barcamp13 Nov 2007 02:02 pm

It always takes me about a week to come to closure with a camp. Besides the obvious sleep debt to be paid, I also enjoy watching the pics and videos roll in, checking out the session media that gets posted, and listening to the conversations that originated at camp as they get taken out into the world. Especially the last one: I believe that’s what motivates me to keep working on these. Those conversations and connections are priceless, and it’s a pretty amazing feeling to get to see those shockwaves from the epicenter. So, really, thank you all for making good on all the promises we made that this would be an amazing group of people with things to share. We can only set the stage, but you guys put on one hell of a play.

By the Numbers

So, the breakdown looked something like this:

  • About 200 Participants over two days (That’s almost double from March 2007)
  • Close to 40 unique presentations
  • 15 Sponsors
  • $5400 Budget (Spent to the last $40 or so, so if anyone wants reimbursing for drinks or snacks, hit me up) Complete Expense details will be available on the wiki as soon as the last sponsor check gets processed.
  • Two Gongs (Opening intros were MUCH shorter this time!)
  • 113 BarCamper Portraits
  • And the world’s first FooBar Mitzvah

I’m happy with that.

Thanks

There are more people to thank than I think I can fit into this space or possibly link to, so let me start off by saying thank you to every person who answered our call for help on Sunday morning and brought sodas, fruit, bread, yogurt, ice, etc. When you’re on a fixed budget for a free conference and then attendance doubles out of nowhere (as it did), you’re suddenly not sure whether to say “yay!” or “uh oh…” Those contributions, from cupcakes to sunflower seeds to sodas to fruit, kept us in the “yay!” category. So thank you all for stepping up and really being every bit the awesome community we love to brag about.

Sponsors

BarCamp simply could not be the free, accessible, community event it is without our sponsors. These companies make this event possible, pitch-free, no strings attached. They ‘get’ what we’re doing here, and so many of them were in active participation at the event, not as sponsors, but as BarCampers. So, thank you to:

  • Little Radio Warehouse - There’s a reason we list these guys under both ‘Sponsors’ and ‘Hosts’ on the wiki. Not only do they give us such an awesome venue for free, Jimmy spends the weekend working just as hard as the organizers to make sure everything runs smoothly for the event. I don’t think we can say thanks enough, but we try.
  • 3jane IndieClick - A big thanks to 3jane IndieClick for returning as sponsors this round.
  • Belkin - Belkin has always been such a huge supporter of BarCamps in LA and elsewhere. Thanks so much to Jory and crew for sticking with us!
  • crowdgather - Thanks Sanjay and crew for supporting BarCampLA!
  • Disney - A big thanks to Mike and the team at Disney for continuing to support BarCamp in Los Angeles, even with the success of PoohCamp, their internal unconference. Also, I think Mike’s most excellent wi-fi shirt upstaged us all for supreme geek wear.
  • DreamHost - Suuuuure, Dreamhost couldn’t just sponsor, they had to throw in a year’s free hosting for everyone at BarCamp as well. Sweet! Thanks, guys!
  • Microsoft - Thanks again to Microsoft, always a huge help to us. They were kind enough this year to cover our insurance costs, one of our largest expenses, for us. Such a huge help. Also, a huge thanks to Woody Pewitt for working the registration desk for most of the day Saturday.
  • ::search.labs -search labs specializes in placing top talent in the web 2.0 and new media sphere. Thanks for supporting BarCamp!
  • Show-in-a-Box -How cool is it that a free software project wanted to be a BarCamp sponsor? Show in a Box is a video blogging platform built on Wordpress, and consisting of Wordpress, a custom set of plug-ins, and a custom theme. Check it out! It’s free!
  • [Si]TV - [Si]Tv is a 24 hour, English-speaking Latino cable channel with a video-rich website. Tune over to www.sitv.com/ to see what they’ve got going on.
  • Startup Schwag - Startup Schwag picks up where ValleySchwag left off, bringing the latest Web2.0 shirts and tchochkes to folks everywhere. Check them out!
  • Qtask -A huge thanks to Reichart, Lisette, Emi, and the rest of the Qtask crew for the sponsorship, the help, and the cupcakes! (ok, and the pink t-shirt)
  • twiistup- Next twiistup is Jan 16, 2008 in Vence. Deadline to apply to Showoff is November 15, so hurry! Thanks again, guys!
  • Yahoo! Developer Network - A big thanks to the Yahoo! Developer Network for sponsoring lunch on Sunday. Cheers!

