeing their faces about an inch high in my quicktime window. Shawn seems to be laboring under the mistaken impression that I'm going to be nicer to him to his face. We'll see how much I can abuse him of that notion by the end of the week. :) He's a jolly giant, though, I'll grant him that, and I liked both him and Lesa on sight. 
</p><p>
After a long, long, do-you-think-we're-lost? walk, we ate at a nice little Mexican place that was far too free with their guacamole, chatted, and then headed off again into the streets.
</p><p>
We met up with Jim Dalrymple and Colin, who I'm told are also something like gods in the Mac Pantheon. Colin is the little Welsh one, and Jim is Bacchus in the flesh. I liked Jim immensely. Especially because when you disturb him his face does its best to curl into a small place (probably behind his immense beard), and think happy thoughts that probably involve giant tits full of Heinekin. He's got the temperment of an adorable grumpy baby bear, and the appetite of a full grown one, and you do not, under any circumstances, get between that man and his cheese/beer/tits. 
</p><p>
We curled up in a little dive bar for a bit, while Jim grumped and nursed on his beer, then wandered over to Dave's, which, I'm told, is this crew's main stomping ground during the expo. About now my batteries were flashing empty and Sly looked ready to yawn wide enough to crack her skull wide like a true South Park Canadian. So John kindly (after being kicked in the shin a couple of times) brought us back to the hotel for the night. 
</p><p>
This morning we're off for Sonoma to tour the wineries. I'll bring the camera and actually USE it today. </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/arrivals.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/arrivals.html</guid>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">My First Macworld</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">first impressions</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Jim</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Lesa</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Macworld</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">San Francisco</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Shawn</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Sly</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 07 Jan 2007 10:26:38 -0500</pubDate>
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         <title>Love is in the Air</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Here’s the thing about flying: until I flew out to Kansas City to meet John in 2004, I’d never flown before in my life. So the whole concept of getting on a plane can, sometimes, be a little nerve-wracking for me. I haven’t had time yet to get jaded about the experience, and I think it’s one of the reasons why, even when it’s still Hell’s:Frozen Over a.m. and I’m falling asleep standing up at the ticket counter because I only had maybe an hour of sleep the night before, I’m almost incapable of sleeping on a plane. 
</p><p>
So I figured I’d put the time to good use, somehow. 
</p><p>
This is, actually, the first time that John and I have ever flown together. We both spend a lot of time at airports, taking turns at being the one lugging the baggage around (and this is the perfect sentence for my “g” key to suddenly decide that it doesn’t want to type). But we usually part ways at the security gate. 
</p><p>
Flying with John is an interesting experience. Especially when you have to wake up at 3 a.m. to make your flight. He marvels at my ability to take a shower while half asleep with my eyes closed. I marvel at his ability to be fully awake and functional enough to drag me through the airport, get the boarding passes, sleepwalk through security, and then onto the plane where he promptly, with little to no transition time, goes from wide awake to dead to the world. 
</p><p>
Dead to the world, by the way, includes snoring softly, and his mouth dropping wide open, making him look remarkably like the Incredible Mr. Limpet. Every once in awhile I reach over and tap him on the chin, which causes him to reflexively close his mouth. Of course, by the time I’ve glanced away and back again it’s dropped back open to porn star wide. 
</p><p>
Considering his abilities as a public speaker and all around know-it-all, I’m surprised he doesn’t talk in his sleep. 
</p><p>
I’m probably ruining his reputation right now, though. 
</p><p>
It’s funny to me, knowing that there are a lot of people out there who think my fiance is world’s largest asshole. And he can be, don’t get me wrong. But luckily I get to see the funny, goofy, loveable, generous side of him. The side that is, thankfully, turned away from me at the moment and drooling into the aisle. 
</p><p>
I’m looking forward to Macworld. I’m looking forward to getting to meet his friends, and seeing this thing that is such a huge part of who he is. I’m also looking forward to hearing lots of funny, blackmail worthy stories of his past Macworld antics.
</p><p>
Cause a guy who can be such a colossal asshole on occasion, needs to marry a woman who can be a giant dick. </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/love_is_in_the_air.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.bynkii.com/macgeek/2007/01/love_is_in_the_air.html</guid>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">My First Macworld</category>
        
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">airplanes</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">drool</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">flying</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">humor?</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">John</category>
        
          <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Macworld</category>
        
         <pubDate>Sat, 06 Jan 2007 10:26:14 -0500</pubDate>
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