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Donut Age: America's Donut Magazine

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Ego

Awaking from my long winter's nap

Wednesday, 12 Mar 2008, 1:24 AM (permalink).

Well, neither I nor Donut Age are dead, I am pleased to report. I have just been hibernating, if you can call spending several hours a day on an MMORPG for three and a half months (more on that later) hibernating, which, I suppose, you really can't. But that, along with working and, occasionally, sleeping is basically how I have been riding out the cold, dark winter months....

File under: Metablogging, Ego.

Heavy Rotation: Oct. 29-Nov. 4, 2007

Saturday, 17 Nov 2007, 2:19 PM (permalink).

Here's installment number two of of my new format for music-logging. One thing that is already clear is that given my listening habits, which are structured around the monthly cycle of my eMusic subscription, the weekly "top artists" lists are going to have a fair amount repetition in them from one week to the next. I don't know if that's a problem per se—in fact it might be interesting to see if my enthusiasm for a brand new acquisition sustains for several weeks or fades after the first blush—but I'll go ahead an apologize in advance for entries along the lines of "Still listening to [insert album name] a lot. Still rocks."
...

File under: Music, Ego.

Heavy Rotation: Oct. 21-28, 2007

Wednesday, 7 Nov 2007, 10:20 PM (permalink).

Having fallen woefully behind on my "Acquisitions" series, I am trying out a new approach to logging my music habits, namely looking at my Last.fm "weekly top artists" list and commenting on what I find there. This should have two advantages over the Acquisitions approach. First, since it is limited to ten artists, I shouldn't get overwhelmed by sheer volume, as was happening regularly with my monthly acquisitions lists. Second, since this is the music I've listened to the most in a given week (more or less—not everything I listen to manages to get scrobbled to Last.fm, but the vast majority does), I should actually have something to say about it, which was not always the case with the brand-new music covered in my earlier posts. There should actually be some intersection between what comes up with this method and what 's actually new in my library, because the structure of my playlists keeps new arrivals in heavy rotation for about a month after they get added to iTunes. But it will also give me reason to revisit older music that's caught my ear, which appeals to me as well. Obviously, this will not wind up being some perfect log of my listening habits, but I never really set out to do that in the first place. The tougher question will be whether I can keep up with a regular schedule of weekly posts. History would suggest not, but maybe this exercise will be the impetus I needed to get more disciplined about my blogging. ...

File under: Music, Metablogging, Ego.

Tweet, tweet

Tuesday, 11 Sep 2007, 9:31 PM (permalink).

So as you can see, I've added a Twitter badge to my sidebar. Seeing all the cool kids doing it, I actually signed on last spring, but it did not especially appeal to me. More recently, however, I downloaded the Twitterific client, which makes both following and posting to Twitter almost infinitely less cumbersome. I also discovered Twitterfeed, which is letting me pipe content into my Twitter page: my Last.fm recently-listened feed, my LibraryThing recently-added feed, and my del.icio.us bookmark feed. I rather like the idea of using Twitter as the glue for my now far-flung empire of social software site participation (though I am not completely happy with the Last.fm feed: it's not really reflective of what is "now playing." Rather, it dumps the five most recent tracks as a block every half hour—the most frequent interval Twitterfeed will allow). Finally, I found a few folks that seemed interesting to follow, notably John Gruber of Daring Fireball and Mark Bernstein of Eastgate Systems. It is doubtful that any of these developments would hold my interest by itself, but taken together, they are keeping me intrigued with the service.

File under: Digital culture, Tools, Ego.

Recommendation engine

Tuesday, 11 Sep 2007, 8:44 PM (permalink).

The following is a real-life email exchange between myself and a colleague regarding Belle & Sebastian:...

File under: Music, Ego.

The ancestral lands

Sunday, 12 Aug 2007, 11:20 PM (permalink).

I am just back from an all-too-brief trip to the New Jersey shore (my people simply call it "the shore") for a multitude of birthdays: daughter's, father's, niece's and nephew's are all within a few days of each other. Besides the family time, the trip was a whirlwind tour of beloved foods that, if they exist at all outside of New Jersey/the Delaware Valley, do so only as pale shadows of their true essence: paper-thin slices of Nirvana from Mack and Manco's and a brimming tub of caramel decadence from Johnson's on the Ocean City boardwalk; a perfect turkey hoagie (no cheese, no mayo, just a dash of oil and vinegar) from Brady's Hoagie Dock; a trio of Philly soft pretzels from a stand in the airport. ...

