Home

KSOL1460 Station Log

Albums don't rust. I don't care what Neil Young said.

June 12th, 2008

Shut your eyes and listen to Obama.

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
vote kucinich
Garrison Keillor

June 11, 2008 |  .....  And now we are all staring at Barack Obama, who is -- if you listen to him on the radio -- a commanding presence and a towering candidate for president. I heard the speech he gave in St. Paul to an arena full of supporters, and the man can give a speech. Nobody else surfs on applause like Obama and drives his point home, and it all sounds as if he were telling you what he thinks and not reading off a Plexiglas reflector.

But when you look closely at him he is a skinny young black guy, and this is going to be a problem for some folks.The gifts that transcend race )

June 3rd, 2008

custom browser for autistics

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
autism2
If a custom browser can be built for this kid, they can make one for adult autistics, and one that works with the kind of autism we have, and [info]sethrenn too.

Grandfather builds Web browser for autistic boy
By BRIAN BERGSTEIN Associated Press Writer

Jun 3rd, 2008 | John LeSieur is in the software business, so he took particular interest when computers seemed mostly useless to his 6-year-old grandson, Zackary. The boy has autism, and the whirlwind of options presented by PCs so confounded him that he threw the mouse in frustration.

LeSieur tried to find online tools that could guide autistic children around the Web, but he couldn't find anything satisfactory. So he had one built, named it the Zac Browser For Autistic Children in honor of his grandson, and is making it available to anyone for free.

LeSieur's quest is a reminder that while the Web has created important communication and educational opportunities for some people with cognitive impairments, computers can also introduce new headaches for families trying to navigate the contours of disability.

The Zac Browser greatly simplifies the experience of using a computer. It seals off most Web sites from view, to block violent, sexual or otherwise adult-themed material. Instead it presents a hand-picked slate of choices from free, public Web sites, with an emphasis on educational games, music, videos and visually entertaining images, like a virtual aquarium.

Other programs for children already offer that "walled garden" approach to the Web. But LeSieur's browser aims to go further: It essentially takes over the computer and reduces the controls available for children like Zackary, who finds too many choices overwhelming.

For example, the Zac Browser disables extraneous keyboard buttons like "Print Screen" and turns off the right button on the mouse. That eliminates commands most children don't need anyway, and it reduces the chance an autistic child will lose confidence after making a counterproductive click.

Children using the Zac Browser select activities by clicking on bigger-than-normal icons, like a soccer ball for games and a stack of books for "stories." The Zac Browser also configures the view so no advertisements or other flashing distractions appear.

"We're trying to avoid aggressive or very dark or complicated Web sites, because it's all about self-esteem," LeSieur said from Las Vegas, where he lives. "If they're not under control, they will get easily frustrated."

Autism generally affects a person's ability to communicate, and Zackary doesn't speak much. But his mother, Emmanuelle Villeneuve, reports that the boy can start the Zac Browser himself. He enjoys listening to music through the program and trying puzzles — things he always liked before but hadn't been able to explore online, she said from her family's home in suburban Montreal.

Perhaps most tellingly, while he still acts out aggressively against the TV, she said, he doesn't try to harm the computer.

LeSieur didn't create the browser by consulting with people who are considered experts in disorders on the autism spectrum. The small software company he runs, People CD Inc., essentially designed the Zac Browser to meet Zackary's needs, and figured that the approach would likely help other autistic children. Early reviews have been positive, though LeSieur plans to tweak the program so parents can suggest new content to add.

Several autism experts were pleased to hear of LeSieur's work, and not surprised that he had not previously found anything suitable for Zackary.

After all, the autism spectrum is so wide that a particular pattern of abilities or impairments experienced by one autistic person might be reversed in another. In other words, creating software that would work for huge swaths of autistic children is a tall order.

Indeed, the Zac Browser might do nothing for another autistic child.

That said, however, LeSieur's approach of limiting distractions and using the software as a confidence-boosting tool "is a very good idea," said Dianne Zager, director of the Center for Teaching and Research in Autism at Pace University. She said many autistic students tend to do best with educational materials that make unnecessary stimuli fade from view.

"Some parts of the Web have so much extraneous material that it can be distracting, and for the nonverbal child, there might not be an ability to negotiate that information," added Stephen Sheinkopf, an autism researcher at Brown University.

This is not to say the Web is necessarily barren for autistic children. James Ball, an autism-education consultant in New Jersey, said many children he works with enjoy Webkinz, where kids care for virtual pets. Others find chat rooms and instant-messaging a lower-anxiety way of socializing than talking to someone in person, he said.

But the Zac Browser might turn out to be the rare tool that can be configured to strike a chord with a wide range of autistic students, said Chris Vacek, chief innovation officer at Heartspring, a special-education center in Wichita, Kan. Vacek is considering using the Zac Browser at Heartspring.

One huge advantage is that the browser is free, while many assistive technologies cost upward of $5,000 and work only on specialized devices. But Vacek, himself a parent of an autistic child, said the Zac Browser's best credential is that it appears to pass what he calls Heartspring's "acid test": It has a high chance of increasing a child's ability to do things independently.