Special Thanks To:

Jason Cosper, my co-BarCamp Counselor (Lambie, did you coin that?). You know I can’t possibly name everything, but thanks for the moral support, the mad publicity and blog and twitter and sponsorship wrangling, Saturday and Sunday and all they entailed, and for that amazing yell of doom of yours that made it possible for my squawking to be heard. Beer doesn’t cut it, I owe you whiskey.
Dan Tentler, for running network ops and getting/keeping the wifi running. “What? There’s a muffin up here! How the hell?
JoAnna and her ninja-like reflexes where catering is involved made it possible to get food laid out for 150+ people in 10 mins or less not once, but THREE times. That plus the pre-ordering food consulting made a world of difference for us.
CJ Little, whose remarkably lifelike cardboard facsimile somehow managed to co-staff the registration booth for most of Saturday along with Woody Pewitt, ensuring that BarCampers were greeted, tagged, and signed in. Thanks!
Andy Sternberg, who wrangled us an awesome keg of Craftsman and the ice to cool it.
More thanks to Bino Gopal for the no-questions-asked instant office supply run.
Jane Lee, who volunteered herself and her vehicle to pick up EVERYTHING that wouldn’t fit in my car from Costco, plus Saturday’s lunch. (That was a lifesaver!)
Thanks to Chris Gagne for picking up Saturday morning’s coffee.
And lastly, a huge thanks to Darren Wong for not taking no for an answer and working in the middle of the night to give us a killer new BarCampLA logo. We love it!

Plus, a very special thanks to Richard M. Stallman (RMS) for joining us, hanging out, having fun, and for speaking. We don’t usually condone ‘keynotes’ for BarCamp, but if there were ever a case for an exception, this was most certainly the time.

And lastly, the Media…

If you haven’t already, go check out Noodle Scar’s On Location at BarCampLA-4 video. You can find other videos here, on YouTube, and linked off of the BarCampLA-4 Main Wiki. If you have videos you want the world to see, put them there!

There are also Tons of great pictures, of course, so check them out, help with tagging, and make sure your own are up and tagged so we can all enjoy them. Here are some of my personal favorites.


I’m going to treasure this one for a long time.
Photo by Daniel Hengeveld.


PowerPoint Karaoke
Photo by Lisa Brewster


FooBarMitzvah
Photo by Lisa Brewster


“What’s in your Not-Coming-Back-Bag.” I walked in to call time on this session and just lost it laughing. Thanks, guys!
Photo by Dan Tentler


The bus. Seriously, the bus was awesome. Go check out The 1 Second Film.
Photo by Dan Tentler

Thanks everyone. It was nothing short of surreal. Post your pics and comments here and/or to the wiki and we’ll see you for the next one!

-Crystal

process18 Oct 2007 12:26 am

So basically, if I have ever emailed with you at all, you’re in my gmail address book. And if you are in my gmail address book, all 600ish of you, around the first of September, you got a message that looked something like this:

“cleverclevergirl” would like you to join them on Zannel

Zannel is a mobile community where you can meet people, send messages and share photos and videos on your mobile phone. Share your life in real time.

Click here to join and accept the invitation.

And then if you also follow me on twitter, you shortly after received a few frantic, apologetic tweets from me explaining that some UI had malfunctioned and to please ignore the bother. I try to be exceedingly careful with my contacts and tend to never invite people to things unless I’m positive they want to be invited. I hate email, I assume you hate email too, and I try to avoid sending any unless it’s necessary or just purely pleasant.

So I was pretty devastated that this happened, especially since I generally consider myself savvier than that, but figured I’d done what I could and it was done with.

Until I got a message on the site from Zannel’s CTO the next day.

Hey there - I’m with Zannel, and I’ve heard some buzz about our friend invite feature - r u open to discussing?

Uh oh.

Chris Messina was amongst the unintentionally-invited. Chris, thankfully, has a pretty low tolerance for bad UI, so he made some screenshots

This was noted by Tantek Çelik, who asked Chris to submit screenshots to the wiki he’s been working on, documenting Social Network Anti-Patterns, something expecially useful in the wake of the Quechup disaster. (Incidentally, Chris has a whole collection of these screenshots here)

Zannel’s PR folks had picked up on the grumblings, traced it back to me, and now wanted to chat.

