Thursday, December 18, 2008

Received this error after an automatic windows update and reboot while I was working on a project in VS 2008.

The components required to enumerate web references are not installed on this computer. Please re-install Visual Studio

After the box rebooted, I couldn't connect to the web service for my project and couldn't refresh the references to my web service from within Visual Studio.

I tried running

c:\> devenv /resetsettings

but nothing. My environment reset, but same - or at least similar problems.

I looked through some of the other settings and found this:

c:\> devenv /resetskippkgs

Worked like a charm, but did have to update my web references, rebuild, etc... But it looks like I am back on track.

H

posted on 12/18/2008 4:02:08 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, December 17, 2008

    It seems that it is not possible to run the 64-bit version of the 2.0 extensions along side the 1.1 extensions for web applications. However, it is possible to run both in WOW64. There is a slight performance hit due to the additional layer provided by WOW64, but I haven't noticed it in my environment and only speculate that it might show up under extreme load.

    Here is how to switch (from http://support.microsoft.com/kb/894435) between versions.

    ASP.NET 1.1, 32-bit version
    To run the 32-bit version of ASP.NET 1.1, follow these steps:
    1. Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then click OK.
    2. Type the following command to enable the 32-bit mode:

      cscript %SYSTEMDRIVE%\inetpub\adminscripts\adsutil.vbs SET W3SVC/AppPools/Enable32bitAppOnWin64 1

    3. Type the following command to install the version of ASP.NET 1.1 and to install the script maps at the IIS root and under:

      %SYSTEMROOT%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v1.1.4322\aspnet_regiis.exe -i

    4. Make sure that the status of ASP.NET version 1.1.4322 is set to Allowed in the Web service extension list in Internet Information Services Manager.
    ASP.NET 2.0, 32-bit version
    To run the 32-bit version of ASP.NET 2.0, follow these steps:
    1. Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then click OK.
    2. Type the following command to enable the 32-bit mode:

      cscript %SYSTEMDRIVE%\inetpub\adminscripts\adsutil.vbs SET W3SVC/AppPools/Enable32bitAppOnWin64 1

    3. Type the following command to install the version of ASP.NET 2.0 (32-bit) and to install the script maps at the IIS root and under:

      %SYSTEMROOT%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727\aspnet_regiis.exe -i

    4. Make sure that the status of ASP.NET version 2.0.50727 (32-bit) is set to Allowed in the Web service extension list in Internet Information Services Manager.
    ASP.NET 2.0, 64-bit version
    To run the 64-bit version of ASP.NET 2.0, follow these steps:
    1. Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then click OK.
    2. Type the following command to disable the 32-bit mode:

      cscript %SYSTEMDRIVE%\inetpub\adminscripts\adsutil.vbs SET W3SVC/AppPools/Enable32bitAppOnWin64 0

    3. Type the following command to install the version of ASP.NET 2.0 and to install the script maps at the IIS root and under:

      %SYSTEMROOT%\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v2.0.50727\aspnet_regiis.exe -i

    4. Make sure that the status of ASP.NET version 2.0.50727 is set to Allowed in the Web service extension list in Internet Information Services Manager.
    Note The build version of ASP.NET 2.0 may differ depending on what the currently released build version is. These steps are for build version 2.0.50727.

    (It is important to note the need to re-enable the extensions in the Web service extension list in IIS, after running the aspnet_regiis.exe commands. They are disabled after each install and will produce a "Service Unavailable" error on the application if not.)

    Another issue that you will run into when installing the 1.1 extensions on 2K3 64-bit is the loss of the ASP.NET tab in IIS. While not a terrible problem, as you can switch the framework version for a web application from the command line, using the following command:

    aspnet_regiis.exe –s /w3svc/<identifier>/root

    Resources:

    http://support.microsoft.com/kb/894435

    http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;894435

    http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/winsharepointadmin/HA100598511033.aspx

    posted on 12/17/2008 10:54:03 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, October 01, 2008

    Now that the media (and the DC drama queens) are shying away from calling the $700 billion dollar gift to Wall Street a buyout - actually reporting that there is the potential for taxpayers to actually make money from the deal, I am trying to make sure that I have my head wrapped sufficiently around what they are trying to accomplish.

    The treasury (via the FDIC) is going to purchase all "toxic" loans from troubled banks so that they can clear up their balance sheet and begin to meet the Federal regulations in order to begin loaning money again. They will be purchasing these failing (or failed loans at the full value (not really the market value, but the full value of the mortgage, even if the property values have dropped substantially) of the note - essentially taking ownership of the property and they owner will begin paying (or not paying) the treasury. This will allow the credit markets to being to outflow again to speculate against potential future inflows into a company that before had crumbling books, but now has a clean slate.

    The federal government then owns the notes that are not currently being paid on, hoping that those people who can't pay their loans will begin to do so as the market recovers.

    This is in hopes to stimulate the economy, especially in the area of housing starts, so that we can add more homes to an already flooded market whose values are propped up by the fact that loans were so easy to come by in the first place.

    Those worthless properties that the federal government (taxpayers) may or may not be paid on and any hope to foreclose the property are worthless because of the housing glut and the fact that the properties are virtually un-sellable. The hope is that eventually the market will recover and both the new housing starts and the foreclosed properties will regain value and eventually surpass their current values (from nothing) giving the taxpayers much needed relief and seeing a return on the 700 billion initial "investment".

    Remember, people ultimately foreclose when they can't afford their mortgage and they can't sell their property at or above the loan value. The houses they own are worth far less than the loan amounts that they have outstanding. The government can't do any better getting this money back and who in the world is going to start new houses, when the ones that we already have (most new, 5-10 years old) aren't moving and are depreciating - rapidly.

    Add to that the fact that we all of a sudden have $700 billion more in the potential money supply, that is un-earned, un-product driven, non-GNP expanding currency. Any ECON 101 student would understand that, given that there is really no solid basis for the value of money anymore, each individual dollar in the previous money supply is now worth, aggregated, $700 billion less.

    Crap. We're all screwed - unless of course I can find a way, before Friday, to buy an overpriced house, at 19% APR, that I can't afford, in a bad part of town....

    And the EU, I don't even want to think about that.

    I covet any comments and corrections on how I understand things. I'm going to try to get some sleep, but that's probably not very likely.

    H

    posted on 10/1/2008 10:56:57 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, July 22, 2008

    Recently I had to make an .mdb file accessible for download after authentication and couldn't allow a direct link to the file. We had written a similar handler for .xls and others (.csv, etc...) - we sent back a few headers to set the file name and the mime type and then server.transfer'd to stream out the binary file.

    Turns out that IIS maps .mdb files to the aspnet_isapi.dll executable by default (in fact on the server we were testing it was also mapped to a perl interpreter... go figure) , making server.transfer cough. We were receiving the following error when trying to do the transfer:

    System.Web.HttpException: Error executing child request for /{ourdirectory}/{ourfilename}.mdb

    [HttpException (0x80004005): Error executing child request for /{ourdirectory}/{ourfilename}.]
       System.Web.HttpServerUtility.ExecuteInternal(IHttpHandler handler, TextWriter writer, Boolean preserveForm, Boolean setPreviousPage, VirtualPath path, VirtualPath filePath, String physPath, Exception error, String queryStringOverride) +2672379
       System.Web.HttpServerUtility.Execute(String path, TextWriter writer, Boolean preserveForm) +819
       System.Web.HttpServerUtility.Transfer(String path, Boolean preserveForm) +57
       System.Web.HttpServerUtility.Transfer(String path) +35
       {mycontrol}.Page_Load(Object sender, EventArgs e) in {path to my control file}.cs:33
       System.Web.Util.CalliHelper.EventArgFunctionCaller(IntPtr fp, Object o, Object t, EventArgs e) +14
       System.Web.Util.CalliEventHandlerDelegateProxy.Callback(Object sender, EventArgs e) +35
       System.Web.UI.Control.OnLoad(EventArgs e) +99
       System.Web.UI.Control.LoadRecursive() +50
       System.Web.UI.Page.ProcessRequestMain(Boolean includeStagesBeforeAsyncPoint, Boolean includeStagesAfterAsyncPoint) +627
    

    One of the options that we found was to simply remove the mapping in IIS, but then I ran into the problem of not being able to remove the mapping from the ASP.NET Development Server (at least in a way I could figure out easily). So, option 2 presented itself and we found it to be the best solution for both situations. Simply add the following in the <httpHandlers> section of your web.config:

    <remove verb="*" path="*.mdb" />

    If you don't have an httpHandlers section of your web.config, it goes in as a subsection of <system.web>

    <system.web>
    <!-- ... other stuff .. -->
    <httpHandlers>
    <remove verb="*" path="*.mdb" />
    </httpHandlers>
    <!-- ... other stuff ... -->
    </system.web>

    No more problems with code like the following:

    Response.ContentType = "application/octet-stream";
    Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=" + myFileName);
    Response.Flush();
    Server.Transfer(baseVirtualPath + myFileName);

    No my dev environment using Asp.Net Development Server had the same settings that the IIS 6 app had, so I could test and debug properly.

    Some helpful links that helped me solve the problem:

    http://www.eggheadcafe.com/software/aspnet/29460604/iis-6-wont-serve-mdb-fil.aspx
    http://forums.asp.net/p/1022569/1393806.aspx

    posted on 7/22/2008 4:38:33 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, July 14, 2008

    I recently developed an application using Linq to Sql against SQL Express for my development environment. Initially, I was under the impression that it would be running in a SQL 2K5 production environment, but at my first deliverable discovered that I was going to have to port back to SQL 2000 prior to delivery.

    I thought at first that the only real changes I would have to make is reducing my varchar(max) types to the 2K5 upper limit and continue on, but discovered some pretty severe limitations to using Linq To SQL against SQL 2000.

    To access my LTS objects and methods, I wrapped everything up into a data layer that returned either single enties or IQueryable for multiple result sets, this in turn was consumed by my business layer which generally converted to lists or something that made a little more since to the presentation. On my port back, IQueryable seems to be where I ran into the problems. I was running into errors like the following:

    Local sequence cannot be used in LINQ to SQL implementation of query operators except the Contains() operator.

    Cannot translate expression to SQL for this server version.Translation would contain an expression of type Text, NText or Image in a SELECT DISTINCT clause

    Cannot translate expression to SQL for this server version

    Using SQL 2000 as the back-end doesn't allow me to do complex queries when the results contain nText or binary data as the derived sql makes extensive use of DISTINCT. Against SQL Express I had become accustomed to chaining together multiple IQueryable methods and then calling my datacontext to execute a single method. Now, I found myself having to make use of .ToList in virtually every complex query that involved a table at any join level that contained a BLOB. Lots and lots of junk across the wire...

    I still don't have a workable solution to allowing IQueryable to be replacement for collections and am in the process of combining methods anywhere that IQueryable no longer makes sense which is tedious and hopefully will be rendered unnecessary.

    That was a lot of lead up to what I really wanted to post - The limitations of SQL Server Express...

    For ages (at least several months), I have been developing against SQL Express and find it easy to use, light weight and very capable. However, I had never before considered the possibility that SQL Express could be a viable dbms, especially in a production environment. My application is complex, but not huge.

    The limitations of SQL Express are simply resource limits and not functional limits. As long as my db is smaller than 4GB in size (if I manage my log files well, there is no reason it shouldn't be) and doesn't require more than 1 CPU and 1 GB of RAM, SQL Express should be a fully capable and possibly even desirable alternative to the enterprise editions of even SQL 2005. These are not hardware limits, but resource limits constrained by the application itself. This means that SQL Express could probably live nicely on a web server and that the db service, out of the box, wouldn't grab an excessive share of resources.

    Using SQL Express would help me to avoid extensive re-writes and would allow the client to install without any additional software purchases. I covet any feedback on your experiences using SQL Express in a production environment and any feedback in general about this post.

    In addition, here are some links I found useful to finding the source of my problem in the first place:

    H

    posted on 7/14/2008 1:53:44 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, March 12, 2008

    This list is from here: 101 Useful Resources for Online Entrepreneurs, but I have removed all the links that aren't free and republished. I will also add more as I find them. It is a terrific list of resources for the those starting or operating business. As I read through the list, it was difficult to figure out from the descriptions which ones were free, so I edited the list and crossed out the ones that aren't. Enjoy. Please visit the original link above as well, as I would hate to be accused of link jacking... just wanted to make the list more usable and it was a real pain to sort through them all - trying to save you the trouble.

    Communications/VOIP

    1. Skype - Free calls over the internet to other people on Skype for as long as you like.
    2. Vonage - Leading provider of VoIP internet broadband telephone services.
    3. Gizmo - Low cost international calling and free calls to users on Yahoo Messenger, Google Talk, Windows Live users and SIP networks.
    4. Vonics Digital - Plans start at $12.99 per month lowest price available in the market.
    5. VoipBuster - Free program that uses the latest technology to bring free and high-quality voice communications to people all over the world.

