JewloftheLotus.com http://jewlofthelotus.com en-us 40 The Sound That Strengthens Compassion in All Enlightened Beings. Om mani padme hum. SaveNetRadio.org <table> <tr> <td style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://saveinternetradio.org"><img src="http://209.9.226.89/mirror/banner/banner_wherewillube_300x250.gif" title="SaveNetRadio.org" alt="SaveNetRadio.org" /></a></td> </tr> </table> <p>Recent government action has dramatically increased (300-1200%) the fees internet radio companies must pay to play the music you enjoy.</p> <p>This means that sites like <a href="http://pandora.com">Pandora</a> and <a href="http://last.fm">Last.fm</a>, as well as many other online radio stations, could be shut down due to bankruptcy.</p> <p>You can help, let your voice be heard. Visit <a href="http://savenetradio.org">SaveNetRadio.org</a> to see how you can help prevent the death of online radio.</p> Tue, 24 Apr 2007 12:13:00 -0400 urn:uuid:b424eabe-e429-4ef9-bcc6-ffe9d8a51ef7 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/04/24/savenetradio-org The Web Music http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1263 Robert Dempsey &amp; Craig Ambrose - RoR Gurus Interviewed <p>About a month ago I conducted a couple informational interviews for my Job Search Strategies class.</p> <p>The first interview was with Robert Dempsey, Project Director of <a href="http://www.techcfl.com">Atlantic Dominion Solutions</a> – a Ruby on Rails website and application development firm, and Founder and Director of <a href="http://railsforall.org/">Rails For All</a> – a non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion of Ruby on Rails to developers and businesses.</p> <p>My interview with Robert is available in the Interviews section at <a href="http://railsforall.org/interviews/2">Rails for All</a>.</p> <p>The second interview was with <a href="http://www.craigambrose.com/">Craig Ambrose</a>, a freelance agile web developer specializing in Ruby on Rails. In November, Craig began producing his <a href="http://www.craigambrose.com/podcasts">Freelancing On Rails</a> podcasts which have been a great insight into the world of freelance web development (something I’d like to try full time down the road).</p> <p>Read on to view my interview with Craig&#8230;</p> <p><strong>1. How did you get into software development, and more specifically, Ruby on Rails? Did you have any university training or were you more self-taught?</strong></p> <p>I spent three years at uni (software engineering) but I never finished because I was doing a year of industry placement with a computer games company and got a bit involved in the project and lost interest in going back to uni. So, while I found university invaluable, I did find I was learning more once I left. I’m personally in favour of a more balanced combination of theory and practice. Usually whenever people give me a chance to rant about it I advocate an apprenticeship model for programmers, with a couple of days a week of “trade school”, covering all the theory, and a much heavier programming component that university usually offers, on real projects for real clients, rather than contrived problems.</p> <p>I started using Rails a couple of years ago when I was at a local industry group (on the subject of design patterns) and pitching about the lack of good object-relational modelling layers in <span class="caps">PHP</span> and someone suggested that I try Active Record (and Rails). I tried rewriting a small <span class="caps">PHP</span> app I’d written in Rails instead and was surprised by how much faster it came together and how much nicer the code looked.</p> <p><strong>2. What kind of jobs did you have before freelancing and how did they help prepare you for this work?</strong></p> <p>I spent about 4 years doing C and C++ programming in a couple of different game development companies, and when the second one downsized, I started doing freelance work as a <span class="caps">PHP</span> programmer. After about eighteen months of that I was feeling a bit isolated and stagnant in my learning. At the games companied I’d been part of teams (of about ten programmers) and there were always more senior people to learn from. As a <span class="caps">PHP</span> developer I was working with a a couple of other programmers on occasion, but many of them were self-taught, which I don’t have anything against, but they didn’t seem to have much interest in pushing their skills beyond producing spaghetti and calling it programming. Also, I found that I was working more and more for the same client that I ended up being basically an employee.