Simple URLs for PostNuke

I got tired of the fact that my site can’t be easily searched on Google and has a poor ranking. Ok, so my site has a poor ranking because no one is linking to it, but deep articles aren’t showing up at all because even if people linked to them, they aren’t linking to the “print” version which is the only think which is cached by Google from Muninn. Only the main page and the “print” version of the articles at Muninn make it to Google’s archive because it ignores the long complex links which PostNuke, which I run Muninn on, uses far too much.

After poking around, many others have had a similar problem. The simplest solution I found here (at another complex URL).

It didn’t work completely because my site uses “&” for ampersands instead of just “&” so I had to modify the code for the replace_for_mod_rewrite and also used the code for this function based on a site that linked to the above article at Aquanuke. In case others have the same problem, try the version of the function below (read more) instead of the one found at those various sites:
Continue reading Simple URLs for PostNuke

Rice

A big box was waiting for me this afternoon when I came home. On the mailing label it just said, “Rice”

My friend Hiroshi came back to Japan after working for a time in Central America for a charity, setting up a small school in rural Guatemala. While he is currently studying Spanish on the beaches of Thailand (all I can say is, that’s Hiroshi), he stays at my place whenever he is homeless in Tokyo. I remember he asked me if I like rice when he was on the phone with his parents somewhere in rural Japan and that his parents would send me some in thanks for housing him…

I didn’t imagine a box of close to 20kg of his family’s own harvest of rice (judging it roughly by comparison to my half eaten 2kg bag in the kitchen) would arrive on my doorstep, covered only by a large paper bag and a cardboard box!

Thanks Hiroshi! You have guaranteed that I can’t possibly go hungry here during my last 6 months here in Japan. I’m now accepting recipes for some good rice dishes!

Links and Comments

Lots of fun stuff going around the net in the last few weeks. Some I found interesting:

-Glenn has passed on some good links lately. Looks like Japan is considering a project to provide GPS tracking of their kids in response to a recent kidnapping. This could do wonders for their safety, although I’m somewhat uncomfortable about the other potential applications of such a system.

-Looks like a few Austrian and german Villages, as well as the country of Liechtenstein are available for rental.

-Universities feeling the pressures of competing for students are apparently providing various new ways to attract top students.

-University of Tokyo is getting over a thousand Macintoshes. Also on the Mac front, Gen Kanai noticed the huge proportion of powerbooks at BloggerCon. See the pictures. Rush Limbaugh, whose current troubles are not getting much of my pity apparently wanted to be in an Apple switch ad. According to the story, Jobs rejected him for political reasons. A company who used images of Gandhi (think different campaign) is not likely to want an ignorant and racist man for a new campaign. Also an article on Apple’s new developer tools coming in the Panther release of the OS.

Look for your old professors or current ones here. You can rate them online and leave comments…

Find out what conferences and such are inviting papers through this new online service. Choose topics to watch and get notification on.

-Interesting article on homework by children in the US. 19 minutes is the average per day in 1997.

-Some good articles on blogging lately. Columbia’s Journalism review has three short articles on the technical history of blogs, a list of media blogs, and an article talking about the growth of blogs. He makes an important point on the importance of 9/11 on the explosion of the blog movement, and this also helps account for the conservative nature of many of them (which includes this writer, see his links, which include a young misguided Norwegian who I have very little taste for). There is also an interesting survey on blogging and an article at The Register. A good article at teacherlibrarian.com on the use of Blogs for educators and librarians. There is a whole corner of the Blogosphere now talking about this and it is frequently getting presented about at conferences. There is a good article here on the important “trackback” feature of blogs, which unfortunately, my own blog here at Muninn does not yet support.

-Apparently the more you watched TV, the more likely you were to be wrong about the basic facts of the war. Also, the more you watched the “Rupert Murdoch-owned Fox News channel, in particular, the more likely it is that your perceptions about the war are wrong, adds the report by the University of Maryland’s Program on International Policy Attitudes” The fact that 70% of Americans still believe that Saddam was involved in 9/11 is one manifestation of this. Although we can also thank Cheney’s stubborn efforts to maintain this connection.

-A quick look through some of the blogs listed on my blogroll will show how interested I am in issues of copyright and intellectual property. Some recent articles I have enjoyed is one on the“Copyright Cage” and an article on fair use in the education world. Interesting little row on the internet about an article about Hitler’s home that resurfaced. Read a Wired article and a NYT article on this.