    Data Backup

    1. Mozy - Industry-leading solution for online backup.
    2.
    Intronis - Online backup solution with remote computer data backup software.
    3.
    Carbonite - Unlimited online backup for one flat fee.
    4.
    Data Deposit Box - Your source for online backup, and secure online data backup.
    5.
    Athena Backup - Automatically backup your home computer files with Athena Backup.
    6.
    Data Protection Services - Secure online backup services, free trial!

    1. I couldn't find any of these for free... But GDrive works pretty well and also - which is not to be confused with the GDrive project from Google, which will blow most of these out of the water.
    2. Micro$oft SkyDrive looks promising too.

    Invoicing

    1. Bamboo Invoice - Simple, Open Source, Online Invoicing.
    2. FreshBooks - Online invoicing and time tracking service. - Limited number for free
    3. Transcepta - Electronic invoicing solution.
    4. Blinksale - The easiest way to send invoices online. - Free, but you only get three invoices per month in that version
    5. InterlinQ Solutions - Providing a daily job report, time sheets, job tracking, construction reports and mobile billing.
    6. Bill My Clients - Easy way to create and send invoices and bills to your clients. - Not free, but reasonable considering they actually send by postal mail.
    7. Billing Orchard - Online electronic billing software application.
    8. 2nd Site - Secure invoicing service w/ online invoice payment & online employee timesheets. - 3 Invoices per month for free

    Financial Management and Accounting

    1. Intacct - Delivers ERP software as a service to small and midsize companies.
    2.
    QuickBooks Online - Accounting Solutions for professionals and businesses.
    3. Xero - Slash the hours you spend every week on accounting administration. - Can try for free, but have to pay to setup a live company

    Time Management and Project Management

    1. Google Calendar - Free online shareable calendar service.
    2. Vitalist - Web based task manager designed to work with Getting Things Done (GTD). - Free to 10 projects
    3. Backpack - Personal and small business information management, intranet, and to do list organizer. - Free for 2 users
    4. Basecamp - Web-based tool that lets you manage and track projects. - Free for 1 project
    5. Goplan - Online project management app. - Free for 2 projects
    6. Copper Project - Project Management Software.
    7. Side Job Track - Web-based job tracking, invoicing, reporting & project management software.

    Contact Manager

    1. Big Contacts - Web Based Contact Manager for 2 to 2000 People. - Free to 100 contacts
    2. Highrise - Shared contact manager. - Free for 2 users
    3. BatchBook - Easy-to-use contact management system. - 1 user - 200 contacts
    4. Relenta CRM - Small business CRM software. - 1user - 250 contacts
    5. Oprius - Sales and Contact Management Software for Independent Sales Consultants.
    6. PipelineDeals - CRM made simple - $15/User/Month. - Says it's free, but I think it actually will cancel after 30 days.

    Hiring Freelancers

    1. Elance - Outsourcing to Freelancers. - Post for Free
    2. Guru - Free service helps you find freelancers, get free quotes, and get your project done.
    3. SmarterWork - Top small business services marketplace. -
    4. Contracted Work - Work Jobs Freelance Search.
    5. oDesk - Global service marketplace for small and medium sized businesses.
    6. Get A Freelancer - Freelance programmers and web designers.
    7. BizReef - Online Services platform.

    Online Reputation Management Tools

    1. claimID - Free, easy way to manage your online identity.
    2. Google Alerts - Email updates of the latest relevant Google results.
    3. Yahoo Alerts - Free, personalized notification service.
    4. Technorati - Real-time search for user-generated media.
    5. FindMeOn - Manage your circles of friends, family, colleagues and others.
    6. myOpenID - Secure OpenID provider.

    Accepting Payment

    1. PayPal - World renowned.
    2. Google Checkout - Google’s way to send and receive money.
    3. Neteller - Online payment solutions.
    4. Moneybookers - Cheaper way to send and receive money worldwide.
    5. iKobo - Pick up your money at over 1000000 Visa ATMs.
    6. CheckFree - Provides financial electronic commerce services.

    Shopping Carts

    1. Zen Cart - Free, user-friendly, open source shopping cart system.
    2. osCommerce - Free online shop program.
    3. AgoraCart - Free shopping cart.
    4. OpenCart - Open source PHP-based online shopping cart system.
    5. Ubercart - Open source e-commerce suite.
    6. X-Cart - Shopping cart software & PHP ecommerce solutions.
    7. NetSuite - Integrated web-based business software suite.
    8. ZNode - ASP.NET shopping cart.
    9. Fortune3 - Ecommerce Shopping cart software.
    10. Network Solutions - Robust, customizable Ecommerce online shopping cart software.
    11.
    Kick Start Cart - Business professionally over the Internet.
    12. Secure Delivery - The best digital download management site on the net! - Free for 1 product

    Social Networking

    1. PartnerUp - Find business partners, opportunities to get involved in businesses.
    2. Cofoundr - Cofoundr is a private community for entrepreneurs.
    3. Fast Pitch Networking - Business Networking Social Network for Business Professionals.
    4. Killer Startups - Reviewing new startups.
    5. Konnects - Business technology focus groups and networking events.
    6. LinkedIn - Strengthens and extends your existing network of trusted contacts.
    7. Ryze - Business Networking.
    8. StartupNation - Provides real-world business advice to people who want to start a business.
    9. Startupping - Community resource created for Internet entrepreneurs.
    10. UpSpring - Business networking.
    11. Ziggs - White pages and free people search for professionals.

    Finding Funding

    1. GoBigNetwork - Angel investor network/venture capital.
    3. Find That Money - Formidable presence in consumer finance. - Free for very limited trial
    4. Venture Deal - Venture capital database.
    5.
    American Capital Advance - Fast Business Loans.
    6. Financing: Where to Find It

    CPC Revenue - Many in the CPC and CPM section are based on your site traffic volume, etc... but after signup and approval, they all seem to be free from the content publisher standpoint.

    1. Google AdSense - Google’s CPC Network.
    2. Yahoo! Publisher Network - Yahoo’s CPC Network.
    3. ABC Search - Get paid per click by ABC.
    4. AdBrite - Webmasters can buy and sell text ads based on their site’s topic area.
    5. Chitika - The leading merchandising network for bloggers.
    6. Bidvertiser - Pay per click advertising.
    7. Kanoodle - Distributes results to a large network of other search engines and search box providers.
    8. Clicksor - Effective online advertising technology.
    9. Kontera - Advertiser and Publisher Solutions.

    CPM Revenue

    1. ADSDAQ - A new advertising exchange.
    2. ValueClick Media - One of the largest and most effective online advertising networks.
    3. AdDynamix - Full-spectrum interactive provider delivering ad management.
    4. Morning Falls - Online advertising solutions to advertisers and publishers worldwide.
    5. CPX Interactive - Online ad network.
    6. BurstMedia - Internet advertising network.
    7. Casale Media - World’s fastest growing provider of online media solutions.
    8. Tribal Fusion - Focused on high quality sites with targeted content and significant reach.
    9. BrightRoll - Video advertising.
    10. Adtegrity - Internet Advertising Solutions.

     

    posted on 3/12/2008 8:08:53 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [7]
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  •  Thursday, February 28, 2008

    Appalachian State University Alum, economist and author Stephen J Dubner has been listed by Forbes as one of only a handful of profiled Business Visionaries.

    Stephen J. Dubner grew up in a rural area outside Albany, New York in a town called Duanesburg, as the youngest of eight children in a devout Roman Catholic family. His parents, Paul and Veronica Dubner, had converted to Catholicism from Judaism, the faith, ironically, that Dubner turned to as an adult [1]. His first published work was in the American children's magazine Highlights for Children.

    Dubner received a scholarship from Appalachian State University in North Carolina, and graduated in 1984. At Appalachian he formed a band, "The Right Profile," which was signed to Arista Records. In 1988, he stopped playing music to focus more on writing, going on to receive an MFA in Writing from Columbia University (1990), where he also taught in the English Department.

    Dubner currently resides in New York City with his wife, Ellen Binder, and two children. (from wiki)

    Business Visionaries - Forbes.com

    posted on 2/28/2008 9:50:02 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, February 26, 2008

    Just created my ChatBack GTalk badge. I'll publish it to the sidebar shortly, but just wanted to go ahead and publish it in a post to see how it works.

     

    Source: Create a Google Talk chatback badge

    posted on 2/26/2008 8:52:08 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, January 30, 2008

    This is one of the best new ideas that I've seen recently. The premise is that you vote on the outcome of current news events (with virtual currency). It's fun way to read current news, but could turn into a real productivity killer.

    Hubdub - Home

    posted on 1/30/2008 5:14:32 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, January 23, 2008

    I'm not convinced that even if Huckabee wasn't having money problems that he could pull more Christian conservatives than Ron Paul is going to get after this endorsement. I truly believe that for conservatives, esp. the Christian segment, this has been the deciding factor of their voting in virtually every election since Roe v Wade - more than same sex marriage, more than war, more than economy.

    "Jane Roe," whose real name is Norma McCorvey, turned against abortion a decade ago. In her endorsement Tuesday she said, "I support Ron Paul for president because we share the same goal, that of overturning Roe v. Wade. He has never wavered....

    Top of the Ticket : Los Angeles Times : Ron Paul endorsed by Jane Roe, yes, THAT Roe

    I know that my last two posts have been about Ron Paul, and please don't think that I am starting some kind of a political blog, b/c that is the last thing I want to do. I've just been really impressed over the last few weeks about both the viability and the positions taken by this candidate. Incredible.

    posted on 1/23/2008 11:08:42 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [3]
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  •  Monday, August 13, 2007

    I just finished reading a disturbing article in Time magazine with the following statistic: 

    Large urban churches have been accepting credit cards for several years, tapping into the Generation P (for Plastic) aversion to carrying cash. Pastors like to tell jokes about parishioners collecting Frequent Flier points on the way to heaven. A recent Dallas Morning News poll found that 55% of 200 local churches accept credit and/or debit cards.

    I feel quite certain that God doesn't need money that bad. I understand that there is a growing aversion to carrying money, but there is also a growing aversion to paying off debt. I don't personally believe that, from a Biblical perspective, alcohol use in moderation is a sin.  I also don't believe that the managed use of credit cards is a sin. I do believe that it would be a sin for me to offer churchgoers an open bar next to the foyer Starbucks (although I'm sure it would be a very effective way to grow a church) - not because it is in itself sinful, but because even if I contributed to a single person's alcoholism, it would be evil. I have a feeling that at least some of the 55% of 200 local churches have at least someone with terrible credit card debt. If the church is in receipt of that money, are they also responsible for the usury that is the 20%+ APR?

    The article itself had to do with ATM's in the lobby, with which I don't necessarily have a problem. At least not the same problem that I have with donations on credit. I do question why a church would feel it necessary to make it easier for someone to give. If giving to a their church is a responsibility of a believer in Christ, then what would be the need make it easier to do. Part of the growth the we experience spiritually in our giving is the fact that it is a discipline. It is something that we do even though it might not be that easy.

    I would assume as well that many of these churches who are trying to make it easier to give are also preaching a message of prosperity that says, "if you are faithful in your giving, God with be faithful in providing your abundance." Wrong.

    God IS faithful. Giving is my responsibility.

    Just because I give to a church, my condition is not necessarily going to improve. I give to a church because the God who has changed my position (death to life) has told my heart to do so. If I give my offering to him at 22.5% interest, I have a pretty good feeling that my abundant prosperity is going to be at least 22.5% lower (compounded) than if I had paid cash.

    The ATM in the Church Lobby - TIME

    posted on 8/13/2007 5:33:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, August 06, 2007

    Robert Scoble has apparently given up on email. He makes a good point for clear, open communication in his latest Twitter rant. If nothing else, the following tweets force me to consider the possibility of 1) defaulting to open communications (blog, twitter, forum) or 2) making sure that my private communication is acceptable for public consumption - don't say anything that the world couldn't see (not that the world is really all that interested in what I am doing.)

    From Twitter via pidgin:

    (13:51:42) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: It's amazing that in this age of Twitter that people still send email. I hate email. I hate direct Tweets. I hate Facebook messages.
    (13:52:58) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: PR people are the worst in the email regard. Speaker planners are close. I don't answer a lot of my email anymore. If I did, I'd never do.
    (13:55:44) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: arikb: yeah, email still has SOME value. But going down all the time. I far prefer people not send me private notes. Scalable communication.
    (13:56:40) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: I always answer things in public space first. Why? Because those communications scale.
    (13:57:06) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: If something really needs to be private than email is great. But most of my email doesn't need to be private.
    (13:58:30) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: Or people asking me to blog. Very low quality stuff. If PR people were forced to do their work in public their entire method would change.
    14:00
    (14:00:44) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: If I want to get a hold of Mike Arrington, for instance, i know that writing a Tweet about him will get his attention far faster than email.
    (14:04:42) twitter@twitter.com: Scobleizer: Basically this is my gesture to the world: I am not answering my email and I'm not going to start. I'm overloaded. Tweet me.

