Site of the Day: This is Why I’m Broke
It’s like Toys R Us for grown-ups. Cool, quirky stuff to blow my money on! > Visit
My least favorite time of year for clothing is summer. I abhor shorts really, and cannot stand shirts sticking to my back with sweat. I hate wearing socks but find flip flops to be extremely uncomfortable and frankly devoid of any style once or ever. But seeing as the seasons are inevitable, I seek inspiration wherever it is available.
A go-to for any fashion-conscious dude or dudette should be The Sartorialist. Fashion-forward photoblogger extraordinaire is always roaming the streets and sharing his finds with the community at large. Summer is where I struggle the most so find myself devoid of ideas. I like to steal ideas from the streets of NY.
I think an idea worth a try is adding something to the outfit to compliment shorts such as a light-weight blazer. I own two linen blazers. Loafers or my camp mocs are good for the footwear department. This is worth giving a try…if I am brave enough.
So it has been about two weeks of me playing with Google+, and even participated in my first ‘hangout’ last week with friends. The featureset is clearly well thought out and yet nimble enough once you figure it out. The concept of ‘circles’ seems to be a large selling point, and knowing I can better manage which content I push to which ‘circles’ I have assigned people to is turning out to be very handy.
With about 100 people know in my circles, regrettably my stream was again starting to look like my Facebook wall before I hid those oversharers. But it is a simple as a click to filter what I want to see in my stream. I also created a circle for ‘oversharers’. Yep, no shame in saying that!
The Hangout feature may be one of the real killer features that prompt me to visit most often. Hands down this exceeds Facebooks chat features. The other evening I logged on to see a good friend currently in a ‘hangout’. A ‘Live’ icon showed up under his name and all I needed to do was click to join.
I hope to see broader integration as G+ grows, something akeen to what has happened in the marketplace with FB ‘Likes’. More businesses and organizations integrating cleanly with G+. I frankly believe this medium will minimize the ‘spammy’ feel FB has grown to accommodate.
It remains to be seen if the masses will come in droves. What I expect to see happen is rather simple.
This is the sub-heading on this weeks Economist. The mag hit my mailbox earlier in the week and I was reminded, in big bold print, that the space age as I know it is over.
I grew up enthralled with the US shuttle program. While my parents and the generation before mine huddled around the TV in the 60s to watch our country pour billions and billions of dollars simply to stake claim in space from the Russians, I had the Shuttle program; a long term program funded for 30 years to help ensure the US had access to space for technological, scientific and exploratory purposes. I went to Space Camp. Twice. I built models of Columbia and Discovery. I remember where I was when Challenger and Columbia both met tragedy head-on (laid up with Mono and moving my brother into his first apartment, respectively). My parents graciously took me and my brother to see a shuttle launch when I was a pre-teen. We climbed up and sat on the roof of the minivan and watched Atlantis blast off from mere miles away. Hopefully this weekend it will soar into space with 7.8 million pounds of thrust for the last time. To this day a shuttle launch is the one thing I tell friends and colleagues they must do in their lifetime. But soon, they can no longer, ever, see a Space Shuttle launch into space.
The US has had a government funded space program going on 60 years; 30 of which was operated by the Shuttle. After Atlantis, the only way to get an American man or experiment into space is via Russia. Take away what you want about that statement, but it is a bit hard to swallow.
So now we turn to private, commercialized space programs. The likes of Elon Musk and Richard Branson. Can it be commercially viable? Will we launch trained astronauts into orbit as we do today, or just millionaires looking for a joyride? NASA will focus on low-orbit, unmanned missions and lay off countless thousands of staff in this historic decision and ‘sometime’ in the next decade return to space in the form of a program to explore beyond just the moon. However, with most decisions in Washington, once the money is cut it’s likelihood to return is few and far between. I read one article in the Guardian that struck a cord: “Crewed space flight is too important a field of human endeavor to play party politics with. Is it not time once more to commit as one nation with one political voice to a new exploration program for Nasa?”. Here, here. I, for one, see the need to slash our federal budget but all one needs to do is look back to the 1960s and see what came of our nation, indivisible, united to see us reach ‘the final frontier’. Without a program on the books to replace the Shuttle, we have failed the hopes and dreams of millions.
Regardless of what we can hope for, and despite what some see is a huge taxpayer money pit of a program, the Shuttle represented an amazing technological and engineering miracle. For the better part of the last three decades, we’ve spent billions to build the ISS. The Shuttle put Hubble into orbit, which provides us unmatched photos of the universe that makes my skin crawl. For those of us passionate about space exploration it was our symbol, our vehicle. Tomorrow, or perhaps by the end of the weekend, it will launch for the last time. This is truly the end of an era for my generation and frankly anyone who was alive to see Mercury, Gemini, Apollo and the Shuttle defeat gravity.
Matt & Kim brought the house down tonight at The Pageant in St Louis. Such a great duo. A friend I brought along for his first show noted it was the first band he had ever seen where they smiled and had a ball all night. Couldn’t have agreed more.