-Old news, but check out the fun features of Google’s new calculator features.

Blog entry and links to idea of hyperlinking philosophical texts

-Link passed on by Claire, BBC has a new history site which is very interesting.

-Some interesting ideas being thrown around about things like emergent democracy. See Joi Ito’s version of emergent democracy, he seems to be focusing a lot of energy on it of late. I haven’t looked at this closely but may blog my thoughts on this at some future point…

Train announcement and Overweight French Fries

Sayaka and I went for some sandwiches at subway a few days ago. While enjoying our meal, I watched as someone ordered a side of french fries with their food. An employee filled a little bag with french fries and placed it on a scale. She then removed one french fry before giving it to the customer. The experience reminded me of buying vegetables in the market.

On the train home yesterday we heard the usual announcement overhead which includes the standard warning, “Cell phones are an inconvenience to other passengers, please turn off your phones while on the train.” I’m used to this now. The inclusion of this phrase comes from the ubiquitous use of the phones on the train have become annoying for others but also, apparently, due to trouble they cause for passengers with pacemakers etc.

However, before the final, “Thank you for your cooperation,” there was a new addition to the announcement, “By the way, chikan (sexual molestation in the form of touching, groping etc.) is a crime. Please report it to our staff.” What can we conclude from the new inclusion of this phrase? (Also, this same train line has just introduced, or I have just noticed, the “Women-only” cars during commuting hours.) Read a recent article on this issue.

Note Taking

I took a lot of notes today. I have a growing collection of typed up notes from various things I have read of late which is a great source to go back to. I do a lot of highlighting or tabbing (if I don’t own the book or a photococpy) of what I read and then type up these tabbed or highlighted passages and/or notes/summaries/responses to them.

Not only is this very time consuming but I am really worried about whether or not this method is any good. Unlike some, after having read a book or book, I soon forget both the details, argument, and even interesting points found in it. Thus, I feel like to gain something from the activity, I must make some “record” of my having read it. While I may never review these notes, at least I have them to refer to, thus ideally acting as a “substitute” for engaging a given, perhaps difficult, text again at a later date. So far this has been in the form of selecting quotes and passages that I feel represent the important arguments or points in a passage.

However, I am worried about whether this is really a good method. I would ideally like to take “notes of notes” (which a professor of mine once insisted as the best method) where a second pass over notes reduce your notes even further to a short readable narrative. However, I find that going back to my notes, I can hardly reconstruct that narrative. Even after reading a chapter I don’t feel confident enough in my ability to summarize an argument coherently or even have the energy to recreate it with a more free interplay of my own ideas with the text. I feel that this act “violates” the text in a way. This of course, may reveal more about my lack of attention in reading than my lack of skill in note taking. However, I suspect there is a deeper problem which I only barely understand. It is the problem of negotiating my relationship with a given text and of certain problematic assumptions I have long held about the status of my role as reader. I think I am reading too much theory…I can’t think straight.

Modern History Workshop

I went to a presentation at Waseda University tonight called “Images of Imperial Womenhood: Japanese Women in Colonial Korea and Their Modes of Domination, 1930-45″ by Atsuko Aoki, a grad student at Brown University. She had a couple of observations from her research that I found interesting. One was the apparent fact that in colonial Korea there were apparently far more Korean men marrying Japanese women than the other way around, as far as the data will show. I had expected the opposite to be true. The other was her observations on the views of Japanese towards Japanese women who were born or raised in the Korean colony as “spoiled”, “flippant” or “incompetent” or “lazy” and needing “rectification and re-education” as proper wives, or the fact that they weren’t considered fit to be wives at all. There followed an interesting discussion on this.

Stanford’s Peter Duus questioned her on this. Daqing Yang, a professor whose writings I have always liked, and a number of students chimed in with lots of other interesting observations. A student from U Chicago, (who is also in one of my Waseda classes where we will be struggling together through Harootunian’s Overcome by Modernity with a professor who is currently translating it into Japanese) recounted other examples from her studies of art and literature from colonial Dalian of how the colony was seen to have changed or defiled the purity of the Japanese original of something, giving it a “continental” look. I’m sure references to this can be found in a lot of places. I seem to remember seeing something about this in some reading on India as well.