     

    posted on 8/6/2007 2:31:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Saturday, July 07, 2007

    I had a problem on one of our home pc's tonight where Spoolsv.exe was pegging the CPU at 100% usage. I couldn't find any knowledgebase articles concerning it and a Google query only turned up safe-file results.

    I ended up discovering that the problem was in the MS Office Document Image Writer spool. There was a job (apparently from almost a year ago) stuck in the queue at 67% complete. I canceled the job and everything has returned to normal. Go figure. I have been unable to find any information on Tojans or Virii that cause such behavior, so I am chalking it up to a quirk... and going to bed.

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    posted on 7/7/2007 12:53:00 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, May 30, 2007

    Microsoft has just announced Surface. Just at first glance, this appears to be something that could change everything. I am curious about a couple of things. 1) Will it really be cost effective enough that we will be able to have a coffee table (See the Power video) that sorts our pictures and 2) How in the world is this going to run on top of Vistazilla?

    If they could really do that bar trick with the bubbles and stuff... dang. Pretty impressive.

    Link to Microsoft Surface

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    posted on 5/30/2007 1:11:04 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, May 28, 2007

    Lego is the world's most reputable company: 

    For the eighth year, Reputation Institute, a New York City-based consultancy and research firm, conducted a study to find the answer. This year's winner is LEGO. Yes, LEGO, the 70-year-old Danish toy manufacturer, scored No. 1 out of 600 companies worldwide.

    Source: Development Crossing: The world’s most reputable companies

     

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    posted on 5/28/2007 6:13:29 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, May 23, 2007

    Today, the inhabitants of Earth have hit a significant milestone. The population of the planet has moved from the country to the city.

    "...Wednesday, May 23, 2007, represents a major demographic shift, according to scientists from North Carolina State University and the University of Georgia: For the first time in human history, the earth’s population will be more urban than rural."

    from Mayday 23: World Population Becomes More Urban Than Rural

    I'm pretty sure that this is the kid who tipped the scales:

    Pic from Moonage WebDream 

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    posted on 5/23/2007 4:05:53 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, May 18, 2007

    I found myself talking to another guy the other day about diamonds and remembered a story listing 10 good reasons just to go with a simple gold band. I went to my bookmarks (three computers later, hallelujah for del.icio.us) and found the link but it was dead. I had to dig a little more, but finally found the list here. I am also copying it below for future reference. 

    (2/14/02)

    By Liz Stanton, CPE Staff Economist

    1. You've Been Psychologically Conditioned To Want a Diamond
    The diamond engagement ring is a 63-year-old invention of N.W.Ayer advertising agency. The De Beers diamond cartel contracted N.W.Ayer to create a demand for what are, essentially, useless hunks of rock.

    2. Diamonds are Priced Well Above Their Value
    The De Beers cartel has systematically held diamond prices at levels far greater than their abundance would generate under anything even remotely resembling perfect competition. All diamonds not already under its control are bought by the cartel, and then the De Beers cartel carefully managed world diamond supply in order to keep prices steadily high.

    3. Diamonds Have No Resale or Investment Value
    Any diamond that you buy or receive will indeed be yours forever: De Beers’ advertising deliberately brain-washed women not to sell; the steady price is a tool to prevent speculation in diamonds; and no dealer will buy a diamond from you. You can only sell it at a diamond purchasing center or a pawn shop where you will receive a tiny fraction of its original "value."

    4. Diamond Miners are Disproportionately Exposed to HIV/AIDS
    Many diamond mining camps enforce all-male, no-family rules. Men contract HIV/AIDS from camp sex-workers, while women married to miners have no access to employment, no income outside of their husbands and no bargaining power for negotiating safe sex, and thus are at extremely high risk of contracting HIV.

    5. Open-Pit Diamond Mines Pose Environmental Threats
    Diamond mines are open pits where salts, heavy minerals, organisms, oil, and chemicals from mining equipment freely leach into ground-water, endangering people in nearby mining camps and villages, as well as downstream plants and animals.

    6. Diamond Mine-Owners Violate Indigenous People's Rights
    Diamond mines in Australia, Canada, India and many countries in Africa are situated on lands traditionally associated with indigenous peoples. Many of these communities have been displaced, while others remain, often at great cost to their health, livelihoods and traditional cultures.

    7. Slave Laborers Cut and Polish Diamonds
    More than one-half of the world's diamonds are processed in India where many of the cutters and polishers are bonded child laborers. Bonded children work to pay off the debts of their relatives, often unsuccessfully. When they reach adulthood their debt is passed on to their younger siblings or to their own children.

    8. Conflict Diamonds Fund Civil Wars in Africa
    There is no reliable way to insure that your diamond was not mined or stolen by government or rebel military forces in order to finance civil conflict. Conflict diamonds are traded either for guns or for cash to pay and feed soldiers.

    9. Diamond Wars are Fought Using Child Warriors
    Many diamond producing governments and rebel forces use children as soldiers, laborers in military camps, and sex slaves. Child soldiers are given drugs to overcome their fear and reluctance to participate in atrocities.

    10. Small Arms Trade is Intimately Related to Diamond Smuggling
    Illicit diamonds inflame the clandestine trade of small arms. There are 500 million small arms in the world today which are used to kill 500,000 people annually, the vast majority of whom are non-combatants.

    References:

    Collier, Paul, "Economic Causes of Civil Conflict and Their Implications for Policy," World Bank, June 15, 2000.

    Epstein, Edward Jay, "Have You Ever Tried to Sell a Diamond?", The Atlantic Monthly, February 1982. http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/82feb/8202diamond1.htm

    Global Witness, "Conflict Diamonds: Possibilities for the Identification, Certification and Control of Diamonds," A Briefing Document, June 2000, http://www.globalwitness.org/text/campaigns/diamonds/reports.html

    Human Rights Watch/Asia, "The Small Hands of Slavery: Bonded Child Labor In India," Human Rights Watch Children's Rights Project, http://www.hrw.org/reports/1996/India3.htm .

    Human Rights Watch, "Children’s Rights: Stop the Use of Child Soldiers;" http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/crp/index.htm .

    Kerlin, Katherine "Diamonds Aren’t Forever: Environmental Degradation and Civil War in the Gem Trade," The Environment Magazine, http://www.emagazine.com/september-october_2001/0901gl_consumer.html .

    Le Billon, Philippe, "Angola’s Political Economy of War: The Role of Oil and Diamonds, 1975-2000," African Affairs, (2001), 100, p.55-80.

    Mines and Communities, "The Mining Curse: The roles of mining in ‘underdeveloped’ economies," Minewatch Asia Pacific/Nostromo Briefing Paper, February 1999, http://www.minesandcommunities.org/Country/curse.htm .

    Other Facets, Number 1, April 2001; Number 2, June 2001; Number 3, October 2001, http://www.partnershipafricacanada.org/hsdp/of.html .

    © 2002 Center for Popular Economics

    Source: 10 Reasons Why You Should Never Buy Diamonds | Perpetual Draft

     

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    posted on 5/18/2007 9:49:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, April 26, 2007

    I've decided to Twitter. I haven't invited anyone yet, because I want to get the feel of it first - however, Twitter is almost impossible to get the feel of without a considerable number of friends/followers... a quandary.

    I would love to Twitter up a little more organically, so if you are a twitter user, please check out my profile: Link to Twitter / Widescreen

    posted on 4/26/2007 2:03:34 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, April 25, 2007

    At first I was a little shocked... I wasn't quite sure how to feel and I wasn't sure if what I was feeling was anger or fear - or both. I found out a few days ago that starting next month I was going to have to expect a little less each month from my job. A little = 1/3 of my existing monthly income. Ouch.

    It is supposed to only be for a short time, but I can't count on that now that I live in Mexico. So, having said that, I apologize up front for the repositioning of the advertising and the addition of the in text/contextual advertising, but I'm hoping to eeek out a little more money each month from this blog. It gets pretty decent traffic (several thousand unique views each month), but my conversions have been pretty low (a lot of my traffic comes from RSS readers) - so I thought I would move some stuff around and add some more.

    I REALLY hope that it doesn't become intrusive to anyone and if it does, for ANY reason, please don't hesitate to let me know. I have been really reluctant to try to monetize this site and if it bothers anyone, I'll take it down immediately.

    I'll also try to post on how it does in a month or so. If it doesn't do much, I'll take it all off again.

    Best regards,

    Hal

    posted on 4/25/2007 8:24:42 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, April 05, 2007
    I've been playing around with Meebo.com since a laptop crash a few days ago and I'm sold. The interface is light and easy, it has integrated sounds and right click actions. It's total free and it has a really need little script generator to create widgets (not what I would consider a widget in the web2.0 sense, but still pretty cool).

    With the widget I can place the code on my web site in order to IM with site visitors in real time. No more LiveAssistant for $20 a month...


    posted on 4/5/2007 1:45:56 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, October 06, 2006
    From TechCrunch.

    It looks like Michael Arrington’s report last night that Google is in talks to acquire YouTube may have been more than what he called “40% likely to be at least partially true.” The Wall St. Journal is reporting this morning that those talks are in fact underway, according to “a person familiar with the matter.” Journal writer Keven Delaney writes that the talks are in early stages and could break off. The Journal reported the same price tag that Michael did earlier, $1.6 billion.

    Wow...

    This will probably bring to a head to the digital rights fight. Google is constantly being sued for linking to content and YouTube in trouble for showing infringed work.

    I worry that YouTube will now simply go away, with it's web property redirected to Google video content - but I sincerely hope not. YouTube just does it better than GoogleVid. My $.02.



    posted on 10/6/2006 2:41:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
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  •  Monday, October 02, 2006
    From Lifehacker

    Officials of the world's largest Internet media company said it planned to give away the underlying code to Yahoo Mail, one of the crown jewels of its business, in a bid to encourage software developers to build new applications based on e-mail.

    The Reuters article has the following quote,

    Open applications like Google Maps and Yahoo's own Flickr have inspired a new wave of programming in which developers can combine software features from different companies to create what are known as "mashups" -- hybrid Web products.

    However, this step by yahoo appears to go beyond a well developed API like Maps or Flickr or Amazon and actually releases the source.

    I am assuming that this will not be an OSS release, with a Yahoo license instead of GPL'd or something, so reusing the code will be difficult or impossible. It does however open up a world of possibilities in terms of extensibility. IMHO, this could be an exchange/lotus killer based on myriad possibilities for extensions.
    posted on 10/2/2006 12:32:49 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, July 03, 2006

    The latest version of arguably the best automated DAL generator and code automation tool, LLBLGen Pro has been released. Upgrade is only $49 for existing users and licensing is unrestrictive. I’ve been using 1.1 for two years now and can’t remember the last time I wronte ANY ADO.

    From: Frans Bouma's blog : LLBLGen Pro v2.0 released!

    # Full .NET 2.0 support in generated code and runtime libraries with separate runtime libraries codebase for .NET 2.0, using .NET specific features like generics internally as well for optimal performance.
    # SqlServer 2005 server side paging queries now use a CTE based query instead of a temptable based query for optimal performance.
    # Support for nullable types for value-type based entity and view fields. (.NET 2.0 targeting code only)
    # Support for System.Transactions transactions when applicable (SqlServer 2005, .NET 2.0)
    # Support for wsdl schema interpretation logic to have wsdl.exe generate typed stubs for webservices instead of DataSet based stubs (.NET 2.0 targeting code only)
    # New feature-rich validation framework.
    # Powerful data-projection framework: project any entitycollection or resultset retrieved from a datareader onto any datastructure of any type using generic code.
    # Ability to specify scalar queries in expressions, so a subquery inside a selectlist or inside expressions in filters is now possible.
    # It's now possible to fetch a query as a datareader. This query can be a stored procedure call, or a query created on the fly. This datareader can then be used further, if required, to project the data onto classes like entity classes, datatables or custom classes using the generic data-projection framework. This makes it possible to fetch entities through a stored procedure call with very a few lines of code.
    # EntityView (SelfServicing) and EntityView2 (Adapter) classes added, which are dataview-style objects for entity collections. They support sorting, and filtering in-memory, data projection onto other entity collections, datatables or custom classes. Filtering and sorting is done through strongly-typed, compile-time checked predicate and sortclause objects, which are also used for filters and sorters in database queries.
    # Expressions now support calls to database functions (UDF's or system functions). Database functions can accept entity fields or normal values you pass to the function or other expressions (like for example scalar queries).
    # Full support for 2-way declarative databinding and design time databinding in ASP.NET 2.0, using the LLBLGenProDataSource (selfservicing) and LLBLGenProDataSource2 (adapter) controls. These controls support (design time) databinding of entity collections, typed lists and typed views and support server-side paging, sorting and filtering. They also support data persistence / retrieval delegation to different methods (by tracking changes into a UnitofWork object), and filtering/sorting based on parameter binding with other controls on an ASP.NET 2.0 webform.
    # Full support for design time databinding in .NET 2.0 windows forms.
    # .NET 2.0/VS.NET 2005: A set of Debugger Visualizers has been added for a lot of classes in the framework to ease debugging your code.
    # support for CF.NET 2.0 and SqlServerCE 3.0
    # Oracle support using the Microsoft Oracle provider. This replaces the DataDirect based Oracle support.
    # SqlServer 2005: support for synonyms for tables and views, support for User Defined Types (UDT) based on CLR classes, support for NEWSEQUENTIALID() so sequential uniqueidentifier values can be generated by the DB and read back into entities.
    # PostgreSql support for PostgreSql v7.4 and up
    # Much lower memory footprint of entity collections in memory.
    # Entity fetch speed has been greatly enhanced.
    # LLBLGen Pro designer is now running on .NET 2.0, using the new Janus Windows controls v3 for windowing and grids.
    # Plug-ins can now open their own docked window in the LLBLGen Pro designer
    # It's now possible to specify in the designer additional namespaces and interfaces to generate into the entity classes
    # Completely new code generation configuration system, which makes it very easy to add/remove/edit the tasks scheduled in the run queue for code generation.
    # New template configuration system which makes it very easy to add your own templates to an existing set of templates to enhance or replace existing templates
    # without having to alter any system configuration. Much more small enhancements, changes, tweaks and additions.

