With all that said, this has been my weekend:
Friday night, I got home, watched an episode of The West Wing, and did my basic household chores. Then I sat down to get some work done. This began with the insertion of my thumb drive into the USB port. "The format of Drive G is not recognized. Format Drive G?"
Uh, no. I removed the drive, blew on it, and tried it in a different port. Same result. I rebooted. Same result. I pulled out my netbook, booted it up, and tried again. Same result. I called Rey in tightly controlled hysterics. He came over, and—after spending about an hour and a half fighting—took my thumb drive away. He's supposed to come back tonight to finish file recovery. I've done basically no work this weekend, but I've only cried myself to sleep once, so that's something, right? Right?!
Oh, Great Pumpkin, I need a drink.
In happier news, there are still pendants created from A Local Habitation available from Chimera Fancies. Not only are these amazing pieces of unique, wearable art, but there are three extra-special pendants currently up for small-scale auction, here:
1. Born to Neverland.
2. Save Faerie.
3. Tybalt's Magic.
These are just incredible. Plus I got to write BPAL-style bumper text for them, which was, like, super-fun, and I will probably be unable to resist doing in the future. I am such a geek. Anyway, pretty shinies to admire and desire and obtain, and you should totally take a look. I love Mia's work so.
More contests next week, more review roundups, and hopefully, more sanity, once I have my files back. I have not had a good weekend.
June 22 2010, 16:11:04 UTC 7 years ago
June 22 2010, 17:24:22 UTC 7 years ago
Here's a link to a story about the US policy:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co
The link to the official release detailing the policy is broken, but it covers 'any device capable of storing information in digital or analog form,' including hard drives, flash drives, cell phones, iPods, pagers, beepers, and video and audio tapes. They also cover 'all papers and other written documentation,' including books, pamphlets and 'written materials commonly referred to as "pocket trash..."'"
In other words, if the homeland security agent decides he doesn't like your attitude, he can strip you of everything down to the postcards you bought for your friends.
June 22 2010, 19:41:04 UTC 7 years ago