Yahoo! Powered Shortcuts Plugin

I’m not sure what to think about the new Yahoo! Shortcuts plugin that WordPress folks are blogging about. It seems to be a joint venture between WordPress and Yahoo! that scans your posts to recommend and create shortcut links to sites, creative commons Flickr photos, maps, news, etc. What are these shortcuts you ask? Well, I am using this post as a test to see what I will be recommended as a shortcut. Thus far it has only identified one two shortcuts that automatically create queries for Yahoo! Shortcuts and Flickr. I wonder if it will find a link to the Internet Archive or to IMDB or to Netflix? Two out of three ain’t bad! The image for this post is something recommended by the Flickr interface for Creative Common photos which is quite slick.

All in all the plugin feels a bit creepy, kinda like Gmail creeps me out as it recommends ad links based on the content of my emails. So, while I write posts something is reading, processing, and creating links for me on the fly. I guess I can see the use of it pragmatically, but this kind of joint venture that creates unique links to various services online just seems to be the harbinger of bad things to come. It doesn’t really excite me all that much, it just kinda makes me feel that much more vulnerable in the sacred space of the backend of my blog. But, I guess I can always uninstall it, but maybe the image recommended above is telling me something that I just can’t quite make out. Am I missing something? Is there a metaphor there?

Looking at this post from the preview screen, the links are quite distracting when clicked on with the Yahoo! branded pop-up. In fact, the Netflix link has financial information that pops up with info about their stocks and so forth. I don’t know who might find this plugin useful, certainly not the bava faithful šŸ˜‰ but I for one think the link shortcuts are pretty distracting and the Flickr image doesn’t align with text neatly at all. That said, I like the instant CC user attribution, but is that so hard to do while writing a post? And the recommendation of images may be cool, but it certainly isn’t the creative, pointed Flickr selection that someone like Brian Lamb has made an art of, as Alan Levine pointed out recently in one of the many places I follow him. In fact, given this plugin is a production between two rather prominent players in the online world, it feels pretty uninspired and potentially bordering on flaccid. I’m even wondering why I wasted a post on it. I guess as an excuse to test after the bava blackout!

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Bava Going Black

Bavatuesdays will be going offline for a few days while I try and experiment with moving this site (and four others I currently maintain) into one WPMu installation through a different host. I’ll be testing the possibilities for domain mapping (more about this here and here) in an attempt to centralize all my work into one space and push the limits of thinking through WPMu as an integrated blog/CMS/social site. Not sure where this will lead, but I am excited by the challenge and possibilities. So in honor of this blackout, which will happen sometime this evening, I leave you with the trailer to Mario Bava’s Black Sunday (a.k.a. The Mask of Satan), arguably his greatest film.

[MEDIA=6]

See you on the other side with documentation for all you fellow sinners.

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Trilogy of Terror

 Zuni-fetish-dollFor some reason Chucky’s far more frightening predecessor, the African Zuni Fetish Warrior Doll from the 1975 telemovie Trilogy of Terror, was on my mind earlier this evening. So, I promptly searched for Trilogy of Terror on YouTube and, as always, I found the goods. If you haven’t seen this classic written by Richard Matheson (author of the amazing novella I Am Legend) you really should, and if you have you seen it already you know exactly what I am talking about. Deramani , YouTube user and archivist of the treasured clips below, does a nice job framing it with the following description [Update 2/27/2018: Deraman’s YouTube account has since been deleted, as all the great ones are]:

Trilogy of Terror”, a Dan Curtis telemovie, was a collection of three horror anthology stories featuring Karen Black in four different roles playing tormented women. While all of the tales were notable, it was the third which has become legendary.

In the final story, Amelia in a solo horror story monologue plays a mother-dominated woman who buys an African Zuni fetish doll for her latest boyfriend in which the doll comes to life and terrorizes her in her own apartment.

The following is the culmination of that struggle, and is still some of the creepiest television ever shot.

Here’s a clip of Karen Black battling this ferocious devil doll…

https://youtu.be/Q79V2cjpHWw?t=42s

And here is what may have been one of the most horrifying endings I ever saw on a VHS tape:

What’s even better, is that given YouTube’s groovy related videos feature I found a film dealing with Zuni fetish dolls that I had never seen before, seems like it is a veritable sub genre I have not been clued into before YouTube. Here’s a clip from the 1985 movie Attack of the Beast Creatures, obviously inspired by the Trilogy of Terror -with little of the terror unfortunately.