</p> <p>In the end, I took a job at a .NET firm for a year. The work wasn’t terribly interesting, but I found that my “freelancing mind set” really helped in dealing with management and the companies clients. I was learning more again, but the organisation and technology where very conservative, so obviously I was being left behind. When I finally quit to freelance again (and this time with an intention of having a bigger variety of clients, and working exclusively in rails) I had a bunch of knowledge about what the bigger companies were doing. Still, I don’t think that the experience is entirely necessary, people can start freelancing straight away, providing they have ways of continuing their own learning.</p> <p><strong>3. What part of your job is the most interesting or rewarding and which is the most challenging or difficult? What motivates you to continue in spite of these difficulties?</strong></p> <p>The rewarding bit is not working for someone else. It’s good to be able to succeed and fail on my own merits, and make my own decisions about which technologies and development practices are most effective. I enjoy the face to face contact with clients, and the networking and marketting.</p> <p>The downside is probably cash flow. A single contractor is pretty exposed to the feast and famine income of payments and gaps between projects. It seems to be slowly becoming less of an issue, but it’s probably the single biggest obstacle to freelancing.</p> <p><strong>4. From your personal experience in this field, what attributes do you think are essential for success?</strong></p> <p>Confidence. Everything else can be faked if you’ve got confidence. :)</p> <p>Oh, I guess being able to program helps too, but that just requires practice and a whole lot of books.</p> Tue, 03 Apr 2007 13:47:00 -0400 urn:uuid:61316866-6312-415c-bfe7-27d55e03f935 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/04/03/robert-dempsey-craig-ambrose-ruby-on-rails-gurus-interviewed The Web Ruby on Rails School http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1262 JulieMarie.net - Overdue Launch Announcement <table> <tr> <td style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://juliemarie.net/"><img src="http://jewlofthelotus.com/files/name.png" title="JulieMarie.net" alt="JulieMarie.net" /></a> </td> </tr> </table> <p>Well, I&#8217;m really not sure why I didn&#8217;t do this a month ago, or why it took me this long to think of it, but my new portfolio site is up at <a href="http://juliemarie.net">JulieMarie.net</a>.</p> <p>I built the site with <a href="http://radiantcms.org/">Radiant</a>, a simple, Ruby on Rails based content management system and designed the layout myself.</p> <p>Check it out! Let me know what you think :)</p> <p>Jewls</p> Fri, 30 Mar 2007 12:44:00 -0400 urn:uuid:51370188-fe86-4d65-8755-79dfeb4b5569 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/03/30/juliemarie-net-overdue-launch-announcement The Web Ruby on Rails http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1261 Twitter: My More Regularly Updated Mini-Blog <div style="float: right; width:176px;text-align:center"><embed src="http://twitter.com/flash/twitter_badge.swf" flashvars="color1=3381708&#38;type=user&#38;id=1062521" quality="high" width="176" height="176" name="twitter_badge" align="middle" allowScriptAccess="always" wmode="transparent" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" /><br><a style="font-size: 10px; color: #3399CC; text-decoration: none" href="http://twitter.com/jewlofthelotus">follow jewlofthelotus at http://twitter.com</a></div> <p>Well, since I don&#8217;t really have a lot of time to write more than one blog post per month, I figured I&#8217;d link you all to my Twitter page where I have the chance to post once or twice a day.</p> <p>You can find me at <a href="http://twitter.com/jewlofthelotus">twitter.com/jewlofthelotus</a>. Add me if you&#8217;re a Twitter-er (?), too. :)</p> <p>I don&#8217;t tweet too often and I don&#8217;t necessarily tweet about what I am doing. But if I have something meaningful to say in less than 140 characters, I&#8217;ll tweet about it.</p> <p>And so I give in to this Twitter thing.