accident prone
May 05, 2003 by Eric Richardson
I've seen more accidents at the corner of 29th & Vermont (it's the centered intersection... the west side is higher than the east) in the last couple weeks than I would think an intersection like that would get. I know I can think of at least three that I've happened to have been here and heard (and then seen the results of). They're not major, but they're decent fender-benders, usually involving the south/east side of the intersection. Odd...
mmmm... live music
May 04, 2003 by Eric Richardson
So thursday night I made it out to the Hotel Cafe and caught Steve Reynolds. He was amazing, as usual, and this time I finally got to pick up his cd. Now I don't have to go through withdrawl between shows. I also caught the last couple minutes of a set by Penny. I can't at all say I got enough from the little I heard to make a judgement, but listening to a couple tracks on their website I'd definitely want to check them out. Unfortunately their show at the knit is while I'm back in MI, but I'm sure I'll find a time to catch them over the summer. All in all, a great night.
steve reynolds
May 01, 2003 by Eric Richardson
Steve Reynolds did a set on Morning Becomes Eclectic today. Definitely check it out. I've seen him live twice now, and every time I'm amazed. I just told #{node "6"}Magilla#{/node} that being able to easily see Steve's shows might be reason #1 to turn 21.
it's going to be a long night
April 22, 2003 by Eric Richardson
I'm working on writing the paper I mentioned the other day. I think the public domain is going to take a larger role than I had envisioned, but I like how my outline has come together. Now the whole serious writing process starts. Eleven pages, due at 2pm tomorrow, but I've got other classes between now and then, so for me it's basically due at 10am. It'll be interesting.
research, research, research
April 20, 2003 by Eric Richardson
So tonight I find myself in the computer lab, looking for information for a research paper due Wednesday. It's for my Legal Issues in New Media class, and the topic I've chosen to tackle is copyright terms. Right now I'm working with the juxtaposition of increasing copyright terms and what I'm calling the decreasing shelf life of information. The copyright term aspect is pretty broad and straight-forward, but the fun part is trying to figure out how you reasearch the latter aspect. What metric do you use to determine how long information is useful?