Index:
Weblog:
A semi-daily update of my world. A quick short and not complete
look of all the odd things that run through my head. Because at some
future time I expect to be employed I frequently edit the outpourings
from my skull so that I don't scare perspective employers off.
Archive:
The past ramblings since December 2000.
Books:
A listing of the books and magazines that I am reading, have read or
plan to read. Maybe reviews in the future, but currently just the hope
that you will buy a book from my Amazon
store so I can earn enough money through my associate account so
that I can buy items from my Wish
List, cause God knows that no one else is going to buy them for
me.
Me:
My bio page. Not that I update it enough or even mess around with it
on a regular basis. You can learn some things about me on this page,
but they are mostly dry boring facts that will make it easier for you
to steal my identity.
Photos:
Which is pretty self explanatory. But even so, here you can find links
to photo collections and to individual photos that I have used in my
blog, and links to other pages that I upload photos.
Geocities:
This is where I started hosting my blog. Then Yahoo decided that you
could no longer FTP for free anymore and I moved almost all the stuff
to a new server and my own domain name. There is still some stuff
there that I haven't deleted yet.
Off-Site:
Here is a quick list of some of the other sites
that I work on, help with or oversee.
53
Brentwood Street: The weblog of my house. Everyone who posts here lived in
the house at some time, currently I am the only poster who still lives
in the house. Quick history, we were
sitting around one day playing scrabble in October of 1999 when
one of my roommates at the time joked about how we should have
a homepage. I disappeared and 20 minutes later we had our first
page. The site is now a place for Giulio to write his sentence of the day, and
for the rest of us to post weird shit. Current posters: Giulio
Gambarota, Maiko
Callister, Ann
Marie Rakowski, Jeff Copetas
and myself. 53 is on both blogspot
(for the blog) and geocities
(for all the other stuff that we don't update).
Mindless
Drifter: This is my friend Keith's weblog. I help him when he
needs it, I also do background upkeep and fixes to make sure it all
runs smoothly. Keith is currently trying to move over to Movable
Type and so I now get to figure MT out without fucking my own site
up if I ever decide to move myself.
Scourge
Darts: The website for the dart team that I play for. Consists of
a schedule, photos, team roster and weekly updates of how we did.
Geocities and Blogspot.
There are 2 other blogs that I post to. One is a
semi-private blog and the other is my secret blog. Neither one is that
hard to find but I still won't link to them on this page.
Here is a list of dead sites, they still exist but
I don't update them because I can't or because I don't want to.
Lt. jg. Archie
Goodwin: Back in the day I used to write Star Trek
fan fiction. This was the homepage for my character. Most of the stories
I wrote were collaborations with other writers and only a few
are reprinted on this site. We posted on alt.startrek.uss-amagosa
Nero
Wolfe: I am a member of the Nero
Wolfe Mailing
list. Nero Wolfe is the main character in a series of mysteries written
by Rex Stout. This was the homepage of the list for 1996.
1996
School Page: This was my first go at HTML. Written
by hand on an X-Term running UNIX. I cut and paste from other
websites until I got the "hang" of it.
1999 School Page: This is just the cookie cutter front page that BU gave me
when I returned to school. I never went back and worked on it,
so some of the links don't go anywhere. I didn't have time to
fool around.
Lost
Pages of Doom: July 1999. I was bored and
threw together this quick page that is up on my ISP. At the time
I was thinking about doing a weblog but I didn't want to code
it myself. It was a year later that I found out about blogger and finally started
tinkering. But it still took me 6 months before I got anything
up and running.
Scrabble
Scores: Back in the day, we played scrabble. We
were competitive. We kept weekly scores. I still don't know why.
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