This weblog is now powered by tangelo, and no longer Movable Type. Hopefully you won’t notice too much of a difference. I need to find or build a new commenting system, and there are some template tweaks that need to be made, but everything is coming out of tangelo now, and that’s a big step. I can now verify that tangelo can produce PHP with embedded JavaScript without any hassle. I’m using an unreleased version, 1.0b4. I hope to polish it up and release it this weekend, but that will depend on a number of factors, not the least of which is how long it takes Clair and me to install the new French doors. Or as Mike would say, Freedom doors.
Category Archives: uncategorized
Gimme One Reason
Here’s another good reason not to use Internet Explorer, or Windows in general: Browser hijackers are malicious programs that change browser settings, usually altering designated default start and search pages. But some, such as CWS, also produce pop-up ads for pornography, add dozens of bookmarks — some for extremely hard-core pornography websites — to Internet Explorer’s Favorites folder, and can redirect users to porn websites when they mistype URLs.
Brad and Jen
Just checking through my referrers and such and discovered that one person found this site by typing “brad and jen rumors” into a search engine. They must have been rather disappointed to find this Brad and my Jen. Fortunately for them, we’re the better-looking Brad and Jen duo.
Tech Support Care and Feeding
1) Instead of “Hello” or “How are you today?”, greet me with “I’m ready to throw this stupid machine out the window.” That helps to give me the illusion that I make a difference in the world, since I can save this computer from certain destruction.
2) Ask me if I have “an extra laptop” for you. Because, surely, I have lots of spare equipment sitting around unused. That’s why I use a four year old PowerMac G3 as my web server.
3) Don’t ever try to restart your computer when you have a problem, even though that solves many, many technical problems. It’s much better use of my time to spend fifteen minutes walking or driving to your location and restart the computer myself to get the print queue going again.
4) Don’t write down error messages. I love a good mystery. And keep the description of your problem as vague as possible. After all, the computer is hard to use, so it should be hard to fix.
5) Tell me things like “I never use this stupid computer anyway” after I spend an hour fixing a trivial problem at your urgent request.
6) Ask me to fix your personal computer. Better yet, bring it to my desk and wait for me to fix it. While I’m eating lunch. I love that.
7) Ignore any memos that I send out, especially the ones marked Urgent. If it’s important, I’ll come and find you to talk to you personally.
8) Install each and every piece of freeware and shareware you can find. No problem; I’m sure none will do anything nefarious or conflict with anything critical. But, when I send you an update to an internal application I wrote, be totally clueless and refuse to drag and drop it to the proper location yourself.
9) Change email programs yourself. Our “standards” are really just recommendations. If you want to use a different email program, that’s perfectly fine. We love maintaining user directories in multiple formats to suit you. And make sure you do all of your word processing in a six year old bootleg copy of WordPerfect.
10) Bring in your own equipment and hook it up to the network. We love seeing mysterious DNS entries and rogue servers, especially if they don’t have any virus protection on them.
Dog Food
I’ve released tangelo 1.0b3 to my beta testers. I indicated to them that this release is code-named “The Appetizer.” 1.0b4 will be the “Dog Food” release, at which point I’ll begin to use tangelo for this weblog. I’ll be, as they say, eating my own dog food.
This means I have to figure out how to get posts from Movable Type into tangelo, since I’m sure as crap not re-typing them all 566 of them. The first thing to try is the default export format from Movable Type. If that works, that will make life a lot easier for me, and for anyone moving from Movable Type to tangelo.
I also have to choose a commenting system to use until I develop my own. Hopefully I can salvage all 669 comments as well, because there’s stuff in there that shouldn’t be lost. Well, OK, some of it maybe should be lost, but there’s still some really good stuff in there.
By the way, whoever’s been stuffing ballots for Snow White: knock it off.
Once And For All
Let’s put it to a vote.
Hottest “Princess”
Princess Issues
Gracie has a bunch of books about Disney Princesses. This is, I believe, to be expected. She’s a four year old girl, and very much into things that are girly and pink. Disney Princesses fit the bill quite nicely.
But she has one book that lists eight princesses: Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Mulan, and Pocahontas.
