Follow Millard Fillmore’s Bathtub on Twitter

June 19, 2011

Look to the column at the right, and you may notice that I’ve added a widget so you can subscribe to my posts and other ramblings on Twitter.

Missing the boat?  Facebook accounts fell last month in the U.S., suggesting social media may have peaked here.  I’ve had no great luck getting students to subscribe to my classroom blog’s Twitter account.  (“I don’t want to get reminders of tests and quizzes!  They depress me.”).

But let’s see what happens.  Before I did anything more than set up the account we snagged a couple of followers.

Maybe that was pure accident and they’ll bail out, now.

I’ll work to tweet on each post, and maybe a few other things I find from time to time.

Subscribe if you wish:


All libraried up

June 14, 2011

Posting may be a bit slight this week.

With a group of history teachers from Dallas Independent School District, I’m off on a trip that will take us to three Presidential Libraries in the system operated by the National Archives. This study is underwritten in part by a grant from the Teaching American History program at the U.S. Department of Education, one of those good programs that is on the chopping block.

Yesterday we toured and talked at the George H. W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum in College Station, Texas.  Today it’s the LBJ in Austin.

I hope your summer is as productive.


Ah, the WordPress blog snow is back

November 30, 2010

No, your vision isn’t deteriorating faster than you thought.  If you pause on a post here for a few seconds, snowflakes may begin to fall.

It’s a December, holidays sort of thing.  A few complaints, but I like it.


Norton Security: Customer service fail

November 29, 2010

For the past two weeks I’ve been trying to get approval for a license I already paid for to work on my laptop.  Probably a dozen times I’ve gotten a message that I’ve been “updated,” or “approved,” or somesuch, but each morning when I boot up I get the nastygram from Norton that my “trial” security period is ended — or now, that I’m wholly unprotected.

Never mind that this is the 6th license I’ve bought from Norton in two years for two different computers.

Skroom.  Norton security is worthless if it doesn’t work after you’ve paid them several times.  Off to shop for something else.

And, just try to contact them.  E-mails go unanswered for weeks.  Phone calls are disconnected after 15 minutes of waiting, in the middle of some explanation for why you should be happy to be waiting.

Once upon a time I found Norton to be responsive and very useful.  Now Norton is merely the subject of great frustration.

Rats.


“142nd fastest gun in the West”

October 22, 2010

You’d probably have to probe the archives of Dr. Demento to find it, but there was a modest little hit in a humor song years ago, a parody of Jimmy Dean’s “Big John.”  The song praised the life of Irving, a Jewish cowboy who was “the 142nd fastest gun [RIMSHOT] in the West.”

I thought of it immediately when I learned that, according to Wikio, this blog, Millard Fillmore’s Bathtub,  ranks 2,263.

No kidding.  Not even enough swat to rank in a category.

So, why is Anthony Watts so ticked at this measly little mosquito of a blog?

Wikio - Top Blogs


Blogging longhand

August 29, 2010

From the Department of Education where my group was in charge of dragging the rest of the research branch into the computer age — putting computers on desks of contract managers for the first time, in most cases — I moved to American Airlines.  Though American boasted the best computer reservations system in the world, at headquarters my cubicle came with no computer, not even a typewriter.

I requested a typewriter to draft documents.  “That’s what we have secretaries for,” I was told.  “You draft longhand, let the secretaries turn them into print.”

That quickly changed, thank the business gods, but I feel like I’ve been thrust back to 1987 in many ways since my laptop crashed last week.

The good people at Fry’s noted the fan wasn’t working, but feared it might be damage beyond that.  I’m informed now that it’s been sent to its birthplace with HP/Compaq in California for a more serious assessment and, I hope, quick repair.  Alas, when we bought the extended warranty (the first time such a purchase seems to have not been a really stupid idea) we did not purchase the “automatic loaner” rider.

Oh, I’ve got the data backed up.  What I don’t have is an easy access to one computer I can use regularly  or transport with me to get that information into the formats I need.  Lesson plans, presentations, worksheets and tests are essentially on hold.

A somewhat better prepared group of juniors this year.  They have heard of Columbus.  They know basic map stuff, like in which direction we say the sun rises.  Prehistory remains mysterious to them, human migrations prior to 1750 are fuzzy to them, and the Age of Exploration seems to be complete news.  All that stuff I put together last year in case this happened?   It’s on the backup drive, the drive that I don’t have enough USB ports to tap into while doing much of anything else.

My classroom for a good book!  Of course, I’d have to reinvent the book check out process, and find some way to transport a half-ton of books from the book room to the classroom, and check them out.

We had a meeting Friday on what we’re doing to differentiate classroom lessons for differently-abled learners.  Unable to get lessons to any learners, I found it a waste of time at the moment.  How much other work teachers do is frustrated by the assumptions that all systems are go for teachers, when few systems are.

