Frankly Speaking: Southern Hip H
Grok Headline matches for Frankly Speaking: Southern Hip H
Frankly Speaking: Back to the Garage
Frankly Speaking: Back to the Garage
09/09/2004 10:06 PMG4 Tech TV Sep 10 2004 2:35AM GMT
Quite frankly, it's too late for this
Quite frankly, it's too late for this
07/12/2004 07:17 PMMadCowering - a weblog about BSE, very nicely done, and, as of today,
using a hacked up version of my fedex-tracker to RSS hack. Moo!
Meanwhile, there's a new Perl module for the Atom API. Out today, very
nice looking....
CEOs speak frankly at CTIA roundtable
CEOs speak frankly at CTIA roundtable
03/26/2005 05:41 AMNextel's Tim Donahue, Cingular's Stan Sigman and T-Mobile's Robert
Dotson on industry consolidation and more
"Frankly, my dear..." named No. 1 movie
quote (Reuters)
"Frankly, my dear..." named No. 1 movie
quote (Reuters)
06/22/2005 02:18 AMReuters - Neither the Godfather nor 007 can top Rhett Butler when it
comes to being the most quotable character in the movies.
speaking Right
speaking Right
04/09/2004 04:06 PMThe Wall Street Journal ran a review of
Free Culture Friday. (I can't show
you a link because on the Journal's theory of the web, it doesn't make
sense to even allow searches on your website without paying first.)
Great review, with an interestingly critical twist.
The thrust of Stewart Baker's criticism is that my argument should be
directed to the Right: That copyright law is
"asbestos litigation for the Internet age." "Big Copyright," he
continues,
"is one special interest that Republican strategists should love
attacking." And he ends by mapping copyright as a wedge issue:
What's to fear, that Hollywood will end its generous suppo
rt of Republican candidates? And talk about wedge issues. Voters under
40 are already more Republican than any other generation. What if the
administration stood with them on this issue, proposing a cap on the
damages that the industry can extract from college students for
downloading music? Say, $1 a song, or even $10, instead of $150,000.
Karl Rove could put that on the table, sit back and let John Kerry
choose between his contributors and our kids. If that happens, Mr.
Lessig could end up next to Ralph Nader in the pantheon of liberals
that the Republican Party has learned to love.
Of course not a result I'm eager to see (though after my sniping about
Nader, perhaps one I deserve), and of course, I am, as Baker suggests,
a liberal.
But Baker is exactly right that this issue should play to the Right as
well as to the Left. And as you'll see in
this
video from the Progress and Freedom Foundation debate with Jim DeLong
(recorded the day before Baker's review), it is a point I've been
making as well.
Speaking of CES
Speaking of CES
01/07/2004 06:04 PMDon't forget to check out PCMag.com's CES Center site for the latest
product and technology news from Vegas all week.
Speaking SearchSpeak
Speaking SearchSpeak
07/15/2004 08:43 PMAre we being trained by search engines to speak without "stop words"?
More at Many2Many......
Speaking naturally
Speaking naturally
01/28/2004 01:12 AMComputer Times Asia Jan 28 2004 5:29AM GMT
Speaking of WiFi
Speaking of WiFi
09/06/2004 01:26 AMEverybody's been talking about Pennsylvania thinking about going to an
all-state, WiFi, so I thought I'd mention a press release at
Michigan's Web site. Michigan has deployed WiFi at two...
Speaking machines!
Speaking machines!
01/04/2004 01:14 PM A brief
history of speech synthesis : an interesting read, with photos and
sound samples!
Speaking in San Jose
Speaking in San Jose
09/20/2004 10:40 AMCalendar note for Silicon Valley folks: On the evening of Oct. 4, I'm
giving
a talk in San Jose, sponsored by the
Commonwealth Club and San
Jose State University's
Department of Journalism and
Mass Communications. The topic will be "The Emergence of
Grassroots Journalism," and given current events there's plenty to
discuss.
Details
here.
I'm also scheduled, on Nov. 6, to be at the
Barnes &
Noble store on Stevens Creek Blvd. in San Jose. Details to come.
Speaking of Crones
Speaking of Crones
01/02/2004 07:08 AMKalilily Time
kalilily.net/weblog/04/01/01/151811.html
track this
site | 5 links
Speaking of contests...
Speaking of contests...