File under: Travel, Ego, Food.

Playin' hooky

Monday, 9 Jul 2007, 9:30 PM (permalink).

Oops. Looks like I slept through the month of June without blogging. And I can't blame ill health either. For one reason or another, I got off to a slow start the first couple weeks, and then was on my vacation in Paris (poor me) with just limited enough Internet access to justify blowing off the month entirely. I am back home now, though, and have every intention of buckling down and getting back to my previous standard of erratic posting. ...

File under: Ego, Travel, Grouses.

The (almost) lost month

Wednesday, 30 May 2007, 10:17 PM (permalink).

Just like last year, I've come dangerously close to taking an o-fer for the month of May. Unlike last year, I have a reason, or at least an excuse, for the lack of activity here. This is now Day 40 of a tenacious "sinus event" that seems to be some combination of an actual infection, seasonal allergies (which, the medical establishment tells me, I don't actually have), and the hyperactive cough reflex I seem to have developed from the various bouts of pneumonia, bronchitis, and exercise-induced asthma that were annual features of my younger life. Because I am a firm believer in the old adage, "no one wants to hear about your mucus," I won't go into much detail about the ailment itself. However, three doctor visits, two courses of antibiotics, various permutations of prescription and over-the-counter antihistamines, expectorants, decongestants, cough suppressants, nasal sprays, salt gargles, and herbal throat lozenges have only succeeded in downgrading my cough from debilitating to a mere nuisance. When I haven't been physically wiped out, I just have not been in the mood for blogging. However, I seem (knock on wood) to be ever so slowly improving, so perhaps I'll get back to my normal, sporadic posting rate.

File under: Ego, Metablogging, Grouses.

Acquisitions—February 2007

Wednesday, 11 Apr 2007, 2:13 AM (permalink).

Still trying to catch up on the inventory additions. February was a very light month: it's shameful that I haven't been able to get this posted before now. At least I've formed some pretty firm opinions on most of this....

File under: Music, Ego, TeeVee.

Acquisitions—January 2007

Thursday, 29 Mar 2007, 11:08 PM (permalink).

Continuing my attempt to get back up to date with my library additions. ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Acquisitons—December

Wednesday, 7 Mar 2007, 9:12 AM (permalink).

Since I have fallen so very far behind with this, I'm just going to list the last couple months of iTunes library additions with a minimum of commentary. Here's the rundown for December. ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Strange but true technology fixes

Saturday, 17 Feb 2007, 2:11 AM (permalink).

I was rather amazed some months back when I discovered, while trying to solve a faculty member's printing woes, that the consensus fix for gunked up inkjet cartridges is to nuke them briefly in a microwave and even more surprised when it actually worked for said faculty member. I think, however, I've found an even less likely (and less advisable) computer fix. Shortly after getting my MacBook Pro last May, the latches that keep the laptop closed stopped working. It was one of those irritating problems that one never fixes because doing so would be more inconvenient than just living with it. ...

File under: Geekery, Ego.

it's not you, it's me

Monday, 29 Jan 2007, 11:23 PM (permalink).

As I alluded to briefly a while back, The Hold Steady played in Louisville on December 9, and by a happy coincidence, I was in town for work that very weekend. The show was supposed to be the highlight of my trip, but while there's little I can fault about the show, it was not the exhilarating experience I'd hoped. The biggest reason for this was that I was just too tired to fully enjoy it: I'd been conferencing for two days already, my arthritis was majorly acting up (thanks to my boneheaded decision to walk from downtown out to Headliners, which seems to be in some sort of outlying industrial district), and I just don't have the stamina for those midnight start times that are a point of pride among the indie hipster set (the two abysmal opening bands I endured to get to that midnight start didn't help either). ...

File under: Music, Ego, Local color.

Acquisitions—November

Saturday, 20 Jan 2007, 1:47 PM (permalink).

Ooops, it looks like I've fallen a little lot behind in my 'Acquisitions' reporting. Although I reined in the breakneck pace of previous months, I still have plenty to write about, so I'll catch up in two posts, starting with November's acquisitions....

