civil marriage is a civil right
I just got through tagging the entries around Empress Wu’s death. Damn, that sucked. Much worse than tagging those around Toadstool’s death. I am going to need to go home and hug kitties big-time.
So I have tagged almost all of 2006 now. Tagging is not easy; as I mentioned it requires reading everything. It’s also been a bit of a pain because my site doesn’t like me opening so many windows on it at once; I keep getting timeouts trying to load edit pages. Only four more years to tag now.
Today is another woot-off, but I’ve had four meetings today and I missed the electronic sudoku game that would’ve been $10 shipped. Nothing else has been remotely tempting, really.
I just realized that you cannot use tags on Tagalag unless you have an account. If you already have a TypeKey account, you can use that to log into Tagalag, but otherwise you have to create one. Nobody has tagged me yet, but if you are inclined to make an account (or login with TypeKey), please do tag me. I’m incredibly curious to see what people will put.
And if you’re not interested in tagging me on Tagalag, please comment with a few tags for me. If you’re not familiar with tagging, tags are a way of classifying something using just a word or two. You’re welcome to give more than one tag, to repeat tags others have already used for me, etc. I just want to know how my friends would tag me!
Two things that are nifty enough to get a post about them now, rather than later:
Tagalag is a people-tagging system with APIs and all that. “Tag people. Manage your online identity. Create lasting, contextual links. Tagalag is a new way to define your relationships. You can see what others have tagged you as and remove tags if they are inappropriate.” You can tag me! [via eHub]
$3 Domains is an offer from Yahoo Small Business. It’s (presumably) legit, and you can register a domain for up to five years. Seems to be for new customers only, one to a customer. I need to make a list of domains to think about registering… [via WeblogToolsCollection]