12/10/2003 11:24 PMThe Creative Commons Moving
Images Contest deadline is three weeks from today, and there are
lots of great prizes. You can use Flash or video to illustrate how
Creative Commons works (here's a
sample of how we describe it to musicians), no more than two
minutes in length.
To be honest, we haven't had a ton of entries yet, so get cracking
creative types!
Speaking of the environment...
Speaking of the environment...
06/10/2004 11:08 AMI was on a road trip last weekend thru the rolling hills between
Somerset, PA and Cumberland, MD, where I noticed scattered windmill
technology producing clean energy. I posted my appreciation and a
picture on my personal YardBoy Blog that provoked a valuable reader
comment. I learned that my Rochester, NY electric utility offers a
billing option that guarantees production of wind power at anyone's
request. It's called [Catch the Wind] and I signed up to have my average
useage "blown" into the power grid for an extra $5 per month. For $60
a year, I will reduce carbon dioxide emissions equivalent to planting
146 trees or not driving 2,338 miles. If I was a zealot, I could have
purchased extra. In fact, one can support wind energy regardless of
who supplies your electricity. You will receive a certificate that
verifies your purchase.
And speaking of gifts
And speaking of gifts
12/19/2004 03:40 PMSo the most significant change in my technology-related life in the
last year is the elimination of spam without a white-list technology.
I used to use Mailblocks for my main account, but Marc Perkel
convinced me to try his own Bayesian spam filter.
I'm on record saying such systems could never work. I was wrong.
Marc's system is amazing. I get endless email. His system filters the
mail into three boxes -- my inbox, a low probability box, and a high
probability box. I have never found a mistake in the high probability
box, so I no longer look at it. I very rarely find a mistake in the
low probability box, so I scan it about once a week (maybe 1% error).
And it is almost fun to get an error in my inbox, reminding me that
there still is this problem of spam out there.
Anyway, I'm giving Marc's spam filter service to my family for
Christmas (no, they don't read my blog). And I'd recommend it to
anyone else out there looking for a gift (note, I don't have any
financial interest in this). As Marc described to me:
I
sell it as a service. I can do it several ways. If someone wants a
single email address I can give them a something@marxmail.net account.
$25/year. Or I can host their email domain for $95/year. Or I can be a
front end spam filter where I clean it and pass it on to their
existing email server $75/year.
You can reach him for at this
MarxMail address.
And Speaking Of Wondering...
And Speaking Of Wondering...
04/19/2004 07:04 PMAnyone want to fork out $200 for a
Gucci iPod case?
Speaking about Blogs....
Speaking about Blogs....
06/17/2005 07:17 PMYesterday, Larry Sloma, who (along with Troy Swanson) helped
Moraine Valley Community College get all bloggy and RSSified, sent
me an email noting that he’s running a pilot project on his new
library’s web site. Check out the Highland Park Public
Library’s blog, which you can now have read to
you.
“Inspired by Gary
Price's recent post about Speakwire, we thought we'd try to add a
voice to our pilot blog. Works like a charm!
Look for the button
labeled ‘Want this blog to read to you?’ near the bottom
of the right hand column at http://lishost.org/~hpplblog/
.”
That wasn’t enough for Larry,
though. Today, I got an email from Troy, saying that Larry had also
helped MVCC set this up for their blogs, too. Check out the
“Click to Listen” link on the right-hand side of their Library News
blog!
Here’s the weird, spooky, serendipitous part.
I’m reading my work email tonight (yeah, I’m that
overwhelmed at work that I’m doing email from home these days),
when the following message from David Mattison
appears on the WEB4LIB
mailing list:
“I spotted a Google Adsense ad on my blog for a new
service called Talkr.com (http://www.talkr.com) that offers
conversion of text-only blogs into podcasts. I haven't tried it, but
it sounds like (pardon the pun) there's a library application in there
somewhere. The company has a revenue sharing program if they select
your blog as one of their podcasts. Jenny Levine's The Shifted
Librarian blog is one of the blogs already available as a
podcast.”
That’s news to me! But, I
guess if you’d rather listen to my posts than read them,
here’s your chance.
Hypothetically Speaking...
Hypothetically Speaking...