I have issues with this; I don’t think they’re all princesses.
Snow White is definitely a princess. That isn’t even up for discussion. Same goes for Sleeping Beauty. Even a cursory examination of these stories clearly reveals the characters as royalty (or royalty in exile). Cinderella I can also accept. Although she doesn’t begin life as a princess, she marries a prince.
Those three are easy. The others are a bit trickier.
Ariel: yeah, she’s a princess, I guess. Her father is the King of the Sea, so that makes her the mermaid equivalent of a princess. And even if you don’t buy that, she marries a human prince at the end. I’ll also take Jasmine as a princess or princess equivalent, since her father is the sultan.
So we’re up to five bonafide princesses so far.
Belle, one of the “Classic Six” as near as I can determine, is problematic, so I’ll get back to her in a moment.
Mulan I’m rejecting out of hand. She’s not born into royalty. She doesn’t marry into royalty. She doesn’t marry at all, in fact, at least within the story as Disney tells it. I suppose a romance and eventual marriage are implied, but even so, her beau isn’t a prince. He’s a soldier. True, he’s a high ranking soldier, but that’s not quite the same as a prince, now is it? So, I’m sorry, but Mulan doesn’t make the cut. Great soldier, but no princess.
As for Pocahontas, I could go either way. Her father is the chief of the tribe, but that does that really qualify as royalty? Especially in that culture? I don’t know. Like I said, I could go either way. We’ll count her as a half princess.
Back to Belle. As far as I’m concerned, Belle is no princess. Allow me to explain. She’s the daughter of an eccentric inventory, not a king, so she’s not born into royalty. She does marry a “prince” at the end of the story, but for me, it’s the princeliness of the former Beast that raises the most questions. I don’t think he’s a genuine prince. He lives in some huge castle in France, near a village where no one even knows about the castle. None of the villagers seem to be aware that there’s a prince in the proximity, and there doesn’t seem to be any other sort of constituency within a reasonable distance of the castle. So what, exactly, is the Beast the prince of? Just the castle? Hogwash. And where are his parents? In the story, he must fall in love by either his eighteenth or twenty-first birthday (I forget which). How did he amass such wealth and power so early in life, and apparently entirely on his own? He even has a full staff at his disposal. Obviously, the Beast attained his position illegally. I think he sold steroids to Gaston and his cronies. I reject the Beast as a prince, so that rules Belle out, much as it pains me, because she is the second hottest of the so-called princesses.
So out of eight potential princess, we have five and a half.
Better And Better
iTunes just keeps getting better. The new 4.5 release adds a slew of great features, including some I’ve wished for. The best is the new ability to add Music Store preview tracks to your own playlists. I’ve wanted to do this for a while, because many times I’ll browse the store and think, “Oh, I want to buy that later,” only to forget within minutes. Now it’s not a problem.
Don’t miss the free songs they’re giving away. I just snagged “My Hero” by Foo Fighters after upgrading. Check out music videos and movie trailers, too. The new Disney section gives me a great idea for a birthday present for Gracie: her own custom mix CD, chock full of songs that won’t annoy Daddy in the car.
Printing CD inserts is a really nice touch, too. The mosaic on the left was generated from my Purchased Music playlist. Party Shuffle seems cools, but Jen and I will need to have another Un-Valentine Party so I can check it out. I haven’t tried Apple Lossless yet, since AAC and higher bit rate MP3 compression are acceptable to me, at least considering the file size trade-off.
This Weekend
This weekend, I…
– mowed the front yard for the first time this year, nearly obliterating my lawnmower in the process. I should have mowed sooner, but I didn’t want to mow right after installing the invisible dog fence.
– finally saw The Passion of the Christ. Wow. What an amazing film. Incredibly moving and powerful. Yeah, in the end, it’s just a movie, and Gibson took a few liberties, but it’s a great movie. I highly recommend seeing this movie if you haven’t yet.
– released tangelo 1.0b1 to my testers. What? You didn’t get the message? Then you’re obviously not on the mailing list.
– was dismayed to realize that SQLite doesn’t support ALTER TABLE. That sucks. I’ve worked around it, but it still sucks.