</p> <p>Jewls</p> Wed, 21 Mar 2007 15:24:00 -0400 urn:uuid:27e9b2f9-38c4-4697-a28f-f5fbe96ff070 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/03/21/twitter-my-more-regularly-updated-mini-blog The Web General http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1259 Post-grad ideas (and the story of my college career) <p>Post-graduate plans are something that I&#8217;ve been thinking about rather frequently since the beginning of the new year. To really see where I&#8217;m coming from, I guess I should tell you how I got to where I am now&#8230;</p> <p>When I came to <span class="caps">MSU</span>, I thought that the music industry was where I belonged. I knew performance was definitely not the path for me, so I took the production route. <span class="caps">MSU</span> offers two courses in audio production, both of which I passed with flying colors, but neither of which left me with a strong sense of confidence or inspiration to jump into the business. This was not the fault of the professor. It just turns out that I&#8217;d rather just listen to music and appreciate it, than create it on my own and push it into a market that I won&#8217;t waste time critiquing at this time.</p> <p>Last spring, after finishing both audio classes, I spent a lot of time worrying that I was headed down the wrong road. As I finished up my last audio class, I watched my boyfriend, Adam, code away and make websites. I liked his freedom and I liked that he was making something that people could use. With music, people can absorb it &#8211; listen to it, dance to it, appreciate it. With the internet, you can interact &#8211; with people and with applications. It only became clear to me recently, but interaction has always intrigued me. I guess this comes from my fascination with determinism &#8211; I enjoy observing interactions and the effects of those interactions. Human interaction is particularly interesting. In my interactions with people, I&#8217;ve always liked to play a mutual role &#8211; lots of different groups of friends, never taking sides in a fight. I&#8217;ve also always enjoyed entertaining people &#8211; throwing parties is one of my specialties, you know. I like a lot of different types of people, I don&#8217;t like fighting, and I like to make people happy. Plus, I enjoy interaction. So, how do I make a career of this? Well, I had a whole summer to figure things out. So, I headed to Europe and forgot about the future. I also signed up for a few web-related classes before I left.</p> <p>As you may have heard, Europe was incredible and completely life-altering. I came back to Michigan eager to do something enjoyable with my life (as well as, return promptly back to Italy). So, I gave into Adam&#8217;s praise of Ruby on Rails and spent the rest of my summer working through RoR tutorials and reading <em>Agile Web Development with Rails</em>. When school started back up, I had a Computer-Mediated Communications class as well as an Interactive Media class. From there, I built <a href="http://expressiveconnections.com">ExpressiveConnections.com</a> for my Interactive Media class, and learned a lot about online interaction in the <span class="caps">CMC</span> class. It was a good semester.</p> <p>My Scripting Web 2.0 class this semester is great. My &#8220;Is God Dead?&#8221; class has allowed me to explore determinism among other things more. And <a href="http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/01/26/new-semester-new-life#trackbacks">the other classes</a> are, well, <em>okay</em>.</p> <p>So, I&#8217;m enjoying the internet. I really enjoyed making Expressive Connections. I want to learn more, and I want to be really good at it all one day. I&#8217;ve only been doing this web thing for eight months, though. So, I feel like I have a ways to go. I also feel like I missed out on a lot during the first three years of college&#8230;.I could have been taking programming courses and database classes. (It especially irks me that when I was in high school making websites for rock bands (<a href="http://www.angelfire.com/rock3/faces_of_greenwheel/">the faces of greenwheel</a>) and templates for Diary-x journals, or Freshman year of college when I made an online <a href="http://msu.edu/~camero63">portfolio</a>, that I didn&#8217;t recognize my interest in the web then. I guess I can excuse myself in high school since the characteristics of today&#8217;s &#8220;Web 2.0&#8221; (like interaction, participation, customization, and collaboration), weren&#8217;t quite there yet. I didn&#8217;t see the full potential of the web, then. And, I guess I can excuse myself for Freshman year because I built my portfolio site using Adobe GoLive and it was a frustrating experience, to say the least. However, looking at the old source code today gives me a good laugh.)