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2010 Comment-Con

Some of you may have noticed that comments on recent posts have gone missing. If you haven’t noticed, I sure as hell have. Posts since November 2009 that had comments still say that they do in the meta-link at the top of the post (e.g. “2 comments,” etc.), but those comments just don’t appear at the end of the post.

I don’t know what the hell is wrong. At the moment, I cannot summon the fortitude to spend more time slogging through the WordPress support forums and troubleshooting possible fixes. I’ve just recently done many hours of that after upgrading to PHP 5, and the resultant day and a half when all my blog content was AWOL.

If it’s at all reassuring, I can tell recent commenters this:

  1. I am quite sure that your comments are not irretrievably gone. Like the rest of a WordPress site’s content, they are stored in a MySQL database that underpins the site framework. Comparing the current wp_comments table in the database with a version that was backed up before this snafu, I see no appreciable difference. So it has to be a matter of mending some connective piece of code.
  2. I’ve submitted test comments in the meantime to see if they stay posted, and they do. So don’t let the search and rescue operation for the previous comments discourage you from commenting now, if you’re inclined to do so.

Perhaps none of you give a shit about any of this, and this is the driest post I’ve ever written. Indeed, I may actually be trying to reassure myself: I’m always pleading and cajoling people to comment on my posts, and now those comments that have been submitted recently have disappeared with an audible “pop!” Not the kind of thing that encourages more comments.

Thoughts? Suggestions? Words of encouragement? Leave a comment!

[*rim shot*]

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Don’t say it.

But you-

Don’t even say it, because I know.

[in unison]
Oh my God, I thought you had quit blogging! Oh my God, I thought you had quit blogging!


Told you I knew.

Of course you knew, we’re the same person. What, you think you’re cool because you can read your own mind?

Read the rest of this entry »

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A lot of the public doesn’t realize how sophisticated the [pharmaceutical industry's] marketing techniques have become, really over the last 10 years… Essentially when a pharmaceutical company gets FDA approval for a drug, their marketing department can assure their bosses that they are going to be able to sell the drug, really whether the drug is effective or not.
Dr. Daniel Carlat, psychiatrist
Fresh Air, July 13, 2010

Emphasis in the final sentence is mine.

Dr. Carlat’s current book is Unhinged: The Trouble with Psychiatry – A Doctor’s Revelations about a Profession in Crisis. He was previously the author of a 2007 New York Times Magazine article entitled “Dr. Drug Rep,” about his experience being paid by Wyeth Pharmaceuticals to sing the praises of its anti-depressant Effexor to his colleagues; he also talks about it at length in the Fresh Air interview.

Carlat is a psychiatrist in private practice in Newburyport, Massachusetts, an Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine, and the publisher of The Carlat Psychiatry Report. Oh, and he’s also a blogger. How he is all of these things at once I cannot fucking imagine.

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All I did was plug in text from this post and this post, and it was definitively confirmed…

I write like
James Joyce

I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

Hey, Dr. Karl Hufbauer – you and your C+ dismissal of my Freshman Billy Budd paper can kiss my baby tuckoo!

What can I say? I try to keep C&B more on the Dubliners/Portrait of the Artist end of things than going all Ulysses or Finnegan’s Wake up in here. Read the rest of this entry »

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accentmap-screenshotHere’s the idea: make a Google Map wherein each placemark on the map contains a link to an audio or video source of that place’s authentic accent/dialect — for example, documentaries which can be rented or found at libraries, or radio segments that are archived online (like at the NPR website, and the sites of some specific public radio shows). The important thing is that the media sources contain the speech of ordinary people (i.e., non-actors). See also the screenshot at right for an example of what a placemark on the map would look like.

Great idea or dumb idea? Vote in the comments. And comment in the comments, if you are moved to do so.

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