So we chatted. First off, they were genuinely apologetic. This was really an unintentional effect of the common mobile design strategy of reducing page length by having many small pages of information, and definitely not a ’strategy’ of any sort.

I explained that the problem had occurred while using their mobile interface. I had wanted to *check* if anyone I knew was already using this service, but only intended to invite one coworker. Unfortunately, the default state for “send invites to everyone” was set to TRUE, and that option was on a separate page than the main confirm screen. So by requesting and confirming to invite one friend, everyone else got dragged into it. They admitted that this was a problem and one that had been discussed internally.

They also agreed to fix it. Quickly.

And I’m very pleased to say that they did! The fix has been in place now for about a month and apparently now, users complain, if anything, that it is too difficult to add a bunch of friends at once. So far, though, everyone seems to agree that this is a better problem to have.

They were also kind enough to send me some screenshots of the new interface:

findfriendscreenflow.png

Congrats to Zannel for making this right, and a big thanks to Chris and Tantek for their zero-tolerance policies.

Go Check them out.They’re getting nods from the likes of TechCrunch, Mashable, and The LA Times.

barcamp and sisu and drupal and drupalcamp22 Sep 2007 12:34 am

It’s been two weeks since DrupalCampLA and I think the dust has finally settled enough for me to write this.

As I said in my opening remarks, when I first started planning this event, I was really hoping for a small gathering of dedicated Drupal Developers, you know, just 40-60 people to kick things off…

Man, what the heck do I know?

DrupalCampLA saw a bit over 100 participants and about 25 unique session topics (not to mention 120 somewhat unique cupcakes) in two days at the AOL offices in Beverly Hills, and I really don’t think I could have asked for a better group of curious folks or a more supportive community.

From Project Management to Flex, Install Profiles to Podcast tools, we had some really fantastic presentations, and as always, hallway conversations that spark friendships, projects, and more than a few modules. While the attendance skewed heavily towards the developers (another surprise for me and others) we also had great participation from project managers, designers, admins, and the business development folks who are keeping these projects coming through the doors.

A big thanks to all who turned out and made this event such a success, and an even bigger thanks to our sponsors who made it possible to give an event like this to the community for free.

Sponsors

  • AOL - Our venue sponsor, and close partner for this event. A huge thanks to Mike Macadaan, Bill Wetherell, Karl Dotter, and Daryl from AOL for being so amazingly supportive and ensuring that this event went off without a hitch. The space was great, the wi-fi was glorious, and we never had to worry about the projectors. Couldn’t have asked for more. Mike and Bill are also responsible for Twiistups 1 & 2, with #3 on the way. Go check them out.
  • Warner Bros. Records - Giant thanks #2 goes to Ethan Kaplan and the rest of the team at WBR for not only being major sponsors of DrupalCampLA, but also for being a driving force in Drupal adoption amongst recording artists. How awesome is that?
  • OurMedia - This event would not have happened if it weren’t for the support and encouragement of Markus Sandy at OurMedia. Back in June, when I was just starting to think about putting one of these together, I mentioned it to Markus and he immediately volunteered sponsorship. (Which meant, then, that I actually had to go through with this). Check out OurMedia, they’re doing some great things for independent online content.
  • Sisu, Inc. - Another big thanks to my colleagues at Sisu for not only tolerating my crazy self in ‘organizer mode’ but even supporting it by serving as DrupalCampLA’s official cupcake sponsor. We’re currently hiring freelance art directors, designers, and web developers (especially drupallers), so if you’re interested, drop us a line at jobs@sisumedia.com.
    • But wait, there’s more…

      Not only were we lucky enough to have such great sponsors, but we also had the incredible support and participation of many of the top Drupal firms on the left coast. A huge thanks goes out to:

