I Had Cancer

posted in: About The Author | 0

And, while that IS true, it’s not what this post is about, exactly.

When you have cancer, or have survived cancer, you feel alone.  You feel like there isn’t anyone in the world who understands you or your life or what you went through or are going through now.  But, at the same time, you know there are others.  You’ve seen them in waiting rooms and lines and shuffling in and out of hospital rooms and doctor’s offices.  They are out…
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In Search of Schrödinger’s Tumor

posted in: About The Author | 0

I may, or may not, have cancer.

Now, before all my regular readers and, due to my automated update configurations, my Twitter and Facebook friends who might read this, get too excited, nothing has changed in my recent medical status.  However, Wednesday, I go in for a scan.  A regular scan, nothing special, nothing new.  My scheduled, nine-month scan, per the standard protocol.  Or so I have been lead to believe.

The scan, however routine it may be, will not decide if…
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DupeGuru, Music Edition

Do you have a lot of music?

I’m not a huge music person, really.  At least, not in the pop-music on the radio all the time kind of way.  But, I am sort of a digital pack-rat, which means I’ve actually got a surprising collection of MP3 files.  And, of course, moving those from computer to computer means I’ve ended up with a surprising number of duplicates.  So, what to do?
Well, now there’s DupeGuru, music edition.  Pretty much what it says;…
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Muse – Free Web Publishing Software

I love free!

So, most everyone in my business has heard of Adobe.  Mainly because they’re the top design and graphics software publisher in business right now.  Well, they’ve released a FREE program called Muse that lets you layout and publish webpages without having to write code.  Now, myself, personally, I’m okay writing the HTML code behind simple webpages, but, frankly, it’s a lot faster to do it in a nice graphical user interface that’s filled with point-and-click tools.  Also, since…
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Alexandria

No, not some new chick I’m dating.

Sadly, it’s Linux software.   Okay, well, not so sad, because it’s Linux-based software to help you track your personal library.
Yeah, yeah, I know, what kind of geek has a personal library that’s worth cataloging, right?  Yeah, well, as it turns out, me.  I probably have a couple thousand books of one kind or another spread all over my house.  I’m pretty sure virtually every room in my house has a stack of books in…
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Extend your Kindle

But, sadly, not for the software Kindle apps.

Okay so these two tools I’m going to share only work for the Kindle, and mostly rely on the ability to e-mail documents to your Kindle, but SendtoReader works with a Manual Delivery option, too.  SendtoReader is a web app that lets you send any webpage to your Kindle for later perusal.  Though, as I mentioned, you need to have an actual Kindle if you want to update it without synching via a…
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Chicken or Egg?

posted in: On Creativity | 0

Personally, I find both to be delicious!

But, that has nothing at all to do with this post.
I’ve been thinking about a lot of stuff this week.  Mostly, though, I’ve been thinking about creativity and photography.  So, instead of just bringing you one link today, I’m bringing you two.
First, a little about creativity.  Some time ago now, Paul Zii wrote 29 Ways to Stay Creative on his Tumblr.  It’s worth reading.  I can’t promise you that it will fix your creative…
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The History of Digital Photography

posted in: About The Author | 0

You may have seen this already…

If you travel in the same tech circles on-line that I do, you probably have seen a lot of the same things I link to here on Fridays.  So, why do I still do it?  Well, for a couple reasons.
First, because maybe you missed it.  Or it didn’t seem like it was what it is so you didn’t actually look at it.
Secondly, because, well, I liked it, so I want to link to it so…
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Hemingway’s Birthday

Sounds like it should be a band.

But, no, today is Ernest Hemingway’s birthday.
I celebrate that because his work meant so much to me when I was just learning to really write.  [amazon_link id=”0743297334″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]The Sun Also Rises[/amazon_link] remains, I think, one of the most influential works of literature in my personal mythology.  His short stories still move me, on the odd occasion that I still re-read one.  Today, in celebration, I may read some of his work, though I haven’t for many years.  Don’t think, however, that a lack of current interest means that my admiration of Hemingway, as a writer and a man, has waned in the slightest.  His are the stories I still tell myself, that I still think of, when I think of what a story is and what it means to be a real writer, a good writer.  Just earlier this week I found myself watching [amazon_link id=”B0041SI7CK” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]The Matador[/amazon_link] starring Pierce Brosnan and thinking of [amazon_link id=”068485922X” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Death in the Afternoon[/amazon_link], Hemingway’s ode to the majesty and tragedy of the bullfight.  I find that I cannot help but think of Hemingway any time that bullfighting comes up, as rarely as it does these days.  In fact, I find that I tend to think of Hemingway any time the subject of American ex-patriots comes up at all.

I have always admired his tight, sparse prose.  And, somewhat more secretly, I have always admired the zest with which he approached life.  He may have been, by many accounts, a bit of a brutal man, but he was also courageous in adventurous in ways that, I think, most of us modern men cannot be.  Certainly, he was a product of his times, but, even then, I think, had a reputation that was bigger than life.
I always enjoyed the fact that he grew up not far from where I, in fact, grew up.  I believe that his approach to writing, and life, is something inherited from that region.  Midwesterners are often maligned as being plain and dull and overly conventional, but I see the simplicity and lack of pretension in Hemingway’s writing that I recognize from my own upbringing.  It’s an attitude, I think, that tends to get impressed on us as small children.  Certainly, we Midwesterners tend to be simple people, who just grind away at whatever work falls to hand, generally uncomplaining and accepting that hard work is the price one pays for any reasonable success.  And, it’s that workman-like quality of Hemingway’s work that I always enjoyed.

I have to admit, there was a time I thought I might emulate him, not only in writing, but in life.
That was, of course, until I realized the damage he did to those around him with his alcohol problems, his violent temper and uncompromising way.  Certainly, having been married and divorced once, I hope not to repeat that mistake as often as did Hemingway!
I also hope to end things better than he did, with a shotgun in the mouth.  Though it may have been an end fitting to one of Hemingway’s fictional heroes, I know it to be the coward’s way out.  Much harder to face the world and all the things which may pain us, cancer included, than to take our own life.  And, yes, as a cancer survivor, I do know just what that feels like, to want to just simply stop the pain.  I do.

Still, for all his flaws, Ernest Hemingway wrote the most magnificent literature I think America has ever known.  I will always admire his work and frequently wish I could emulate it.
Where ever he may be now, I hope he is finally at peace.  And, today, of all days, his birthday, I hope he is satisfied with his work and his life.
Thank you, sir, for the gifts you’ve given us and continue to give us.

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