A reader, nyceducator,  noted he’s never had a working computer in his classroom in 25 years.  He’s better prepared than I am as a result, and I envy him at the moment.  Should I retrench and prepare for a paper future?

Teaching in America is, too often, a constant reinvention of the wheel.

The laptop I’m typing this on is 9 years old, old enough that it can connect to the home WiFi only with an expensive modem.  That takes up the one USB port.  I think I donated the last wired mouse I had, and the touchpad on the computer is failing (which is a big reason I bought the now-ailing computer back in 2009).  The battery has been failing for a long time, but that model is no longer manufactured.  Used batteries are tough to find on eBay, even.

I can write it out longhand, and fax it to a secretarial service who will convert it to electronic files for me.

How is your 1987 going?


Computer fritz. Expletive deleted.

August 22, 2010

Two days before school starts, with the computers in the classroom not yet up and running well, with a lot of material yet to create, with poor printer connections in the best of times, there appears to be a power supply issue.  Sudden loss of data.  Inability to back up.  Days for a solution.

Expletive deleted.

You know, when I was in solo practice I had a much smaller burden to bear on office automation.  I was responsible for all of it, but I didn’t have Wizards of Smart from downtown creating programs and processes incompatible with computer use.  The comic strip, “Dilbert,” discusses the Department of Automation and Information Prevention.

I got that.  With troubles on my own computer.

Another expletive deleted.

Maybe I can get Jonathan Kozol to do a chapter in a new book, a follow-up to Rudolph Flesch’s work: Why Johnny Can’t Teach.

Feel free to discuss on any thread.


Twitter Tweet button on all posts

August 18, 2010

WordPress added a function that puts an easy way to tweet from any post.

Tweet Button for WordPress

New Tweet button, found at the bottom of all posts; this is just an image -- click the little one below, to Tweet

When you click on the title of a post, or when you go to “comments,” there will be a button at the end of the post, before comments, that gives you a quick way to tweet a post.

This is automatic, not the clunky 18 step process required to post the line of buttons you see on some posts (those where I remembered to go back and create them).

Please, feel free to use that button with abandon.

Thanks, WordPress.

Thanks, Dear Readers.


2,000,000

February 23, 2010

It’s a day’s readership for Pharyngula.  It’s a trifle compared to those sites that cater to woo and disinformation.

A few people, perhaps, have found use in the posts here.  Two million looks passed about 8:00 a.m. this morning.

Thank you, readers.


Becalmed in the Dallas Doldrums of the internet

February 16, 2010

Sorry about that.

Near the end of storm recovery in Dallas, on Sunday, our power went out.  Still out.

Well, at least partially.  I’ll leave it to the electricians, but we’ve lost all big power, 220-volts, to major appliances including the furnace and water heater, and half of our other house circuits, including the one that runs the DSL modem.

Posting will be slight while I shiver and curse and harangue Oncor Energy.


Few posts lately: I apologize

November 25, 2009

Posting’s been much slower than events warrant, lately.  Difficulties at work, and a six-week bout with allergies of unknown origins haven’t helped.

A visit with the allergist yesterday offers some hope — I’ve been symptom free now for almost 24 hours, for the first time since early October.

Before next Monday I hope to catch up a bit on the follies at the Texas State Board of Education, and other educational events around Texas.  While I’ve been itchy and swelling, the denialists haven’t gotten any smarter or nicer.

One horrible thought:  I may be allergic to stupidity in public policy.  The timing of the main attacks coincides with several rounds of recent raving excrement from government officers.  Avoiding contact with the offending stuff is not possible, then, in a moral world.


Slow posting

August 27, 2009

Dear Reader,

My apologies.  Posting is slow — as it always is when the new school year begins.  But this year is complicated by a death in the family.

Find a thread and comment.

How are things at your school this year, so far?


Moving Civil War Memory. No, I mean, it’s really moving.

July 22, 2009

Civil War Memory said:

This past weekend I mentioned that there are some big changes to Civil War Memory on the horizon.  Well, today is the day that I announce that Civil War Memory is moving to WordPress.org.  All the posts and comments have been moved to the new site, which can be found at http://cwmemory.com/.   Please update your blogroll as soon as possible.  In about a month I will unveil a brand new theme for the blog.


Comments change: Newest first

May 31, 2009

Dear Readers, I’ve changed the way comments are displayed.  Newest comments will show up first, going to older comments as you scroll down.

If you have serious complaints, let me know — in commments.


Detour – slow blogging next few days

March 12, 2009

It may be difficult to get less active than I already am.

For the next four days

I’m out of town, seminaring on Washington and the Constitution.  (George Washington, no D.C.)

One rule of the seminar is no computers, so no live blogging.

FYI.