File under: Music, Ego.

Acquisitions - October

Saturday, 18 Nov 2006, 3:13 PM (permalink).

Installment number 3 in the saga of the ongoing bloat of my hard drive. ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Acquisitions - September

Thursday, 26 Oct 2006, 12:53 AM (permalink).

In the same spirit as my August report, here's all the additions to my iTunes library for the month of September, with comments: ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Pottymouth

Tuesday, 24 Oct 2006, 9:42 PM (permalink).

Seems that Tim Bray ruffled some feathers with his use of the phrase "fucking cool" in a post a few days back. So much so that he posted again to apologize to anyone who was offended, but also to offer, if not a defense then a rationale for his choice of language:...

File under: Metablogging, Ego.

Yes, I am aware they played baseball this year

Thursday, 28 Sep 2006, 10:40 PM (permalink).

Despite its complete absence from these pages, I have noticed and even followed (casually) the current major league baseball season. Even more than last year, I have been singularly unexcited by baseball. There are several factors—my growing disaffection with baseball's broken economics, my distance from an actual major league team, weak baseball coverage in the local paper—but I think the biggest reason is simply that my wireless coverage at home does not reliably reach the TV room. Forced to choose between wasting away my evening in front of the TV or in front of my web browser, I choose web almost every time. ...

File under: Baseball, Ego.

36 days of fame

Saturday, 23 Sep 2006, 2:45 PM (permalink).

I wasn't aware of this until after the fact, but for 36 days, Donut Age was listed in the Wikipedia article on Doughnuts, under the heading of "Doughtnuts and popular culture." A revision for 13 August observed:...

File under: Ego, Metablogging.

Finding new music

Monday, 3 Apr 2006, 10:39 PM (permalink).

Diane Greco was moved by my post on the New Pornographers/Belle & Sebastian show to go out and get The Life Pursuit (Stuart Murdoch, you now owe me 37¢!). She goes on to muse on the difficulty of finding new music: "I don't find new music by listening anymore. No radio, no MTV. It's all so sucky and boring. So the result is I don't hear about much, and when I do, the channel is almost as interesting as the band." ...

File under: Music, Ego, Digital culture.

Fore!

Friday, 24 Feb 2006, 12:20 AM (permalink).

Dorothea Salo abdicated her tagging responsibilities, so I'll pick up this meme. ...

File under: Ego.

I'll get you, Dorothy! And your little dog, too!

Tuesday, 15 Nov 2005, 10:11 PM (permalink).

I am becoming curious to the state of distraction about the identity behind that big red dot hovering over east-central Kansas in my ClustrMap ClustrMap of Donut Age visitors from the US, July 27-November 15, 2005 (ClustrMaps, incidentally, is the commercial re-birth of HitMaps after the latter was swamped by volume). They still have a free plan, but $10/year will get you higher traffic limits and nifty continent views like the one to the left.) That dot represents 30+ page views from a fairly small geographic area. The only other dots that big are me and a couple large metro areas. Unless some major search engine is based in Topeka Wichita, I can only conclude I have some intensely devoted reader out there in the heartland. If you are out there Mysterious Visitor, I have many questions for you, so . You can have a GMail, Flickr, and/or ClustrMaps invitation if you do.

File under: Ego, Metablogging.

Conference blogging

Thursday, 29 Sep 2005, 1:25 PM (permalink).

I am at the Kentucky Higher Education Computing Conference (KHECC) and I am taking my first stab at conference blogging. My notes are going up on the professional education/technology blog that I recently got up and running (I guess this also serves as my official announcement of said blog). So far, it's an interesting experience. I don't take notes the same way as I do when it's just for myself: I'm making more of an effort to listen and then digest information for posting (when I'm just writing my own notes it tends to be constant and stream-of-consciousness). I certainly feel like there's more of a purpose to my note-taking than usual. OK, back to the conference...

File under: Academe, Metablogging, Ego.

I Wanna Be Lou

Wednesday, 28 Sep 2005, 5:15 PM (permalink).

Quizilla says: ...

File under: Ego, Music.

Cluttered

Tuesday, 23 Aug 2005, 3:12 PM (permalink).