– attended the newcomer class at LCBC. The best part was when the pastor pointed out that one of their leadership principles is to “eliminate entropy in its earliest stages.” Or, in other words, to change direction when something isn’t working, the earlier the better. My good friend Andy, who happens to be a hydraulic engineer, was sitting next to me. He loved it. Any church that can refer to thermodynamics in its leadership principles is OK with him. Plus, the pastor opened this week’s sermon by driving a Plymouth Prowler onto the stage, and you have to respect that.
– re-read a hilarious story about a blimp and alligator brains and a large, silent, menacing presence that could fly. If you’ve never this story, you must. It is absolutely hilarious and very well written.
– had a lovely evening with Jen on Friday. Grace had an impromptu sleepover at Jen’s parents’ house, so we had the place to ourselves, after the movie and dinner with a friend.
– fixed some issues and bugs for tangelo 1.0b2. Sunday afternoons can be very productive for me. We almost always eat lunch with Jen’s parents, at their house. After lunch, Grace plays Barbies and make-up with Nana and Jen while Pops settles in for a well-deserved Sunday afternoon nap. I break out the laptop and crank out code. I also revamped some of the button icons, with a little bit of help from Jen (the globe icon carries her influence).
– finally made it to Celebrate Life this morning to see Tanya and Steve. Steve wasn’t there.
– wondered where I’ll be working this time next month. I thought about PowerSchool, IMSeries, LDAP, and writing my own CMS from the ground up. I hope SwordFish is ready soon. I just sent an email to REAL Software asking if SwordFish will be available for beta testing the way REALbasic currently is.
– finished watching Pulp Fiction. I’m probably the only guy around who watched Pulp Fiction and The Passion in the same weekend. It was pretty good. It wasn’t as non-linear as Mike had led me to believe, but telling the story out of sequence was effective. It was the first of Quentin Tarantino’s films that I’ve seen. I’d watch another. I think Dan wants me to see Reservoir Dogs.
– decided that I will use four by fours to prop up the new gazebo. Or as the Engrish instructions call it, my Ancient Pavilion. Three stacked horizontally should do it. Then I’ll put some faux-stone paint on them.
– ate several bowls of sugar free ice cream with sugar free chocolate syrup. And yes, I paid for it. Several times.
Crack Down
Looks like the FBI is getting ever more serious about copyright violations. This is good, as I feel strongly that they’ve been frittering away too many precious resources on frivilous pursuits, like catching killers and stuff.
Yesterday in Arizona, and allegedly in other places as well, the FBI raided Deer Valley School District: FBI agents raided the Deer Valley district’s Administration Services Center, just south of Deer Valley High School in Glendale, at 6 a.m. and stayed most of the day. The site houses the district’s information services and technology offices, essentially the “brains” of the district’s computer system, said Timothy Tait, district spokesman.
Interestingly, this copyright violation seems to be in reference to music and movies, not to software, which I would think is a much more viable target in cash-strapped schools.
Perhaps the FBI should be cracking down on poor editing at kpho.com (emphasis mine): Those agents will only confirm that they’re investigation does not involve terrorism or any kind of a threat to students.
Fortunately, the local Fox affiliate asked the tough questions: NewsChannel 3’s Olivia Fierro asked the FBI spokeswoman on the scene if the search was related to possible child pornography. Susan Herkskovitc said that people should not jump to any conclusions, and reiterated that the warrant is sealed. Cute.
Ars Technica’s Eric Bangeman writes: While this may be just the first in a series of law enforcement actions, it’s also possible that yesterday’s raids were a warning shot intended to put the fear of God into schools and school district network admins. What is glaringly apparent is that the DoJ is getting serious about cracking down on copyright issues. It’s a shame that they are more concerned with shielding the industry than looking out for the rights of consumers. Well put, although I do think many people, especially in education are horrendously guilty of copyright infringement, but have a tendency to stick their fingers in their ears and yell, “FAIR USE! FAIR USE!” That said, I do hope this is only a warning shot. If not, there are dark days ahead.
For more reaction and gnashing of teeth, read the related Slashdot discussion.