      • Achieve Internet not only brought a small, extremely Drupal-savvy army up from San Diego, they also sponsored Saturday night’s party at Islands. So if you’re looking for who to thank for that, look no further. They’re looking to hire great people, so if San Diego sounds like a good destination, give them a shout.
      • WorkHabit may indeed take the prize for largest number of Drupal devs schlepped the furthest distance, bringing their core team all the way down from Sacramento to see how so-cal kicks it drupal-style. WorkHabit provides Drupal development, integration, strategy, deployment solutions, and training.They’re also looking to hire, so if Northern Cali is more your speed, Drop them a line.
      • Another big thanks to Bryght for sending Chief Blogging Officer Roland Tanglao down for the weekend to speak on Install Profiles (definitely a hot topic lately).
      • Also, thanks to the folks at CivicActions who couldn’t be there, but send their love in the form of Some really nifty Drupal pins. Thanks, guys!
      • And lastly, thanks to Jen Simmons, who joined us all the way from Philadelphia, and Jacob Redding, organizer of DrupalCampNYC, who joined us on his victory lap around the U.S. before moving to China.

      Other big thanks are due to Chris Charlton and everyone else who fetched ice, coffee, cupcakes, or napkins, or helped set-up, clean-up, or just generally keep the show running. It was all noticed and much appreciated.

      And Now Time for the Media Frenzy…

      Ok, not quite, but there was an amazing amount of recording done at this event. We’re still assembling it all, but stay tuned, we should have recordings of nearly every session available to the internet at large soon. For now, though, enjoy some glimpses of DrupalCampLA:

      Video by Chris Charlton:

      More video
      A glimpse of the pre-opening craziness on Saturday from Mike Macadaan here That one opens with me saying “I can’t believe people are trying to email me to register this morning” (it was true), and later includes me answering “Hi Crystal” with “I need someone to go get the coffee.” This kind of sums up my morning there.

      Pics

      Drupal Deployment Solutions Session

      By Roland Tanglao

      Chris and Roland

      By Me

      Cupcakes from Sisu

      By Me

      Markus Sandy

      By Roland Tanglao

      Jonathan Lambert and Roland Tanglao

      Photo from WorkHabit

      Opening Session

      Photo by Roland Tangalo

      For all DrupalCampLA pics on Flickr, go here.

drupal22 Aug 2007 07:36 pm

Details:
September 8-9
(Saturday - 10am - 6pm, Sunday - 10am - 2pm)
AOL Beverly Hills - 331 N. Maple Dr., 90210
Registration - http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/221082

Organizer Notes:

a Drupal story

I originally got involved with Drupal about a year and a half ago when I moved up to Vancouver to work for Raincity Studios, a dedicated Drupal development shop. Since then, I’ve pretty much plunged head first into the world of open-source and content management systems, and it’s been a pretty major eye opener in how I think about web development.

When I moved back to LA last fall, I chose a technology agnostic design agency instead of a Drupal shop, but remained active in the Drupal community here in Southern California. When I started getting weekly, and then bi-weekly calls and emails looking for Drupal developers, I knew something was definitely afoot. When I ran out of non-swamped devs to refer people to, I knew it was time to do something.

I really do believe that Open Source projects and solid adherence to web standards are the way to a more secure, better designed, and more accessible web for everyone. And it’s fantastic that companies such as Yahoo! and Warner Bros. Records have recognized this as well and are deploying Drupal on a new scale. However, they are also flooding the market with more projects than we currently have people to handle, and we’ll all be in trouble if the party line becomes “Well, Drupal is great, but you can’t find developers for it…”

Los Angeles is also in a peculiar situation, having lots and lots of demand for Drupal, but being one of the only major US cities without a dedicated Drupal development shop here in town. Besides the obvious fact that LA based companies have to go elsewhere to find developers right now, this is also a problem because it means there has been no LA-based training initiative in LA. Yet.

So, here’s the idea. We’re bringing in some real Drupal rockstars from all over the US (and some from Canada) to teach two days of sessions, and in some instances, giving real world case studies in collaboration with their LA clients. Our goal is to jump start the Drupal community in Los Angeles, get people trained and interested, and see where we can push this from there. Sound good?

Read below for the official boilerplate and info on how you can get involved.

The LA Drupal Group presents DrupalCampLA, a free community learning conference focused on Drupal development, theming, deployment, and management. Experts and professionals in the field of Drupal development will be teaching two days of seminars on three tracks aimed at varying levels of technical knowledge, so whether you’re a seasoned developer, a frustrated newcomer, or just curious what all the hype is about, there will be sessions designed for you.

We’ll also have several sessions devoted to podcasting and media using Drupal, as well as several case studies featuring Drupal and Online Music promotion and distribution from Warner Bros. Records and Rhino Records.

