KG Here

I have cable on my screened in back porch and live across the street from the library. I moved to Nashville to work in music and I love a road trip home so I can listen to my Ipod in alphabetical order.
kghereblog at gmail dot com
byrdie:meghanasha: Everyone should have an SMS business card, it’s a great way to retrieve contact info without having to sort through mounds of cards. I just created an account with TextMarks that allows me to give out 120 characters worth of contact details to others by simply telling them to text “MeghanAsha to 41411”.
I’m reblogging joelaz, as he explains setting up a TextMark account in great detail: 
SMS Business Cards
On Monday, I was out for drinks and met a guy who’s working on some similar stuff. He handed me his business card and asked for mine. I told him I didn’t have one on me (truth is, I haven’t had a card since I left Yahoo! and I never carried them with me then anyway). Instead, I said, “Just text joelaz to 41411”. A second later he received a text message on his phone like the one above with my name, address, email, website URL and any other contact info I wanted to share.
It took just a few seconds to create this using a simple, free service that I recently heard about from Russell Beattie called Textmarks. After learning about Textmarks in the comments of a post on Fred Wilson’s blog, it occurred to me that you could use the service for text message business cards. Here’s how to make your own: 
1. Go to the “create” page on Textmarks.com
2. Pick a unique keyword for yourself (I used “joelaz”)
3. Enter up to 120 characters of contact info in the “Respond to keyword with text message:” field
4. Click the “Create” button
5. If you haven’t already done so, create an account on Textmarks (if you skip this step, your keyword will expire in 24 hours)
6. Click the “Manage” tab and then click the “Edit” button next to the keyword you created
7. Click “Edit” Configuration and uncheck all the boxes under “Messaging Options” and uncheck “Subscribable Textmark” (those options are for more advanced uses of Textmarks, but not needed for your SMS business cards)
8. Tell new friends and business contacts to “text your_keyword to 41411” (replace your_keyword, duh)
That’s it. It’s free, simple to use, environmentally friendly, and you’ll be the envy of geeks everywhere.

byrdie:meghanasha: Everyone should have an SMS business card, it’s a great way to retrieve contact info without having to sort through mounds of cards. I just created an account with TextMarks that allows me to give out 120 characters worth of contact details to others by simply telling them to text “MeghanAsha to 41411”.

I’m reblogging joelaz, as he explains setting up a TextMark account in great detail:

SMS Business Cards

On Monday, I was out for drinks and met a guy who’s working on some similar stuff. He handed me his business card and asked for mine. I told him I didn’t have one on me (truth is, I haven’t had a card since I left Yahoo! and I never carried them with me then anyway). Instead, I said, “Just text joelaz to 41411”. A second later he received a text message on his phone like the one above with my name, address, email, website URL and any other contact info I wanted to share.

It took just a few seconds to create this using a simple, free service that I recently heard about from Russell Beattie called Textmarks. After learning about Textmarks in the comments of a post on Fred Wilson’s blog, it occurred to me that you could use the service for text message business cards. Here’s how to make your own:

1. Go to the “create” page on Textmarks.com

2. Pick a unique keyword for yourself (I used “joelaz”)

3. Enter up to 120 characters of contact info in the “Respond to keyword with text message:” field

4. Click the “Create” button

5. If you haven’t already done so, create an account on Textmarks (if you skip this step, your keyword will expire in 24 hours)

6. Click the “Manage” tab and then click the “Edit” button next to the keyword you created

7. Click “Edit” Configuration and uncheck all the boxes under “Messaging Options” and uncheck “Subscribable Textmark” (those options are for more advanced uses of Textmarks, but not needed for your SMS business cards)

8. Tell new friends and business contacts to “text your_keyword to 41411” (replace your_keyword, duh)

That’s it. It’s free, simple to use, environmentally friendly, and you’ll be the envy of geeks everywhere.

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alohanico: A conceptual update on a classic. CMYK pen (via the Behance Network)
alohanico: A conceptual update on a classic. CMYK pen (via the Behance Network)
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I am a 36 year old African American woman. I have two girls ages 10 and 8. The country does not get the full import of this moment. My daughters and I sat together along with my husband to watch Michelle Obama tonight. Mr. Sullivan, we were all in tears. This is a day that cannot be fully described. This country has systematically oppressed Black women for centuries. My ancestors were slaves and my great, great, great, grandmothers raped and treated as property. My daughters have very few Black women to look up to in popular culture as role models. They do not feel seen, they are not held up as the standards of American beauty. We shed tears tonight as a family because Michelle (with her elegance and grace) is holding all of us up with her. You don’t understand the burden that she bears.

From a reader of the Daily Dish, The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan (via robot-heart) (via britticisms)

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An anthropological introduction to YouTube which was presented at the Library of Congress, June 23rd.  It’s probably preaching to the choir to post it here but I found parts of it pretty interesting.
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noraleah:

“Want a Crocs that’s a bit dressier? Then the Crocs Islander is for you.”
Or the answer to the question, Could they get any uglier?
(Thanks, Gena, for thoughtfully bringing these to my attention.)

Eeck.  The croc-oafer.  Last year a friend and I saw a guy wearing these at the bar.  They were so ugly we had to have a photo.  So she prentended to drop her purse near his foot and use her camera phone.  We almost got away with it but apparently he knew a guy all the way across the bar who spotted her and we had to spend the next five minutes hearing about how we too could special order them.  No thanks croc-oafer man!

noraleah:

“Want a Crocs that’s a bit dressier? Then the Crocs Islander is for you.”

Or the answer to the question, Could they get any uglier?

(Thanks, Gena, for thoughtfully bringing these to my attention.)

Eeck.  The croc-oafer.  Last year a friend and I saw a guy wearing these at the bar.  They were so ugly we had to have a photo.  So she prentended to drop her purse near his foot and use her camera phone.  We almost got away with it but apparently he knew a guy all the way across the bar who spotted her and we had to spend the next five minutes hearing about how we too could special order them.  No thanks croc-oafer man!

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“You’re naked. She’s naked. You’re running around chasing a cat around the house. What am I supposed to think?” Chris Hansen

This is my favorite To Catch A Predator EVER.

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I enjoy the ghost puppet at the beginning.
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boymeetslove:

The time I spend trying to point out your flaws to myself is wasted in the fact that I am still in love with you.
Everything that’s wrong with you to everyone else in your life, is everything that’s right for me to have in my life.

boymeetslove:

The time I spend trying to point out your flaws to myself is wasted in the fact that I am still in love with you.

Everything that’s wrong with you to everyone else in your life, is everything that’s right for me to have in my life.

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