03/11/2003 09:44 AM... if there were a Safari v62, and it did happen to leak to the
public, and someone did happen to run it, and that person did happen to
discover a bug with text-decoration, well then I would
hypothetically be most grateful, and would in fact fix such a bug with
the utmost expedience. In fact, it might even be fixed already,
assuming of course there were such a build, and it did in fact have
this problem.
Speaking in Montreal
Speaking in Montreal
03/21/2003 11:26 AMLots of interesting things happening at the PHPQuebec Conference in
Montreal. I gave my little "build a successful OSS business"
speech yesterday, and it seems to have been well received.Seveal
"well known" PHP folks were also there--from Rasmus Lerdorf to
Zeev Suraski--with a good number of things to say and ...
Speaking at Gnomedex
Speaking at Gnomedex
06/23/2004 09:22 AMWhen I attended Gnomedex
last year, I have to confess that I went with muted expectations. As
it turned out, though, I had a great time, and rank it among the best
conferences I've visited.
This year, not only am I attending the conference but I'm scheduled
to speak on one of
the panels. Along with blogging gurus Robert Scoble, Henry Copeland and Ross Rader, I'll be discussing how
to maximize your blogging strategies. I'm glad I have a couple of
months to figure out what to say, because I'm not an experienced
public speaker :)
Among the other confirmed speakers are Steve Wozniak, Wil Wheaton and Dan
Gillmor.
The conference isn't until September 30 so I'll talk more about it
closer to the time, but if you want to attend I recommend registering now. Unlike
last year's Iowa-based Gnomedex, this year it's being held in Lake
Tahoe - so I expect even more people to be there.
Speaking of inexperience
Speaking of inexperience
07/06/2004 01:45 PMChurches speaking out against BNP
Churches speaking out against BNP
04/28/2004 02:53 AMWest Yorkshire church leaders are due to sign a declaration attacking
the right-wing British National Party.
Speaking of Overpriced Gear...
Speaking of Overpriced Gear...
06/10/2004 01:01 PM...did you know that you could spend more on a power cord than you would for a brand new Gateway
510 System? Or throw in another $55 and you could get a brand new
eMac.
Yes, it's true. $744 for a friggin power cord. A "Cardas Golden
Reference Power Cord with Built-in Filtration" no less, but still, a
power cord.
Does the US Army know about this
outfit?
from Gizmodo.
Click here to comment on this entry
Speaking of funny IM conversations
Speaking of funny IM conversations
07/16/2004 08:39 AM
I think fake IM conversations are becoming a new legitimate form of
satire. Here is one of the
classics.
via snowchyld
Comment -
TrackBack
Outrage over Sen. Clinton not speaking
Outrage over Sen. Clinton not speaking
07/14/2004 01:41 PMSpeaking of Image Formats
Speaking of Image Formats
07/22/2004 03:06 PMThe lame UNISYS LZW patent has kept GIF support out of free software
for some time. The patent has now expired worldwide, so the popular GD Graphics Library now has GIF
support again, after a very long absence.
gd 2.0.28 has been released. gd 2.0.28 restores support
for reading and writing GIF images.
So now you can fire up PHP and render your on-the-fly 'Punch The
Monkey' animated banner ads.
Click here to comment on this entry
Speaking too fast? E-mail me...
Speaking too fast? E-mail me...
08/06/2004 11:08 AM'Outrage' Over Sen. Clinton Not Speaking
(AP)
'Outrage' Over Sen. Clinton Not Speaking
(AP)
07/14/2004 12:04 PMAP - The former chairwoman of the New York State Democratic Party on
Wednesday called it "a total outrage" and "very stupid" that Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton has not been offered a prominent speaking role
at the Democratic National Convention.
Speaking of flip-flops
Speaking of flip-flops
03/08/2004 11:07 PMSpeaking of Music Piracy ....
Speaking of Music Piracy ....
04/09/2004 03:57 PMDigital music was supposed be a cheaper alternative to grossly
overpriced CDs. But the companies controlling the industry are looking
for ways to raise prices and boost their profits.
Speaking of Camino...If you are thinking
about gra ...
Speaking of Camino...If you are thinking
about gra ...
03/13/2003 10:22 AM
Speaking of Camino...If you are
thinking about grabbing the 20030310 build of Camino, don't. It's
crash-a-rific and I'm almost positive it has to do with the flash
plug-in. I've already sent in 5 talkback reports today. Just stick
with .7 for now. I only mention this because the nightly builds from
.6 to .7 were almost always as stable as the point release and the dev
guys even advocated grabbing a nightly build in the time between .6
and .7 to fix (among other things) a flash issue. Yes, I'm fully
aware that nightly builds are meant for testing purposes only, they
might shred your data, people can and do lose money! I'm just
sayin'...
