A new company has entered the race to commercial space: Reaction Engines. And they have an amazing video of their vehicle, powered by a proprietary engine called the Sabre.
I spent part of my time with the flu trying to figure out how to convert a collection of old Word documents into Markdown-fomatted plain text files. I determined that textutil is close to useless in this regard because it does not maintain headings, instead preferring to collapse headings into a styled paragraph. To get to HTML, then, I will need to use Word itself, which means AppleScript or Automator. I need to first open a document, then save it as HTML.
Microsoft’s Site for Mac Developers is here.
UPDATE: It looks like Microsoft does have an Automator Workflow that does what I want, but the bundle of workflows does not come with the Student and Teacher Edition. Thanks, MBU!
Here’s a guy who’s written a book and released some podcasts on automating Office.
I can speak about how I grade exams, and I have some suggestions that I think are reasonably useful in a universal sense, but I must also note that the grading of PhD exams has not been normalized in the department and probably will never be. Thus, every person taking an exam should inquire of their writers what their standards are for evaluation.
Folklore studies has chosen to drop identifications and short essay questions in favor of three long essays. We did so in the belief that the concentration in folklore studies within the department’s generalist program best serves students and future scholars by expanding the framework within which they think and write. And so, we decided that the exam that served that purpose best was one where you required to do just that. There are, then, questions that ask you to write one of three kinds of essays:
- an intellectual history/history of ideas that pertain to a given topic or term within the domain
- a synthesis of an array of ideas, terms, or thinkers on a given topic
- a list of n things having to do with a particular project with an introduction that offers a framework for understanding the list: e.g., an anthology, a museum exhibit, a course syllabus
The photo on the cover of the Cape Cod Beadboard Planking insert looks so nice and inviting. The planks themselves, if one can call a mixture of sawdust and glue a “plank”, are nice enough. Certainly their ridges are more believable than those of the 4 x 8 sheets found just up the aisle in our local Home Depot.
I painted the first batch of planks with an oil-based enamel from Sherwin-Williams, using what is slowly becoming the ubiquitous off-white of choice in our home: SW 6154, aka “Nacre.” It’s the same white found on our kitchen cabinets. We have a brighter white in the rest of the bathroom, “Callalily,” but it’s just a little too bright to my eye these days.
The first batch of planks only got me a little less than halfway around the bathroom — it is quite literally the bathroom, since the bath tub is the only thing in this little enclosure — before I had to start using unpainted planks, fetched during a second trip to the Home Depot because those little 7-inch wide things go fast.
This morning at breakfast Lily announced, all of a sudden, that she remembered why, when she was younger she didn’t like peas and green beans. She thought the peas were grass seeds and the green beans were grass.
It was a nice day to be “in the field,” which is an odd but apt phrase when you write it down and look at it. A bit cool in the morning, but warm in the sun, with a constant breeze that sometimes swept the warmth away. Brandon Barker joined me today, wanting a chance to give his new DSLR a test run. I think I was supposed to help with some detailed instruction on settings, but I confess I forgot as the day wore on and simply enjoyed the niceness of the day, visiting with some of the folks I’ve come to know, and showing Brandon a few bits of the Louisiana landscape.
We headed straight out to the Olinger Repair Shop, packed a bit more tightly in the truck than I would like. The cab of the Isuzu is perfect for me, my gear, and the usual extras I pack “just in case” (dry socks, rubber boots, towel), but two people both with, albeit small, gear bags are crowded. Perhaps it is time to upgrade the truck.
We arrived at the shop just as a tractor truck stopped in front of the shop. It was pulling a flatbed trailer with a large piece of agricultural gear on the back. It turned out that the piece of equipment was a roller-packer and that it’s new owner was Chip Link, who had bought it sight unseen, but from a reputable dealer, in Tennessee. Link had no way to get the packer off the trailer at his farm, so he had instructed the driver to drop off the packer at the Olinger shop. Link consulted with Gerard and Dale, and they then instructed the driver to pull into a clearing on the far side of the shop — it’s the same spot where Dale’s combine now rests and where I’ve helped power wash PTO ditchers.