</p> <p>So now I&#8217;m going to graduate and need to figure out what I&#8217;m going to do with myself after that. I think I&#8217;ve almost come to some sort of clear rational decision, but I&#8217;m not there yet. Here are some things I&#8217;ve been thinking about:</p> <ol> <li>Grad School &#8211; <a href="http://www.si.umich.edu/msi/hci.htm">Human-Computer Interaction</a> at U of M</li> <li>Freelancing&#8230;</li> <li>A real job somewhere&#8230;</li> </ol> <p>I like freelancing because I can be my own boss and work on my own hours. I&#8217;m hesitant about getting a &#8220;real job&#8221; mostly because I <em>have</em> only been doing this 8 months. I barely have a relevant resume. And, I feel like there&#8217;s a lot more that I should know before going for a &#8220;real job.&#8221; Finally, there&#8217;s grad school. Honestly, this program at U of M sounds <em>perfect</em>. And applying is 90% positively in my near future, however, before I apply &#8211; I <em>need</em> to get Michigan residency. No more of these Out-of-State fees, thank you. When I am able to get residency, though, will determine which semester I am able to apply for. If I wait to get a place in Ann Arbor after graduation and then get residency, the soonest I could apply for is Winter admission. So, then I&#8217;d need to find something to do on a full-time basis between May and January. Whether that would be freelancing or a job or an internship &#8211; I have <span class="caps">NO IDEA</span>.</p> <p><em>Sigh.</em> But that is where I am now. Trying to make decisions. Excited about the future, unsure of how I&#8217;m getting there. I&#8217;m good at planning, though. So, hopefully it will all come together soon.</p> <p>If you read this far, please leave a comment so I can bake you a cake.</p> <p>Jewls</p> Tue, 20 Feb 2007 14:58:00 -0500 urn:uuid:81081c97-c9e6-4ac7-9b06-414175325f03 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/02/20/post-grad-ideas-and-the-story-of-my-college-career The Web General Music Ruby on Rails School http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1258 ExpressiveConnections.com - Alpha Launch <table> <tr> <td style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://www.expressiveconnections.com/"><img src="http://jewlofthelotus.com/files/logo.png" title="Expressive Connections" alt="Expressive Connections" /></a> </td> </tr> </table> <p>Check it out, kids: <a href="http://www.expressiveconnections.com">ExpressiveConnections.com</a> has finally been announced.</p> <p>Expressive Connections is a network for creative professionals &#8211; aimed at aspiring and accomplished writers and artists who are looking to begin or advance in a career utilizing their talent.</p> <p>The site is in a sort of alpha-mode right now. We think it&#8217;s got a pretty solid start, though &#8211; which is why we&#8217;re inviting you to take a look around, create an account and let us know what you think &#8211; if you&#8217;d use it, or what features you&#8217;d like to see added, etc. It&#8217;s still got some kinks and we&#8217;re still working things out here and there. But we&#8217;ve got big plans.</p> <p>The site started out as a class project for my Interactive Media class. If you&#8217;ve read my blog at all, then you have probably heard me speak of it vaguely &#8211; referring to it as my first <em>real</em> RoR, <span class="caps">HTML</span>, and <span class="caps">CSS</span> application. You may have also noticed that I keep referring to &#8220;us&#8221; and &#8220;we,&#8221; by that I mean myself and <a href="http://msu.facebook.com/profile.php?id=2343248">AJ Gorczyca</a> &#8211; we are the &#8220;team.&#8221; Well, once again we find ourselves in the same course &#8211; this time it&#8217;s <span class="caps">TC448</span> &#8211; Scripting Web 2.0. And if you read my <em>very</em> <em>last</em> post, then you would know that this class entails Ruby on Rails, MySQL, and Apache, and other things of the &#8220;Web 2.0&#8221; nature. Pretty f-ing awesome, basically. Well just like the last course we took together, this one has a group project &#8211; that is to develop a web site utilizing the ideas and languages learned in class. Since Expressive Connections already fit into these project requirements, we decided to ask the professor, Kurt Demaagd, if we could continue building onto the project rather than start again from scratch. He agreed and so you can expect to see a lot of new features and changes. Here&#8217;s what we&#8217;re aiming for:</p> <ul> <li>On-site private messaging </li> <li>Member endorsements and letters of recommendation</li> <li>Ability to watch favorite users, see who other users are watching, and see who is watching you</li> <li>User-submitted audio and video content for portfolios</li> </ul> <p>It would just be wrong if a network for <em>creative</em> professionals left out musicians, producers, actors, directors, and everyone in between. So, we&#8217;re not going to leave you out.