(Originally shared via Google+)
Amazon Smile
PSA: If you haven’t heard of it before, you should look into Amazon Smile (smile.amazon.com). You select a charity and a small portion of all your purchases will be donated to the selected charity. Easy enough to do, so you may as well do it.
Just make sure you always go to smile.amazon.com instead of the normal www.amazon.com.
Christmas 2013
We stayed home for Christmas this year and didn’t have anyone coming to visit either. This is the first year for us when we didn’t either visit someone or have someone visit so it felt a little off. For me at least, it’s always tough to feel like it’s Christmas in California since the weather is usually warm (mid 60’s, low 70’s this year). On Christmas Eve this year I heard the ice-cream truck driving around the neighborhood; it just doesn’t work for me.
At least going to visit or having visitors creates some excitement, but without even that it just never really felt like the proper season. I mentioned to Jess on at least one occasion that I needed to figure out something to do that would make it feel like Christmas. I never really did, unfortunately.
We watched “A Charlie Brown Christmas” and several other Christmas specials, but up until the week of I was still going to work every day, the sun was shining, and many of the trees still have leaves on them. Due to poor air quality it’s been illegal to burn wood for most of the month (including Christmas Eve and Christmas Day) so that didn’t help either. I’ll have to figure something out for next year. We’ve kicked around the idea of every other year having Christmas at a “cabin” in the mountains so we’d get some snow and cold weather. We’ll see if we still like that idea next year.
Anyways, enough lamenting about that.
On Monday Heather and I did some painting. This was my creation (I’m planning on keeping my day job):
On Christmas Eve we went over to the house of some friends who had invited over a few families who also didn’t have any family to visit with for Christmas. We drank Dickerson Family Wassail and ate Dickerson Family Little Weenies so that helped make it feel like Christmas. Of course, we also ate Triscuits and Wheat Thins with cheese. After a couple of hours of hanging out we all headed home.
Christmas morning was calm and sunshiny. Santa had arrived.
I think Heather knew something different was happening—she was pretty amped up (but then, she’s often all amped up in the morning anyway…). We, of course, took obligatory pre-presents pictures:
Heather was just as adorable as could possibly be. So here are a bunch of pictures of her looking adorable:
The trolley and affiliated characters are from Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, a modern, animated spin-off of Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood. Netflix has the first 20 episodes and Heather loves it.
Jess and I were also around, but we know everyone would rather look at pictures of Heather than us. But just for proof, here’s Jess with her Eye-Fi card:
The Eye-Fi card will magically transfer her pictures from her camera to the computer so she can just sit down at the computer to work on them without taking the memory card out of the camera.
Since the desktop computer is only on when we’re using it (saving a bunch of electricity) I set it up to transfer to the Raspberry Pi and then wrote some scripts for Jess so she can just click a link on the desktop and it will transfer all her pictures to the computer, organize them by year/month/day and then automatically convert any videos to mp4 files (which take up much less space with no noticeable loss in quality). Being married to a geek has its perks.
And yes, I was also present. Here I am showcasing this year’s “Most Unexpected Gift,” a “Zombie Shelter” sign my parents found in New Orleans:
Just For Fun
These are two of my favorite non-traditional Christmas songs.
“A Baby Changes Everything” by Faith Hill:
and “It Really Is (A Wonderful Life)” by Mindy Smith:
(I don’t really care for either of those videos, but the songs are great.)
And as a bonus, here’s Heather’s favorite, “For Unto Us” by Point of Grace (a.k.a. “Child is Born Song”):
(Yes, she sings along. “…booooooooooooorn…King of Kings…boooooooorn…”).
Reducing Tracking
As a software developer and particularly a web developer it is my responsibility to set a good example and try to be a force for good.
As of today, none of my sites use Google Analytics anymore. The tipping point, aside from improving general web privacy, was that the NSA is supposedly hijacking the Google tracking data for their own purposes.
While I don’t really need any analytics, I do get curious as to what kind of traffic my websites are getting. So I instead stood up my own instance of Piwik. This is a self-hosted analytics solution. Now my websites simply report to another one of my systems when they’re accessed (instead of Google). And I know that my Piwik installation respects the “Do Not Track” setting you can use in your browser (I’ve tested it myself). Also, my Piwik analytics won’t track you all over the Internet.
I realize this may seem a little silly coming from a blog hosted on Google’s servers via Blogger, but I’m also working on that. I’m looking into using Habari and migrating this blog to be self-hosted as well. Given that Blogger seems to be a dead product in Google’s eyes (little to no updates or changes in many, many months), it’s probably better to get off it anyway as it may get shut down at some point. However, I’ll probably wait a few months until the more stabilized Habari 1.0 release is finished. Such a move will probably coincide with standing up a family cloud using ArkOS and OwnCloud.
It’s not that I’m particularly paranoid, but the various pieces of software are reaching a point where for someone like me, it’s not particularly difficult or burdensome to self-host things. So I might as well do it and encourage an Internet model closer to its original design: interacting, decentralized systems. A model which is harder for any one organization (government or otherwise) to infiltrate, break, or commandeer.
