Gerard and Dale got on either side of the flatbed trailer with forklifts and carefully raised the packer up. Once it was clear, I was given the job of telling the driver to pull forward, pulling the trailer out from under the raised gear, which was then lowered to the ground. Brandon photographed the whole affair:
Afterwards, Chip Link stayed to inspect his “new” piece of equipment and to begin the necessary work of refitting it for use in the coming season. I headed indoors to visit some with Gerard and Dale and to let Brandon have a chance to see what the inside of a working metal shop looks like. I regret I did not give him more of a tour, but he seemed readily at ease and wandered away to try out his camera.
In the mean time, Dwayne Gossen stopped by, looking for a small part that would allow him to test the lines of a pump he was working on. I introduced Brandon to Dwayne, and for the first time I saw Dwayne relax a bit and tell a few stories. It was nice to see.
At some point I gave Brandon the task of documenting one of the many crawfish boats sitting out in front of the shop. I showed him the compass method I use myself and gave him suggestions not only on detail shots that might be worth his while but also on using a tape measure to document the size of an object as well as the advisability of shooting a few “art” shots along the way. With only a few words, he borrowed my tape measure and settled into the task. I am curious to see what his results were.
After lunch with Gerard at Frog City, I thought I would drive Brandon around a bit to see if we couldn’t find a boat in action. No such luck, but we did find this boat along Hwy 365 just east of Richard:
The drive unit looks like something by Mike Richard, but the motor is on the left side, not the right. It’s a Honda engine, which is something he would use and the nose of the boat and the external wheels are both Richard elements. But the drive unit is mounted to the hull with something that looks more like one of Kurt Venable’s pods and the bearing that allows the drive unit to float up and down looks like the kind that Gerard Olinger makes. The boat is both an enigma and … as I noted in my Facebook post, folklore gold.
A note written to my seminar on documentary inputs and outputs.
… direct observation by people interested in learning firsthand from other people, without the mediation of statistics, theory, and endless elaborations of so-called methodology. (Coles 114)
Later:
Instead, he simply wants to describe what he has witnessed. He wants to set down the words he has heard, to tell us what the people of New Burlingon have to say about themselves and their lives. (Coles 180)
Collected below are a series of notes and/or prompts to asking better questions while doing documentary/ethnographic research. It assumes the interviewer has at least a notepad in hand as basic recording technology.
An interview is not a dialogue. The whole point of the interview is to get the narrator to tell her story. Limit your own remarks to a few pleasantries to break the ice, then brief questions to guide her along. It is not necessary to give her the details of your great-grandmother’s life growing up in Abbeville in order to get her to tell you about her grandfather’s trip to Texas. Just say, “I understand your grandfather went to Texas during the oil boom. What did he tell you about his time there?”
Ask questions that require more of an answer than “yes” or “no.” Start with “why,” “how,” “where,” “what kind of. . .” instead of “Was Henry Miller a good boss?” ask “What did the drilling crew say about Henry Miller?”
Ask one question at a time. Sometimes interviewers ask a series of questions all at once. Probably the narrator will answer only the first or last one. You will catch this kind of questioning when you listen through the tape after the session, and you can avoid it the next time.
Ask brief questions. We all know the irrepressible speech-maker who, when questions are called for at the end of a lecture, gets up and asks five- minute questions. It is unlikely that the narrator is so dull that it takes more than a sentence or two for her to understand the question.
Start with questions that are not controversial; save the delicate questions, if there are any, until you have become better acquainted. A good place to begin is with the narrator’s youth and background.
Don’t let periods of silence fluster you. Give your narrator a chance to think of what she wants to add before you hustle her along with the next question. Relax, write a few words on your notepad. The sure sign of a beginning interviewer is a tape where every brief pause signals the next question
Don’t worry if your questions are not as beautifully phrased as you would like them to be for posterity. A few fumbled questions will help put your narrator at ease as she realizes that you are not perfect and she need not worry if she isn’t either. It is not necessary to practice fumbling a few questions; most of us are nervous enough to do that naturally.
