Delicious Library Is Once Again My Favorite Mac App

It’s been a while since I gushed fanboy-style about something related to Macs and Apple.  This should make up for that.

I just finally sprung for the $20 upgrade to Delicious Library 2.  Delicious Library has always been one of my favorite apps for the Mac.  It was one of those apps that you pull out just to demo to your PC Friends so they can drool and wish they had Macs.  In a nutshell, it uses the built-in iSight camera to scan UPCs off your media items and catalog them.  It doesn’t stop there, though, it also pulls GOBS of data from online sources about your items (including synopses, ratings–i.e. the “star” kind–used value, and much more.  DL2 came out a few months ago, but I just hadn’t bothered to upgrade yet.  Today, I decided to scan a few items I’d acquired in the last couple months and said, what the heck, let’s upgrade.

Well, in version two, they added an awesome way to publish your whole library for the world.  You can publish via a variety of avenues (I’m using FTP) and it creates a whole “website” for your media catalog!  So, don’t laugh too much at my tastes and remember that a lot of this belongs to my wife and my 3 year-old.  Also, I didn’t spend any time cleaning up the iTunes stuff–it automatically pulled out a lot of “junk” that’s been hanging around in my iTunes Library for a long time.  I’ll get around to cleaning it up eventually.  I also need to spend some serious time scanning books since I have a LOT of those to get in my library!

http://www.forwheelers.net/media/

Totally awesome!

The American Public are Directly Paying to Bail Out Banks

Don’t believe me?  Check out this article.  “Wait!” you say. “That sounds like good news.”

Here’s the part that proves my point:

The dollar was mostly lower against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

That means your dollar now buys less than it did yesterday.  How is that different from the government just taking a portion of your dollar and calling it a tax?

So, is it nice that the DJIA rose almost 400 points?  On the surface.  The problem is as the government continues to stabilize banks and claim it’s not costing the American people anything, our dollar continues to fall.  That 3-5% raise you hope for at the end of the year–it probably won’t even cover inflation.  The government continues to lie to the American people and continues to inflate our dollar to pay for things they should not be doing.

I need to go–I hear black helicopters.

Family Days

We were on-the-go a lot yesterday.  Kayla was invited to a friend’s “bring a friend” soccer class, I had to be in Marietta at the same time for a few hours, then we had a Parent’s Night Out for Kayla at her school and had a friend watch Rebekah for us so we could get a few hours of peace.  We went to see Quantum of Solace and had a nice, quiet dinner.

So, today, we’ve just been enjoying a “family day” here at home all morning.  It’s nice to just slow down, sit around the house, watch a movie, color, drink coffee all morning, etc. once in a while.

We’ll get back to the church search next week, for today, I’m enjoying a Family Day at home with my girls.

Early Voting’s New Fan

Me.  That’s right. Thanks in part to media hype, early voting turnout was ridiculously high.  People stood in lines for 3 and 4 hours just to early vote.  Not me.  I said all along that with 100x the number of voting machines and dozens more locations to vote, November 4 would not be very crowded.

This morning, my wife and I got the kids all set and headed off about 9:05 to vote–figuring that the initial crowds would have died down by then.  It was even better than I thought.  We walked right in, walked right up to each station, and walked right up to machines.  Seriously, we were out in 10 minutes.

So, a big “thank you” to all the people who stood in line for hours to early vote so that I could walk right in and out on November 4!

Also, it felt really good to finally vote for people I could believe in rather than the “lesser of two evils.”

Do I Care?

Well, somewhat.  Honestly, this is the least I’ve been excited about a Presidential election, well, ever.

At this point, I’m still trying to decide whether I’ll vote for Bob Barr (who has the most likelyhood of winning out of any third party candidate) or Chuck Baldwin (who I agree with slightly more than Bob Barr).  Wait, you say?  I’m not voting for The Lesser of Two Evils (whichever candidate you believe that to be)?

No.  I’m done with that.  When you really take a good look at the top two, there is little difference on the issues that matter.  Oh, sure, there are the side-issues that most people are convinced to make their decision based on–but on the things I feel are the most important?  They’re almost twins.

They both believe that spending billions (or even trillions) of dollars that we don’t have to bail out huge corporations that made poor decisions (and continue to) is a good idea.  I don’t.  Both candidates received over $20 million dollars to their campaigns from the very banks they voted to give money to.  Both support continuing our country’s failed foreign policies.  Obama wants to bring the troops home slightly sooner, but will likely throw Israel under the bus and expand the UN’s illegal dominion over our country’s policies.  McCain wants to “finish the job” in Iraq, but is considering other wars like Iran, Pakistan, and maybe even getting involved in the Georgia-Russia conflict.  Both will drive this country further into debt (did I mention that we already owe $10 TRILLION) with their out-of-control spending.  Both will trample our liberties (McCain with more wiretapping and “Patriot” Act-esque stuff, Obama with more gun control and more social programs like healthcare which we can’t afford).  So, why would I vote for either?

That leaves me with Bob Barr who is on the ballot in many states and who I agree with as far as platform goes on about a 80-90% level.  His problem is his somewhat sordid past.  Or, Chuck Baldwin who has little to no chance of being elected (he’s a write-in in Georgia) who I agree with on a 85-90% level.

The real race I’m interested in is the Saxby Chambliss(R)/Jim Martin(D)/Allen Buckley(L) three-way.  Saxby voted for the bailout (again, he’s beholden to the special interests that called for it), Martin wouldn’t have, but only because it wasn’t big enough!  Allen Buckley (the Libertarian candidate) is the only fiscal conservative of the bunch.  I’m happily voting for him in the hopes that it forces a run-off.  If that happens, most likely, Saxby will win (Buckley won’t even be in the run-off), but I have hopes that it will make our Senator a little more aware of the people he represents (since he claimed a few weeks ago that his job was safe because people won’t vote him out on the single issue of the bailout vote).

Then, there’s Phil Gingrey (R) who I will also happily be voting for.  Despite enormous political pressure, he stuck to his guns and faithfully represented the people of Georgia by voting against the bailout bill.  He has also stood his ground on a few other issues that I can be proud of him for.  Gingrey: He Delivers!  (He’s a former OB/GYN)

So, while I will vote, I will do so for the first time with the surety that my chosen candidate will lose.  Sadly, no matter which of the top two candidates win, America loses.

Voting Day Approaches

I haven’t gotten sucked in by the “early voting” fad.  I suppose it’s a nice thing for some people, but when they have 20 machines to service the number of people that are usually broken up across 5 or more voting locations with 100+ machines on Election Day, I’m not willing to stand in the 3 hour lines.  If everything works out as I hope, I will work from home on Tuesday and run out at lunchtime or early afternoon to go vote.  Typically, even in busy elections, the lines are not that long during the middle of the day.

Anyone want to bet I’m in and out in under 30 minutes?