</p> <p>This is where we stand and these are our plans for the next semester. I think you&#8217;ll see some exciting changes along the way. And, <em>hopefully</em> you&#8217;ll help us, too &#8211; by checking it out, creating a profile, or spreading the word around to others who may be interested.</p> <p>It&#8217;s a work in progress and we want you all to help us in building the most exciting site we can, so any feedback you give would be greatly appreciated.</p> <p>Jewls</p> Thu, 01 Feb 2007 22:58:00 -0500 urn:uuid:ad956d04-9774-4e18-be77-f47cea904752 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/02/01/expressiveconnections-com-alpha-launch The Web Ruby on Rails School http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1257 New Semester, New Life <p>Well, it&#8217;s been an entire month since my last post. It&#8217;s not that I haven&#8217;t had anything to write about &#8211; I&#8217;ve just been really, really busy. We&#8217;re three weeks into the spring semester now and classes are going pretty well. I&#8217;m taking:</p> <ul> <li><span class="caps">TC448</span> &#8211; Scripting Web 2.0 </li> <li><span class="caps">ADV456</span> &#8211; Interactive Advertising</li> <li><span class="caps">REL491</span> &#8211; Is God Dead? Pantheism, Nihilism, and the Pursuit of Divine Knowledge</li> <li><span class="caps">PSY330</span> &#8211; Personality from a Psychoanalytic Perspective</li> <li><span class="caps">CAS380</span> &#8211; Job Search Strategies</li> </ul> <p>Two of my classes are relatively related to my field, Scripting Web 2.0 goes over Ruby on Rails, MySQL, and Apache, and is taught by Kurt Demaagd, co-founder of Slashdot and board member on the Perl Foundation. So, needless to say &#8211; I&#8217;m pretty excited about that one.</p> <p>The other class potentially beneficial to my future is Interactive Advertising. The class is centered around a group project in which we have to develop a predominantly online advertising plan for a local business. My group is working with John Kodeski of <a href="http://relish-store.com">Relish Culinary Boutique</a>. Now, if you visited that link &#8211; you&#8217;ll see that the site could use some work and this is where our group comes in with a plan (and also where I come in with my web skills &#8211; if he likes our plan, maybe I&#8217;d be the one to redesign the site, eh?).</p> <p>The &#8220;Is God Dead?&#8221; class, is one of my more enjoyable courses. We&#8217;re currently discussing the viewpoints of the Dutch philosopher, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinoza">Spinoza</a> (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pantheism">Pantheism</a>), and the German philosopher, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Heinrich_Jacobi">Jacobi</a>, who argued against Spinoza&#8217;s views. It&#8217;s pretty interesting stuff, if you&#8217;re into deep philosophical thoughts of God and the freedom of man, that is.</p> <p>Next, there&#8217;s Personality from a Psychoanalytic Perspective with <a href="http://www.msu.edu/~karon/">Bertram Karon</a>. Pretty smart guy, pretty interesting stuff &#8211; however, I had him before in Abnormal Psychology and already I&#8217;m hearing the same stories . Still, interesting stuff.</p> <p>And finally, Job Search Strategies. I&#8217;ve gotta do what I&#8217;ve gotta do.</p> <p>Additionally, I&#8217;m taking introductory yoga classes at <a href="http://www.center4yoga.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=788f5d5cc54137b28167a67a448acd34">Center for Yoga</a> in East Lansing. Those are pretty nice. Good stress relief.</p> <p>Between all of these classes, I have been working on the site &#8211; which will probably be in some sort of alpha mode within in the next few weeks. Once finalized, I&#8217;ll of course post it here. I&#8217;ve also been working on a portfolio site for myself, once that is up &#8211; I&#8217;ll post it here, too. And on the weekends, I spend time with Adam. And that&#8217;s pretty much life.</p> <p>Some other random thoughts over the last month:</p> <ul> <li>iPhone is <span class="caps">AWESOME</span>.</li> <li>I should have said this back in November but Incubus&#8217; new album &#8211; <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_Grenades">Light Grenades</a> is <span class="caps">AWESOME</span>.