Jacksonville blogger Joe Dougherty made Howard Kurtz's column this week with his reaction to the Senate filibuster deal:
... starting today, I will now do everything in my power to see that John McCain's chances at the Republican presidential nomination in 2008 are non-existent. In fact, I'd like to help out if there's anyway we can get another Republican to run against him for his Senate seat.
This man is not a Republican or a conservative. He is a curse on the party and the movement and he must be removed from the political landscape.
I'd never talk Republicans out of forming a circular firing squad before the 2008 election, but Sen. McCain has a lifetime 83 rating on his voting record from the American Conservative Union, which compares to the scores of Sens. Chuck Hagel, Elizabeth Dole, and Rick Santorum.
I don't see how he erased two decades of conservative votes with a deal to uphold the filibuster, a practice that has been a fundamental part of Senate debate since 1806.
I wish the guy was another Jim Jeffords -- McCain's one of the only national political figures so well-liked he'd be a strong contender in the other party's primary.
Cuban's surprisingly candid about this stuff on his weblog, so I sent him an e-mail inviting his comment on the strange basketkabalistic world of salary capology.
As I told him, I don't see how an NBA owner can afford a playoff-caliber team when he's committed to paying someone like Abdul Wahad, a player yet to start a single game for the Mavericks, almost $8 million five years after he was acquired in a trade with the Denver Nuggets.
When I upgraded the Drudge Retort, I wanted to simpify things by offering a single feed in RSS 2.0 format. Any halfway decent aggregator supports RSS 1.0, RSS 2.0, and Atom, so offering all three on a site just gives you two more things that can break.I quickly discovered that the Retort has 212 subscribers to its Atom feed on Bloglines, none of whom were getting updates when I redirected the URL to the RSS feed. So I added Atom support to Wordzilla and recreated the feed.
Bloglines won't poll it, reporting an error. At first, I thought it was because I redirected the old URL to a new one that better supports caching. But no matter where I offer the feed, which is valid Atom 0.3, Bloglines refuses to check it.
Priscilla Owen's confirmation is the bitter fruit of the unprincipled "compromise" on judical nominations. ![]()
The img tag at the end of this description loads the web bug, a transparent one-by-one pixel graphic. Niall Kennedy wrote earlier this month that they're part of a paid statistics package.
Every time a bugged item is viewed in an aggregator, FeedBurner can track the IP address and user agent making the request. If a blog republishes an item verbatim, that also shows up in the usage stats.
Web bugs have privacy implications but have become commonplace in web sites and e-mail.
This is the first time I've seen one in RSS. I wrote some PHP code to squash the bugs before I pass along any stories from The Nation on my sites.
So, Senator, if we should have done it and if we had the votes to do it in the Senate -- if you guys in the Republican Party did -- then why did you need a compromise?
It's funny to see the guy talking like a Republican homer, but anyone who knows Asman's biography doesn't need to be told where his politics lie. He's a former senior editor for the Wall Street Journal editorial page.
Asman also shared his beliefs on Issues USA, a cable talk show he hosted from 1995-96. I was among the miniscule audience for the daily program, which aired on the not-long-for-this -world News Talk Television channel, because I worked as its webmaster.
The show's web site demonstrates why I wasn't able to find work in web design and began writing computer books. So much ugly crammed into so few pages -- shadowed graphics on a grotesque tile background inside completely unnecessary frames -- you'd think I was intentionally sabotaging the program.
The original title for Asman's show was Damn Right, but complaints by offended viewers scared them into a more wholesome title.
The Retort is emulating Daily Kos by giving site visitors the tools to create their own blogs. I'm going to choose interesting user blog entries for the main page and home page to run alongside my own blog entries -- I've always wanted to give the kids a chance to drive the family car.
There are 270 users who've written blog entries. One of the most active is by Niceville, a relentless contributor whose politics lie to the right of Alan Keyes, even though the Retort leans left. User blogs support visitor comments, RSS feeds, page caching, membership, and ping notification. Anyone who wants to try it out can join the site and begin blogging.
From now on, I'll be multiplying all project time estimates by five. My next book, an irreverent beginner's title on Java 2 version 1.4, will be completed in November 2007. Pre-order it today.
My vocals were receding deeper into the background with each version, so I'm pleasantly surprised to hear more of myself in Rex's edit. I also like the shotgun blast sound he makes at the end, which I interpret as a metaphorical attempt to put a sick dog out of its misery.
He'd love to hear an asynchronous podcasting choir that had the sense to exclude the five of us:
... this is a great idea for some serious choral folks and acapella enthusiasts (translation: people with talent) to experiment with. Post the music arrangement and some MP3 masters for each vocal part, and then invite folks to send in their part.