Thursday, December 20, 2007

Smells like a new blog

New Blog smell isn't exactly a new car smell or something equally noticeable, but it's still new.
It's been awhile since I've been on the ol' bloggy, so I decided to update my tens of readers before I left on my highfalutin (or however you spell that) vacation.
My family and I leave for Hawaii tomorrow (an 8.5 hour flight from Minneapolis to Honolulu) to go on an island cruise! We're stopping at all the main islands, and I have no idea right now how many there actually are, but there's a bunch. We're going on the cruise with my mom's extended family, so my aunts and uncles and one set of grandparents and all those type people. All in all we'll add up to 23 people.
Now, I've never been on a cruise, so I have no idea what to expect. We may be doing the shuffleboard-Vegas-show-old-people-Branson-on-a-boat type things (I hope not), or we may just hang around the pool-within-the-bigger-pool-known-as-the-ocean until we're sunburnt and fat on free cruise food. I don't know yet. I do know that we'll be doing all the touristy type stuff like this shop and that volcano park, but I don't know exactly what each off-boat excursion will entail.
I do know one thing about the trip: I have about a 1000-1500 limit on the pictures I can take, and I plan on getting as close to that as humanly possible. That very well may be filling up my already almost-full hard drive.

In other news, I'm home! I've finished my first semester of my junior year at KU, and hopefully only have 3 more to go, barring any unforeseen catastrophe. Next semester I'll be taking the last of my non-journalism classes. I will also be working for the student paper as a reporter for a class, so I can get experience and class credit, all in one. I'll also be taking some other classes, but I can't remember them at all right now. I'll check on that once I get back to Lawrence sometime in January.
Ah, to be a young, carefree college kid. (insert scoff here)

For those tens of you that read my blog but don't know my mother, she has also started a blog (in an effort to become hip and cool and cool and hip and all up ons) called Just Enough Light. You should all check it out.

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Now playing: Hans Zimmer - Hunger
via FoxyTunes

Monday, September 10, 2007

New Photo Site!

Since Google is taking over the world, I decided to help them out. I'm now using Picasa Web Albums to post my pictures online instead of Photobucket. It's a lot easier, and it's integrated with Picasa.
I've just put a bunch up from this past year, and a bunch from Navigator events. Enjoy!

One Free Night A Week.

Hence the lack of blog posts. Monday I lead a Bible Study, Tuesday I have leadership team for Navs, Wednesday I have music practice for Nav Night, Thursday I have Nav Night, and Friday night I am free (hear that, ladies? Hehe). That....and I really haven't made time for it.
*Ashamed Face*
Life has been going good here at KU. It's much easier to get into the swing of things once you've already done it twice. Classes are going good for the most part. My Western Civ class is a LOT of reading (including some wonderful *snore* Plato), but kinda interesting. My Political Theory class....well....let's just say that no other human should have to take a class from this goofball. He's a big fancy-schmancy pants from Rutgers who's "used to 90 minute classes" and "can't repeat sentences. I don't have a replay button." He thinks he's all that and a can of worms, so when he lectures, it's just a bunch of big words and ramblings to make himself sound smart. He actually lectures straight out of the text (with a few pointless long ramblings), so I know what he's trying to talk about. He actually used the word pejorative about 4 times the first class period. My photojournalism class is going really well. The prof is the photo editor at the KC Star, so he really knows his stuff. He's funny, he's informative, and he actually helps all of us figure out our cameras. For instance, he taught us how to take pictures in Manual with no flash, just by adjusting the aperture and shutter speed according to what the light meter says. If that made sense to you, mad props. If it didn't, don't worry. It didn't until two weeks ago for me. My child psych class is really interesting, and I am looking forward to learning lotsa stuff to help me parent, if/when that ever happens. I also get to sit next to a girl from Navs who's a lot of fun to talk to during class. She already took a developmental psych class last year, so she usually spends the time studying for other classes. She's fun, though. I'm also taking an editing class that has so far been a bunch of practice. Which is good, because I can already see a difference in my editing capabilities.
Aside from classes and my full night schedule....hmmm. My roommates and I all pitched in 5 bucks a month and got Netflix, which has been a lot of fun. We all have a list of movies that we've never seen and want to, and now we can! For a heckuva lot cheaper than Hasting's or Blockbuster.
I've done worship once so far at Christ Community, and it was Maggie's inaugural worship experience there. She did well. I'm up next week, too.
And now, as I am sitting in the Budig computer lab listening to "Live and Let Die" by Paul McCartney and the Wings, sipping my Full Throttle Unnecessarily Large Energy Drink, I must leave again. Western Civ beckons to me from Wescoe 3140. Weee.



