</li> <li>Going back to Europe in July will be <span class="caps">AWESOME</span>.</li> <li>And if you&#8217;ve read this far into my post, <span class="caps">YOU ARE AWESOME</span>.</li> </ul> <p>I&#8217;ll stop now.</p> <p><em>Take care now, bye-bye then.</em> Jewls</p> Fri, 26 Jan 2007 12:44:00 -0500 urn:uuid:1cd8e7f5-9900-48d1-bf43-9356e66235e9 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2007/01/26/new-semester-new-life General School http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1256 It's Official, I &lt;3 RoR (&amp; Merry Christmas, too!) <p><em>Sigh.</em> Wow. I&#8217;ve just successfully created a <a href="http://www.rubyonrails.org">Ruby on Rails</a> forum for the site that you&#8217;ve all been eagerly awaiting (don&#8217;t worry, it&#8217;ll be public soon &#8211; just a few more weeks!). It&#8217;s pretty simple thus far. I spent the last two days just working on <em>basic</em> functionality. Nothing fancy&#8230;yet. ;)</p> <p>This forum is the first <em>major</em> RoR feature that I&#8217;ve done almost entirely on my own. It&#8217;s my baby. And, I can&#8217;t believe it only took me two days &#8211; yeah Rails!</p> <p>Having no programming experience behind me, learning Ruby on Rails started out as quite the challenge. However, this experience has definitely turned me into a lover of the language. I often have trouble stopping myself from working into the night.</p> <p>So thanks to <a href="http://threadbox.net">Adam</a> for inspiring me to give Rails a try! :)</p> <p>Oh yeah, one last thing&#8230; Happy Holidays!</p> <p>Jewls</p> Sun, 24 Dec 2006 17:15:19 -0500 urn:uuid:5df35816-8aae-43e0-9235-05ef4e1455c8 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2006/12/24/its-official-i-3-ror-merry-christmas-too The Web Ruby on Rails http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1254 Winter Break, Here I Come! <p>My apologies for the downtime. Over a long weekend of unsuccessfully attempting to launch my Rails app on Dreamhost, I managed to also break my JewloftheLotus site. Well now that my final (..my one and <em>only</em> final) is over, I had a chance to sit down and fix the problem. So, I&#8217;m back!</p> <p>Coming <span class="caps">VERY</span> soon &#8211; My First Rails App :)</p> Tue, 12 Dec 2006 17:06:44 -0500 urn:uuid:466898dc-de80-44ce-b8cc-dfe95ebb7108 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2006/12/12/winter-break-here-i-come General http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/1252 What NOT to do if you're the MPAA <p><a href="http://www.bbspot.com/News/2006/11/home-theater-regulations.html">This</a> is a satirical article posted on <a href="http://www.bbspot.com/Legal/about.html">BBSpot</a> that had <span class="caps">WAY</span> too many of us fooled&#8230;</p> <p>To sum it up:</p> <blockquote> <p>The <span class="caps">MPAA</span> defines a home theater as any home with a television larger than 29&#8221; with stereo sound and at least two comfortable chairs, couch, or futon. Anyone with a home theater would need to pay a $50 registration fee with the <span class="caps">MPAA</span> or face fines up to $500,000 per movie shown&#8230;</p> </blockquote> <blockquote> <p>The bill would require that any hardware manufactured in the future contain technology that tells the <span class="caps">MPAA</span> directly of what is being shown and specific details on the audience. The data would be gathered using various motion sensors and biometric technology&#8230;</p> </blockquote> <blockquote> <p>&#8216;Just because you buy a <span class="caps">DVD</span> to watch at home doesn&#8217;t give you the right to invite friends over to watch it too. That&#8217;s a violation of copyright and denies us the revenue that would be generated from <span class="caps">DVD</span> sales to your friends,&#8217; said Glickman.</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="http://digg.com/offbeat_news/MPAA_Lobbying_for_Home_Theater_Regulations#c4001663">mcatrage&#8217;s</a> digg comment explains why we were so easily fooled:</p> <blockquote> <p>Sad part is would you really put it past the <span class="caps">MPAA</span> to actually try and do this?</p> </blockquote> <p>...man, I was <span class="caps">REALLY</span> pissed off for a second there.</p> Tue, 28 Nov 2006 08:49:56 -0500 urn:uuid:ee830f8e-e5cf-487d-9862-167e9478a2a1 Jewls http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/2006/11/28/what-not-to-do-if-youre-the-mpaa General http://jewlofthelotus.com/articles/trackback/413