Sitting on the toilet at work, thinking about feet.

I don’t know where it began, but I absolutely cannot stand to have my feet uncovered. I hate walking on tile or linoleum with bare feet, my soles sticking to the floor. The thought of walking on hard wood flooring unshod, possibly impaling myself on a splinter, makes the hair on the back of my legs stand up.

Once I had a dream that I had just woken up and was paralyzed, held down to the bed by an unseen force only able to move my eyes to look toward my uncovered, unprotected feet while my then 4 year old nephew was inserting sewing needles into my arches, giggling as he watched them travel up the veins in my legs.

Understandably I do not wear flip-flops.

Don’t get me wrong, I don’t have any fear or hatred of the human foot itself, nor do other people’s feet bother me. I’m not podophobic, I just recognize that my feet are particularly doughy and vulnerable and I project this vulnerability onto other people. I don’t mind cuddling up to someone in bed and having their feet touch me under the covers; I rather like that actually. In fact, I prefer to cuddle with guys who have a set of intact feet.

Where was I? Yes, back to flip-flops.

What is it with people and these abominations of footwear? Is it because they’re so cheap inexpensive? It can’t be because they’re comfortable, with that annoying string between your toes, constantly… there… between your toes being all “string like.” They’re also not cute and they’re noisy. Plus, what if something should happen where it would be beneficial to have footwear that actually covers and protects your feet?

Being from New Orleans, of course the first situation that comes to mind is a drunk frat guy or sorostitute throwing up on the floor near you or finding yourself accidentally stumbling through a mound of horse crap the size of Monkey Hill in the middle of the street; or the middle of the sidewalk. If you have spent any time there, you know that two thirds of every block in New Orleans is basically covered in either horse crap or tourist vomit and yet there are hundreds of people constantly walking around wearing nothing more on their feet than a piece of nylon twine and nerf refuse.

Frequently I see people wearing flip flops with shorts or jeans on the street or in the bars and although my logical mind acknowledges that this is a fashionably acceptable combination, it terrifies me, given the amount of people in very close proximity in a bar. It’s just asking for trouble: a crushed distal phalanx, a wet foot from a spilled drink or accidentally puncturing a cute guy’s Achilles tendon with my sharp, talon-like nails.

It’s hard to keep them trim them while constantly wearing socks.

Today, here in DC, I saw someone wearing flip-flops with a suit and tie for god’s sake. What’s up with that? What if some crazed defendant, unable to control his rage, suddenly bolts across the room when the verdict is read? What if before the bailiffs taze him and tackle him to the ground, he accidentally steps on your foot or vomits? What if one of the bailiffs has a horse? What then, mr lawyer-man with the flip flops? What then?

Sidekick LX Updates Coming to a, well.. a Sidekick LX near you

Just read this news article about the SideKick LX:

… the update adds two major capabilities: video record, play, and share; and support for stereo Bluetooth headsets and file transfers. You’ll also get some smaller but equally useful features, including an alarm clock, an integrated spell-checker, advanced instant-messaging functions

Holy crap. Video is cool and all (read: PORN!) but I’m most excited about stereo bluetooth! I am wondering what “advanced instant-messaging functions” is all about though.

While on the outside I am seated calmly at my desk in suburban Rockville MD, on the inside I am jumping on my chair a-la Tom Cruise in Oprah’s studio.

UPDATE: I found this full list of Official Sidekick LX Over-the-Air Update Notes here.

o != 0

Each day I have at least 10 people calling asking how to get into the control panel for their site. The control panel is the set of web pages that allows our customers to tweak settings they don’t comprehend, edit files in programming languages they can’t read and manage e-mail account using an easy to use interface that they refuse to learn to operate.

The address for this control panel is http://yourdomain.com:8443/, replacing “yourdomain.com” with whatever the customer’s domain is. Easy, right?

On the telephone…
Me: The address is h.t.t.p., colon, slash slash, your domain, then colon eight four four three.
Customer: Do I type “your domain”?
Me: No, type your domain name, then colon eight four four three.
Customer: I get “server not found”.
Me: Are you typing a slash before the 8443 or the colon?
Customer: I’m typing h.t.t.p. colon, slash slash, y.o.u.r.d.o.m.a.i.n.n.a.m.e….”
Me: No, you need to type your domain.
Customer: What domain is that?
Me: What domain do you have hosted with us?
Customer: I don’t know.

So, I look up their account using their last name, find out the domain name, tell them what it is (they’re always like “yeah, that’s it!”)

Next, I try to make it simple. We have a easy URL where after they type their domain name in a box on a form, it takes them where they need to go via a couple clicks on “control panel”, “web mail”, shopping cart administration” etc, all without knowing their colon from a forward slash.

This address however includes the letter “o”. Note: “o”, not “0”. That’s “oh” not “zero”.

I repeat this a million times a day and despite saying “blah blah blah, the letter ‘o’, not the number zero, blah blah” customers NEVER pay attention.

I think I have o patience left today.

An informal experiment

While I am admittedly not an astronomer, astrologist or an astrophysicist, I have been working on a theory of mine for the better part of the morning. I’ve googled for data, consulted my horoscope, taken precise measurements of space and weather conditions and “borrowed” an expensive looking scientific calculator from the office down the hall.

After entering a LOT of seemingly random strings of very large and very small numbers both real and imaginary, I have tested and proven my hypothesis: the sun has drifted off course and is at this moment approximately 13.381 meters directly above the point centered between my apartment in Washington, DC and my office in Rockville, MD.

In scientific terminology this phenomenon is known as being “hot as balls” outside.