Here's a great video of one my new favorite artists, Damien Rice. The song is called "Volcano."

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Back in the Saddle again...kind of


Well, I'm back in Lawrence now. Have been since Monday, but just haven't gotten around to blogging yet.
I left Hutchinson after church on the 12th, and after Maggie's (my newest guitar) worship team debut, and drove 4 hours to Ames, Iowa, where I have family. They weren't actually there, but I was able to use their house to sleep in, which was very nice. They actually had a plaster tree built into the side of the wall. (see picture)
yeah. Don't really know what the point of that was.
Anyways...after a night there, I drove the remaining 4 hours to Lawrence. Driving for the most part went okay...it just got really tiring really fast. I had my iPod hooked up to an FM transmitter so I could listen to it on my stereo. The only big cities I had to drive through were Des Moines and KC, and both weren't too bad. Lawrence traffic was, and is, by far the worst. Most major roads are four lane, and a huge percentage of the drivers are college students.
Which, by stereotype, aren't exactly the best drivers (I'm only guilty sometimes).
Classes started on Thursday, but I've only had one. The two others I have scheduled are discussion sections for lectures I haven't had yet. The one I did have was Child Psych, which looks very interesting.
Other than that one class (busy, I know), I've been running errands, buying cables to get various electronics in the room working, eating at Sonic again (for the first time in a long time today! Yummmm!), and seeing old buddies. I'm actually going to "The Bourne Ultimatum" again tonight with some of them. Wooohoo!
The room's pretty nice. I'm on the sixth floor in something called the Jayhawker Towers now, or just the Towers. They used to be private apartments, but the university bought them a while back and now they're university-operated apartments. We have a very small kitchen, and a pretty good-sized living room. I like it.
My window I'm right next to right now is a little creepy...There's four Towers (A-D), and they all face a central courtyard. My window faces the courtyard, and therefore looks into a buncha other rooms, too. That's why they have blinds.
Well....that's about it for the Lawrence news. Be sure to check back for more excitement!







PHOTO BONUS:
The New Hairstyle!

Thursday, August 02, 2007

My Summer (sans 3M and pre KU)

Well, since the last post was a feature on where most of my summer has been taking place, here's what I'm doing when I'm not at 3M. Only a few more days up in the FWOM* until I go back to Lawrence!

On the weekends, I've been hanging out with my friend Jeremy a bunch. We usually just watch movies and talk (or rather, he talks and I listen) and take the occasional road trip (we went to St. Cloud so I could help him buy a camera. Since I'm like a camera expert or something). We've been friends since halfway through 9th grade, or the beginning of 10th grade...but that's besides the point. We've been friends for a long time.

During the week, I usually meet with my pastor Dan Moose (yes, funny name I know). We're going through the book of Nehemiah so I can begin to grow as a spiritual leader. I'm really excited about what I've learned, and I know that God will present multiple opportunities to test it out. Nehemiah was the governor of Judah right after the Jews got out of exile, and he took it upon himself to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem.

I'm also a part of the Joshua Team next year at KU which is a leadership training thingymabob for Navs. I'm pumped to see what God has planned.

I've also made a new friend! Zach Meyer is the new youth leader at our church who also works at HTI, or as he calls it, "The Company." He's [age], and a lot of fun to hang around with. Not to mention he actually gets and laughs at most of my jokes. I think there's probably 4 or 5 people in the world who do that. My sister and dad just look at me funny most of the time. Shoutout to Mom for thinking I'm funny!

I am now the proud owner of my fourth guitar! I bought an acoustic-electric Martin DCX1E about a month ago, and it rocks! I keep it next to my bed just in case inspiration strikes suddenly, which it often does. I've been playing a lot of bluesy-jazz-make-it-up-as-I-go stuff, as well as some Damien Rice.

When I went to St. Cloud with Jeremy, I also bought a new external flash for my Olympus E-330. I got drafted to take photos at a friend's wedding this fall, so I figured I might as well be all fancy and whatnot.


