I updated the All In One SEO Plugin on this website today. The next thing I knew, I had two new plugins installed for me, the Monsterinsights and some sort of opt-in plugin called Optinmonster.
Yeet!
I deleted all that shit faster than you can throw a watermelon off an overpass. After googling around a bit to figure out what had happened, I discovered this post that keyed me in to what was going on:
MonsterInsights is Auto-installed https://wordpress.org/support/topic/monsterinsights-is-auto-installed/
This is a terrible practice I hope no other WordPress plugin developers emulate. If you do, I hope the community shames you into reconsidering your ways.
Why is this so bad? Let me enumerate they ways:
Installing one plugin should never, EVER install more plugins without giving a person the awareness that this is happening! It’s bad form, it’s stealing a website’s resources, it’s stealing screen real estate, it’s introducing unknown risk, and broadening your website’s threat profile without telling you.
Then you get all these banners asking you to set up all these paid connections for these plugins to work. Bad form, again!
The Kicker
To top it all off, after walking through the All In One SEO setup steps, I found an email waiting for me moments later:
I did not opt in for this! This egregious action is most certainly in violation of the US CAN-SPAM laws. I can’t wait to report them. In fact, I will go do that now…
Ok, I feel a little better now.
If you offer a plugin for people to use, you should never assume they want MORE plugins installed, and never grab their email address from their WordPress settings to sign them up for ANYTHING outside of your plugin installed.
As I recently passed the half-century mark in my life, I find myself contemplating some things now, more than I ever did before.
How long it takes muscle strains to heal vs how long it did 30 years ago
The strange new places hair grows on, and in, my body
The annual upkeep of my physical form and how intimately my doctor is getting to know me
Does my doctor go home at night and think about these things as he tries to go to sleep, or discuss them with his wife over drinks on the porch?
The strangest contemplation of them all is dying. Death. It gets closer each day, sure, but it’s more of an interesting proposition than something I find myself dreading or fearing. I don’t know for certain what it will bring, if anything. No one does. Many people think they do, but they don’t.
Not that I am eager to find out, but it’s interesting to think about all the ways we humans have created to avoid it, prevent it, reckon with it, and make ourselves think that there we are certain about what happens when it arrives.
I’m not afraid of being dead, as I’ve been dead before, and I’ll be dead again. Being dead didn’t seem so bad from what I can recall. No, what I’m afraid of is transitioning back to death in a terrible way, such as in a plane crash or slowly and painfully, from stomach cancer. That kind of fear is more a part of being alive than it is a fear of death.
– Me
I saw something online sometime back, and I saved it. Finding it again led me to write this blog post. I’d like to offer it up here, as it makes a lot of sense to me. It’s a eulogy from a physicist. This resonates because it is the most true and accurate thing we can possibly know about death, without conjecture, superstition, or guessing:
“You want a physicist to speak at your funeral. You want the physicist to talk to your grieving family about the conservation of energy, so they will understand that your energy has not died. You want the physicist to remind your sobbing mother about the first law of thermodynamics; that no energy gets created in the universe, and none is destroyed. You want your mother to know that all your energy, every vibration, every BTU of heat, every wave of every particle that was her beloved child remains with her in this world. You want the physicist to tell your weeping father that amid energies of the cosmos, you gave as good as you got.
And at one point you’d hope that the physicist would step down from the pulpit and walk to your brokenhearted spouse there in the pew and tell her that all the photons that ever bounced off your face, all the particles whose paths were interrupted by your smile, by the touch of your hair, hundreds of trillions of particles, have raced off like children, their ways forever changed by you. And as your widow rocks in the arms of a loving family, may the physicist let her know that all the photons that bounced from you were gathered in the particle detectors that are her eyes, that those photons created within her constellations of electromagnetically charged neurons whose energy will go on forever.
And the physicist will remind the congregation of how much of all our energy is given off as heat. There may be a few fanning themselves with their programs as he says it. And he will tell them that the warmth that flowed through you in life is still here, still part of all that we are, even as we who mourn continue the heat of our own lives.
And you’ll want the physicist to explain to those who loved you that they need not have faith; indeed, they should not have faith. Let them know that they can measure, that scientists have measured precisely the conservation of energy and found it accurate, verifiable and consistent across space and time. You can hope your family will examine the evidence and satisfy themselves that the science is sound and that they’ll be comforted to know your energy’s still around. According to the law of the conservation of energy, not a bit of you is gone; you’re just less orderly. Amen.”