We think Drupal is the best damn open source content management system period, and we’re not the only ones. Come learn how to develop, design, and create content for the the open source project that powers www.theonion.com, www.mtv.co.uk, and www.askaninja.com (and thousands more).

For more information, please visit http://barcamp.org/DrupalCampLA

Official sign-up is at http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/221082. Even though this is a free event, please register so we can plan accordingly.

You can also find us at

Details:
September 8-9
(Saturday - 10am - 6pm, Sunday - 10am - 2pm)
AOL Beverly Hills - 331 N. Maple Dr., 90210

barcamp21 Aug 2007 11:44 am

I was really sorry I couldn’t make it to BarCamp Block this weekend in the Bay area. For those who don’t know, this was the 2 year anniversary of BarCamp, an ad-hoc gathering born from the desire for people to share and learn in an open environment. Ironically, the reason I couldn’t attend is that I’ve been just too busy planning DrupalCampLA and BarCampLA-4 (more info on those coming shortly).

I was happy to see, however, that at least a little part of me got to be there for the event. My friend Tantek Çelik is shown here sporting my BarCamp Shanghai shirt.

See, back in January, Tantek and I had a little shirt swap:

Almost a year ago, now, I had the amazing opportunity to help bring BarCamp to China for the very first time by Co-Organizing BarCamp Shanghai. It was an amazing trip, a great adventure, and a rocking BarCamp. However, in all the mayhem, even though I designed and sourced ‘em, I didn’t manage to get one of the shirts in a size that didn’t absolutely swallow me. (I’m a bit wee, so I hear). Rather than see it get hidden away in my closet as a memento, I chose to give it to someone who could wear it proud. Since Tantek was a key factor in the very first BarCamp (two years ago now, wow!), I can’t think of anyone I’d rather have sporting it around Palo Alto.

Also, for the curious, BarCamp Shanghai 2 is in the works for September 8-9, 2007. I won’t be making the trek this year, but if you’re in China, check it out!

Photo Credit: Wired.com Click Here for Original

process26 Jul 2007 01:13 pm

Ok, so, I’m avoiding the seven or so very relevant and probably no longer timely posts I have drafts of in order to jot down these notes, because despite all the wonderful events I’ve been attending and all the ideas I currently have buzzing around in my little head, what I’m really obsessed with right now is calendars.

That’s right. Calendars.

See, somewhere in the past six months or so, I got incurably busy. I’ve known this state before, but it has always been temporary. And I’m just getting the hunch that it isn’t temporary this time.

So besides the sleep deprivation, the coffee dependency, and the general sense of twitchiness (apologies to those who’ve seen me recently), what’s been really driving me crazy and impeding further productivity is fear. That’s right, you know this fear. You find out about an event, a party, or a project you want to do and you really want to say yes and make firm plans, but you stop short because you’re not entirely sure if you can. It’s pretty easy to check the calendar to see if you’re supposed to BE somewhere at that particular point in the space time continuum, but what about mental bandwidth and deadlines? Can I schedule a trip to Texas to see my family if I can’t get a good idea of what projects I’m launching then? I’m constantly trying to not be out of town for a major site launch or milestone, but those move often, so how does one guess?

You can see the loop forming here and it generally results in a semi-catatonic state followed with “I need coffee. Let me get back to you.”

This is not really ok anymore.

So the key problem to be solved here is “How do I get an accurate, at a glance idea of how busy I am for any 2-3 day period?”

I have a job where I’m, at any point, responsible for 5-12 active creative projects. (Currently, it’s about 9). Timelines slip, usually not because of our team, but projects tend to evolve as they progress and sometimes small changes have big effects. Therefore, it’s crucial to have a system that ties into my current professional workflow, but can also integrate with my personal schedule since I’m also co-organizing two conferences in LA, working on contributing a Drupal theme, and attending a large number of fun/learning/networking events here, and in SF and SD. (Not to mention the occasional, purely social outing)

My tools:

  • My work laptop (PC)
  • my Stickerbooked Mac
  • Blackberry 8800
  • gmail
  • gcal (I have two - one hosted calendar that we use company wide where we are all subscribed to each other, and also my personal calendar, which is also subscribed to things like the barcamp global schedule, the Boston Red Sox season schedule, and my Upcoming.yahoo.com events, as well as my work calendar)
  • MS Project
  • Basecamp
  • upcoming.yahoo.com
  • twitter

