
Everything was just fine on my way home last night - earbuds in, music flowing, phone call clear as a bell... But last night I tried making a couple of phone calls from home - no sound of ringing, no audio in (or out, so I was told) until I put the call into speaker mode. Panic! But Googling "iPhone sound" turned up the answer quickly - plug in the earphones and unplug them again.

I needed to establish backups. I have a 300GB external hard drive - but it was formatted with NTFS (thus unwritable by Mac OS X), and it contained many, many GB of music files. I had already imported the MP3s into iTunes on my MacBook, but Sarah has been using the external drive to sync her MP3 player through her Windows laptop (using MediaMonkey, a much better music library manager than iTunes, but which unfortunately won't sync to my iPhone).

Having some file permission trouble on my MacBook - files that I cannot edit/mv/etc. although I own them and permissions are 755... So, how about good ol' su?
How to Enable the "root" account on Mac OS X
The Quick CLI Method (sudo passwd root) worked fine for allowing me to su - but the root account can't seem to do anything to these files either...

Transitioning to the MacBook, I've set up my display(s) to rotate the background among several pictures. This one just popped up - a rare candid of my mother (10/7/39-2/3/07), at the Grand Canyon a few years ago when I visited my folks at their Arizona winter place. She hated having her picture taken; I've never been much on photography - but here I captured something...


Today is a milestone for me - last day working fulltime on the day job. I will still be there two days a week for the foreseeable future, but going forward most of my "work" time (no longer constrained to the office business day) will be Drupal-centric.

Seems a little quiet around here... I got a MacBook this week, the past few days I've been migrating stuff from my old Windows system. It's coming along slowly, had a couple little glitches (the first sync with my iPhone wiped out my contacts and calendar, and then I had problems with Quicken Mac 2007). I'll be more verbose once my platform is stable...

In terms of blogging my experience at Drupalcon, I only got partway through Day 2 last week, and it's getting harder and harder to make out my own chicken-scratching. For the moment, my time is better spent actively Drupaling - I hope at some point in the not-too-distant future to review the videos and report back...

This may be slightly out of order, since I've still got a ways to go in blogging my notes on the specific sessions I attended at Drupalcon, but I want to get my overall thoughts and impressions out as quickly as possible.
First, expanding on my comment on Drupal.org - I'm re-entering the Drupal community after some time away, and it feels so right... There are some acknowledgements I need to make:
First and foremost, my significant other SIGNIFICANT Other, Sarah Richards, has been supportive above-and-beyond of the time I've spent Drupaling on top of my day job (and of the constant whining over how little time I have left to do all the other things I want to do). I hope her patience continues, because I have a lot of catching up to do in the Drupal world. And I hope some non-profit working on progressive change out there can use an anthropologist with project management experience (contact me if you can...).

pingVision presented a case study of the migration of the Popular Science site to Drupal. Since I'm joining Moshe Weitzman in Cyrve, specializing in content migration, this was of particular interest to me.

I made a stab at live blogging with the usability session, but I think it will work better for me just to jot down the random points that particularly strike me at the time, and fill in more thoughts later. Hopefully most if not all sessions will be on video, so there's no need to be a scribe...