Arron Freeman
If anyone know of any physicists for hire to perform eulogies around the time I die, please hire them! They’d be well worth the money.
Check out this promo we had made. The footage is from our show at Highland Brewing a few weeks ago. Thanks to Bob Peck at Mountainwater Films for putting this together!
Check out the Ska City website for all the latest news and upcoming gigs. I hope to see you soon!
We received a nice write-up about our show on Friday. We played the “Concerts on the Creek” series in Sylva, NC and had a grand old time (similar to last season). This D. Trull feller showed up -clearly a ska fan already- and really seemed to enjoy himself. Then he wrote a review on his blog. Check it out!
I have been using Cloudron recently, and after initially trying it out a couple years ago, I found it to be a really easy, awesome way to create my own, personal, cloud, keeping the peering eyes of big-tech out of my life.
So far I have been using Cloudron to manage my OnlyOffice office instance (better than MS Office or Google Docs) and my instance of Nextcloud, a Google Drive-like file storage and sharing center. They integrate with each other to create your own, secure, private office suite with file storage.
The best part is that you can do all this simply from the DigitalOcean Marketplace – a one-click shop for easy installation of everything. All you need is a domain name to point at it.
Once you have it installed, you can set it and forget it, as Cloudron will keep itself updated, patched, and secure.
Cloudron Coupon Code
It isn’t cheap to run Cloudron, but it lets you host 2 app without a subscriotion. I have yet to find a working Cloudron coupon code out there, but there are Cloudron referral codes such as my own (https://cloudron.io/?refcode=901142a319d1498b) which earn the referee a small discount. Once you have your own Cloudron account set up, you can use your own referral code and encourage others to use.
So that is me encouraging you to use my referrer code 😀
We played our second show recently, and the good George Hodges produced a fine live recording of it for everyone to hear.
The Internet Archive, the same people who bring you the Wayback Machine, is a great place where live music recording enthusiasts are posting all kinds of great stuff for free listening. Not only is the Ska City show there, but there are millions of other things you can get lost in listening to as well.
Merle, circa 1992, in Schaefer Dormitory at Warren Wilson College.
Way back in the good years of 1992-1993 or so I was in a band called Merle, based at Warren Wilson College. As a three-piece, we produced some insane sounds, surrounded ourselves with more insane antics, and had a hell of a time doing it.
Merle went on to become The Merle when Morgan Geer joined the band, and our notoriety in Asheville and beyond started to grow. Eventually, I left the band (I was the only one still in school at that point), but The Merle continued on and became an Asheville legend.
An old pal from Warren Wilson (Richard Stowe) recently dug up a tape of a live recordings and some demos that Merle had done from 1992 or 1993. Another old pal (George Hodges) cleaned up the tape, remastered it, and put it out there for you all to enjoy!
Beware: there are vulgarities at certain points, where we asked friends to join us on stage.
It’s been a while since I posted any musical updates here, and I don’t have a ton to share, but I did get a surprise email from the venerable Jason Lowenstein the other day, with a remastered set of Crain’s studio appearance on WMBR in Boston back in 1991 that he had made.
The previous version of this, mastered by Bob Weston, who initially recorded it in the studio late that evening way back when, is still here on my Music downloads page, and it is great, but I thought I’d add Jason’s version for you to download in one fell swoop.
As you may or may not know, I was a locksmith for the better part of a decade, working on campus at Warren Wilson College as a student, learning the trade as I earned my BA in psychology, then being hired to work there and train other students after I graduated for about 4 years. I also ran my own business (Chatham’s Lock & Key) for about two years, and I did a stint at Willis Klein up in Louisville for a summer.
So it was interesting to me that once I started attending information security conferences, I saw how popular lock picking has become among that otherwise computer-based hacking crowd. They have “lock picking villages” where you can learn to pick locks, contests to pit your skills against others, and there are now loads of videos and tutorials online for “locksport” enthusiasts.
I was resistant to get into “locksport” for a while, perhaps because I had “been there, done that,” but also because the phrase “locksport” annoyed me.
However, I lost that battle when I found my old lock pick set from back in the day, and then found myself working a Master lock I had in the garage. Check out my first contribution to the Locksport community in this video.