The past week or so, my mind has been cluttered. Lots of ideas and things to be doing, but I'm having trouble getting it all untangled so that I can actually do something productive with them. My usual tools (from Tinderbox to plain old pen & paper) don't seem to be helping me much. When I get like this, I not only don't get much work done, but I also don't have much fun because I won't let myself do those things whe the other stuff is still isn't sorted out. Bleagh,

File under: Ego.

Truancy

Tuesday, 9 Aug 2005, 10:01 PM (permalink).

Six weeks without posting... yikes! I didn't mean to drop off the face of the blogosphere like that and I'm still not sure why it happened. It's not like I've been all that busy, although there was a vacation to the Jersey shore and a couple birthday celebrations buried in there, and I'm actually full of ideas I've been meaning to put down. Just a bad case of summer laziness, I guess. Anyhoo, I think I am back on the trolley and will soon be regaling the world with my insightful commentary on old news once again.

File under: Metablogging, Ego.

Alphabet Soup

Saturday, 25 Jun 2005, 1:20 PM (permalink).

Saw this meme a while back on mamamusings and thought it would be an amusing exercise. The rules are: sort your music collection by title and pick the first song listed for each letter of the alphabet. I decided to go one further and include songs for each numeral and miscellaneous punctuation marks. Here goes:
  • "A Big Hunk O' Love," Elvis Presley, The Number One Hits.
  • "B + A" Beta Band, The Three E.P.'s.
  • "C Is The Heavenly Option," Heavenly, Le Jardin De Heavenly.
  • "D-C-G," Silo the Huskie, Cringe.com/pilation.
  • "E Motel," The Clean, Old Enough To Know Better - 15 Years Of Merge Records.
  • "Fabliau Of Florida," Wallace Stevens, Poetry Speaks.
  • "Galveston Bay," Bruce Springsteen, The Ghost Of Tom Joad.
  • "H.W.C.," Liz Phair, Liz Phair.
  • "I (Heart Sign) Apple," The Mekons, I (Heart Symbol) Mekons.
  • "Jackals, False Grails: The Lonesome Era," Pavement, Slanted & Enchanted.
  • "K-Jee," M.F.S.B., Saturday Night Fever Soundtrack.
  • "L Dopa," Big Black, Songs About Fucking.
  • "Ma Rainey," Sterling Brown, Call & Response - The Riverside Anthology To The African American Literary Tradition.
  • "Nadine," Chuck Berry, The Great Twenty-Eight.
  • "O Death," Camper Van Beethoven, Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart.
  • "P-Funk (Wants To Get Funked Up)," Parliament, Live: P-Funk Earth Tour.
  • "Quarrel With The World," Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, Bait and Switch.
  • "R & R," Charles Mingus, In A Soulful Mood.
  • "SAAB," Randys, Cringe.com/pilation.
  • "T. & T.," Ornette Coleman, Ornette!
  • "U Can Do (Life)," De La Soul, Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump.
  • "Vague Space," Stephen Malkmus, Stephen Malkmus.
  • "W-I-F-E," Old 97's, Wreck Your Life.
  • "x-ray man," Liz Phair, Whip-Smart.
  • "Ya No Hay Mujeres Feas," Tito Puente, The Very Best of Tito Puentes and Vicento Valdes.
  • "Zebra," The Magnetic Fields, 69 Love Songs.
  • "09-15-00 (Part One)," Godspeed You Black Emperor! Yanqui U.X.O.
  • "1 Million Bottlebags," Public Enemy, Apocalypse 91...The Enemy Strikes Black.
  • "2 Piano Pieces: 1," Daniel Barenboim, Mendelssohn: Songs without Words.
  • "3 Away," Pretty Girls Make Graves, Pretty Girls Make Graves EP.
  • "4 (from The Dream Songs)," John Berryman, Poetry Speaks.
  • "5 Nights," Grafton, Salt Horse Release Party CD.
  • "6' 1"," Liz Phair, Exile In Guyville.
  • "7 Chinese Bros.," R.E.M., Reckoning.
  • "8 Ball (Remix)," NWA, Straight Outta Compton.
  • "9-9," R.E.M., Murmur.
  • "?," Outkast, Stankonia.
  • "...and Carrot Rope," Pavement, Terror Twilight.
  • "(Crazy for You But) Not That Crazy," The Magnetic Fields, 69 Love Songs.
  • "#1 Hit Song," The Minutemen, Double Nickels On The Dime.
...