Don’t interrupt a good story because you have thought of a question, or because your narrator is straying from the planned outline. If the information is pertinent, let her go on, but jot down your questions on your notepad so you will remember to ask it later.
If your narrator does stray into subjects that are not pertinent (the most common problems are to follow some family member’s children or to get into a series of family medical problems), try to pull her back as quickly as possible. “Before we move on, I’d like to find out how the closing of the mine in 1935 affected your family’s finances. Do you remember that?”
It is often hard for a narrator to describe people. An easy way to begin is to ask her to describe the person’s appearance. From there, the narrator is more likely to move into character description.
Try to establish at every important point in the story where the narrator was or what her role was in this event, in order to indicate how much is eye-witness information and how much based on reports of others. “Where were you at the time of the mine disaster?” “Did you talk to any of the survivors later?” Work around these questions carefully, so that you will not appear to be doubting the accuracy of the narrator’s account.
Do not challenge accounts you think might be inaccurate. Instead, try to develop as much information as possible that can be used by later researchers in establishing what probably happened. Your narrator may be telling you quite accurately what she saw. As Walter Lord explained when describing his interviews with survivors of the Titanic, “Every lady I interviewed had left the sinking ship in the last lifeboat. As I later found out from studying the placement of the lifeboats, no group of lifeboats was in view of another and each lady probably was in the last lifeboat she could see leaving the ship.”
Try to avoid “off the record” information–the times when your narrator asks you to turn off the recorder while she tells you a good story. Ask her to let you record the whole things and promise that you will erase that portion if she asks you to after further consideration. You may have to erase it later, or she may not tell you the story at all, but once you allow “off the record” stories, she may continue with more and more, and you will end up with almost no recorded interview at all. “Off the record” information is only useful if you yourself are researching a subject and this is the only way you can get the information. It has no value if your purpose is to collect information for later use by other researchers.
Don’t switch the recorder off and on. It is much better to waste a little tape on irrelevant material than to call attention to the tape recorder by a constant on-off operation. Of course you can turn off the recorder if the telephone rings or if someone interrupts your session.
Interviews, for beginning interviewers, usually work out better if there is no one present except the narrator and the interviewer. Sometimes two or more narrators can be successfully recorded, but usually each one of them would have been better alone.
End the interview at a reasonable time. An hour and a half is probably the maximum. First, you must protect your narrator against over-fatigue; second, you will be tired even if she isn’t. Some narrators tell you very frankly if they are tired, or their spouses will. Otherwise, you must plead fatigue, another appointment, or no more tape.
Don’t use the interview to show off your knowledge, vocabulary, charm, or other abilities. Good interviewers do not shine; only their interviews do.
More news is available at Ruby Inside. With all the changes, maybe it was a good thing I put learning Ruby on hold. Maybe?
Every once in a while you have to figure out where all the space is going on your hard drive, because 250GB seemed like a lot when you ordered the machine a year or two ago.
Work iMac
| Specifications | Size (GB) |
|---|---|
| Capacity: | 232.57 |
| Used: | 203.41 |
| Available: | 29.15 |
| Folder | Size (GB) |
|---|---|
| Archive-ALL | 18.98 |
| Archive-DOCS | 5.35 |
| Desktop | 10.97 |
| Documents | 3.87 |
| Downloads | 30.20 |
| Library | 2.69 |
| Lr | 35.19 |
| Movies | 3.97 |
| Music | 6.86 |
| Pictures | 6.55 |
| Public | 0.00 |
| Sites | 0.57 |
| Total | 125.2 |
30 gigs of downloads? There’s some space-saving right there. 11 gigs on the desktop? Half of that is probably downloads I haven’t sorted yet. Sigh. Yes. I use my desktop all too often as a giant inbox. The two Archive directories makes me wish OS X had an easy “merge” command.


