Air Rings
Here’s a cool clip of a Beluga Whale blowing “air rings” at a little girl. I didn’t even know there was such a thing as “air rings.” Beluga Whale…sure, but “air rings?” Neat.
Here’s a cool clip of a Beluga Whale blowing “air rings” at a little girl. I didn’t even know there was such a thing as “air rings.” Beluga Whale…sure, but “air rings?” Neat.
It’s really very sad when a voice that you love – a voice that you depend on to challenge and inspire – suddenly goes silent. Science Fiction writer Octavia Butler died unexpectedly on Friday. She was only 58 years old and had just published her first book in eight years. I feel such sadness at losing the words she still had to write.
Octavia Butler wrote with intensity about issues of gender, race, sexuality, and humanity, challenging her readers with her unflinching exploration of what is means to be human. Her stories never shied from sadness or gave easy answers. I still can’t believe we won’t know what happens next.
Thank you Octavia. Thank you and good-bye.
“I’m comfortably asocial, a hermit in the middle of a large city, a pessimist if I’m not careful, a feminist, a Black, a former Baptist, an oil-and-water combination of ambition, laziness, insecurity, certainty and drive.”
J: Mama
R: Son, Age 7
R: [Gasp!] mama – there’s blood on your finger!! get a band-aid, quick!!
J: Oh, rats, must be a hangnail.
R: Oh, I HATE hangnails!! I hate them!!… What’s a hangnail?
J: [explains]
R: Oh, yea. I HATE those! How old are you?
J: 36.
R: 26?
J: THIRTY-6.
R: [Gasp!] You’re almost a grandma!!!
J: I’m a grandma when you have babies. Are you almost going to have babies?
R: No. I’m never having babies. I’m going to be partners with P [R’s sister].
J: Partners with P?
R: Yes. I’m never going to marry.
J: Oh. What’s the difference between partners and marrying?
R: I don’t know.
J: Well, you can’t have babies with your sister.
R: Nope. Maybe she can have babies with her husband and we’ll just be partners.
J: What if she doesn’t have a husband?
R: She has to or she can’t play with mans. And, she has to play with mans or it won’t be fun.
J: What if she wants a wife?
R: You can’t have two WIFES!!! Then you would have FOUR babies! And THAT would be TERRIBLE.
J: Why?
R: FOUR babies?!? You would be CRAZY!
J: Well, sure. It’s not such a hot idea to have more kids than parents around. Scary. But, why would two wives have to have four babies?
R: Because each wife has to have her own two. This is boring. Grab my feet!
My dear friend Jeff just put up a bunch of new artwork. Please do take a look. It’s lovely: http://www.jeffrossart.com
On Tuesday, the National Federation of the Blind filed suit against Target, claiming that its site is not accessible to blind users. This certainly would be a case to watch since, to date, we’ve thought accessibility requirements as having legal weight only with government sites. Whether or not the NFB wins the suit, it will likely bring increased focus to the subject. And the fact that they also mention that the Target site is "powered by Amazon.com" would seem to suggest that this isn’t the last we’ll hear about this.
"Target?s website ? which according to its home page is ‘powered by Amazon.com’ ? contains significant access barriers that prevent blind customers from browsing and purchasing products online, as well as from finding important corporate information such as employment opportunities, investor news, and company policies.
The plaintiffs charge that Target.com fails to meet the minimum standard of web accessibility. It lacks compliant alt-text, an invisible code embedded beneath graphic images that allows screen readers to detect and vocalize a description of the image to a blind
computer user. It also contains inaccessible image maps, preventing blind users from jumping to different destinations within the website. And because the website requires the use of a mouse to complete a transaction, blind Target customers are unable to make purchases on Target.com independently.‘We tried to convince Target that it should make its website accessible through negotiations,’ says Dr. Maurer [NFB Pres.]. ‘It?s unfortunate that Target was unwilling to commit to equal access for all its online customers. That gave us no choice but to seek the protection of the court. The website is no more accessible today than it was in May of last year,
when we first complained to Target."
More information available from the Disability Rights Advocates Web site including a Fact Sheet and the complete complaint.
I’m so glad that Andrew Bell opened up his head for us to see inside: http://www.creaturesinmyhead.com/
Yesterday I had to stop my second attempt at an anti-depressant due to allergic reation. Here’s how it goes:
First I tried Wellbutrin. Yesterday I had to stop Effexor. Monday I’ll get a new one. If this happens again I’ll just go back to drinking heavily.
Saw this on Boing Boing today and thought it was really pretty cool:
At last, walking slowly toward us from the parking lot, was a man built very differently from the men gathered around me. He had none of their Midwestern roundness, none of their low-slung solidity. He was tall, lean, somewhat frail, and instead of clomping along on big feet, as the others tended to do, he picked his way forward delicately, as if someone had told him to watch out for broken glass.
He was dressed differently too. Rather than the dapper uniform worn by his teammates, Meeden wore baggy street clothes–he preferred to play in his everyday duds, his teammates insisted–and he carried a sad little Kansas City Chiefs tote bag. Also, while every other man looked as if he’d been to the same Supercuts that morning, Meeden wore his white hair rakishly, almost foppishly, long. The wispy strands fell well below his shoulders.