I've seen a few good flicks this summer as well. "The Bourne Ultimatum" was absolutely incredible. It was better than the first two, crisp, gritty, and full of fight scences and car chases that made you go "Ooooo! That had to hurt!" Plus, it has the ominous-sounding line "Activate the asset."

Creeeepy.

I also saw the third Shrek movie (snore, with a few funny parts thrown in) and the third Pirates movie, "At World's End." I thought it was a good ending to the series (although they did leave it open for more...oh Disney), with a lot of great action and hilarious Captain Jack moments.

Overall, this summer was a lot of fun, despite the work that sucked my life up. I'll miss everyone back in Hutch this school year, especially my awesome family.

I love you guys! Thanks for being a great family to come home to.




*Frozen Wastelands Of Minnesota. Applies 9-10 months out of the year.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

The Story of The Temp, Mr. Guy Who Talks Like Dan Akroyd, Mr. Oops, and Mr. Mumbles

Well....this isn't really going to be an actual STORY. Sorry. Those are just the people that I've spent a majority of the summer with at 3M. Since I haven't written in the ol' blog lately, I thought I'd liven things up a bit with a different kind of post.

If you haven't figured it out yet, I'm The Temp. I'm one of 4 in my area of 3M (HPT Converting for those 2.5 of you who speak 3Mese), and we basically get the shaft while on our short stays here. Oh well. We do need money, right? Anyways, I'm going to be done being The Temp on the 10th, which means (hopefully) eight more days of work, counting this one. Whew.

Now on to the other characters. Mr. Guy Who Talks Like Dan Akroyd (let's call him Mr. Gwtlda) is somehow the self-appointed leader of the bunch. And seriously, he sounds almost exactly like Dan Akroyd in The Blues Brothers.
"You want I should clean the dead bugs off your windshield?"
Yup.

Mr. Oops is the nicest of the bunch. He has a daughter that just graduated, and he works really hard, but sometimes he just makes mistakes that make ya wonder where his mind was. Mr. Gwtlda gets very angry at Mr. Oops sometimes.

Mr. Mumbles is my favorite to work with. He doesn't get all pissy like Mr. Gwtlda, and he doesn't make big mistakes like Mr. Oops. He's been here for something like 17 years, knows exactly what he's doing, and is pleasant to talk to when he isn't being a creepy old pervert (Mr. Mumbles and Mr. Gwtlda share this affinty). The only problem is that about 50% of the time, I have no clue what the heck he's saying. Oh well. He thinks he's funny.

And there you have it. Of course, we have many supporting characters, like Creepy Old Ladies 1-7, Mrs. Extremely Loud Cackle, Sarge the Supervisor, and the list continues. I will definitely (read=not definitely) miss it here.
The money has been good, and will be good, considering I'll be driving in Lawrence this school year, and gas tends to cost money.
Unless you've got extra arms and legs to give to the employees at Holiday. I don't know if they actually take them, though.
Might be something to try later...*strokes chin*

Friday, June 08, 2007

Gettin POLITICAL all up in dis

Yes, political ghetto-speak. It should be used more often.

Anywho...here I am at the last break of yet another 8-hour stint at the 3M. Decided to get a little political in this post, seeing as a few things have been brought to my attention.

Which brings me to my first point: there are some things that are brought to my attention that I really don't feel like having to pay attention to. In other words, I don't stinking care.
Case in point: the whole stupid Paris Hilton thing.

Facts?
-drove drunk.
-got arrested(or whatever it is they do to celebrities....foam handcuffs?).
-got license suspended.
-drove twice while license suspended(took legal advice from her publicist).
-got sentenced to serve 45 days in jail.
-served three, and then was released to "house arrest" (meaning: "You're in trouble...Go to your private Disneyland RIGHT NOW!").
-judge got mad and made her serve the whole sentence.
-Paris started to scream and cry.

My take?

Holy crap, people. Worldwide, people who got arrested for driving with a suspended license are all asking their TVs the same thing:
"Where's my small army of paparazzi and helicopters?!?"

She should just have to serve her sentence just like any other bum who drove drunk and then on a suspended license. No whining, no "medical condition." Besides, I wasn't ever aware that whining and complaining qualified as medical.