"Let's hear it for grassroots innovation," Vacek said.

May 31st, 2008

Nate Tseglin Goes Home

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
celebrate
According to autismvox.com and getnatehome.com, Nate Tseglin, the autistic boy from the Russian Jewish family which held the "wrong beliefs", has been released and is going home.

May 30th, 2008

... and all these words I'm thinking will get outside my head

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
andy3
May 30th, 2008 | WASHINGTON -- The man whose parents' battle to save him from a nerve disease was told in the movie "Lorenzo's Oil" died Friday at his home in Virginia, having lived more than 20 years longer than doctors had predicted.Read more... )

http://www.myelin.org/

May 27th, 2008

Goodbye Sydney

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
andy3
Sydney Pollack, director and co-star of the marvellous satire Tootsie and many, many other films and commercials (including the perfect theatrical PSA reminding viewers to turn off their cell phones), transitus est.

May 25th, 2008

Yippeeee!!!!!!!!!!

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
hst
CNN reports the Mars Phoenix probe landed safely.

Now if those dang Martians will leave this one alone and not blow it up or dismantle it the way they did the others.

er.... excuse me?

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
vote kucinich
Clinton Spokesman: It's All Obama's Fault!

May 23rd, 2008

Has Hillary Clinton gone too far?

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
test pattern


see also
Clinton Remark on Kennedy’s Killing Stirs Uproar NY Times

also,
Hillary's RFK remarks spark widespread rebuke Daily KOS

Olbermann has a diary on KOS and yesterday he said: "We can sometimes have our most innocent remarks misinterpreted into the most violent of inferences - I know this firsthand. And we are still responsible for the words, no matter the intent.

"The use of the word 'assassination' is not open to misinterpretation. It has no place, not with our country's history."

ETA changed to a youtube that has the whole speech in one file.

Holy resurrection, Batman!

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
hst
http://blocksandfiles.com/article/5056

Thanks [info]nineweaving!

May 22nd, 2008

Yippieeee!!! Federal court rules against military gays policy

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
celebrate
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080522/ap_on_re_us/military_gays

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer 56 minutes ago

SEATTLE - The military cannot automatically discharge people because they're gay, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday in the case of a decorated flight nurse who sued the Air Force over her dismissal.

The three judges from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals did not strike down the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy. But they reinstated Maj. Margaret Witt's lawsuit, saying the Air Force must prove that her dismissal furthered the military's goals of troop readiness and unit cohesion.
Hopefully this is eventually the end of don't ask don't tell. )

[info]iamshadow sez: "This is a brilliant victory, not just for Maj. Margaret Witt, but for queer military personnel all over the US and abroad. Maj. Witt was a decorated flight nurse and performed her job for eighteen years before the Air Force succeeded in dismissing her for having a long-term same sex civilian partner.

"This isn't a youngster, partying hard, causing 'dissent' in the ranks (the sort of person the government claims "don't ask, don't tell" is designed to "protect" their forces from). This is a well respected officer, who, like millions of other military personnel, just wants to do their job, and have a meaningful relationship."

May 20th, 2008

Senator Kennedy Has Malignant Brain Tumor

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
phone
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/20/washington/20cnd-kennedy.html?hp

May 19th, 2008

Celebrity Gossip

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
test pattern
Olbermann Vs. O'Reilly Thing Escalates

The networks are making all the $$$ they can out of this - and yeah, I'm sitting back with the popcorn and cheering for Keith. Except this kind of cat fight between announcers is taking away from the real issues and will ensure a Rep win in Nov.

Nick

May 17th, 2008

What else could possibly happen? Don't answer that.

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
vote kucinich
Teddy Kennedy is in the hospital with what's variously been described as a stroke and a seizure.

May 15th, 2008

Olbermann says it all

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
sucketh
part one:



part two:

April 4th, 2008

Patricia Douglas

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
jay4
If you have Netflix, go here and watch this.

Also, read this.

The author says she died the day after he called her (Nov. 10, 2003) to tell her that people were mailing him sympathetic responses to her story. Her reply: "Thank you. I can go now."

I grew up watching those pictures -- the big extravaganzas, the dance numbers, the oh-so-catchy tunes and all those "ostrich feather" showgirls. They formed an integral part of who I am. I learned part of the truth (which I had already suspected watching how hard those actors and dancers worked) reading Valley of the Dolls when I was eleven. When I first heard of this story I immediately wondered why Susann had not found some way to include it even as a background story, a brief mention. I now realize that even she probably did not know Patricia Douglas existed.

April 3rd, 2008

Buy Neat Stuff and Help Someone

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
nick
We have some friends who are selling off computer equipment, software, music CDs, books, DVDs and so on, in an attempt to raise money to get out of a bad situation.

Below is a link to their entry which lists the items they're selling. If you want to buy something from them, please either leave them a comment or leave one to this entry.

http://flatlanders.insanejournal.com/130752.html#cutid1

April 2nd, 2008

Wal-Mart Concedes!

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
celebrate


More at http://action.walmartwatch.com
(also, check their blog)

We can all help the Shanks. They have a fund at Bank of America. You can go to any branch or send a check to:
BofA
320 W. Main St.
Jackson, MO 63755
c/o Debbie Shank Fund
573/339-6500
Write "Debbie Shank Fund" on the check.