    In addition, LLBLGen Pro has the smartest and fastest support forums that I have ever experienced. I’ve never had an unanswered post go longer than 1/2 hour – and usually Frans provides at least a little commentary, if not the solution itself.

    posted on 7/3/2006 11:16:30 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
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  •  Friday, June 09, 2006

    I guess that the Church of Scientology is trying to broaden their reach a little bit. Let the Days of Thunder jokes begin.

    From Sports Illustrated:

    The Church of Scientology, the religion for which actor Tom Cruise crusades, will attempt to spread its "Ignite Your Potential" message into auto racing through sponsorship of a race car in one of NASCAR's lowest levels.

    Kenton Gray, a 35-year-old Californian, will attempt to make the field for a late model race Saturday night at Irwindale (Calif.) Speedway. His No. 27 Ford Taurus will be sponsored by Bridge Publications, which publishes Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard's bestseller "Dianetics."

    The hood of the car will say "Dianetics" on it, along with a volcano to mimic the book cover.

    posted on 6/9/2006 3:54:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
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  •  Wednesday, June 07, 2006

    Finally. Although, I am not sure what part of “NO” leaves room for “Perhaps”.

    In a hint that Google could adjust its stance in China in the future, he added: "Perhaps now the principled approach makes more sense." – Sergey Brin

    The biggest problem that I have with Google attempting to alter their stance now is that they stood so hard for their stance in the first place. Does anyone else get the feeling that it is still just about the $$?

    Speaking in Beijing at the time, Eric Schmidt, Google's chief executive, said: "We believe that the decision that we made to follow the law in China was absolutely the right one."

    It also makes me wonder why money would drive unprincipled business endeavours for a company whose core business makes billions. The Times (UK) wrote an article ripping Google’s attempts to excel outside of it’s core search business. It is evident that Google desires to expand beyond the search. They’ve got the cash to allow these infants (Gmail, Google Finance, Google News, Writely, Spreadsheet) to mature, so why do anything that would risk your integrity and consistency (not to mention the trust and respect of your base)?

    posted on 6/7/2006 1:09:34 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Saturday, May 27, 2006

    This ridiculous little flash app is a complete waste of time. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

    posted on 5/27/2006 2:13:07 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
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  •  Monday, May 22, 2006

    I came across a Dugg link on fixing the problem with MFA (Made for Adsense) pages in Google and how they were polluting search results and hindering fair value in the AdWords system. I decided to go ahead and quickly run up a DotNetNuke AdSense hosting system to try to implement some of what the article was describing.

    I have added the my first stab at it over here and it took a little under an hour using DotNetNuke. I’ll post my results in the next few days. My only real concern is that I at least make back the $20 that I put into it – if that works out then I am all for this kind of civil disobedience. :-).

    H

    From the article:

    This tutorial will definitely increase the number of MFA web sites as well as our previous research on Digg.com attention grabbing words increased the number of stories with "amazing", "digg", "revealed" words. When the number of MFA web sites will reach the critical mass, Google will turn on its immune system.

    posted on 5/22/2006 2:19:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
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  •  Friday, May 19, 2006

    I just came across a horrifying story claiming that the Iranian parliament is attempting to pass legislation that would require Jews and Christians (non-Muslims) to wear identification (yellow strips of cloth for Jews, Red badges for Christians, and blue cloth for Zoroastrians).

    The article was Dugg and there is plenty of commental speculation that it may be inaccurate – in which case, I will go ahead and pull this down. However, I was able to find substantiation from:

    UPI and The Jerusalem Post and Wizbang (it must be true  )

    Human rights groups are raising alarms over a new law passed by the Iranian parliament that would require the country's Jews and Christians to wear coloured badges to identify them and other religious minorities as non-Muslims.

    posted on 5/19/2006 12:55:08 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, April 13, 2006

    Wired News has posted about Google’s response to criticism that they caved to Chinese censorship and also announced the creation of a Beijing research center. There are several excerpts of note which I will comment on below:

    He said Google had to accept restrictions in order to serve China, which has the world's second-largest population of internet users after the United States, with more than 111 million people online.

    This is the Internet morons… how is it that Google has to accept those restrictions? Google is not bound by Chinese law. Google is not forced to have a physical presence in order to offer results to China. Google only has to comply with undemocratic laws in order to make certain that Google’s sites are not blocked at the physical level by the Chinese government. Google caved to the restrictions so that people could see Google’s bits more easily – $$.

    Schmidt also announced the creation of a research center in Beijing that he said should have 150 employees by mid-2006 and "eventually thousands of people." He said the center is meant to create products for markets worldwide, though he said planning was still in such an early stage that he didn't know what they might be.

    Me thinks there is something else to this… Do no evil?

    Schmidt was speaking at a ceremony to announce Google's Chinese-language brand name — "Gu Ge," or "Valley Song," which the company says draws on Chinese rural traditions to describe a fruitful and rewarding experience.

    I would think a better name might be “Klu Dge” – meaning “kludge” which I say draws on an old coder tradition of doing what you can to make the dumb thing work.

    Talking to reporters later, Schmidt said Google's managers were stung by criticism that they accepted Chinese censorship, but said they haven't lobbied Beijing to change its rules.

    I have absolutely no problem whatsoever with filtering the results from Google China and making sure that Google is in compliance with Chinese law for the sake of money. I do, however, have a problem when what Google is doing goes completely against their corporate culture and mission. While Google may not be doing evil directly, they are certainly bowing to an authority who is evil… very evil. Perhaps Google should get back to “their philosophy”. Item’s of note from their philosophy:

    #4) Democracy on the web works. (unless you are in China)
    #5) You don’t need to be at your desk to need an answer. (unless you are in China)
    #6) You can make money without doing evil. (but you can make more money in China by cohorting with those that do evil)
    #7) There is always more information out there. (unless it contains the word Tibet in China)
    #8) The need for information crosses all borders. (unless it is the border of China and Tibet)

    And how about some snips from Google’s software principles:

    GoogleChinaCLEAR BEHAVIOUR: Applications that affect or change your user experience should make clear they are the reason for those changes… Applications should not intentionally obscure themselves under multiple or confusing names… [I don’t have the Chinese character set installed on my machine, but I don’t think that those little ???s say anything about why a Chinese Netizen can’t find good links on Job openings in Taiwan]

    KEEPING GOOD COMPANY: Application providers should not allow their products to be bundled with applications that do not meet these guidelines… [but it’s not really bundling when it includes the entirety of the web]

    Would you filter searches for apartheid for Google South Africa? Would you filter searches for genocide for Google Sudan? No. Why not? Because they don’t have 111 million potential adsense viewers.

    posted on 4/13/2006 10:56:18 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, April 07, 2006

    Deion Sanders met with the Austin Wranglers on Wednesday to discuss options for joining the Arena Football League team as an owner.

    The article discusses that it would only be in an ownership position, but imagine how perfectly suited Neon would be to the AFL. I don’t just mean because of all the flash and WWF’ng :-) of the AFL and how Deion and his flamboyance would fit right in. I’m talking skill set – think about:

    Deion_sanders1) He’s still REALLY fast (and can still jump). However, his speed has turned to more of a quickness than the enduring speed needed by a long haul cornerback in the NFL. The shortened field is perfectly suited to his speed bursts and jumping ability. I am going to try to find some statistics to compare his speed with the speed of receivers in the AFL – please help if you can point me to any.

    2) It’s ALL about passing in the AFL. The forward motion rule and the physical out of bound restraints make it perfect for the passing game and in turn creates an even greater need for a talented back field.

    3) Finally, picture Deion receiving a missed field goal deep in the in-zone (remember you play it off the nets in AFL) – he would conceivably have a run-back opportunity on each non-scoring set of downs, not just on interceptions. Dude.

    Deion and the AFL might just be the perfect fit. Deion did quip with the following:

    "If I don't like what I see, I may just have to go down there and play," Sanders said with a laugh, according to a statement issued by the team. "You never know when I might put on a uniform."

    IMHO – and I will probably get blasted for this – the AFL version of football is really a considerably better version of football than is the NFL version (I'm not saying I would rather watch AFL, just that the version of the game is fundamentally better).

    The rules lend it a faster pace, the score is much more volatile (teams can recover from 30+ points in a single quarter), and the players are much more… just much more (the players are playing to win, not because they make $12 million a year). The only thing that the AFL lacks is the franchise player. The players themselves are already grittier and more impervious to pain then 85% of the NFL. Those physical out of bound restraints couldn’t possibly feel good. At least 3–5 times a game you see a receiver disappear either through or over one of them. In addition, they do it for 1/20th of the salary.

    Just my $0.02.

    posted on 4/7/2006 2:30:59 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, April 06, 2006

     

    Partition20060405My first impulse when I read about BootCamp was to check the date and make certain that it was not posted April 1, 2006.

    It seems that Apple will be helping it’s Intel based users run Windows XP:

    To broaden its appeal in a Windows-dominated world, Apple Computer Inc. unveiled software Wednesday to help owners of its new Intel-based Macs run not only its own operating system but also Microsoft Corp.'s rival software. [link]

    Another quote:

    "It makes the Mac the most versatile computer on the market," said Tim Bajarin, a tech industry consultant at Creative Strategies.[link]

    What makes it any more versatile than a grey box AMD machine running XP Pro and Ubuntu… oh wait - better yet, just send me an Ubuntu bootable LIVE CD for my AMD running XP Pro and who’s got the bigger (and cleaner) rig now?

    Microsoft IPOD

    Here are some other observations from around the way:

    Dan Gillmore writes: My main worry is that the notoriously porous (to malware) Windows partitions will give the bad guys access to the Mac partitions, which so far are almost entirely free of the malware that afflicts the Windows community. Macs are getting the attention of the malevolent hackers, though, and will soon enough be facing at least some of the virus/worm/trojan/etc. woes. Mac users shouldn't be cocky.

    Ujwal Tickoo writes: The three reasons behind this strategic move from Apple seem to be:

    1. Increase the sales of Intel based Mac computers and improve Apple Mac's market share 
    2. Help interested Windows users switch to the "cooler" Mac Hardware while continuing to use their Windows software and data.
    3. Allow existing Mac users to use software, utilities, and games available on Windows and therefore not dump the Macintosh.

    Om Malik mused: …Apple HQ has a sick sense of humor… Sick as in making people up north sick. The release of Boot Camp, a small application that allows you to install and use Windows XP on a Mac (running Intel chips of course) is proof that one should never ever believe what Apple says. After all for the longest time, the company issued half-hearted denials about no-interest in having Windows run on a Mac. Yeah right - that’s like saying that Steve Jobs has a wardrobe full of rainbow colored mock-neck sweaters.

     

    posted on 4/6/2006 2:31:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Saturday, April 01, 2006

    Honest and Forthright

    I understand that this is actually a true report and in regards to the dreadful/horrible/unimaginable actions of the lacrosse team, but the image itself struck me as funny.

     

    posted on 4/1/2006 1:27:08 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, March 07, 2006

    Here is my take on what your Cingular’s Real Enabled phone will look like in service:

    Bufferphone

    You should get used to that little green “Buffering line”.

    I also foresee the following feature set:

    64 MB flash… Wait it’s Real, you can’t really save the video… let’s make that 16MB.
    1.5 GB of RAM… Remember, it’s Real player. I think this should be enough.
    3 Midi files (all stored on the internal 16MB flash card) – “You lost that lovin’ feelin’”, “Waiting on a miracle” and “Axel F” for you to listen to while buffering.
    A custom WAP home page with three links to the three sites that still encode ANYTHING in Real.

    The new portalet will be called “PluralCingular.com”, because that name makes about as much sense as partnering with Real for this type of technology.