The other thing that was brought to my attention was a response to an article I wrote in the Leader. First off, it wasn't an opinion piece. It wasn't really even me. It was simply a reaction piece of business owners on a smoking ban that just went into effect here in Hutch. The ban applies to all public places and requires that smokers must stand at least 15 feet away from entrances, lest they face a $300 fine and a petty misdemeanor charge. Anyways...this person started the email saying that there were things about liberty that I "did not learn in school." This person then went on to say that whenever the state is used to accomplish a goal, it is considered force. This person then gives the example of property tax, and says that if you don't pay it, you will eventually be killed.
Not really, though. The person said that if you don't follow the law, you will eventually be killed, but that argument was juxtaposed with the property tax example, making it rather interesting.
The person then goes on to give this account:

"
Think about the smoking ban for instance, we have now given the police
the power to throw someone in jail because they smoked a cigarette in
their own property. If this person refuses to stop smoking the police
will eventually have to remove him or her from THEIR property. This
does not sound like the land of the free to me."


Alrighty then, let's get started.

First of all, what didn't I learn about liberty? I, unlike this person, have lived in a country with significantly less liberty than America (Singapore, for three years, cuz my Dad works for 3M). I know about liberty. I couldn't be prouder to be an American, and I thank God on an almost daily basis that He has given me the great privilege to live and serve Him in this great country. The Singaporean government works extremely well, with crime being lower than low, and most street being clean. Sure, you can't sell/buy gum there, sure, the newspaper is probably regulated a little bit, and sure, you get deported for possession of pot and executed for possession of cocaine and heroin. But those freedoms were sacrificed by the Singapore people, and their country is and has been a rising star in the global economic and social sense. I'm not saying we should start offing coke fiends right and left, but some "freedoms" may have to be sacrificed to have true, protected liberty.

Secondly, when the "State" causes something to happen, (now read this carefully), it's doing what it's supposed to be doing. What is a government for, if not to do things in the best interest of itself and it's people? Since when is using force a bad thing? If it weren't for force, the Israelites would have been wiped out by it's many enemies in Biblical times, Germany would have stomped all over the world (and then would have most likely pulled a "Fall of the Roman Empire" Part II), and a drug dealer who pulled a gun on a cop would still be in the streets killing people with guns and drugs instead of dead or in jail. Force may be unpleasant at times, (Iraq, anyone?) but it is completely and utterly necessary.

Thirdly, the property tax example was flawed. This person based it on religious principles, which property tax has nothing at all to do with. Property tax is where cities get a lot of their money, and without that money, sewers, streets, lightpoles, and even water systems would not get maintained.

Fourthly (is that even a word?), this person got the smoking ban totally and utterly wrong. It is illegal to smoke in restaurants, bars, clubs, bowling alleys, newspapers, salons, theaters, and any other public building. If someone owns a property like those and smokes on it, they face the same fine and petty misdemeanor charge that any other person would get. To say that a person can be forcibly removed from their living room for lighting up is completely ludicrous. That isn't even remotely enforceable. A person can smoke on private property, no problem.

Which brings me to my last point here on this rant: The smoking ban is a good thing. Don't you dare give me the whole slippery slope theory, saying that next we can't smoke on private property, and then cigarettes will be totally illegal (my response to that by the way: so?). The slippery slope theory is ridiculous. Think I'm wrong? Show me one example of the slippery slope theory being proved, and I might reconsider.
Anyways, banning smoking is a wonderful idea. Sure, the three bars in town may lose a little bit of their Friday night farmer regulars, but those numbers will be made up by the families who can now enjoy a smoke-free, choke-free dinner.

To wrap things up, the law is a necessary thing. Without it, we'd have anarchy and total chaos. Sure, people would be "free to do what they want," but at what cost? If Hannibal Lecter were free to do whatever the heck he felt like, he'd gorge himself on human livers.

Some freedoms must be sacrificed in order to obtain a truly free and secure society.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

The Work Blog

Yes, that's about all I've been doing this summer so far. I'm actually writing this post while on breaks at 3M.