What’s more, through a quick search I found out that there is an actual doll one can buy based on the African Zuni Warrior doll from the movie, which is too frightening to even imagine.

On the other hand, I think I could live with the Evil Krusty the Clown parody of the demon doll from the “Clown without Pity” episode of the Simpson’s Treehouse of Horror III. Why is it that dolls are so damned freaky?

Update 2/27/2018: As a special bonus, I found the entire episode online, at least for now:
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ja9dv

Posted in movies, video, YouTube | Tagged , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

One-Click Updater Plugin for WordPress

I posted recently about the OneClick Installer plugin that makes installing new plugins on your blog a cinch. One of the issues that this plugin has is that while it can install just about any plugin easily, it can not overwrite existing plugins making it useless when it comes to updating plugins.

One of the features of WordPress 2.3 I find quite useful is that each plugin has a notification link alerting you about new versions. I particularly appreciate this because plugins have been the biggest security risk for my blog, primarily because I don’t always follow each and every version of all my various plugins. The only time I was hacked is when I neglected to update an older plugin. With this new feature, I just have to scan my plugins and see which one’s need to be updated. But just because I know what needs to be updated doesn’t mean I’ll do it. I often postpone updating my plugins because I have to download them, unzip them, then FTP them to my server. A simple process, but sometimes those few steps become a drag, especially when you have PodPress and are updating every three days.

So, along comes the One-Click Updater plugin developed by W-Shaow. As you can see below, once installed you simply click the “update automatically” link beneath the plugin to be updated and you are in full compliance (just like Steve Buscemi wanted to be in Fargo).

One-click updater

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Civil War Land

I witnessed a U.S. Civil War re-enactment on my street today. It was a rather involved affair that replayed the Union’s defeat in the first Battle of Fredericksburg, but specifically I saw the slaughter of the Union’s Irish Brigade in Marye’s Heights. Here’s a quick description from Wikipedia:

The brigade suffered its most severe casualties in December [1862] during the Battle of Fredericksburg where its fighting force was reduced from over 1600 to 256. The brigade was involved in the northern battleground at Fredericksburg where they assaulted the sunken road in front of Marye’s Heights. Link.

Image of scene of Battle in Fredericksburg, VA 1863

I make no pretenses at being a Civil War enthusiast, in fact before I moved to Fredericksburg the Civil War was seldom if ever something I thought about seriously. Yet watching the re-enactment this afternoon gave me pause, for it was frighteningly realistic right down to the mass of Irish bodies at the bottom of Trench Hill. A grave and compelling sight. I couldn’t help but think of the scene in Martin Scorsese’s Gangs of New York where the Irish immigrants coming off the boat were given instant citizenship and sent immediately to fight for “their country.” Or when the New York Draft Riots broke out in that film, offering some powerful scenes that suggest a different face of intolerance and racism.

Interestingly enough, the wikipedia article on the Irish Brigade lists three theories of why an ethnically based group of soldiers was formed. They are as follows:

1) It warned Britain (which appeared to be favoring the Confederacy if not deliberating entry into the conflict on their behalf) that there could be Union-supported consequences in Ireland if Britain intervened (most of the brigade’s membership were known Irish revolutionaries), and

2) It served to solidify Irish support for the Union. The Irish were naturally predisposed to support the Confederacy due to their sympathy with the struggle for independence. They also didn’t want a flood of freed slaves to migrate north and compete for the lowly jobs for which they already had to scrabble.

3) It solidified the support of the Catholic minority for the Union cause. Having their own paid Catholic chaplain implied a social acceptance for Irish Catholics which had eluded them in the antebellum period. Their chaplain was Fr. William Corby, CSC, a Holy Cross priest and future president of the University of Notre Dame. He became famous for his giving absolution to the troops of the Irish Brigade before the Battle of Gettysburg.

I’m not sure how these theories hold up with contemporary scholars on the topic, but it was a fascinating discussion of the politics behind such a force that I, again, hadn’t thought a lick about. Anyway, I took some video footage of the final moments of the battle, raw and shakey, but this 30 seconds clip might give you a bit of an idea of the impressive verisimilitude of this reenactment.

[MEDIA=5]

Posted in americana, video | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

What are you looking at?


This awesome image by Scarty just came in over my delicious wire from the inimitable Patrick GMJ. I don’t know precisely why, but it speaks volumes to me about our moment.