    Via: BetaNews | Cingular Taps Real for Video Service

    Cingular on Tuesday announced the availability of Cingular Video, a free service to subscribers of its high-speed data network. The deployment, which is the first commercial use of RealNetwork's Helix technology, would be available in the 16 markets currently served by the carrier's 3G UMTS/HSDPA network.

    posted on 3/7/2006 4:15:30 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, February 23, 2006

    I just took a look at the new Google Page Creator Beta. The html editor implementation is top notch and it appears, at least from the help section, that publishing pages using Google page creator ensures that your content is spidered within a few hours – instead of a few days, weeks or months.

    4. Will the pages I create show up in search engine results?
    The pages you create can be crawled by Google within a few hours of publication. Other search engines may also index your pages as they periodically crawl the internet.

    5. Will Google give preferential treatment to web pages created with Google Page Creator in Google search results?
    No, we won't. Web pages created using Google Page Creator will never receive any preferential treatment of any kind in Google search results.

    You are allowed up to 100 MB of storage for images, but there is some chatter about a restrictive TOS. I haven’t had a chance to comb through it yet, but will try to post more if I find anything.

    The only thing that I can really find in their TOS that is the least bit restrictive is the following:

    By submitting, posting or displaying Content on or through Google services which are intended to be available to the general public, you grant Google a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free license to reproduce, adapt and publish such Content on Google services solely for the purpose of displaying, distributing and promoting Google services. This license terminates when such Content is removed from the Google service to which you originally submitted. Google reserves the right to syndicate Content submitted, posted or displayed by you on or through Google services and use that Content in connection with any of the services offered by Google.  Google furthermore reserves the right to refuse to accept, post, display or transmit any Content in its sole discretion.

    Which doesn’t seem any more restrictive than any other free web hosting (or even blog hosting) TOS agreement around. In fact, I expected that my site would at least have some contextual advertising, given Google’s business model, but so far I haven’t seen a bit. There is this in the TOS regarding advertising:

    Some Google services are supported by advertising revenue and may display advertisements and promotions on the service. The manner, mode and extent of advertising by Google on its services are subject to change. You agree that Google shall not be responsible or liable for any loss or damage of any sort incurred by you as a result of any such dealings or as the result of the presence of such advertisers on Google services.

    So potentially there will be advertising on the web sites. If there is adsense displayed, I wonder if it will be credited to my own adsense account?

    One more potential pitfall. The domain name used for the page is gmailaccountname.googlepages.com – IMHO, I would think that this would give harvesters easy access to gmail account names. This may not be a big deal considering that 1) Google has AWESOME spam filtering and 2) somehow or another they get my email address anyway.

    Via Digg – Google releases new Page Creator

    "Google Page Creator is a free online tool that makes it easy for anyone to create and publish useful, attractive web pages in just minutes." Looks good to me!

    posted on 2/23/2006 5:23:00 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, February 14, 2006

    The Scobleizer is testing out blog search engines so what the heck try it.So, here’s the brrreeeport report. You can participate. Just add the word “brrreeeport” to your blog. Or, even better, do that and then give it a tag too.

    [Via Geekswithblogs.net]

    UPDATE: Technorati RealTime report:

    Posts that contain Brrreeeport per day for the last 30 days.
    Technorati Chart
    Get your own chart!

    posted on 2/14/2006 1:59:25 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • The Phog Blog has compiled a list of Coach K photoshops. It is was one small moment of solace since Carolina’s February 7th loss to the Dookies.

    I know, I know… The Miami win was nice and it did give me a brief “up” in the such a time of sadness. However, it was not quite as satisfying as seeing coach K as Ed Norton  (Honeymooners, not Fight Club).

    Coachkbus

    Phog Blog » Classic Coach K Photoshops

    I know that many of you have seen these, but it’s never inappropriate to cull the finest of photoshops of Coach K for the enjoyment of loyal Phog Blog readers. Here are a few - feel free to share with your friends.

    posted on 2/14/2006 11:34:45 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, February 01, 2006

    I’ve been an avid reader of GeeksWithBlogs for the last few months and have decided to start cross posting http://hal.lco.net to http://www.geekswithblogs.net/Widescreen. Thanks Geeks for the space…

     

    posted on 2/1/2006 11:20:59 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, January 27, 2006

    D’Arcy Lussier (one of the Geeks with a Blog) wrote a short entry defending James Frey’s book “A Million Little Pieces”.

    I usually don’t write about stuff like this, but his entry caught my ear.

    In Defence of A Million Little Pieces:

    My wife has read A Million Little Pieces, and she was very moved by it. Does it matter that he only spent hours instead of months in jail? No. Does it matter that Lily slit her wrists instead of hanging herself? No. What does matter, and what seems to have been lost in this whole experience, is that there is an epidemic of addition in our world, and the events of this book paint a picture of reality, even if its not the author's.

    I am glad that his wife was moved by the book. However, his wife was duped into that movement by a money hungry, compulsive liar living some grandiose facade in order to make his boring life seem in some way more meaningful (not to detract from how meaningful his life could have been had he simply told the story as it was).

    Again from his post:

    Oprah: “Was there a Lily?”
    James: “Yes”
    Oprah: “And did she commit suicide?”
    James: “Yes”
    Oprah: “By hanging?”
    James: “No”
    Oprah looks like one of her dogs just died and the audience gasps in unison
    Oprah: “How did she die?”
    James: “She slit her wrists”

    Why wouldn’t James Frey just write that his girlfriend slit her wrist instead of that she was hung? Was he trying to protect her family? Wha’? Please… someone… find out if he even has ever had a girlfriend.

    I had a friend (and he truly was a friend) in high school and college who used to make up stories (really far fetched stories) that were reported as true. Stories of Mafioso and bodyguards and tests of allegiance involving limousines, candles and hands (I’m not making this up)… We were in Boone, NC – for those of you that don’t know, it is a small college town in Western North Carolina – you get my point. 

    The stories that my friend told were neither compelling nor moving because we knew what they were… fiction. James Frey’s stories are compelling and moving as they relate to the real person of James Frey. Without them you simply have a reasonably well written, but fictional account of a guy named James who is a hardened criminal with a complete disrespect for authority stuggling with a drug addiction that has ruined his life. Anyone ever read any books like that?

    It’s not just about the book. During the initial Oprah interview (as well as interviews with other shows), they openly discussed the events in the book and James Frey retold the events with emotion and with pain, wanting the audience to believe that he was who he wrote about. Oprah would never have been asking questions like, “What was that like?”, if it was a fictional book. In fact, if the book had been released as fiction, I would have a hard time believing that it ever would have even been considered for the book club.

    It is a good book only because of the reality that it reveals. As that reality deteriorates, so does the quality of the book.

    What exactly are the positives of the book? The foul language. The images of vomit and drunkeness and death? The positive of the book is the reality that James Frey overcame all of these things to become what he is today… wait… but he became a swindler and a liar. He became someone who would use the very real death of two young girls to depricate himself (to eventually glorify himself) and make his reality far more exciting than it actually is.

     [exceprt via Geekswithblogs.net]

    For fun, here is a James Frey Technorati chart:

    Posts that contain James Frey per day for the last 30 days.
    Technorati Chart
    posted on 1/27/2006 12:40:05 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, January 24, 2006

    Great ALT-TAB Replacement…

    TaskSwitchXP: Main Features | NTWind Software

    TaskSwitchXP is an advanced task management utility that picks up where the standard Windows Alt+Tab switcher leaves off. It provides the same functionality, and adds visual styles to the dialog and also enhances it by displaying thumbnail preview of the application that will be switched to. TaskSwitchXP also has a powerful process and window management capability that allows you quickly to close/minimize applications and their groups. The unique capabilities of TaskSwitchXP make it useful for tracking down multitudinous windows, and provide insight into the way Windows and applications work.

    posted on 1/24/2006 12:09:41 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, January 18, 2006

    Lots of Google Stuff today for some reason. Scott Hanselmann broke down the Google pack. I thought I would contribute my thoughts.

  • Adobe Reader 7 (Evil: Use Foxit) [ – Thanks for this one Scott, Foxit  is a great little App]
  • Ad-Aware SE Personal (Iffy: Use SpyBot) [MSN Spyware Beta even better]
  • Google Talk (Eh, not so much: Use Skype) [Hmmm… gotta contend with this one]
  • Mozilla Firefox with Google Toolbar (Nice way to proliferate Firefox by including it)
  • Norton AntiVirus 2005 Special Edition (Cheesy way to bait and switch with a 6-month "Trial" subscription.") WARNING: This one installs without asking. Not cool. You can uninstall stuff for the "Installed Software" Tab. [EVIL EVIL EVIL, NO NO NO – I prefer the very open, very free ClamWin]
  • RealPlayer (Satan: This is how the devil gets your immortal soul, it starts with RealPlayer...) []
  • Trillian (Ok, but I'm using MSN Messenger Beta 8...we'll see....) [Haven’t tried b8 yet, will have to give it a look]
  • Google Pack:

    Via Greg, Google's released the Google Pack, a nice collection of fairly established software along with their own updater. I think this would be great for my mom, although RealPlayer is Satan.

    • Adobe Reader 7 (Evil: Use Foxit)
    • Ad-Aware SE Personal (Iffy: Use SpyBot)
    • GalleryPlayer HD Images
    • Google Desktop
    • Google Earth
    • Google Pack Screensaver (NICE: This is a VERY nice Photo Screensaver that is multi-monitor aware!)
    • Google Picasa Photo Organizer/Editor
    • Google Talk (Eh, not so much: Use Skype)
    • Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer
    • Google Video player
    • Mozilla Firefox with Google Toolbar (Nice way to proliferate Firefox by including it)
    • Norton AntiVirus 2005 Special Edition (Cheesy way to bait and switch with a 6-month "Trial" subscription.") WARNING: This one installs without asking. Not cool. You can uninstall stuff for the "Installed Software" Tab.
    • RealPlayer (Satan: This is how the devil gets your immortal soul, it starts with RealPlayer...)
    • Trillian (Ok, but I'm using MSN Messenger Beta 8...we'll see....)

    It's easy to see where this is going, of course, as Google will likely start charging for the prime real estate on their own Add/Remove Programs page. Still, I dig it, and I hope it starts serving up a bunch of Open Source software. This may turn out to be a standard thing I will install on my relatives machines.

    Now playing: Freshlyground - Mowbray Kaap

    [Via ComputerZen.com - Scott Hanselman's Weblog]
    posted on 1/18/2006 10:56:54 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Chris Pirillo doesn’t really care for the direction of desktop app UIs over at Google. I have to agree with him that Picasa has an outstanding user interface – perhaps the best of breed. However, I have to argue that the simplicity (and footprint) of Google Talk make it extremely attractive.

    I also like the familiar feel of Google Desktop.

    Over the last few years I have become extremely comfortable with web applications and therefore am right at home with these UIs. I think that the simplicity of web design does in fact translate well to the desktop – and vice versa.

    The footprint of my Google Talk application: 4MB RAM, 8 MB program directory
    The footprint of my MSN Messenger application (assuming I didn’t run Trillian): 17MB and a 12MB application directory (go figure that one out – Ads?).

    BTW – The footprint for Trillian Basic (emulating MSN, AIM, Yahoo and ICQ simultaneously): 5.36 MB (go figure).

    Just my two cents on this one. I know that 12 MB is immaterial these days, but efficiency generally lends itself to a good code base.

    I don’t use the Toolbars (with the exception of the Firefox default search), nor the screensaver (and I rarely download free packs of anything). Google Earth is pretty cool (and I am actually surprised that this one was grouped into the others when discussing UI – IMHO, I think this is perhaps one of the best of have seen, although I am convinced that they stole much of the intellectual property of NASA’s WorldWind.

    Google desktop… works great and I don’t even notice it. I just can’t say the same for MSN Desktop.

    Google, Seriously - Clean up your Apps!:

    I have the minimum amount of Google software on my system. I can easily live without Google toolbars, Google desktop, Google Earth, Google Screensaver (and, naturally, the Google Pack). Why? Every one of them sports a horrible, horrible UI. Simplicity in Web design does not translate well when it comes to desktop applications. I'm thrilled that Google is empowering internal developers to surface their own ideas and projects. So, here's a suggestion for Google: before any app ever sees the light of day, let the Picasa team do the user interface. Seriously, I consider most Google software a complete joke because of the way it looks (and believe the Google pack is relatively useless). I run Google Talk on my system because I don't like Skype (never have, and likely never will). I run Picasa on my system because it's always been an amazing piece of software - one of Google's smartest acquisitions. Now, if only they'd listen to my advice and unify their user experience - letting the true UI experts (from Picasa) turn Google software from a "don't need it" to a "must have it."
    [Via Chris Pirillo]
    posted on 1/18/2006 10:43:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, October 28, 2005

    Handy:

    How To Make a Custom Today Screen for Outlook:

    Ever since Microsoft introduced the Today screen in Outlook, I’ve been intrigued by it. Sadly, release after release, it has been basically completely ignored. When introduced, it was heralded by Bill Gates as a way to offer a “Dashboard” with a view into everything relevant to a knowledge worker. Aside from the occasional heavily branded 3rd party Today screen add-in, there hasn’t been much to get excited about in this area for awhile. However, a self-described “angry web developer” has pulled together a bunch of ActiveX components that can be used in a custom Today screen to make it a heck of a lot more useful. The components include an inbox, tasks, calendar and others, which show the actual views that you would see, rather than the simplified standard Outlook Today version. This means you can have your inbox beside your task list or calendar, something Outlook can’t do by default. Something that’s even cooler about using one of Katy’s today screens is that since they are plain HTML, you can be free to add to or modify them in any way you choose.