For those of you not in the know (the tens of people who probably read this), I am interning at the Hutchinson Leader for the first four weeks from 8am until noon. I have a week left on that. It has been an awesome experience. I'm working for a real life newpaper! Sure, my workload may be somewhat lesser than the other reporters there, but I still do a buncha stuff. I've proofread, ran errands, snapped hundreds of pics (a lot of which will be up here when my computer's back in commission, see below*), and of course written a buncha stories. I'll post those all up here when I'm done there, too. This has really taught me what it's like to work for a real paper (writing 3 opinion articles really doesn't count that much), and it'll look great on the resume.

On the not so much fun end of things, I'm also working fulltime at the 3M plant here (for those 2 of you who have been living in a cave, 3M makes Scotch tape, Post-its, etc.) from 3pm until 11pm. For some reason, they call that the "afternoon" shift, but it basically eats up your entire life.
At least I still have Saturdays.
I'll describe what I do in tomorrow's post.


*Computer Note: A week before finals were done, I accidentally downloaded a virus which promptly froze my computer and didn't let it boot. I sat on it for a week (figurtively, not literally), and then brought it home and promptly did nothing. Work, you see, kills time like no other. Finally, at the beginning of this week (it seems oh so very long ago...), I took it to a business computer place here in town. They worked on it a few days and then called me last night to let me know they were having troubles burning the 30 GIGABITES of data to DVDs. Allow me to explain. I have 10 gigs of music, yes. But not 20 gigs of Word documents and pictures. That is an exhorbitant amount. I had put about 15-20 gigs worth of movies onto my hard drive to put on my iPod, and forgot to tell the guys to disregard them. Oops. So I went to Target today, bought a 320gig hard drive, and dropped it off at the place. Hopefully, I will have a blank computer tomorrow, so I reinstall the OS, scoot all my documents and pics over to my laptop, and be back in action!
Also, we now have WiFi in our house, so I can BLOG FROM MY BEDROOM!
HOLY CRAP!
hehe.


Well, I have about 10 minutes left in this break. Then it's back to work for another hour, then it's TV for 30-40 minutes, then it's sleep till 7am.

Thank God I don't really have a social life.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Kansan Article #3: The Pointlessness of Flyers

Here's my last published article for this year, folks! Enjoy!

Fliers are as much a part of campus life as cramming for tests and 3 a.m. fire alarms. When they’re pinned up on bulletin boards or featured on Web sites, they don’t really cause a problem. It is only when they are passed out to students on campus that there are problems.

Some students just ignore the fliers and walk past the advertisers, often creating awkward situations for both parties. Some take them only to throw them away shortly thereafter. Campus is littered daily with discarded fliers and inserts and someone has to pick them all up.

Doug Riat, University of Kansas Facilities Operations Director, said that fliers are a hassle for his crews to pick up every day. Advertising inserts in the Kansan are to blame as well. His employees have a daily routine of picking up fliers and Kansan inserts, which he says are mainly dropped by students on accident, flying out of the paper when it’s picked up.

Fliers are useless. Handing someone a piece of paper on campus creates the same effect as tossing a bunch on the ground. Sure people have a Constitutional right to free speech — which is why you’re reading this right now. People also have a right and a duty to help keep our environment clean.

If you want people to actually read your ads and not just litter, then post a few on bulletin boards next to the other things that students are selling. When students want a cheap car or stereo or want to know about upcoming events, they look at the bulletin boards. If you really want to advertise something, put it in the classifieds.

Even consider Facebook fliers, eBay, Cars.com, Craig’s List, and the myriad advertising Web sites out there. The people who visit these Web sites are looking for something specific, so they really care about what you’re selling.

The sheer amount of traffic generated by those websites is amazing. According to statbrain.com, Facebook gets around 4.5 million hits per day, Cars.com gets 1.5 million, Craig’s List gets 5.6 million, and eBay gets a jaw-dropping 8.6 million.

The litter and annoyance created by fliers isn’t worth the possible effect of changing someone’s thinking. Especially when there are such great online opportunities.

But inevitably, fliers will continue to litter our campus. When someone hands you a flier, don’t just throw it on the ground. Consider reading the flier and then throw it away in a nearby trash can or recycling bin. Don’t use the excuse that you couldn’t find one. Trash cans on this campus are as innumerable as filled parking spaces. You’ll save the maintenance crews a lot of work by just recycling the fliers, or better yet, by not handing any out at all. Go for eBay.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Photo #29


The weird snakey bridge thing at Millenium Park in Chicago.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Kansan Article #2: The Stupidness of Celebrity Worship

Here's my second article published in the UDK. My third one got bumped from this Friday's paper, so it will be up on here next week sometime. Enjoy!

