I haven’t done much blogging lately with so much going on at work. But I logged onto my Web site and realized it is in dire need of a facelift. This theme is temporary, as I’m planning a redesign of the site to make it more functional and fun. Thanks for stopping by. Check back for updates.
Today is the final section of a series called, “And a song shall carry them home: The Journey of the Brothers Fermin,” which has been running in The Record and on Recordnet.com for the past four Sundays. This is what the series is about:
Two years ago a group of brothers left Acojtapachtlan, a village of about a dozen cement houses in the hills of southern Mexico. They came to San Joaquin County without education, without money, certainly without permission. Really, they brought little more than their ambition and their audacity. One of them carried along his dream to save money, buy instruments and lead a band.
The brothers Fermin were like millions of other Mexicans who have crossed the border already and like thousands who, even today, will attempt it. But the ties of home and family are strong. On Oct. 17, the village of Acojtapachtlan was to honor its patron San Lucas with a festival. Two years of work in San Joaquin County had earned the brothers enough money for televisions, clothing, tools, accordions, guitars, speakers — and a truck to haul it back. One of them would stay behind. Three were headed home. Record reporter Jennifer Torres and photographer Victor Blue followed. This series is running in The Record’s Perspectives section and online every Sunday in December.
Kirk designed the landing page: http://recordnet.com/apps/pbcs
I was moved by the video, done by the reporter and photographer with help from our multimedia reporter, who also designed the Flash presentation: http://online.recordnet.com
I haven’t laughed this hard from a YouTube clip in a while. And I laugh at a lot of YouTube clips, so that definitely says something.
I think while we may not go to the extreme of dating our Macbooks with someone’s profile a constant fixture, Facebook and other social-networking sites allow us to find out sometimes an unreasonable amount of information about people we may just meet in passing.
Shouldn’t people tell you their hobbies, where they work, where they went to school, who they take photos with and all the rest rather than reading what amount to a biography on their social-networking profiles? I can’t judge cyberstalkers, as I am definitely guilty, but I am curious how all of this impacts relationships with new people and people who only communicate via fingertips.
The News Feed feature on Facebook is more invasive than MySpace, where you actually have to click on someone’s profile to learn their details. I recently had a friend change his status from “single” to “in a relationship,” and sent out a bulletin to announce the change, which reminded me of Facebook’s controversial News Feed. For a moment, I thought I might need to explain the News Feed, but with Facebook being so ubiquitous, I don’t think it’s necessary, I’ll just send you to Facebook’s 2006 blog post from when the feature began.
Another friend was joking with his wife and changed his status to “it’s complicated,” while she threw a sheep at him using the now popular SuperPoke application. I brought up the change the next time I talked to him, and he assured me they were not fighting, they were simply bored and wanted to play on Facebook.
When did all of this become normal?
I am writing to share my joy with Wordie.org and hope that like-minded people will try it. The slogan, “Like Flickr, but without the photos,” is appropriate, but while most people like to store and share pictures with their friends, it takes a certain kind of person to get the same thrill from words. In fact, I actually enjoy Wordie much more than Flickr so far because it makes me think about what words I like and what words I use. It’s like word of the day but with 4,623 users adding words to the growing list. I haven’t added any Wordie people to my favorites list yet, but you can add me or comment on my list.
Aside from new words, the true glory of this discovery comes from the many dictionary definitions linked to each word. I’m sure I’m the last person on the Internet to find Ninjawords.com, so if there is already a fan club, I’d like to join. Just in case I’m not last and you’ve never experienced the power of the ninja, I recommend bookmarking this as the only dictionary you need while surfing or studying. So ninjas are smart, accurate and really fast, and this ad-free site boasts its dictionary follows suit. What I like best is that it stacks your searches, and you can search for multiple words just by typing them in the URL separated by commas (no spaces).
Example: http://www.ninjawords.com/ninja,dictionary,rocks
Click it. You know you want to. Then tag it. Bookmark it. Love it.
Ahh.. Nerd nation.
Here’s some food for thought:
“Sometimes it’s best to forget what you feel and remember what you deserve.” A friend posted this somewhere in the Web universe, and I liked it immediately.
It’s always good to keep things in perspective.
Northern California-based communications professional with experience in news media and nonprofits.