The Process::

  • Work Projects are scoped and then scheduled dynamically in Project. Major milestones and deadlines are then manually entered and assigned to people in Basecamp by Client and Project. (Note: I know this is a main bottleneck) Milestones are title by “Initials of milestone owner” - “Project” - “Description of Milestone”. ICAL feeds are then generated by individual project (and also one master feed). These are then subscribed to through my work calendar and color coded by client. I only subscribe to the full-on, mother-load schedule from my personal calendar.
  • As I commit to public events and publicly promoted social events, I add myself to the Upcoming.yahoo.com page so it gets added to my personal calendar.
  • On the fly, small social things, such as dinner with a friend, get added to my personal gcal via twitter via gtalk IM on my blackberry if I’m out and about (or just through the browser if I’m at the computer). (How to do this)

The end result of this is a personal calendar I can look at (on screen or blackberry) and gauge, just by how many lines of stuff I see, whether or not that’s a good day for me or whether I’d best lay low. It also creates a master schedule that my office can selectively share with outside contractors and clients and gives everyone in the company a 5 second glance at how many deadlines each person has for a given day or week, which is necessary for committing resources to a project.

Just starting this system, so I’ll let you know how it goes. Any further integration ideas are much welcome.

Uncategorized22 Jul 2007 08:25 am

Checking in here from WordCamp 2007. I’m having a fantastic time in San Francisco with some good friends from all over the place. Currently sitting here enjoying a fantastic view of the Bay Bridge nicely shrouded in some morning fog.

I’ll be following this up with a more complete post, full of pics, links, and some notes on sessions, but just wanted to give a quick check in and a big thanks to the WordPress team for putting on a really great event.

Uncategorized18 Jul 2007 11:29 am

I knew it had been a dry year. A dry couple of years, actually. The last major rain I really remember was the insane downpour of October 2004, but I think I only remember that because it was during the ALCS and World Series that year, and the rain made storming out of the house at exceptionally tense moments in those epic Red Sox vs Yankees games a bit more ridiculous.

But I’ve found myself telling people recently “I swear, it used to rain here, but it doesn’t anymore” a bit too often, so I went looking for the actual statistics on the matter and came up with this.

From the National Weather Service - Full PDF at http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/lox/Assets/pns_07_01_07.pdf

PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
National weather service los angeles/oxnard ca
635 am pdt sun jul 1 2007

…this was the driest rain season ever in downtown los angeles and many other locations in southwestern california…
The 2006-2007 rain season…which began on july 1 2006 and ended on june 30 2007 is officially the driest ever in downtown Los Angeles since records began 130 years ago in 1877. Only 3.21 inches of rain fell during the season…. nearly one foot or 11.93 inches below the normal for the season…which is 15.14 inches. Rainfall totaled only 21% of normal in downtown Los Angeles.

The previous record for the driest rain season in downtown Los Angeles was 4.42 inches of rain during the 2001-2002 season. The total rain for the 2006-2007 season…3.21 inches…was 1.21 inches lower than the previous driest season…a difference of a whopping 27 percent.

The rainfall total for the season…3.21 inches…was lower than the average yearly rainfall for phoenix (8.29″)…palm springs (5.23″) and las vegas (4.49″)…and was less than one inch more than what is normal for death valley (2.33″).
During this past season…the greatest rain on any calendar day was just 0.50 inches on april 20th. This was the only day during the season on which one half inch of rain or greater was recorded…the fewest number of such days in any season. The previous record was 2 days during the 2001-2002 season.

Measurable rain fell on 21 of the past 365 days in downtown Los Angeles…which was not a record. It was the 4th lowest total… Behind the 16 days with measurable rain during the 1960-1961 Season…the 17 days during the 1958-1959 season…and the 19 days during the 1971-1972. The average number of days with measurable rain in downtown Los Angeles is 35.

Rainfall was below normal in every month of this past season… With not one month receiving rainfall totaling one inch or greater. It is the first season since records began in 1877 not to have a single month during which one inch or more of rain was recorded. The “wettest” month was february…when 0.92 inches of rain was recorded.

