It may mean I’m a terrible person, but this makes me laugh:

Via I Can Has Cheezburger (and Senior Gif, and BBC Two)
It may mean I’m a terrible person, but this makes me laugh:

Via I Can Has Cheezburger (and Senior Gif, and BBC Two)
For the comic in my Facebook / Twitter post, I came across it on Swiss Miss, which had a note that it was from BrownChickenBrownCow. It’s pretty standard in blogging that you include a link to where you found something / who created something (usually the same place) when you include an excerpt from someone else’s work. This leads me immediately to why I hate Tumblr. On Tumblr, people just link to where they found something, which is usually another Tumblr blog, which in turn links to another, and another, and so on, with no note whatsoever along the way of where it originally came from. For example, for this comic, the chain went:
Post this cartoon on your site:
Copy and paste this embed code…
That’s right, on the original comic’s page, there’s code you can just copy and paste to put it right in your site, without having to download it, crop the credit off of it, and re-upload it. Simple as can be, ctrl-c, ctrl-v, publish button, done.
And it’s not just that the four or five Tumblr blogs above reposted this cartoon without noting where it was from, if you look at the bottom of each, it has a list of other Tumblr blogs that have reblogged it since then (or liked it), which on the first two is 530 additional people.
Now you may say, “One comic that made the rounds, big deal.” But, the thing is I come across this all the damn time with Tumblr. Someone posts something cool on a site that usually accredits things well and it leads back to Tumblr, where there’s no clear attribution of where it came from, so people give up and just say it was from there.
The above is actually one of the only times where a chain of accreditation went into Tumblr and I was able to find the way out back out. Most of the time you can’t even search for where it originally came from (even with tineye, which is awesome), because it has been so heavily reposted on Tumblr without notes on where it came from, that the search engines just show you a hundred Tumblr links. There’s been a ton of things I’ve come across and would love to post here, but won’t, because due to the glories of Tumblr, I don’t know who actually did the work to make it, and probably never will.
The reason this really pisses me off is because the whole web is based on sharing and copying (in case you didn’t know, everything that you’ve ever looked at on the web, including this, has gotten copied to your computer before you ever saw it – that, at a technical level – making copies – is how the web works). But people share things on the web with at least the slight hope that they’ll get some form of credit for it. At least a link back. For a fairly poor metaphor – bands let their music get played on the radio for free so people will hear it and want to hear more of their music, and, ideally, buy a CD or some mp3′s or come to a show. The internet and the world of blogging works a lot the same way. But, in my mind, Tumblr is the equivalent of a band playing the song American Pie and either claiming they wrote it, or that it’s by Madonna. Or, more accurately, a band lip syncing to the original recording of American Pie, and then claiming they wrote it, or Madonna did. Unless you’re Don McLean, you can’t claim you wrote American Pie, and you can’t claim the person singing it in the original was you.
This is why I hate Tumblr.
I went to see the new movie Thor today. Pretty good. When I went into the theater, it was nice out – sunny with a light breeze.
When I came out of the theater after watching a movie featuring, as the title character, the Germanic pagan god of thunder, lightening, and storms, it was overcast with a strong wind. When I checked the radar, it looked like this:
About a year ago, I finally got around to creating a Facebook page for Stray Hawkeye, and proceeded to do absolutely nothing with it.
Now, a year later, I’m trying to make it useful. Basically, I’m putting links to each new post on the wall. This is not so much a desperate attempt to be liked (or so I’m telling myself) as it is that several of my friends and family who read the blog have noted that it’s sort of a pain to check the site for updates, especially when they can be a bit sporadic (like lately).
So, hopefully this will make it easier to keep up to date on when there are new posts here. I think if you “like” the site on its Facebook page, new posts will show up in your news feed on Facebook. Granted that may depend on your settings – and I’d try to tell you how to set up the proper settings, but it seems like all of the Facebook setting pages change about every month, so I’m not even going to try. Good luck with that.
The Facebook page is located here if you’d care to like the site.
I also just made a Twitter page, which I plan to use for basically the same thing, for those of you who prefer Twitter to Facebook. That one has the fairly predictable handle of @StrayHawkeye. I’m completely new to this whole tweetmail thing, so Twitter pro’s please be gentle. In my mind @ still denotes an array variable in perl, and # starts a single line comment in korn shell scripts.

Noise to Signal Cartoon Via Swiss Miss (sort of, but I’ll get to that in another post soon).
Oh yeah, just to round out the needy-ness – look, I made you a qr code:
Powered by WordPress | Theme: Aeros 2.0 by TheBuckmaker.com with tweaks by Kearn