    To use these today screens, make sure to right-click and use Save As to save them to your computer locally. They are html files, and as such will simply try to open if you just click on them. Once you’ve saved one to a known location, go into Outlook and right-click on your Exchange mailbox or Personal Folders folder, depending on which you have - it should be the one that shows your Today screen when you click on it. Choose Properties from the right-click menu, then click on the Home Page tab. Simply point to your downloaded file, and you’re set. If you decide you don’t like it, and want to revert back, click on the Restore Defaults button in the same dialog.
      

    [Via Download Squad]

    posted on 10/28/2005 9:15:21 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, September 26, 2005

    For the last 6 months or so, I have been using my Gmail account almost exclusively for my personal email. I have never had a problem where I could not access my email for any reason whatsoever. For the last half hour, this is what I have gotten at Gmail:

    ServerError

    I expect that it will be back up soon, but it really made me stop an think how much I rely on hosted services… Much like the turmoil that I was in the day MSN Messenger died

    [Update] By the time I was finished penning this post, Gmail was back up and online.

    posted on 9/26/2005 9:45:14 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, September 22, 2005

    As I prepare for my trip to Biloxi, I am beginning to wonder if that is where we will end up…

    RitaPathFrom CNN:

    Hurricane Rita's winds are at 175 mph today as it spins closer to the Texas coast -- where it is projected to make landfall early Saturday. Thousands of residents are moving inland. If the storm maintains its intensity, Rita "could be worse than Katrina," according to National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield. Forecasters expect the center of Rita to make landfall near Galveston.

    I found out yesterday that most of the roofing work that we were prepping for in Biloxi is finishing up, so we will actually be participating in mudouts. What in the world is a mudout? I did some poking around on the Internet and found this excerpt taken from an account after a Mexican flood:

    You go into a house that has been flooded with two feet of water," he explained. "There's water, mud and sewage in there. It is in a very unsanitary condition.
    "So our volunteers would come in and take out the furniture, the carpets and the plasterboard off the walls. Then they took high-pressure washers and bleach and they cleaned the house. It would take several weeks to dry out and then they would come back and install insulation and put plasterboard up."
     
    I also got an updated needs list from the person organising the trip… Included in a long list were the following:
    • Bring face masks
    • Bring rubber boots and rubber gloves (in addition to regular gloves)
    • Bring sweat head bands or “do rags”
    • Bring old work clothes—the mudouts are dirty work

    45361063_346a0c221f_mFor fun, I sent this picture to my brother-in-law, who will be going with me.

    I am assuming that this snake is not native to Louisiana, but that it was a pet or zoo animal caught in the catastrophe. The original can be found here.

    posted on 9/22/2005 8:30:48 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Sunday, July 24, 2005

    Phone company blocks access to telecoms union's website:

    Cory Doctorow: The Telecommunications Workers' Union of Canada is striking against has been locked out by Telus, a large phone company and ISP. Two of TWU's sites (including Voices for Change, a message board where union members can discuss issues such as being without a contract for 1666 days and last having received a general wage increase 2031 days ago).

    Telus is playing very dirty -- they're blocking access to the union's website so that their workers and the general public are cut off from legitimate debate about this action. This is inexcusable: imagine if this phone company chose to block all calls into union headquarters. From an email forwarded by Damien Fox:

    Telus Communications Inc, Canada's second largest telephone company, whose 13,500 unionized employees setup picket lines only sixteen hours before Telus implemented their non-negotiated contract offer Friday is now playing media censor.

    In an attempt to convince employees to cross picket lines and win public support during what may be a long labour dispute, Telus has blocked access to several pro-union websites from any Telus customer internet connections. This comes only one day after the Canadian Industrial Regulations Board (CIRB) found Telus guilty of bargaining in bad faith for the third time during the negotiation process that has left the Telecommunications Workers Union (TWU) without a contract for nearly five years.

    TWU members who rely on these websites and internet discussion forums for communications are now looking for alternative methods for retrieving information related to what is happening on picket lines across Alberta and BC. Union members who are able to get to the website are angered but not surprised by Telus' latest move.

    "What else should we expect from a company who has tried to implement a contract deemed a violation of Canadian Labour Code? Telus' disrespect for customers, employees, and Canadian labour law has all unions in Canada on the edge of their seat. If Telus successfully imposes their non-negotiated contracts, it sets precedence for all unionized companies across Canada when they sit down to bargain." one post reads. The CIRB has been reluctant to impose any penalties for Telus' violations of labour code as they are unsure what the direct impact has been on the bargaining process, and if the two parties would be any further along if Telus had followed labour law. Telus has been found guilty of several counts of bargaining in bad faith and interfering with the operations of a trade union by the CIRB.

    Known pro-union websites currently blocked to Telus customers are www.voices-for-change.com and www.telusscabs.ca . Visitors posting on the website are asking fellow union members, Telus customers, and the public to file a complaint with the CRTC and their MP for Telus violating their personal right to freedom of speech and freedom of the press under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

    For further union information and media inquiries, please contact Bruce Bell, TWU President at 604-341-2925 or Sid Shniad at the TWU Burnaby Office at 604-437-8601. Visit the TWU web site: www.twu-canada.ca

    For furher Telus information and media inquiries, please contact Nick Culo, National Communications, Telus Corporation at 780-493-7236, nick.culo@telus.com or visit www.Telus.com

    Link (Thanks, Damien!)

    Update: Abram sez, "This is the website through which you can make complaints to the CRTC about the business practices of Telus."

    [Via Boing Boing]

    posted on 7/24/2005 11:18:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, July 18, 2005
    What in the world? I guess you would have define what “illegal” actually means… I would think that illegal immigrants really shouldn’t be in a US high school in the first place (let alone college).

    Speaking to the nations' largest Hispanic civil rights organization, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., received a standing ovation Monday when she vowed her support for legislation that would allow illegal immigrant high school students to attend college.

    [Via mcall.com - Clinton speaks before Hispanic civil rights conference]
    posted on 7/18/2005 10:03:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, June 27, 2005
    A Slashdotter posted the following:
    Alex_Ionescu writes "U.S. scientists have managed to revive dead dogs to life, by using a technique similar to cryogenation, in which the dogs' blood was drained and replaced by a cold, saline liquid. A couple of hours, their blood was replaced, and an electric shock brought them back to life with no brain damage. The technology will be tested on humans within the next year."
    [Via Slashdot]
    Frightening... Cool, but frightening.
    posted on 6/27/2005 4:56:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, June 23, 2005
    Mediaweek has a survey that claims that 56% of internet users don't know the difference between paid ad search results and regular search results. However, I am curious after reading the mediaweek article how those numbers would be affected if those same internet users were sitting in front if a pc, searching google.

    I don't think about doing it, but my eyes (and mouse) just always find the natural results on the page. I guess I need clarification - does this mean that they do not know what paid search results are or that they do not know what they look like?
    More than half of internet users surveyed in a poll did not know the difference between natural search engine results and advertising listings. Can't say I'm surprised. That helps explain why paid search is so popular.
    [Via Lost Remote]
    posted on 6/23/2005 3:18:43 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, June 17, 2005
    This looks promising.
    It's GPL'd and the sourcecode looks pretty clean. It's simple to use for web developers and they don't have to worry about keeping up with BitTorrent Trackers. It's safe from a DCMA standpoint as the content still comes from and is hosted by the developers website. Nice - I plan to give it a thorough test next week.

    The Dijjer Difference Downloads happen in your browser. Most p2p clients make you use a separate program. Dijjer doesn't. Play media files as they download. If you're downloading a song or a movie, you can listen / watch it as it's downloading. Works great with RSS & podcasting. Dijjer will work perfectly with ipodder, ipodderx, radio, and every other podcasting "aggregator". More info. Works for Windows, Mac, and Linux. Everybody can run Dijjer. No spyware. No adware. No secrets. The Dijjer source code is free, open source, and available to everyone (why this matters). Copyright friendly. Dijjer only downloads files that are on websites. So for copyright holders, policing Dijjer is exactly the same as policing websites. More info.

    [Via Dijjer]

     

    Here are some other sites talking about Dijjer:

    Huginn and Muninn
    Echo Generation
    Snark Market
    Red Ferret

    posted on 6/17/2005 12:49:24 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • I will be travelling to the Ukraine in July for 12 days to take part in a program teaching english (please don't laugh). I am compiling a list of resources for teaching English as a second language:

    British Council - Teaching English
    English Club
    English at Home
    1-Language - Flash Cards, Phonics Sheets and more
    Learn English Online
    ESL Monkeys - Weird name, good site - lesson plans/test
    English Zone
    The Idiom Connection - entertaining (not really useful :-))
    Principles of Composition
    Common Errors in English
    Homophone Dictionary
    More to come...

    In prep for the actual flight, I have to get this link down:
    Project Gutenberg - TOP 100 - Thousands of public domain books...

    posted on 6/17/2005 10:23:56 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, June 10, 2005
    I was looking at the Technorati Beta earlier today and really like the new layout - not that the old one was bad. There are a couple of things that I hope will be fixed by the new beta.
    1. RSS Feeds for watchlists often contain invalid characters and blow up in my reader (RSS Bandit).
    2. Junk filters - not sure how they will tackle this, but Technorati seems to have become the tool of choice for blog spammers (not content or trackback spam, but creating nonsense blogs on blogger, etc. for use as doorway pages and then ping Technorati with it).

    Take a look:
    Currently tracking 11.1 million sites and 1.1 billion links.

    [Technorati Beta]
    I really like the new tag results that include pictures from BuzzNet and Flickr and results from furl and Del.icio.us..
    posted on 6/10/2005 12:34:02 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, June 03, 2005
    CNET has a Cell Phone Radiation chart.

    Here are the 10 highest.

    Here are the 10 lowest.

    According to the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA), SAR or specific absorption rate is "a way of measuring the quantity of radiofrequency (RF) energy that is absorbed by the body." For a phone to pass FCC certification, that phone's maximum SAR level must be less than 1.6W/kg (watts per kilogram). The SAR level listed in our chart represents the maximum SAR level with the phone next to the ear, a level obtained through required FCC tests.

    [Via Cell phone radiation chart - CNET reviews]
    posted on 6/3/2005 9:59:02 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, June 01, 2005
    I don't usually make personal posts about my family, but I just had to post this video I found the other day when I was looking through my external USB drive. We use this moment in my son's life to refer to as "that monkey bar feeling" anytime something seems to hard. I can't believe I actually have it on video (it's big, so please right click and "save as").
    posted on 6/1/2005 10:46:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Saturday, May 14, 2005
    I am a BCBSNC user and was pleasantly surprised today for the first time in years with what I was getting. My wife became ill (strep/ear infection) and required antibiotics, pain killers and steroids with several rounds over the last week. Nothing too serious, just that the first round didn't take quite as well as we would have hoped. My brother-in-law had a similar illness two months ago and was uninsured (college student) and had to pay for similar rounds of medication. He paid (rather we paid and he will eventually pay us back) over $300 for medication alone - our total bill for my wife's treatment, around $70 with no pro-bono physician work.

    However it is a little frustrating that even with that savings, we still are up something like$4000 over the last two years (if not more - $485/month) - I think that a MSA (Medical Savings Account) might still be the way we will ultimately go.

    Then of course I read an article on the AP wire talking about BCBS ranking doctors - not by skill, which would be wonderful, but rather by who would refer to the cheapest specialists. Sounds pretty shady to me.

    Blue Cross initially said physicians who didn't promise in writing to refer patients only to cheaper Tier I hospitals would be placed in Tier II - and patients who visited Tier II doctors would have had higher out-of-pocket expenses.

    [Via AP Wire | 05/13/2005 | Blue Cross/Blue Shield backs away from doctor rankings]
    posted on 5/14/2005 3:06:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Friday, May 13, 2005
    This is incredible.

    By generating a field that is stronger below and weaker above, the resulting upward magnetic force cancels out gravity, the researcher explained.

    [Via Antigravity machine that makes frogs fly:- - World News - Webindia123.com]
    posted on 5/13/2005 10:49:38 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Spread the word!

    Seeing as this information grabbed the attention of everyone in the office this afternoon, it will probably make waves in the blogosphere as well..

    NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Wendy's restaurants are giving away free Frostys frozen desserts this weekend as a thank you to customers who supported the burger chain following an embarrassing incident in California where a women allegedly planted a severed finger in a bowl of chili.

    "Our customers stood by us while we defended our good name and protected our employees' livelihoods, so now we're showing our appreciation with free Frostys," Tom Mueller, Wendy's chief executive, said in a press release. "We're moving on."

    The company estimates it will give away 14 million Junior Frostys during the event, which runs nationwide from Friday through Sunday. No other purchase is required.

    Junior Frostys are normally priced at 99 cents, which means that most Wendy's restaurants will be overrun by mobs of freebie seekers this weekend.

    [Via Wizbang]
    posted on 5/13/2005 9:55:04 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Sunday, May 08, 2005
    Phenomenal stuff... I can't wait for this.

    It will be interesting to see how Disney handles C.S. Lewis' intention of the story of Narnia and the inseparable relationship it holds to the Biblical account of our own redemption.
    Ant writes "After United States' broadcast debut of the "Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe" trailer on Saturday, May 7th during ABC's network premiere of "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets", Ain't It Cool News posted AOL's link to the QuickTime movie (direct link to download the 56 MB high quality trailer file)." Fix yourself some turkish delight and enjoy.
    [Via Slashdot]
    posted on 5/8/2005 10:32:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, May 02, 2005
    What in the world? Andre Da Costa tries to spank Chris Pirillo for comments made regarding the Longhorn UI preview - Andre is that the stench of defensiveness? They shouldn't show it if they don't want it critiqued... Here is what he wrote.

    I have been reading some of the comments across some of the Windows enthusiast websites concerning the latest pre-view build of Microsoft’s next version of Windows code named Longhorn (Build 5048). It is embarrassing to know that they actually allow people like these into technical conferences such as WinHEC just to bash products still in development and make stupid comments about it. The most stupid comment comes from Chris Pirillo otherwise known as the dumb terminal. I would have expected that Robert Scoble would have informed him about the development process of Longhorn, long ago.

     

    Here is the comment Chris Pirillo made:

    When someone asked why they were doing this, Chris Pirillo quipped, "because it looks like #$%," which I thought was the appropriate response.

    (Paul Thurrott) WinHEC 2005: Day Three Blog 

     

    For someone like Chris to call himself a Windows Enthusiast is an embarrassment to the entire Windows community. You are commenting on a product that is still obviously in Alpha stage, software that is targeted specifically to hardware developers, not UI designers, build 5048 does not emphasize on anything about User Experience, that is what beta 2 is for. Microsoft has made it clear that the present build of Longhorn is not final and should not be judged until beta 2 when users will see and understand what the final product will look like. Yet Chris publishes a rubbish heap of babble on his website that just makes him look and sound even more stupid.

     

    If I wanted to critique Longhorn I would have at least had the decency to wait until beta 1 or PDC to start casting judgment. I believe that Longhorn will be an exceptional release of Windows in its final state. So far it is a long journey to that special promise land. Microsoft is already beginning to take the first steps by working with the people who are most important, the hardware manufacturers (OEM’s) who will start to create the hardware today that will be designed specifically to run Windows Longhorn in the near future. Chris did not seem to realize that, and decided instead to make the most stupid assumptions about a product that is still a year and a half away.

     

    Chris should be using his time more wisely and start dedicating it to Mac OS X and Linux, Lord knows the Windows community would not miss him one bit. His babble about Power Users does not make an iota of sense, its just garbage, garbage and more garbage. Probably Chris was expecting Longhorn Build 5048 to make him break fast in bed or get his old job back at Tech-TV, but surprisingly it didn’t happen with Shannen or Arvinds preview presentation. I was a big fan and respected Chris before this and even excused his annoyance with Office Outlook, (I still don’t understand why he hates and still uses the product, its beyond me). But his unnecessary disrespecting of products has pushed me to post this. I just hope he can start thinking about what he is saying before he puts cursor to electronic paper. I am not a Microsoft apologist, but I believe everybody deserves their fair opportunity to make their point, in the case of Microsoft its beta 1 of Longhorn; Chris did not give them that chance.


    [Via LonghornBlogs.com]
    posted on 5/2/2005 3:13:17 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3]
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  •  Wednesday, April 27, 2005

    As I prepare to leave for a trip to Atlanta, GA from Boone, NC - I am playing around with an idea of generating a small web based application to integrate Google directions with gas prices near the route. I know that there are several applications that report on low gas prices, but I am curious if anyone has found one that includes an API. Anyone interesting in helping on this project, please let me know.

    [UPDATE] Completely Owned - they beat me to the punch [/UPDATE]

    posted on 4/27/2005 11:32:11 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Friday, April 22, 2005
    From todays Rocketboom - this is a REALLY well done one-take.
    story links: jack johnson, backwards one-take video for sitting, waiting, wishing (the making of)...
    [Via Rocketboom]

    Here is a link directly to the WMV.
    posted on 4/22/2005 9:52:05 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, April 21, 2005
    I have a new compile of BlogBlip up and online. You can get an XML Listing of the Configured Pings and their API's and I will be adding more as I can get them. Feedback would be greatly appreciated. Blog directory owners - if you would like me to add your API to this list, please comment below or contact me via email.
    Your BlipBlog will begin shortly

    [Via BlogBlip]
    posted on 4/21/2005 12:54:39 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Wednesday, April 20, 2005
    New Blog Ping Automator... Early but working Beta.
    posted on 4/20/2005 5:30:44 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, April 19, 2005
    Looks like there is a brand new Pope after three failed attempts that we know of. I first saw it in an INSTAPUNDIT post

    and Fox News


    "How many winds of doctrine we have known in recent decades, how many ideological currents, how many ways of thinking... The small boat of thought of many Christians has often been tossed about by these waves thrown from one extreme to the other: from Marxism to liberalism, even to libertinism; from collectivism to radical individualism; from atheism to a vague religious mysticism; from agnosticism to syncretism, and so forth. Every day new sects are created and what Saint Paul says about human trickery comes true, with cunning which tries to draw those into error (cf Eph 4, 14). Having a clear faith, based on the Creed of the Church, is often labeled today as a fundamentalism. Whereas, relativism, which is letting oneself be tossed and 'swept along by every wind of teaching', looks like the only attitude (acceptable) to today's standards. We are moving towards a dictatorship of relativism which does not recognize anything as for certain and which has as its highest goal one's own ego and one's own desires." - Pope Benedict XVI


    posted on 4/19/2005 2:16:30 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, April 18, 2005
    The downloads have been suspended for the time being (a common occurance when something is BoingBoing'd) - but hopefully should be back up soon. What an AWESOME idea - hopefully they will have a wide spectrum of genre's (sp?) and not just MeeHawwHaww stuff :-)...
    Xeni Jardin: Ian Clarke, developer of Freenet and other world-changing code, sez:
    Indy is a free music discovery service that learns what you like, and plays more of it. It is designed to provide an alternative channel for music fans to discover artists, and for artists to reach a new audience. Indy employs a sophisticated collaborative filtering algorithm. Currently the Indy client works on Windows, but Mac and Linux versions are in the pipeline.
    Link

    [Via Boing Boing]
    posted on 4/18/2005 3:11:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Blogarama - The Blog Directory Has a pretty extensive list of blogs... Wanted to get it down here for future reference. In my opinion however, they should have a search filter to remove adult content... There is a lot of garbage in there too...
    posted on 4/18/2005 2:54:28 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Oh man - and I thought I was a bad driver.
    Florida Driver
    [Via Dave Barry's Blog]
    posted on 4/18/2005 2:38:45 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Wow - a 120 GB Laptop drive. I really like the idea of a 7200 RPM 120 GB version. Hopefully that will be soon to follow.
    Seagate announced Monday that it will soon begin shipping a 120GB laptop hard drive, which would be the largest available on the market today. The disk maker will also release a 100GB drive. The 100GB version will come in both 5400 and 7200-rpm versions, and the 120GB in a 5400-rpm model.
    [Via BetaNews.Com]
    posted on 4/18/2005 1:35:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • I don't mind Google ads (I use them on this site and think that it is a great service). In fact, I kinda like the pertinent search results on whatever page I am reading.

    If however, you don't like them, I found this on how to suppress them:

    I love Google, but I got sick of seeing their ads on every website I go to now. Researched the problem on Google and came up with this:

    add this line to your hosts file, and presto, you are google ad-free.
    127.0.0.1 pagead2.googlesyndication.com
    Seems to work so far.
    Thanks for the recommendation on AdMuncher.
    [Via LLBLGen.com Forums General Chat feed]
    posted on 4/18/2005 1:27:42 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • I came across Wondir.com today on several blogs and must say that it is one of the best ideas I have seen since the Wiki. Just read though some of the questions (entertaining) and then some of the answers (enlightening). I have a feeling that this will quickly turn into one of the better information resources on the net.
    posted on 4/18/2005 12:29:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
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  • I have a feeling that we will be hearing considerably more from Coach Doherty. He has the coaching skills to start at the bottom and move his way north quickly. Prediction - Carolina and FAU will meet in the NCAA tourney sometime within the next 5 years. [Via ESPN.com]
    posted on 4/18/2005 12:00:51 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • After a BUNCH of searching, I finally figured out how to get w.Bloggar working with dasBlog. Apparantly, you have to use the metaWeblog API and not the BloggerAPI. After changing these settings, everything seemed to work fine. You would think that I would have tried that first, but I don't know why I can't get it in my head to Google first, ask questions later :-).

    [Thanks Torsten]

    posted on 4/18/2005 11:49:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Thursday, April 14, 2005
    Scott and Rory again...
    posted on 4/14/2005 9:39:27 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Tuesday, April 12, 2005
    LexisNexis Terms and Conditions - Funny Read...
    posted on 4/12/2005 11:48:18 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, April 11, 2005
    Useless but cool...
    posted on 4/11/2005 2:37:57 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Microsoft/Gateway/DOJ/E-Machines... whew.
    posted on 4/11/2005 12:16:58 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Google Sightseeing.
    posted on 4/11/2005 11:45:33 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
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  • Star Wars Line.
    posted on 4/11/2005 9:41:37 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Sunday, April 10, 2005
    Click automation for the greater good.
    posted on 4/10/2005 1:13:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Saturday, April 09, 2005
    How not to kill a spider...
    posted on 4/9/2005 10:19:16 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Amazing Basketball Video...
    posted on 4/9/2005 8:47:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Friday, April 08, 2005
    Spammer get 9...
    posted on 4/8/2005 3:46:58 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Thursday, April 07, 2005
    MSN 7.0 for Better and Worse.
    posted on 4/7/2005 4:32:31 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Flute Beat Box - Sweet
    posted on 4/7/2005 10:59:00 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, April 06, 2005
    Appalachian State University - Money Laundering 101
    posted on 4/6/2005 4:31:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
  • Blog reactions
  • How many could return? May, Felton, Williams... Oh My!
    posted on 4/6/2005 9:42:23 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Tuesday, April 05, 2005
    Heels Win!!!
    posted on 4/5/2005 12:11:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, March 30, 2005
    Fancher's Contract Extended.
    posted on 3/30/2005 9:33:50 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
  • Blog reactions
  • Ken Pomeroy Season Review...
    posted on 3/30/2005 11:21:43 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]
  • Blog reactions
  • Corey Martinez - Sweet.
    posted on 3/30/2005 11:07:26 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
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  •  Tuesday, March 29, 2005
    End of End of Latefees...
    posted on 3/29/2005 7:16:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Google Acquires Urchin
    posted on 3/29/2005 2:02:05 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Monday, March 28, 2005
    Drilling vs Slicing Multi-Dimensional Arrays.
    posted on 3/28/2005 9:31:25 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • PocketLinux...
    posted on 3/28/2005 9:25:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Initial Weather Report...
    posted on 3/28/2005 5:03:19 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Earthquake Links
    posted on 3/28/2005 5:00:19 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, March 24, 2005
    Yahoo, Creative Commons, and Google staleness (well, relative staleness)
    posted on 3/24/2005 2:24:19 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • I wonder if I could build a whole house like this... Gravity defying room.
    posted on 3/24/2005 2:16:57 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Would you like to super size that finger?
    posted on 3/24/2005 10:24:07 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, March 22, 2005
    IVI/Appstate.Net VOIP
    posted on 3/22/2005 9:30:33 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Monday, March 21, 2005
    Extracting Distinct Rows from DataTable (Google Discipline)
    posted on 3/21/2005 5:07:01 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [4]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Friday, March 18, 2005
    Skype - VOIP done almost perfectly.
    posted on 3/18/2005 2:40:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Wednesday, March 16, 2005
    Coding Slave from Bob Reselman - for free...
    posted on 3/16/2005 12:31:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Tuesday, March 15, 2005
    Daily Show, scraped.
    posted on 3/15/2005 11:03:03 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Monday, March 14, 2005
    The Land of the Liars.
    posted on 3/14/2005 11:02:13 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Friday, March 11, 2005
    DotNetDevelopment Google Group...
    posted on 3/11/2005 9:33:55 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Boxing and Unboxing in .NET
    posted on 3/11/2005 9:10:41 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, March 08, 2005
    ACC Champions - Finally.
    posted on 3/8/2005 8:43:43 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, March 07, 2005
    ACC Expansion - Best in basketball before, best in basketball after.
    posted on 3/7/2005 12:01:22 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, March 03, 2005

    I just registered with BlogMap...