Yep. Vegas now gets more rain than Los Angeles. Think I could vacation somewhere with good thunderstorms? I may have to track down a monsoon season somewhere to get my fix.

The still amazing thing to me is that the city doesn’t *look* so much different. Is absolutely everything irrigated in this city? What a strange, unnatural place we’ve created here.

If you’re as freaked out by this as I am, here are some water-saving tips:

Uncategorized05 Jul 2007 01:06 am

There are certainly more exciting ways to spend 4th of July, but I’m on a roll for skipping holidays this past year, so this one has been no exception. It was somewhat of an ambitious goal - manage to completely settle in to a new house using a day and a half off - but just past midnight on the second day, I’m sitting here by the open window in the living room, listening to the crickets and late night traffic on La Cienega and there’s not a box in sight.

As some of you might know already, my last lovely apartment was rendered unlivable by turn of events usually reserved for Allstate commercials. A visiting dog chewed through a hose in the bathroom and flooded the place. I tried to stick it out for a while, but the resulting reconstruction efforts were just too disruptive.

Thankfully, LA is full of places to live. Through the wonders of Craigslist, U-Haul, friends, LA’s ready supply of day laborers, and my own unpacking/cleaning stamina, I managed to find a place in 2-3 days, move a bit less than a week later, get the heavy lifting part of the move done in 2.5 hours, and completely unpack/firebomb-level clean in 30 hrs, all for a bit under $150 (including cleaning supplies). I think I am getting a little too good at this.

The new pad is a central-city 1930s Storybook cottage. Living room, formal dining, kitchen, extra room off the kitchen that is solid windows (breakfast nook, maybe? Someone stop me before it becomes a greenhouse), utility room, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, huge backyard and a garage already converted to a workshop. Tons of windows, great light, fairy tale accents, vaulted, wood-plank ceiling, and oddly shaped doorways. I am (not so slowly) filling it with plants. It feels really nice to be in a house again after so many years in apartments and condos. My first place out of college was a classic Pasadena bungalow. This has some of the same feeling, only much, much larger (and without the bizarre accents of the former).

All boxes and suitcases are now unpacked and stowed, and the place has had a thorough, solid scrub. Rugs and art for the walls are still pretty desperately needed, but for now, it’s just good to be home again.

Personal02 Jul 2007 04:13 pm

I have mellowed a lot since 2000, when election night saw me burning Bush/Cheney yard signs in the courtyard of my college dorm. I have stopped arguing with family and friends who are Republican. I have tried to see other points of view, though my own views haven’t changed at all. I have stopped yelling things like “Blood on your hands!” to people I know and love with the confusion and outrage that is perhaps only possible in the too-young and too-educated demographic. I have tried and come a long way towards forgiving and understanding the people I respect and love who inexplicably put this administration in power with the best of intentions.

But Bush’s pardon of Scooter Libby this afternoon just brings much of that outrage and confusion back to the forefront. I can attempt to joke, but I know if I say anything outloud right now, it’ll be with a sharp Texas twang that only surfaces when I’m furious. And I am furious. We all should be. We’re losing the war at home, people.

Bush Commutes Libby’s Prison Sentence - The CNN Article.

WASHINGTON (CNN) — President Bush has commuted the prison term of former White House aide I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, facing 30 months in prison after a federal court convicted him of perjury, obstruction of justice and lying to investigators.

Earlier Monday, a federal appeals court unanimously ruled that Libby could not delay his sentence.

The charges relate to the 2003 leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame’s identity.

Libby was only weeks away from surrendering to a prison.

Bush was under great pressure by Libby allies to pardon the former chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney.

In a written statement issued hours after that ruling, Bush called the sentence “excessive.” But he also rejected calls for a pardon for Libby.

“The consequences of his felony conviction on his former life as a lawyer, public servant, and private citizen will be long-lasting,” Bush said.

But he said Libby was given “a harsh sentence based in part on allegations never presented to the jury.”

Libby was the highest-ranking White House official ordered to prison since the Iran-Contra affair.

The conviction remains on Libby’s record and he still has to pay a $250,000 fine.

Commutations are rarely granted, says CNN’s chief legal analyst, Jeffrey Toobin. A commutation is a total right of the president and it cannot be challenged by any attorney or court, he said.

Once again, I’m wishing we had Molly Ivins’ wit to see us through this one.

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