12:20 AM
| Patrick Berry
Cory speaking on Jan 28 in Novato
Cory speaking on Jan 28 in Novato
01/22/2004 02:46 AMI'm giving a talk ("Copyright, the Web, and Innovation") for the North
Bay Multimedia Association on Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2004 from 6:30 PM -
9:00 PM at the Marin Community Foundation in Novato, CA.
There's nothing new about a copyright crisis: the ability to
automatically reproduce work has been contentious since the Gutenberg
Bible -- and as recently as the mid-Eighties, when the Hollywood
studios tried to outlaw the VCR, calling it "the Boston Strangler of
the American film-industry."
Is it any wonder that the web, with its ability to move, organize and
reproduce information without control or oversight, has precipitated
another crisis? Course not.
What is a wonder is that any number of otherwise bright and
well-meaning lawmakers, geeks and businesspeople are behaving as
though the proper response to a collision between copyright and
technology is limits on technology -- imagine if recorded music had
been "limited" to ensure that it didn't disrupt the sheet-music
business! (It almost was -- and recorded music was only rescued
through a Hail Mary act of Congress that legitimized piano rolls in
1908)
Today, the notion that technology should "compromise" with
rights-holders is a tremendous threat to the open Web. The recording
industry is indiscriminately abusing copyright law to sue 70,000
American file-sharers into submission. The Hollywood companies are
getting the FCC to regulate the basic components of the PC.
LinkIE key developer will be speaking at
Gnomedex
IE key developer will be speaking at
Gnomedex
06/17/2005 03:51 PMUnless Dean Hachamovitch is
coming to tell us how Podcasting is integrated into IE at Gnomedex, I think the speculation
that Microsoft will be announcing how they have seen the light on
Podcast and will have a product ready for us next week is probably not
going to happen. But what does the addition of this keynote speaker
mean. Could IE7 be released to the world at Gnomedex.
Whatever it is all of my sources are being really quiet and no one
is talking. Have a tip send it to geek@geeknewscentral.com
[C
hris Pirillo]
Bla-Bla list - speaking of Laszlo
Bla-Bla list - speaking of Laszlo
04/09/2005 05:50 PMFrom now on - you'll be seeing lots of great examples of free, open
source examples of Laszlo apps.
Here's teh first - the Bla-Blah
list.
Since Laszlo is free and Flex just raised it's price to $15k a
server - there should be no issue why you wouldn't choose this
superior solution.
Dragon Naturally Speaking 8
Dragon Naturally Speaking 8
03/24/2005 08:26 AMvnunet.com Mar 24 2005 12:06PM GMT
Speaking of French cheese
Speaking of French cheese
04/09/2005 07:53 AMAccording to this article, French mobilise to save cheeses under
threat of extinction France is losing cheeses as producers are dying
and taking their cheese making secrets to the grave.
A worrisome trend is looming in this country of cheese-lovers, where
the nation's rich palette of 1,000 cheeses is being nibbled away at
with the annual demise of several varieties..."The Mont-d'Or galette,
which had been produced for some 400 years, disappeared this summer
following the death of the last producer who knew the secret of how to
make it."
That does sound worrisome. What's also worrisome is the reference in
this article to "National Cheese Day" on "Friday." Did I just miss
National Cheese Day?!?! Why weren't there big cheese posters
everywhere telling me about this? Sure, they take the time to hang a
giant neon sign for the Olympics on the Hôtel de Ville, but why
not a giant poster of Brique de Brebis? No wonder a disastrous cheese
extinction looms!
Universal Values, Relatively Speaking
Universal Values, Relatively Speaking
02/01/2005 09:04 PM

A week ago I provided a values
self-test, and asked for your help creating a complete list of human
values, ranked in order of importance. I also promised to provide my
own list and rankings. The chart above is the composite of the
responses. It suggests that there are nine facets to our happiness:
Health, Home, Connection, Discovery, Work, Peace, Play, Awareness and
Self-Esteem. Each of these has aspects that vary depending on our
culture, and their relative importance varies from person to person.