File under: Music, Ego.

Satisfaction!

Thursday, 16 Jun 2005, 2:29 PM (permalink).

I have finally succeeded in creating a table-less web design. Not here (yet), but for a site I manage at work. When I inherited this site along with my job three years ago, it was a disaster. It had been set up with FrontPage, using all sorts of proprietary FP stuff, but then edited in other programs to the point that all the FP stuff was broken anyway. I spent significant parts of the next year and a half repairing, cleaning up, and generally making sense of the site, including doing my best hammer the original FP theme into more-or-less standards-compliant code. ...

File under: Geekery, Ego.

42

Tuesday, 17 May 2005, 2:29 AM (permalink).

Out of loyalty to my adolescence, I went to see The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Sunday night. Reading the Hitchhiker's "trilogy" was one of the tests for entry into the inner circle of suburban American teenage geeks in the early 80s. Other tests included: reciting ¹ to an arbitrary number of significant digits (I never got beyond 8), reading Douglas Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach (poked around in it in highschool and finally read it through in grad school), intimate knowledge of Monty Python's Flying Circus and/or Doctor Who (I reached moderate proficiency with the former but never did become a Whovian), creating recursive acronyms (OK, this one may be a little obscure, but I remember being both impressed by and jealous of "Bram, the Recursive Acronym Man," whom I met at geek summer camp), and playing Dungeons & Dragons (yup, and the less said about this the better). ...

File under: Movies, Books, Ego.

Pound Encylopedia

Tuesday, 3 May 2005, 11:44 PM (permalink).

I was very pleasantly surprised to receive my copy of The Ezra Pound Encyclopedia (Tryphonopoulos and Adams, eds. [Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2005]) today.Ezra Pound Encyclopedia cover Pleasantly because I contributed a few entries (on Pound's critical reception 1908-1920 & 1945-1980, on the essay collection Pavannes and Divagations [1958], and on an obscure prose sketch by Eliot called "Eeldrop and Appleplex" [1917]) to the volume and this copy is my reward for those efforts; surprised because this project has been in the works for a long time (I was first invited to contribute in the fall of 1999 and submitted my draft articles in 2001), and I was beginning to wonder if it would ever be published....

File under: Ego, Books, Academe.

Blogging workshop

Wednesday, 13 Apr 2005, 10:58 AM (permalink).

Last week, I gave a workshop for faculty on blogging. I stuck mostly to the basics: giving some definitions (many thanks to Jill for helping me re-find hers), deciphering some of the jargon, showing a few examples, and finally (briefly) touching on the educational applications of blogging. ...

File under: Metablogging, Academe, Ego.

Fiddling about

Tuesday, 12 Apr 2005, 10:56 PM (permalink).

I've been tinkering with and tweaking my stylesheet, templates, and sidebars. Nothing very earth shattering, but I would not be at all surprised if I seriously screwed up something along the way. ...

File under: Geekery, Ego.

What is work?

Thursday, 20 Jan 2005, 12:34 PM (permalink).

A significant part of my job is to answer faculty members' and other people's questions when they get stuck, or confused, or just plain intimidated by technology or computers. Rarely do those questions have anything to do with topics that I've made a conscious effort to inform myself about (such as blogging, syndication, MOO programming, CSS arcana, or hypertext theory). Much more often, I come up with answers that draw on some buried nugget of tech knowledge I gleaned doing something entirely different and seemingly unproductive. For example, I've become fairly proficient with Microsoft Excel, managing to put together a nifty workbook that tracked demographic information about participants in a large grant project. I credit all my Excel prowess to several years I spent trying to use it to get an edge on my opponents in a fantasy baseball league. Does that mean that all the time I berated myself for wasting as I assembled my giant spreadsheet of player statistics are suddenly "billable hours," so to speak? Does being able to answer my dean's question about putting a desktop link to the university's administrative server (which must be telneted to) in OSX justify the frightening number of hours I have spent logged on to alt.org's nethack server (for which I wanted a desktop icon of my own)?...

File under: Digital culture, Academe, Ego.

Lack of exercise

Sunday, 12 Dec 2004, 6:27 PM (permalink).

