Improve Your Twitter Engagement with ReTweet.ly | (The) Absolute

I’m mostly covering indie games for (The) Absolute, but I’ve also been writing about interesting tech startups, too:

Web app retweet.ly aims to trade related retweets between users. Retweet.ly users sign in with their Twitter accounts, choose one of their recent tweets to share, and then browse through tweets other users would like retweeted. Users decide which of retweet.ly’s messages to retweet, and can always skip sharing tweets that would bore their followers.

Because I could sort potential RTs by interest, and then find the tweets other users had self-selected as most interesting and share-worthy, I found it was a surprisingly good way to find relevant news outside of my usual networks.

Of course, this system is only as good as the users, tweets, and Twitter accounts connecting to it. Under the Tech category, I found about three or four good pieces of shareable industry news to every one GET MORE FOLLOWERS WITH THIS EASY SYSTEM! RT! RT! spam tweet. The category Fun Stuff, though, was mostly followback pyramids. All the more reason to sign up with retweet.ly and get your clever tweets out there!

via Improve Your Twitter Engagement with ReTweet.ly | (The) Absolute.

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Still Life With Tardis

Harold is at my parents’ house, after driving up for a meeting and then getting caught into the snowstorm. I’m really glad he’s spending the night there, and not on the road in a blizzard, but it’s sad to be in Chapel Hill without him, and it does mean another day without the car for me.

Chapel Hill really requires a car. I got a ride into work, which was awesome, but I can’t just rely on people to drive me around all the time, especially if it’s going to be a couple days and not a one-off favor, so I decided to take the bus back. It’s only 2 buses from my office back to my apartment, and I routinely took more transfers than that in NYC, without even thinking about it. If I could make public transit work out for me, I wouldn’t have to drive and park every day, and that would seriously improve my opinion of this area! I went out to wait for the bus. North Carolina laughed in my face and started snowing.

Also my phone died, taking with it the number of a cab company I’d saved in case my travels didn’t work out, but I can’t reasonably blame that on location.   At the bus stop (which is in the middle of a strip mall parking lot, because North Carolina),  I noticed I was only wearing one earring. It was one of my my 3D-printed Tardis earrings, which I bought from an artist in Seattle, so pretty hard to replace it. Ugh. Losing my favorite earring at that point is exactly the kind of heavy-handed symbolism I would just hate to read.

It was no longer snowing this morning, or even particularly cold out. It’s actually only one bus to my office if I walk a bit first, which is quite nice in the sunshine. I enjoyed walking quickly up the street, and commuting with my Kindle and my coffee, and my bag tucked between my knees. (Because that is how you ride public transportation. You do not take up more than one seat. I’m just saying.) Civis Romanus sum, and all that. 

At work, I pulled on the corduroy blazer I leave in my office (because I’m always chilly, and apparently it’s not professional to curl up in a duvet at my desk), and found my missing Tardis earring in the pocket! It wasn’t really lost! I think I’d slipped it off while on the phone with Harold, finding out that he wasn’t going to make it back last night? And I wasn’t exactly thinking about my earrings then? I’m not totally sure. But it’s here!

So I’m just, you know, sitting at work a couple hours early, taking photos of my earrings. As one does.

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I Miss Chipperson

Sometimes I really, really miss working with Chip.

Chip

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I Guess I Could Read The Walltext

I enjoy going to the museum with Harold — I like both Harold and art museums very much — but  we go off in opposite directions immediately. There is almost no overlap in our interests here. I wave him over to look at a Chinese inscription, full of my own cleverness when I can read a bit on an ancient vase. (Actually, ‘reading’ is an exaggeration. The few Chinese words I can recognize — up and big and China and mountain — are the simple ones that haven’t really changed much in centuries, so it’s really just me announcing a few characters I recognize, while pretending to be deciphering ancient wisdom.)

I also call him over to look at classical art, because I need a second opinion on what myth is being depicted. I got through my art-history courses by treating classical iconography like a hidden objects game, and I enjoy it more in a gallery than on an exam. The dude with grapes is probably Dionysus, the lady in a helmet is Athene. White background and lots of reeds? Probably the Reed Painter.  This is apparently less fun to people who did not major in classics.

Harold studied art, instead, and is more interested in modern works. I always ask him about it, because despite boring Harold through the Asian and Ancient wings, I still want to visit the museum together. Then he tries to explain it to me, saying things about form and color and photography freeing art to become less representational, which makes no sense at all. I don’t really get abstract pieces, but if you want to paint blobs and lines and sections of color, why don’t you title it something that hints at the point? Why are these always called things like 27 and Untitled? WHAT AM I SUPPOSED TO UNDERSTAND FROM THAT? Where is the narrative? What is happening in this picture? Ugh. Then I get very frustrated because I would really like to be someone who looks at abstract art and says something thoughtful and intelligent, but mostly I think there’s a lot of green in this one.

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Two At The Most

martini

My whole office went out after a new-semester meeting, and my boss ordered everyone a different, personalized drink. He wanted to know if I thought my martini was a good call or if he should have gone with his second choice for me, a PBR. I think he gets me.

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Still Life With Identity Crisis

Still Life With Identity Crisis #blog | January 16, 2014 at 10:19PM
Still Life With Identity Crisis #blog

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GoodReads Year

books 2013
If you remember to update your GoodReads after you read something, you’ll be able to view these lovely virtual shelves of books you’ve read in the past year. I only sporadically remember to use GoodReads, and so plenty of the books I’ve read never made it to my virtual shelves.

Still, I really like the image it made. I cheated a little here by pasting No Other Gods in over a book called First Activation, which was not just the worst book I read in 2013 but quite possibly one of the worst books I’ve ever read. It is the only 1-star review I’ve left, and that’s only because I couldn’t leave a 0-star review.)

I also started a GoodReads 100 book challenge. Not because I need encouragement to read 100 books in a year, but because I need to be reminded to update GoodReads and share reviews.

2014 Reading Challenge

2014 Reading Challenge
Meg has
read 2 books toward her goal of 100 books.
hide

 

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Headline for @MutantFrogInc

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Text From My Sister

“Whaat? Dumbledore DIES?!?”

–My wonderful sister, who has just finished book six, and who has apparently managed not to have a major plot point of Harry Potter spoiled in the nine years since the book came out.

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Indoor garden. #blog

Indoor garden. #blog | January 15, 2014 at 01:18PM
Indoor garden. #blog

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