Posted in fun, pictures | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

One Blog, Many Feeds

Cole Camplese has had some excellent posts recently thinking about the ability of RSS feeds to connect a campus publishing community. I have been doing a lot of experimentation in this area over the last year or so, and his posts here and here are really useful examinations of what might be possible as I delve into the questions of thinking through UMW Blogs as a CMS publishing platform, blogging service, and an eportfolio all at once.

Cole’s post about providing a selection of feeds to pick from on any given blog that might filter content by category or even provide feeds of your work from other services like del.icio.us, YouTube, Flickr, etc. was particularly intriguing to me. I have seen this done with categories on WordPress, but never using the RSS icon in the address bar. The challenge is to figure out how numerous feeds (not just to your WordPress categories or comments) be added easily? In real life it requires a hack to the template of the blog header, yet how many people are going to be able willing to hack their theme to do this? So, as Cole suggests, making it easy is the real trick. Well, given that I am using WordPress Multi-User, easy is my middle name, baby! There is a plugin Add RSS that does just this, which gives you fields for three feeds URIs to add to your header from any service you specifify, and if you need more you can hack the plugin (which I have), but I think it could easily be modified to automatically create more feed fields if you need them. You can see it in action on a regular WP 2.3.1 site at the OG bava or on WPMu at fakebava.

bavaaddrss

Long story short is that it works and it’s easy. Now I have to wrestle with Cole’s other concerns like repositories, which I can’t say I am nearly as excited about.

Posted in plugins, WordPress, wordpress multi-user, wpmu | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Eighteenth-Century Audio: A WordPress Social Site?

A site that I have been working on with professor Marie McAllister in the English, Linguistics, and Speech department here at UMW has me extremely excited these days. And I decided to blog it early so that my co-workers don’t have to suffer through me talking about it ad nauseum. The site is still very much a work-in-progress and Marie will introduce it to her students next semester and the real work will start then, but I just wanted to talk a bit about how she imagined the site and how we then built it out on UMW Blogs. I think we have the rudimentary beginnings of the closest thing to a WordPress social site (no real trace of a blog) that I have yet to help create: Eighteenth-Century Audio.

ecaudio

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Posted in audio, plugins, UMW Blogs, wordpress multi-user, wpmu | Tagged , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Studio Art at UMW

Image of Professional Practices Presentation posterI had the privilege and the pleasure to be a panelist at the 5th annual Professional Practices in Studio Art Presentation on Monday evening. The work Carol Garmon’s students are doing is nothing short of amazing. I have to admit that I was a little nervous coming into the evening because I thought I might have to formally judge the works (something I am far from qualified to do), but to my great relief the panelists were there only to comment and reflect on each student’s work. Well, talking about things I know little about is something I excel at, and I certainly didn’t hold back during these presentations. In fact, the students and faculty present were extremely polite about the fact that I could neither control my effusion of enthusiasm nor stop commentating wildly.

That said, I had an absolute ball. The students were charged with presenting their work as well as providing a theoretical and/or autobiographical context (akin to a narrative) that would frame their choices, their concerns, and future directions that they plan on pursuing. The whole thing really captured the notion of a group of students reflecting upon their work and asking themselves the difficult question of where they are headed with it. I truly wanted to be a studio art major throughout the whole presentation because they were engaging in a beautifully fused process of imagination, action, and reflection — the holy trinity of education. Huge congratulations are in order to each and every student that presented as well as Carole Garmon who facilitated this important opportunity for each student to negotiate the vision and future directions of their work in front of a larger audience. It was possibly the best two hours I have spent on campus since I arrived two years ago.
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A List of Plugins for WPMu

So what plugins are we using at UMW Blogs? Well, there is a two-part answer to this question: which site wide plugins (mu-plugins) are we using? and which user-activated plugins have we made available? Below you will find a list of each that we are using along with a brief description of the plugin and any notes I thought appropriate.

Keep in mind that this is an insane list that most universities and other WPMu administrators might find horrifying. It’s not my fault, I just haven’t been fully reined in yet šŸ™‚ In other words, you may not want to try all these plugins at home, and I have noted the one’s to watch out for.

Finally, if you are using plugins not listed here I would love to know about them in the comments, UMW Blogs is always on the lookout for additional functionality and there is no better way than through your recommendations, so please don’t be shy and share the love, hippies!
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Posted in plugins, wordpress multi-user, wpmu | Tagged , , , , | 11 Comments