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On Keycards.

I use a Hipster PDA. I must confess I needed some framework though, and chose to use the D*I*Y Planner to keep my shiznat together.

Anyways. All this shuffling around with index cards sent me back to my youth, and my brief flirtation with magic. No, not of the ‘The Gathering’ persuasion, but the more widely experienced sawing-a-loady-in-half flavour. Although I never tried that, I could never seem to find volunteers…

Yeah, I wasn’t very good. However, my point is one thing I learned about was the use of Keycards - specific cards you could use to find a place in a deck of cards when you riffle through them, making it easier to cut a deck at a specific point for the requirements of a trick.

This is the sort of thing I figure could be useful for my Hipster PDA, for finding specific parts of the deck when I need to. I’ve already separated my Next Action lists from my Projects, Calendars, and Someday-Maybe lists with separator cards of varying colour, and have just hacked the dividers so that each one is two index cards glued together. This I hope will make it easier to find cards in the deck without having to use troublesome tabs or paperclips.

Other examples within my ‘Pocket Book of Magic’ (Peter Eldin, published by Kingfisher), include p[aperclips, lengthened cards, or crimping. However, these all involved tabs and things sticking out the end of the deck which I would prefer to avoid. Having said that, I might eventually try the ‘long card’ trick, but I would rather not have anything sticking out of my hipster to get caught.

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“I’ll definitely see you there, unless I get shot with an elephant gun”

~ Guy on the phone seated behind me in a cafe today

I don’t normally listen to peoples conversations when sitting in cafes, honest. That quote just kind of osmosed into my conciousness whilst writing and I had to write it down.

Yes, I write in Cafes, and no, I’m not a pretentious arsehole. I do not have a goatee, nor do I have a beret. Well, I do, but it’s an old military beret and it doesn’t fit, besides which it’s blue and so not really suitable. I honestly find cafe writing helpful in my progress - the cafe in which I write is busy enough to force me to concentrate, but not so busy that I feel smothered. Most excellent.

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I’ve always had a problem with iTunes ratings.

That sounds a lot like a confession at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, I know, but it’s true. I love the program, don’t get me wrong, and I use it a hell of a lot, even going as far as purchasing music with it, despite the (admittedly lax) DRM. But there’s this thing, this littler irritant that’s always niggled me about it.

Maybe it’s just me, but I like a song more or less depending on its context, making assigning ratings very difficult. Say if I’m feeling happy, I don’t want any songs that’ll bring me down. Likewise, if I’m angry I either want to listen to happy songs to make me feel better, or smoulder for a bit in my angry songs.

I intially thought tagging was the answer: I’ve been on a flat hierarchy trip lately, Gmail and del.icio.us have been rockin’ my work world so much I’ve installed a similar system on my Mac with the aid of spotlight comments. But on further investigation, it may be easy to tag a song with iTunes by sticking a word in the comments, but there’s no way to append to these comments as far as I can tell, which is what I can do with Automator. I considered seeking an Applescript solution, but then I thought, hey, what if I’m out on the road with my iPod, find a new (ish) song, and want to categorize it on the fly?

So I chose to use ratings as a tagging system.

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This isn’t ideal as I only have five categories for all of my music, meaning they end up as wider, emotional categories rather than the traditional narrow playlist. But then again, maybe that’s a good thing.

Incidentally, that ‘Baleetable” playlist is for any songs I want to delete. I’m not a completist about album listings, and I’m more than willing to sacrifice track 4 of an album even if it means things aren’t all neat, like. But I guess I could jsut use it as an ‘Unplayable’ playlist.

So, if you’re finding you’re not using Ratings as much as you’d think, why not give this a try?

New Year

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New Year
New Year,
originally uploaded by DarkHawke.

A gloriously sunny and uncharacteristically warm day here, almost like a memory of summer. One hopes it is a good omen for the new year, for me and for all who see this.

Quite frustrated that I missed new years celebrations - I was working new years morning, and a little while after getting home developed a catastrophic headache and felt more than a little sick, so I wasn’t able to pay my visitations.

2005 was a comfortable year for me. Probably too comfortable in all honesty, and I hope for some more excitement in the coming year. Carpe Diem, after all.

Nearly filled a pocket moleskine with novel. Once it’s finished I can move onto my recently acquired A5 moleskine, which I can’t wait to start in.

A good 2006 to you all.