I've shown Family as an aspect of Connection, but for some it may be
inseparable from Home. I've shown 'Work' in quotation marks because I
mean it in the broader sense of 'making a living', rather than the
narrow sense of employment. Again, for some people, self-styled
'home-makers', this may be inseparable from Home. And I've grouped
Personal Values and Beliefs under Discovery because they're part of
self-discovery, making meaning of our lives. You may quibble with my
terminology and groupings, but I'm reasonably confident that this
schema represents a set of Universal Human Values. In fact, I'd say it
represents the values of all sentient life -- from my readings and
personal study of birds, I think ravens, at least, share these nine
values and strive, consciously or unconsciously, to maximize their
achievement. These are the things that drive us all, that motivate all
activity, and because they're all essential to survival of the
species,
they're probably all coded into our DNA.
Alas, just because we may have a shared set of core values doesn't
make
it any easy to achieve agreement on how to maximize and achieve them.
The answer to "How Do We Best Achieve These Things" is a function
of:
- The information we can bring to bear
- The frames
through which we filter and assess that information
- Our culture: Accepted and preferred behaviours
Let's consider the sixth value, Peace, for example. Some of us believe
it is appropriate or even necessary to take aggressive action to
'secure' peace, while others believe in passive resistance to
peace-threatening actions. Some of us, because of the frames through
which we process information about acts of violence, believe that
force
(forces of 'evil') must be met with force (forces of 'good'), while
others with different frames believe we are all good, and that the
solution to violence is to address the inhuman circumstances that give
rise to such unnatural and desperate acts. Some of us believe the role
of the collective is to secure peace, to protect the community from
hostile outsiders, and everything else is the responsibility of the
individual. Others believe we are all responsible for each other in
every sense and aspect of our lives, and that our collective agents
(like governments) should exercise that responsibility extensively and
diligently.
So, if we cannot agree on How to achieve these values, is there even
any point to agreeing on What they are?
I think there is, for two reasons. First, and most obviously, it helps
us to better understand and find common cause with those with
different
frames, since, at bottom, we're all looking for the same thing.
Secondly, it can help us look rationally at our beliefs and
behaviours,
to assess whether they really make sense in light of what they are
intended to appreciate and achieve.
Here's an interesting example of the latter: One thing most liberals
and most conservatives seem to agree on is the value, at least in
theory, of globalization. Liberals don't like the way globalization
can
cause massive social and environmental damage, or how it's been abused
to force third world countries to adopt Western political and economic
policies and give up control of their economies, land and resources,
but most believe that it is quite possible to mitigate these negatives
and still reap the benefit
of free movement of goods and services at market prices as a mechanism
of humanitarianism and eventually economic, social and political
improvement. Conservatives see globalization as the ultimate
manifestation of a 'free' (unimpeded by government) economy, and as a
means to export 'good' Western values, but even they are more than a
little worried about a global government that they don't control
(hence
their loathing of the UN).
What is implicit in the both the liberal and conservative worldviews
of
globalization's benefits is that cultural homogenization is a good
thing. To the conservative, one world adhering to American values
would
be free of terrorism -- if we're all brought up with the same values
and beliefs (and believing in the One True God) the only crime that
would be left would be crimes of sloth and similar individual
moral weakness, universally abhorred and 'nipped in the bud' by a
uniform global 'spare the rod and spoil the child' criminal justice
system. All believing the same, growing up the same, with the same
'opportunity' -- what better way to achieve World Peace? To the
liberal, one world adhering to an agreed-upon consensus of laws,
standards and values would be the 'UN done right', where with only one
government, there would be no 'other government' to wage war on, and
with a global meeting-place for sharing ideas and resolving
disagreements, there would be limited support for civil war as
well.
These neo-liberal and neo-conservative views, though, both implicitly
see cultural heterogeneity as a threat to world peace. What is
interesting about this 'if we're all the same we'll get along'
rationale is that it is imperialistic and utterly ignorant of the
anthropological reasons why such cultural heterogeneity arose in the
first place. Indeed, most anthropologists argue that man is already
astonishingly culturally homogeneous already, and that cultural
imperialism and cultural homogeneity have grown in near-perfect
lock-step with the scale of human violence and war.