I know everyone’s sick of hearing about Anna Nicole Smith and her babies and her old dead husbands. I roll my eyes and growl at Court TV and CNN whenever her name pops up. Forgive me if I’m adding to the noise.

I hope my noise is different sounding.

Some students are obsessed with other people’s lives. These kinds of students (who love the gossip magazines and things like that) aren’t satisfied with just living his/her own life and being concerned with actual people and events that affect the world. Instead, our society is obsessed with knowing what kind of purse so-and-so has. Real life is taking a back seat to fantasy.

Sure, watching the “E!” channel and picking up the gossip rags in the grocery store checkout line may seem harmless, but it hides something deeper, something darker. Because these “celebrity-chasing” students don’t care about their own lives, they are causing two terrible things to happen.

First, they are forcing the journalism world to cover worthless stories like what party Kanye West attended. Journalists are supposed to seek the truth and report it. Celebrity-chasers are forcing journalists to seek out information about celebrities that very well may be true, but not important in the least bit. The important truth is things like the genocide going on in Darfur and what the city council decided at its last meeting. The important truth is things like why China wants to get rid of Starbucks and why John Doe opened up that new deli down the street. The important truth is not what kind of shampoo Jessica Simpson uses.

Secondly, celebrity-chasers are forcing themselves to disconnect with the very world they live in. The AP wire on any given day has three or four headlines about problems in the Middle-East and other news, and then is filled with stories of this party and that DUI. Celebrity-chasers, by being interested in every little thing that celebrities do, are making themselves dumber. These students don’t pay attention to the real news, the news that actually affects the way they live. They live a fantasy life vicariously. They live their lives through the lives of celebrities.

Students need to wake up. We shouldn’t care about the mundane details of people we’ll never meet. We need to care about the events that affect our world. We need to pay attention to what businesses are doing well, what the situation in Iraq is like, and what we as citizens can do about the problems in our world. Sure, those famous people provide us with entertainment, but that’s what iTunes and the movie theaters are for. Let’s not let celebrities distract us from the importance of living in this crazy world.

Instead of watching Laguna Beach and E! in all your free time, watch CNN in the mornings to get the headlines. As you go to lunch or class, pick up the Kansan or one of the four free papers available for students (The New York Times, The Kansas City Star, The Lawrence Journal-World, and USA Today). If we start getting connected to the world, we will know more about our surroundings and therefore be able to affect the world around us for the better.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Photo #28

Part of the Chicago Skyline via the Bean

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Kansan Article #1: The Snootiness Of Apple

First in a series of my three articles published in the University Daily Kansan:

If people from the 1950s saw a picture of a modern-day crowd, they would wonder why so many people had pieces of white spaghetti hanging out of their ears. If a modern-day person told them that it was a device for listening to days of music made by a company named after a fruit, the people would most likely think the modern person was insane. Apple has infiltrated our society with the Mac, the iPod, and now even the iPhone. Apple also has a reputation for being the snooty members of the technology world, with its iPod-only music format and its fancy Apple-exclusive stores. When all other big companies like Microsoft, Sony, and Panasonic unveil new electronic gadgets at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Apple has Macworld in San Francisco, its own conference for all things Apple, and incidentally held at the same exact time.

Since Apple has gone from computers to music to phones, and since it has quite the ego, it’s only a matter of time before the company starts branching out. Here are some products to expect in the next few years.

The iPillow! It comes in six different colors, all bearing the Apple logo in the center. It also, of course, works with your iPod so you can listen to music as you sleep. It will also work with your iPhone, so you don’t have to even move to be awakened by the phone. Since it is an Apple product, and since Apple is notorious for having its products only work with other Apple products, it won’t work with Microsoft-related positions like sleeping on your back or stomach. You will have to sleep in the Apple-copyrighted/protected position on your side. One night’s sleep will only cost 99 cents.

Next up is the iLaundrybasket. It has the standard sleek white and silver finish, with the Apple logo on the bottom, of course. The regular version will hold about 700 socks, but if you buy the bigger version, it can hold up to 10,000 socks. It also works with your iPod and iPhone, of course, so you can listen to music and take phone calls as you are carrying your laundry. It will not be compatible with any clothes bought at Wal-Mart, Target, any thrift stores, or Old Navy, however. After all, it is an Apple product. It has to look good.