March 17th, 2008

As if the anti-gay demographic manipulation on LJ weren't enough

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
alienation


rather than comments on this one, if you could please just pass it on.

Andy & John

March 12th, 2008

RIP Dale Disharoon

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
cliphome
Raise a cup of pan-mead for Dale Disharoon, questers...

He is survived by his long-time partner Robyn, his ex-wife Andrea and their children, Avital and Nadav.  He passed peacefully in the night with his family surrounding him.

more here

and here

Mr. DeSharone, as he was known later in life, was also the founder of Dance Friday.

March 6th, 2008

The Pocket Barack-itizer

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
vote kucinich
Testing this while looking into all different political widgets.

February 27th, 2008

Orange County institutionalizes autistic teen - Russian Jewish parents have "wrong set of beliefs"

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
alienation
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Child abuse by the government
Government rips an autistic boy from his home because it prefers a different treatment than the one offered by the parents.

STEVEN GREENHUT
Sr. editorial writer and columnist
The Orange County Register
sgreenhut@ocregister.com


What kind of society rips a 17-year-old autistic boy from his loving home and places him in a state-run mental institution, where he is given heavy doses of drugs, kept physically restrained, kept away from his family, deprived of books and other mental stimulation and is left alone to rot?

Certainly not a free or humane one. )
Read other comments here:
http://www.ocregister.com/column/nate-parents-home-1982047-government-court

http://www.getnatehome.com

February 11th, 2008

A Song Alone

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
neil2000
No one song can change the world. But that doesn't mean it's time to stop singing.

Somewhere on Earth a scientist is alone working. No one knows what he or she is thinking. The secret is just within reach. If I knew that answer I would be singing the song.

This is the age of innovation. Hope matters. But not hope alone. In the age of innovation, the people's fuel must be found. That is the biggest challenge. Who is up to the challenge? Who is searching today? All day. All night. Every hour that goes by. I know I am.

My friends write to me don't give up. I am not giving up. I know this is the time for change. But I know that it's not a song. Maybe it was. But it isn't now. It's an action, an accomplishment, a revelation, a new way. I am searching for the people's fuel. Will I find it? Yes. I think so. I don't know why I may have been chosen to help enable a discovery of this magnitude. I know I can only write a song about it when I find it. Until then I can write a song about the search or spend all my time looking.

But a song alone will not change the world.

Even so, I will keep on singing.

Neil Young

February 6th, 2008

Happppppppppppppy New Year!!!

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
chinese new year
Year of the Rat. Yay Rats!

Time to start over

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
vote kucinich

Time to start over
The American people are looking for a change this year, and so am I.
By Garrison Keillor

Feb. 6, 2008 | Only February and already it's a fine political year here in our great roisterous republic with a carnival cast of colorful drones and smiley eminences huffing and puffing across the field of battle and tumbling off the cliff, leaving two serious contenders in each party. Thanks to all the candidates for their nerve. Hurray for democracy, which has been so generous to keyboard wretches like me. And to all the soreheads who say the presidential campaign season is too long, a big Bronx cheer (pppppppppppppp). Not when it's this interesting, it isn't.
sometimes when life is too much, you want to walk out the front door and leave it all behind )

Some of the letters responding to this are worth reading, too!

February 5th, 2008

Now, don't let this influence your vote at all...

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
vote kucinich

they're in ur internet readin ur emailz

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
f'd-2
and you can't do a damned thing about it.

February 1st, 2008

How cool is this!

Add to Memories Tell a Friend
music
NASA Launching Beatles Tune Into Space

Feb 1st, 2008 | WASHINGTON -- The Beatles are about to become radio stars in a whole new way. NASA on Monday will broadcast the Beatles' song "Across the Universe" across the galaxy to Polaris, the North Star.

This first-ever beaming of a radio song by the space agency directly into deep space is nostalgia-driven. It celebrates the 40th anniversary of the song, the 45th anniversary of NASA's Deep Space Network, which communicates with its distant probes, and the 50th anniversary of NASA.

"Send my love to the aliens," Paul McCartney told NASA through a Beatles historian. "All the best, Paul."

The song, written by McCartney and John Lennon, may have a ticket to ride and will be flying at the speed of light. But it will take 431 years along a long and winding road to reach its final destination. That's because Polaris is 2.5 quadrillion miles away.

NASA loaded an MP3 of the song, just under four minutes in its original version, and will transmit it digitally at 7 p.m. EST Monday from its giant antenna in Madrid, Spain. But if you wanted to hear it on Polaris, you would need an antenna and a receiver to convert it back to music, the same way people receive satellite television.

The idea came from Martin Lewis, a Los Angeles-based Beatles historian, who then got permission from McCartney, Yoko Ono and the two companies that own the rights to Beatles' music. One of those companies, Apple, was happy to approve the idea because is "always looking for new markets," Lewis said.

Perhaps coincidentally, the song's launching comes a day before the release of the DVD of the Julie Taymor movie named after the Beatles hit.
Powered by LiveJournal.com