In hunter-gatherer cultures, both human and animal, there is little
cultural homogeneity between communities, and inter-mixing between
communities is rare. Anthropologists are astonished at how tribes
living just a few miles apart had rituals, beliefs, religions and even
diets that were completely alien to each other, almost unimaginably
different. Our civilization culture's expansion, imperialism, and
language impositions have compromised these differences enormously,
but
they are still somewhat observable. Even after several hundred years
civilization culture is so utterly alien to North American First
Nations people that they have proved almost impossible to integrate
and
assimilate.
Why would nature, and evolution have encouraged this innate
heterogeneity, this xenophobia which almost inevitably leads to
inter-cultural conflict? The obvious reason is resistance to disease.
As AIDS has shown so horrifically, and the Plague before it, movement
of people between cultures brings the risk of epidemics, and the more
culturally homogeneous the species, the greater the risk that such
epidemics will wipe out the entire race. This homogeneity-caused
fragility is not unique to humans -- we've seen it in the Avian Flu,
and the spread of Mad Cow, and the devastation that this fragility
caused during the Irish Potato Famine should be enough to make us
think
twice about the desirability of us, and our staple foods, being
increasingly genetically indistinguishable around the world, and the
desirability of our being able to travel around the world and infect
so
many others with new exotic diseases so easily.
That's the evolutionary explanation for nature's abhorrence for
homogeneity, and possibly the reason we are inherently so xenophobic
and intolerant of other cultures. But beyond the genetic fragility of cultural
homogeneity, cultural homogeneity also brings with it memetic
fragility -- a lack of variety of ideas. You can already see evidence
of this poverty of imagination in corporations and cults where
intellectual and behavioural conformity is strongly encouraged: no
innovation, group-think leading to inflexibility and denial of the
existence of problems, vulnerability to seduction by false comforts,
and brainwashing.
So assuming that cultural homogeneity is an inevitable consequence of
globalization, at least the globalization models we've come up with so
far, is the resultant genetic and memetic fragility that we would get
along with 'world peace' worth all the wars and imperialistic
devastation necessary to achieve it? Is the benefit of increasing
Peace, one of the nine universal human values, outweighed by the
commensurate reduction in Health and Home and Discovery, three of the
other values?
I prefer to take my learnings from nature, which may or may not be as
'smart' as we are but which demonstrated, especially prior to the
advent of civilization, a remarkable resilience and ability to
optimize
these nine universal values, not just for pre-civilized man but for
all
other life on the planet as well.
Nature would suggest, I think, that the answer is not One World,
homogeneous, a single world political and economic and cultural
system,
but instead a rediscovery of community, of diversity, of the richness
and strength of cultural difference, of heterogeneity.
Nature would suggest that community, not nuclear family or 'household'
or nation-state, is the place and level of aggregation where we will
find the true meaning of Home, of Belonging, of Love and Relationship
and Connection and Self-Sufficiency, and that the land and environment
and all the creatures on it that constitute our Home are sacred and
inviolable and belong to no one.
Nature would suggest that Discovery and Learning and Personal Values
and Beliefs are most effectively found by personal exploration, by
trial and error, through all of our senses in the real world, not by
reading textbooks in classrooms.
Nature would suggest that 'Work', making a living, is done most
successfully and meaningfully by cooperatively and collaboratively, as
equals, beholden to no one but one's chosen partners, helping
ourselves
and others meet real, unmet needs.
Nature would suggest that Peace comes from respecting the differences
and sovereignty of other communities, in celebrating their diversity
as
robust and astonishing communities in the human experiment, and in
trading ideas and goods reciprocally when it is necessary and to the
benefit of all.
Nature would suggest that Playfulness and Awareness and Self-Esteem
are
part of the very essence and meaning of life and that our modern
civilized world which trivializes and veils and manipulates our
achievement of these things turns a world of joy into a prison and
cripples us as human beings.
But I'm not sure I could convince a conservative, or a radical
Islamist, or even a Third World child captivated by the possibility of
modern American life, of this.
We may share the same universal values, but we see them, and the road
to their achievement, through utterly different eyes.
|
Kerry's first Southern win
Kerry's first Southern win
02/10/2004 09:26 PMSergeant disciplined for speaking of
abuse
Sergeant disciplined for speaking of
abuse
05/25/2004 05:49 PMGrok Description matches for Frankly Speaking: Southern Hip H
GrokA matches for Frankly Speaking: Southern Hip H
Frankly Speaking: Southern Hip H