The iBookbag is next. The six different colors are standard, of course. The standard version will hold about 1000 books, and the expanded version will hold up to 20000. But the bag will only carry Apple-endorsed books designed on Apple computers and written by iPod or iPhone-owning professors and professionals. The bag will come with wireless headphones (white, of course) and a microphone, so you can talk to people on the iPhone discreetly while looking like a crazy person to the rest of the world. But of course, since it’s Apple, it would be cool. Not crazy.

On the smaller end of the scale is the amazing iPencil. The pencil will only come in the classic white and silver finish and will have a writing life of up to one month for consistent users. The iPencil will only write on the also up-and-coming iPaper (available only at Apple stores) which will only cost 99 cents per sheet.

These products might be a little hard to find in stores. If Apple wants to continue its amazing sales, it will probably have to end up embracing the other members of the technology world. They will have to go to the same conferences (gasp!) and even make their products compatible with other brands of electronics. In fact, Apple’s computers now run Microsoft Office software, so it is only a matter of time before Apple has to come down from its pedestal to mingle with the commoners in the other aspects of the technology world. The only problem is that Apple is far too snooty to mingle unless money is on the line.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

A flicker of light at the end? Or just my head...

I've been noticing that things are maybe....just maybe...winding down here. I am getting more and more papers and projects that are due in the next few weeks, which in turn will spill out into finals.
Almost halfway done! Woo!
I'm going to turn in my final Kansan piece tomorrow. Once that gets published on Friday, I'll be putting all three of them (I know, big number) up on here for you all to read.
I also just bought some groceries tonight. Twas a glorious occasion. Soup in a can, peanut butter and jelly ingredients, crackers, and the ever-craved OJ. I shall eat well and not be mooching off my roomies for a while.
For those of you who don't know, I'll be living in the sort-of apartments on campus next year called the Towers. I just know I'll be in Tower C, and I know one of the three other guys from Navs. That's about all I know for now.
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Moving on to some current events stuff:
I was watching something on the ABC podcast, and someone was interviewing somebody else about the VTech shooting yesterday. Whoever was asking the questions was asking, in a very accusatory tone, why campus wasn't locked down and why there was so little security around the campus.
Allow me to answer.
It's a campus. If you put a wall and metal detectors around a campus, it become a prison or something. A campus is supposed to be open. That's one of the main reasons I didn't go to the University of Minnesota in the Twin Cities. That campus is not open at all.
As for the lockdown thing...good grief people. It's a college campus, not a high school (which they still have problems "locking down.") These news idiots filling the day with the same loop of information cuz they can't find any more available news ot report need to stop and think about the questions they're asking.
Alrighty. That's just my two cents.
Back to the fun fun polysci paper due on thursday. If you all want to know, it's about what the United States role should be in internati----
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And everyone fell asleep.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

What a week....

It seems like everything is due this week and next week. I had a journalism project due on Friday, which I barely finished on time. I also had an opinion piece due for the Kansan, which I finished a half-hour past deadline (my editor said it was okay. whew!) I had to read a really interesting book called "With The Old Breed" by a guy named E.B. Sledge. It's a memoir of a guy who fought in WWII in the Pacific. It was really interesting, but the fact that I had to read it so fast made it somewhat less enjoyable.
For next week, I have story proposals for my final journalism project, a newsroom shift (where I have to go either film or audio tape something for TV/radio stations on campus), a book report, and a polysci paper due.
I think it'll let up for a while after next thursday, thankfully.
A few more weeks and it'll all be over.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Photo #27


Chicago and the Bean

Monday, April 09, 2007

Enrolled!

I have enrolled for the fifth time here at KU, and for the first time without Russian. Time certainly flies when you grow up.
Here's what I'm taking:
Multimedia Editing: no idea what this is. I was supposed to take it with my multimedia reporting this semester, but it interfered with Russian.

Photojournalism: I wanted to take it this year, but Russian interfered.

Intro to Political Theory: Sounds boring, I know. I think it looks kinda interesting, and then I'll be done with all my Polysci courses.

Western Civ: A class that basically every student has to take at KU. Heard it's easy, heard it's hard. Guess I'll find out soon enough!