    You can check it out here: Pretty nice work from CSThota

    posted on 3/3/2005 10:36:22 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • 8 New Firefox problems.
    posted on 3/3/2005 10:35:54 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [2]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Wednesday, March 02, 2005
    Say it isn't so - Carly Fiorina being considered for World Bank position.
    posted on 3/2/2005 2:14:41 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Scoble and the Meehaww guy.
    posted on 3/2/2005 1:35:04 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • P2P, nostalgia, academics and Thriller...
    posted on 3/2/2005 11:54:55 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, March 01, 2005
    Master Pages in Asp.net
    posted on 3/1/2005 11:24:52 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • IDBProvider for NNTP - now I am looking for POP3/IMAP
    posted on 3/1/2005 10:55:30 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [3]
  • Blog reactions
  • Using System.Management to get processor and hard drive serial number information.
    posted on 3/1/2005 10:41:58 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Monday, February 28, 2005
    Forefox Security hole... how will they respond?
    posted on 2/28/2005 8:54:20 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Friday, February 25, 2005
    Performance Counters and Web Services samples
    posted on 2/25/2005 3:53:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, February 24, 2005

    Well done turtorial regarding web development in c#/asp.net/web services.

    Here is the LINK

    posted on 2/24/2005 11:34:47 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Value vs Reference Types in Vb.NET - concept examined and simplified.
    posted on 2/24/2005 10:51:55 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Wednesday, February 23, 2005
    AMD with first 64 bit multicore... sweet.
    posted on 2/23/2005 10:08:13 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • What you need to know to start podcasting...
    posted on 2/23/2005 9:13:33 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Google Movie Search
    posted on 2/23/2005 4:26:32 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Exposing my Link/Clipping feed at NewsGator
    posted on 2/23/2005 2:14:20 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Carolina vs. NC State
    posted on 2/23/2005 1:11:57 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Harddrive windchimes... me thinks I see a cottage industry.
    posted on 2/23/2005 10:24:29 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Tuesday, February 22, 2005
    Problems with tempdb logfile and it reporting as full when there is plenty of space.
    posted on 2/22/2005 3:02:52 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [1]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Monday, February 21, 2005
    AppState.Net update...
    posted on 2/21/2005 11:39:19 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Friday, February 18, 2005
    LeetSpeak - direct from Microsoft
    posted on 2/18/2005 11:50:26 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Virginia Tech beats Dook (Duke)
    posted on 2/18/2005 11:11:32 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Thursday, February 17, 2005
    Google Cheat Sheet - Awesome and helpful
    posted on 2/17/2005 3:44:19 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Wednesday, February 16, 2005
    New Google Toolbar Beta... Sweet.
    posted on 2/16/2005 9:33:35 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Bill Gates Interview and Firefox.
    posted on 2/16/2005 9:10:42 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Watch out when playing with your webcam... maehheeemaeahaaaa
    posted on 2/16/2005 5:13:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • New DVD Rip protection from MacroVision
    posted on 2/16/2005 5:01:40 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • I expected the NHL to cancel the season several weeks ago and can't believe that it has drawn on this long.

    Finally the union and the owners have decided to cancel the season - but at this point did anyone really care?

    I never have really watched hockey, but have always kept up with it on ESPN and occasionally would pull for Carolina out of allegience. But now, after this, I am SO ready for professional lacrosse to come onto the scene I can't stand it... I always thought that hockey was the true sport of men - but no more.

    posted on 2/16/2005 2:13:09 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  • Microsoft PR Fiasco... I guess their glad they didn't do: Search: Software Behemoth in Redmond... :-)
    posted on 2/16/2005 12:27:44 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • The guys over at StateFans Nation have put together a great rundown of the teams in the ACC and the likelihood of dancing in March. The article can be found HERE and offers some pretty good insight.

    Thanks Dave Sez for pointing me to it.

    posted on 2/16/2005 11:45:41 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
  • Blog reactions
  •  Friday, February 11, 2005
    MPAA rips off a song...
    posted on 2/11/2005 10:23:28 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • 10 Things not to Ask Duke's Coach Mike Krzyzewski
    posted on 2/11/2005 12:13:58 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Adding a global delete confirmation to all datagrid items at runtime.
    posted on 2/11/2005 1:03:48 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Thursday, February 10, 2005

    DotNetRocks.bmpHow to videos from the guys who bring you DotNetRocks (arguably the best podcast of any genre...).

    I also found this link to them today via another blog (I am desperately trying to find my source again so that I can trackback... if it's you, please let me know) and am posting it here only because I can't find the link on the actual DotNetRocks site :-) and don't want to lose it.

    It is three very entertaining videos describing the basics of OOP. While very basic, these guys are entertaining even when covering the simple things. I am seriously considering signing up for some of Carl Franklin's online/remote classes.

    posted on 2/10/2005 6:13:13 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Thanks Dave Sez -for the awesome link to this article. I grew up in Chapel Hill and didn't know half of this stuff - even if it is from a Dookies (Al Featherston Duke Class of '74) POV...

    posted on 2/10/2005 2:46:16 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Bank sued for Customers Hacked Computer
    posted on 2/10/2005 11:49:26 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Microsoft to buy Anti Virus Company
    posted on 2/10/2005 3:01:12 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Duke-UNC the all time greatest rivalry
    posted on 2/10/2005 2:24:33 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [1]
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  • My Logitech cordless mouse rules!!!
    posted on 2/10/2005 1:33:26 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  •  Wednesday, February 09, 2005

    asn-logo-2004.gifGood for them. I have always loved the fact that these guys decided to located their offices for function instead of form. Their DC is located in an apartment complex in Boone, NC right accross from the BellSouth DC. Great job guys... I hope you made a killing.

    Here is a little more information.

    posted on 2/9/2005 11:54:26 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • unc-logo-120x95.jpgMy heart is heavy. No better game every year than one of the two between Carolina and Duke. Felton picked up his dribble with 4 seconds left and it was all over. It it one of those nights when you just want to wake up and think you dreamed it... in a pool of sweat and the need to get up and check whether or not the doors were locked.

    I would kind of hope that I could sleep until 3/6 when Duke travels those long nine miles to Chapel Hill...

    I couldn't really figure out the last 17 seconds, but I thought the ball went out of bounds before the clock expired, but it all happened so fast, I might have dreamed that too.

    Oh well... tomorrow the sun will rise again. Go Heels!

    posted on 2/9/2005 11:25:28 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • It'll be interesting to see how they compete against NewsGator.com and BLoglines.com.
    posted on 2/9/2005 11:03:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Carly Fiorina Update... at world bank?
    posted on 2/9/2005 9:07:04 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • When ever I want to determine either 1) the prevalance or 2) the popularity of a two different entities, I usually turn to google and check the number of search results... Here are some interesting samples:

    Microsoft Memory Leak 264,000 (in hind sight, I probably should have checked Windows Memory Leak - 574,000)
    Linux Memory Leak 461,000

    Microsoft 188,000,000
    Linux 222,000,000

    Windows XP 23,200,000
    RedHat Fedora 3,220,000

    Microsoft XP 17,200,000
    Redhat Fedora  3,220,000 (just Fedora - 10,500,000)

    McDonalds 2,720,000
    Chick-Fil-A 197,000
    Burger King 1,640,000
    Wendy's  949,000

    Intel 60,900,000
    AMD 34,800,000
    Athlon 15,800,000
    Pentium 27,800,000

     

     

     

    posted on 2/9/2005 4:54:24 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • I wanted to get a link down to this thread at LLBLGen's forums - I stop to think back to my first encouter with conputers. While I don't remember how old I was, it must have been the mid 80's or so when my parents got a Vic 20 . I didn't really get it, and just remember how cool I thought it was that I could pull out a cassette tape and store stuff to it. I was overwhelmed by the whole concept of computers and actually was much more at home playing street football and trying to get out of homework.

    I did take a programming class in Junior High School (link temporarily down... here is another) where we used a TRS 80trs80mod4_ad_m.jpg (thanks to 1000bit for the picture), but again, I didn't really get the point. If I remember correctly Mr. Kepner (this teachers husband, who must not be working there anymore) was my teacher, but that is about all I can remember. He was a great teacher, but I can't honestly say that I remember anything about programming from that class.

    During High School - I didn't do much of anything, much less anything with computers.

    During college I did get more involved in computers but more from a user standpoint than a coder. My degree was in MIS, but it was in the Walker College of Business and was from much more of a management perspective (I did take a COBOL class or three, and I do remember one class on Modeling and Simulation in BASIC) but we still always felt far inferioer to the CS guys. Still didn't get it.

    Went to work for Samaritan's Purse for several years as a DBA and System manager and still didn't get it.

    I started a web hosting company in 1996 (LCO Internet) and did a little coding here and there for clients. I could get my way around in Perl, PHP and ASP, but still didn't really get it. One of our clients needed some help on another project and I made my first foray into coding in VB 6. :-)

    Several years later and many different iterations of the same project with different owners and I still work for, am the lead developer, and am partners in the same company. However, I still don't, nor think that I ever truely will, get coding... Sure I understand OOP, try my best to adhere to best practices, and have added lots of different tools to my skillset over the years... But I still don't understand binary math nor can I convert hex in my head. I am a reluctant programmer, but it has become just about everything I do. I enjoy it to no end, but again really don't get it :-). At some point, maybe I'll get there - but for now, I'm just glad I have a job.

    posted on 2/9/2005 12:14:39 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [1]
    commodore_vic20_logo.gif (1.33 KB)
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  •  Tuesday, February 08, 2005

    I must admit, I never realized how much I actually relied on MSN Messenger until it has been down all day. I work out of a home office and feel completely disconnected right now... Maybe I should use the phone. Nah.

    At one time I used Trillian - so that I could have access to all of the different IM clients, but settled on MSN/Windows Messenger b/c that is what our entire company decided to standardize on internally. Also, Trillian, as awesome as it was, seemed to be a little bulky (probably not as bulky as if I were running all of the different IM clients that it supported at once, but then again, I really didn't have a need for them all).

    I love MSN Messenger and really do feel disconnected when it is down.


      [SIDENOTE] - ON a breif sidenote, as I am sitting here with my kids, my son (7) found an old copy of "The Magic Schoolbus Explores the Rainforest" put out by Microsoft several years ago. Aside from getting nostalgic, the thing that I found the most interesting was that when the splash screen for the install came on and "laser cut" MICROSOFT into the screen my son said, "Microsoft... {Pause for effect...} we LOVE Microsoft..." You don't realize the reach that MS truely has until you realize that a 7 year old (who watches little or no television) knows and loves who they are. [/SIDENOTE]
    posted on 2/8/2005 5:07:13 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
    magicbusrainforest.gif (81.34 KB)
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  • I found this really entertaining. I would like to contribute a few additional lines that I am privy to - coming from a VB.NET perspective.

    #REGION "NOT SURE WHAT THIS DOES"
    Private Sub ReallyImportantStuff()
    ' TODO: Figure out what this does.
    End Sub
    #END REGION

    ' Imports System.Security

    Imports Microsoft.VisualBasic


    posted on 2/8/2005 2:57:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • Google has just launched Google Maps... I found out about it from Boing Boing and it can be found here. What isn't Google going to do next?

    Scoble found it too.

    posted on 2/8/2005 2:23:59 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • I am ashamed to say that I am up late working and have the TV on in the background. This show caught my attention. I've been watching for 15 minutes now and am a little worried that I won't be able to sleep tonight :-).

    posted on 2/8/2005 2:14:15 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • At my old location, I wrote extensively about a new laptop purchase (btw - new orders are on backorder, good timing) that I made. I just wanted to update that, at least as of now, things are awesome.

    6969097_ra.jpg

    I did go out and by a Logitec wireless mouse that has made my life a lot easier. The touchpad is okay, but difficult to depress. I did figure out how to setup the touch zones so that I could get to my context menu and other right click functions. Bear with me, my last laptop (Compaq Presario 1800) is something like 4 years old...

    If I have any future problems, I will certainly update, but I am seriously considering making it my primary development box. My wife (and son) would love to have my current desktop to play around on.

     

     

    posted on 2/8/2005 2:11:05 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
    6969097_ra.jpg (29.72 KB)
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  • My old posts can be found here... but all future entries will be made at this location.
    posted on 2/8/2005 1:34:53 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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  • I have decided to move my blog to my own server. I am using dasBlog for maintenance and really how it is setup and all of the features. I'll update and let you know how it goes.
    posted on 2/8/2005 1:33:23 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0]
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