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	<title>RickHorowitz &#187; politics</title>
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		<title>Unspun&#8482;</title>
		<link>http://rickhorowitz.com/my-site-blurbs/unspun/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Dec 2008 03:37:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rick</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[My Site Blurbs]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[blog history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blogging]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[unspun™]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Unspun&#8482; started around 2003 as a blog where I could react to the increasingly conservative "spin" on the news which now has become almost self-parody at Faux News.  From 2003 to 2008, Unspun&#8482; functioned as my "personal blog," distinct from various "professional blogs" I kept for businesses like TechStop&#8482;.  With the advent of RickHorowitz.com, I now intend to have Unspun&#8482; focus more carefully on political and social commentary.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the sad things about living in a digital world is that, more so than the fleshy parts of ancient dinosaurs, some parts of the past are lost, never to be recovered.</p>
<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 387px"><a href="http://rickhorowitz.com/wp-content/themes/rickhorowitz/images/dinosaur.jpg"><img title="All Thats Left" src="http://rickhorowitz.com/wp-content/themes/rickhorowitz/images/dinosaur.jpg" alt="All Thats Left" width="377" height="211" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">All That&#39;s Left of Some Poor Soul&#39;s Past</p></div>
<p>In approximately 1993 or 1994 — digital archeologists will just have to take my word for it — I created the first of many websites.  I don&#8217;t remember the exact URL for the site: it might have been something like <code>http://www.cybergate.com/~rickh</code> since the now-defunct Cybergate ISP was how I gained (SLIP!) access to the commercial Internet.  Eventually, I moved to ValleyNet Communications (later to become Protosource Network after I became the Vice-President there) and bought the domain name &#8220;Winkola.com.&#8221;  (This is derived from a nickname (&#8220;Winky&#8221;) given to me by Sarah Serafimidis.  That&#8217;s a story for a whole &#8216;nuther post.)</p>
<p>Back then, if we wanted to build blogs, we had to code our way uphill, through the snow,<em>both ways</em>!  And that&#8217;s just what I did for quite a long time.  Winkola.com constantly morphed as I posted information about things that interested me, images from local plays — not part of any failed Hollywood career as one Holocaust denier has <a title="CODOHWeb defies July 4th sneak attack! " href="http://www.codoh.com/report/sr35.html" target="_blank">mistakenly claimed</a> all these years (do these guys ever get <em>anything</em> right?) — and I slogged my way through several versions of HTML code to eventually add an &#8220;events calendar&#8221; complete with links to the &#8220;events pages.&#8221;  Ah&#8230;for the days when the <code>&lt;table&gt;</code> tag was brand-new and we were all trying to figure out how to make it do things it wasn&#8217;t (then) designed to do!</p>
<p>Though by then I was part of a small group <a title="mrtg-mail/mailstats-horowitz" href="http://www.sfr-fresh.com/unix/misc/mrtg-2.16.2.tar.gz:a/mrtg-2.16.2/contrib/mrtg-mail/mailstats-horowitz" target="_blank">creating applications with perl,</a> it never occurred to me to create blogging software.  This was not the first — or last! — time that I missed my opportunity to be involved in something significant.  I still ruefully remember sitting around with friends, laughing at the guy who bought chairs.com, or some other generically-named domain, which seemed to us quite silly at the time.  (I even laughed about the idea of buying <a title="rick.com" href="http://www.rick.com/" target="_blank">rick.com</a>.  I did not.  Today, that domain is worth a lot of money, too.)  Consequently, as with my dinosaur-friend above, all the fleshy-parts of my proto-blogging pages are lost.</p>
<p>But I digress.  Repeatedly.  And this was supposed to be a &#8220;blurb.&#8221;</p>
<p>Eventually someone with more business sense than me created blogging software.  I won&#8217;t bore you (even more) with all the packages I tried before settling for several years on <a title="MovableType website" href="http://movabletype.com/" target="_blank">MovableType™.</a></p>
<p>With the birth of my first MovableType™ blog, <a title="Unspun&amp;#8482;" href="http://unspun.us" target="_blank">Unspun™</a> took the place of Winkola.com.  (Winkola.com still exists, but is merely a referrer — or <a title="HTTP referrer" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Referer" target="_blank">&#8220;referer&#8221;</a> as the &#8220;correct&#8221; (mis)spelling of that word has evolved in HTMLspeak —  to <a title="Unspun&amp;#8482;" href="http://unspun.us" target="_blank">Unspun™</a>.)  From at least 2003 through 2008, it powered blogs I wrote at <a title="Unspun&amp;#8482;" href="http://unspun.us" target="_blank">Unspun™</a> and <a title="TechStop&amp;#8482;" href="http://www.techstop.com" target="_blank">TechStop™.</a></p>
<p>In either late 2007, or early 2008, I started learning about <a title="WordPress&amp;#8482;" href="http://wordpress.org/" target="_blank">WordPress™.</a></p>
<p>The one language I had not dealt with a great deal, PHP, powers WordPress™ and that delayed my getting to know it.  In a word — okay, three words — I love WordPress™.  Tinkering with WordPress™ lead me back to something I&#8217;ve always loved: building websites.  In mid-December 2008, I decided to create a &#8220;mother-of-all-Rick&#8217;s-websites&#8221; here at RickHorowitz.com, using WordPress™.  The theme I selected and am busily modifying is <a title="Revolution Office website" href="http://www.revolutiontwo.com/" target="_blank">Revolution Office</a> from Brian Gardner Media, LLC &amp; Circa75 Media, LLC.</p>
<p>Since the development of RickHorowitz.com, <a title="Unspun&amp;#8482;" href="http://unspun.us" target="_blank">Unspun™</a> will now focus more on political and social commentary, while a new blog will be built — sledding downhill with WordPress™ the entire way! — at RickHorowitz.com for more general, and/or more personal, posts.</p>
<p>You now know more about <a title="Unspun&amp;#8482;" href="http://unspun.us" target="_blank">Unspun™,</a> and a few other things, than anyone either needs or cares to know.  To get some firsthand experience with <a title="Unspun&amp;#8482;" href="http://unspun.us" target="_blank">Unspun™,</a> click one of the many instances of its name in this post.</p>
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