Child Psychology: so I can have some semblance of a clue when/if I have kids.

I'm also technically enrolled in an internship class, even though the internship is for the first four weeks of the summer and then I'm done.

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Photo #26


My Family via The Bean in Millennium Park!

Friday, April 06, 2007

Yeah.

I realize it's been...well...forever. It's been a crazy busy couple of months. I won't go into full details, but I had plenty of things distracting me from the ol' blog.
But now, hopefully, I'm back!

Let's see...what have you all missed....

I bought a brand-new camera with some Christmas money! It's an Olympus E-330, and it's pretty sweet. It's a digital SLR, which means it has every feature a 35mm film camera has, and then some. I can change the lenses on it and all that kind of stuff. When my family and I went to Chicago for spring break, it got quite a testing. I took around 300 pictures with it...yikes! It is a lot of fun to play with.

I turned 20 on March 26th! I am now no longer a teenager! For the first time in a while, my birthday didn't actually fall on spring break week, so my family and I celebrated my birthday in Minnesota a few days before. I got some awesome gifts, including a wireless remote for my camera, some great CDs, and a card to join the Apple cult (in other words, an iPod).

School's been amazingly busy. I'm in my last semester of Russian, so things are finally winding down for that. The journalism class I'm taking is an unbelievable amount of work. I have had to 4 or 5 big stories (which is always more work than it sounds like). The links to all those can be found down below, along with some pictures and other fun stuff.

Well...I will definitely be trying to keep up with this thing now that someone has requested it (mom).
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Here's some links:
My J415 work: http://reporting.journalism.ku.edu/spring07/kuhr-volek/caleb_sommerville/
1st set of Chicago Pictures: http://ku.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2126984&l=f219d&id=16822725
2nd set of Chicago Pictures:
http://ku.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2127958&l=c4b5c&id=16822725
First Pictures with new camera:
http://ku.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2121264&l=ee3e8&id=16822725
ManMaker Conference Pictures: http://ku.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2123278&id=16822725
Trash Smash (a game at ManMaker) Pictures: http://ku.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2123282&id=16822725

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Photo #25


Megan playing the piano.
Posted by Picasa

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Christmas Break

Sorry it's been so long between posts, folks. I guess doing nothing all break really sucked up a lot of my time.
Not.
Well, I'm back in Lawrence after a wonderful Christmas break from school. I spent all but three days of it in Minnesota (those three were spent with extended families in Iowa), and I had a blast!
I really didn't do a whole lot over break, but I will attempt to find some things of note.
My mother purchased a brand-new sewing machine over break, so that was her new toy to play with, and she even got to fix a mysterious hole in my dress shirt.
I received my first suit for Christmas and went up to St. Cloud to pick one out and get it fitted and all that jazz. Kayla came up with us to give her opinion and to spend time with my scary family. I then wore the suit on a date with Kayla to Pizza Hut to celebrate our 4th year together. Our anniversary is actually February 14th, but because I'm going to KU and she's going to UND up in Grand Forks, North Dakota, that makes things a tad difficult to arrange.
I also received a Chia Pet from my parents (since my sister has been whining about her deprived childhood of zero pets), which I actually began to work on today. It's actually a complicated process for such a....strange thing.
Kayla gave me a book called "Comes A Horseman" by one Robert Liparulo. It's the same kind of style as Ted Dekker or Frank Peretti, which we both really like. The book was very strange. Strange on a level with Dekker's and Peretti's collaboration, titled "House." Both are very strange and make you really think about spiritual and even ethical topics. Liparulo's book delves into the coming of the Antichrist and what circumstances could surround that event in the future. I would highly recommend both.
I came back to Lawrence a few days early to attend various meetings concerning my new job as a guest columnist with the newspaper on campus, the University Daily Kansan. So far, I am only going to printed for sure twice, once in March and once in April. But, since the job description mentioned something about filling in when another column can't run, I might be able to get printed a few more times. Who knows? I already have one piece written up for them: a satire piece against Apple Inc. I pointed out their incredible snootyness (sp?) and made up a few new products for them, like the iPillow, the iPencil, and of course, the iLaundrybasket. If it gets printed, I will be sure to let you all know via blog.
Well, I believe that catches us up to today. If I forget anything, please don't hesitate to add!
Sorry about the gap!

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