Jill has a nice post up summarizing and expanding on a number of bloggers and researchers who argue that blogging helps with their non-blogging writing as well, that blogging is writerly exercise. If so, I guess I have been a couch potato lately, and my writing muscles are getting all soft and flabby... ...

File under: Metablogging, Ego, Geekery.

Back

Sunday, 12 Sep 2004, 2:14 PM (permalink).

I'm back. I think....

File under: Ego, Metablogging.

Excuses, excuses

Saturday, 24 Jul 2004, 3:54 PM (permalink).

I've gone another several weeks without posting and I don't really know why. Sure, various things (personal, professional and global) have been going on, but none of them really explain or excuse my nonblogging. I've just been in an extended doldrum for a couple months, lacking the energy to do much of anything except play NetHack (at which I am largely sucking). In a week, I'll be heading to the beach for some vacation. Maybe, that'll recharge the batteries.

File under: Metablogging, Ego.

Blogging blahs

Friday, 11 Jun 2004, 12:06 AM (permalink).

Hmmm. Almost a month since my last post. I'm not sure where the time went. I haven't really been all that busy (at least not compared to the month before that) and I haven't really lacked for things to write about (I've jotted down ideas for about a dozen posts in that time). I've just been feeling kind of blah about things, not just this blog, lately. Maybe this post will get me rolling again.

File under: Ego, Metablogging.

Slow posting next 107 miles

Sunday, 18 Apr 2004, 12:56 PM (permalink).

Our spring semester is coming to a close (May 7) as is the grant project I am working on (May 31), so I expect the next several weeks to be incredibly hectic. Blogging likely to remain sproradic throughout.

File under: Metablogging, Ego.

Horrible affliction

Wednesday, 7 Apr 2004, 10:17 PM (permalink).

File under: Ego.

I am a 1970s geek

Monday, 22 Dec 2003, 2:41 PM (permalink).

...

File under: Ego, Geekery.

Fan Mail

Sunday, 30 Nov 2003, 11:21 PM (permalink).

I got my first piece of blog-related fanmail over the break, from Bob Torres of Bobblog.net. I should be more jaded (or less self-absorbed) than this, but it does give me a thrill to find out that someone actually reads the little text missiles I launch out into the world. A long, long time ago, I was referred to as a list "elder" (or something to that effect) on the Baseball (and lesser sports) Discussion List. I no longer remember what was under discussion at the time, but I remember the little surge of pride I felt at the idea that my opinions were valued there. But I digress.......

File under: Ego, Geekery.

Now appearing in print

Tuesday, 18 Nov 2003, 10:59 PM (permalink).

Today I finally got my courtesy copy of DRH 2001 and 2002: Selected papers from the Digital Resources for the Humanities Conferences at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London in September 2001 and at Edinburgh University Library in September 2002 (whew!), on pages 57-70 of which one can read yours truly's paper on The Gromboolia Project. At the time I delivered the paper (2002), I still had high hopes that it would become my dissertation. Alas, it was not meant to be. The diss died, but Gromboolia lived on: it can be found on LinguaMOO (or login and @go Gromboolia), and if I can ever get Jan to give me more quota, I might even get around to finishing it. I still believe in the argument of this paper (and of the ill-fated dissertation), that MOOs have untapped potential as educational environments and are underappreciated as hypertext authoring systems.

File under: Academe, Ego.

Accidental techie

Tuesday, 28 Oct 2003, 10:26 PM (permalink).

There's a post from Dorothea Salo on Misbehaving.net about being an "accidental techie," i.e., winding up in a technical field without a background in computer science or any of the other qualifications. Salo speculates whether gender is a factor:...

File under: Digital culture, Academe, Ego.

I am the best

Wednesday, 1 Oct 2003, 11:40 AM (permalink).

I googled myself today and apparently I am now the best William Cole in the world, or at least on the web. At first I was inclined to credit Jill Walker's kind shout-out, but she referenced this site, not the Virtual William Cole subsite that showed up in Google. So maybe it is just my elaborate network of past sites that's bumping my pagerank. Or the rest of my eponyms are slackers. Jill, by the way, is not only the best Jill Walker in the world, but the best Jill in the world. Now that's impressive. Well done, Jill!

File under: Digital culture, Ego.