Atsuko mentioned going on to look at some Korean women who were later branded as collaborators, research that brings it close to my own interest. I hope I can learn from many grad students who are working on these areas.

Modern Japanese History, from Father to Son

Riding home on the train a number of advertisements for the new issue of the popular monthly magazine Bungei Shunjû (文藝春秋) caught my eye. They were all announcing this month’s special feature in large letters, “25 ‘Why?’s of Showa History for a Father to Teach his Son.” (父が子に教える昭和史25の「なぜ?」)

I was curious to see what the sons of Japan were going to learn from fathers who had just put down October’s issue. I wasn’t suprised to find that there was much reason for concern about the conservative magazine’s responses to these questions “Why?” Let us look at just four of these questions, (none of which actually ask a question “Why?” in any language – but we shan’t quibble) which are most often dismissed outside of Japan with a resounding, “Duh!” …
Continue reading Modern Japanese History, from Father to Son

Fun Weekend

The last three days I was able to enjoy some wonderful sun in a Japan where the summer was already supposed to have ended. Friday was spent with my friends Jaehwan, Sayaka, Lars, and Lars’ bicycling partner Tamara going to see an exhibition of a North Korean spy ship that had been sunk by Japan. Its rusting carcass had been raised an put on display for a host of curious mostly older Japanese. It was a nice extra touch to see a collection of flowers put there in honor of the dead North Korean spies. They also put on display a host of objects found on the boat, including weapons, clothes, Kim Jong Il badges, a “self-destruct” button (the presentation claims that after being shot at, the ship exploded itself), and various Japanese electronics they had with them.

On Saturday Sayaka and I rented bicycles for the ridiculously cheap price of 200 yen. Musashino city, apparently famous for programs like this, offers rental of bicycles at one of its bicycle parking centers for less than $2 a day. We hopped on our bikes and randomly wandered north, ending up in Wako city in Saitama before wandering back again for a full afternoon of random bike riding.

Yesterday I joined some of my friends from SIPA for a BBQ on a beach near Enoshima (鵠沼海岸, a stop on the 小田急 line) south of Tokyo. The beach was very nice, and we were able to enjoy swimming, great food, and some beach ball throughout the hot afternoon. It was partly to celebrate our friend Shuji Inatomi’s publishing of a book. It was also excellent to see other friends there, including Suguru, who was back for a short time from Thailand.

Using Unicode (UTF-8) in Postnuke

Ok, for a long time now I have wanted to switch the encoding for Muninn to Unicode so that I can easily display Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. I love the PostNuke software, but it isn’t good for everything. One thing it isn’t good for is support sites like the one at support.postnuke.com. An article based approach is not good for reference sites and they obviously haven’t gotten that.

Anyways, a search on their site or on google turned up nothing. Only by wandering into their forums, did I realize the search there (which appears to be running phpBB) turned up the answer. If you ant to change your site to Unicode with Postnuke, simply:

1. Locate the file “global.php” in your blog folder’s:

~/languages/eng/global.php

2. search down the list until you find this line:

define(‘_CHARSET’,’ISO-8859-1′);

3. Change this line to:

define(‘_CHARSET’,’utf-8′);

That is all there is to it.

Transferring Muninn

For my own reference and notes to others who might be interested some of the issues involved in transferring muninn:

-The new server, a reseller account at bestreseller.com has Fantastico which can install all sorts of things including PostNuke (which the Muninn blog runs on)
-I installed a default PostNuke install, no prob
-took me a while to figure out how to do the mysqldump on the old muninn.net server since there is no control panel and the database settings are a little funky. A quick email to netnation.com gave me the command to run from SSH:

mysqldump -h db -P 4000 -u user_name user_name -p> myfile.txt

-dumped my old database to a file, downloaded it, and used the cpanel backup feature on the new server to upload the database to the new server
-changed the config file for the Postnuke installation that fantastico made to point to my old, uploaded database
-things worked great (same version of PostNuke as was running over at the netnation account) the blog was up and running immediately.
-Gallery and Icons still needed to be moved over.
-The gallery was a pain with permissions after the transfer, the modules/gallery/albums/ stuff had to have a lot of permissions changed to prevent various PHP errors from displaying, think it is working now.