Archive for the 'Miscellaneous' Category

High Low

I’ve been pretty down lately. To be honest I sort of expected it to turn out bad and have been pleasantly surprised to find positivity instead. Benjamin Franklin said that if you expect the worst then you won’t be disappointed. Or maybe it was, ouch! That lightning hurts! One of those things. They both apply here I think.

Basically I’ve been with my current company since 1913 or so it seems. Now that a big monolithic company has bought us, everyone has lost their minds. Would it surprise any of you to know that while I have grown technically in my current job, I have been physically and mentally worn thin by the politics and swarms of low self esteems in our building? Ok. I haven’t exactly been worn thin. That’s not a word anyone would use while describing me.

The point I am trying to make here is that I am a survivor. It’s not that I am special or somehow destined to do great things and therefore deserving of being spared the loss of my job. I just survived. That’s it. I feel pretty good about it. It doesn’t make me better than anyone else, if anything it just shows that I have remaining oportunity where I had been nurturing a growing dispair. Either that or it proves that even expendable bomb sniffing dogs survive once in a while.

I think mostly the people who read my blog are friends. If you and I don’t talk personally on occaision you are the rare exception. So I feel comfortable closing by just saying that I am taking a breather, being thankful for what I have in my life and taking in the air as I need it.

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I Really Love Cars

I have been in that mood lately. It’s hard to stop the snowball effect when you start letting your eye wander over car lots and allow that thought to enter into your head that buying a new or used vehicle might not be so bad. I am completely and firmly rooted in the idea that I do not actually need a new car any more, but I still love to shop for them. In my last post, I was pretty hard on car salesmen, drawing generalizations off a few that are in reality very poor stewards of their collective profession. I should revise what I said and temper it by saying that I am developing something of a sympathy towards these people.

I read an article by edmunds.com entitled something similar to “Confessions of a Salesman”. This article was developed by an undercover reporter the editors of edmunds.com sent out to get jobs at a couple of different types of dealerships. It’s sad and disturbing on a couple different levels that the dealerships are really forced to beg, lie, steal and cheat their way to a profit and even the honest salespeople are caught in the middle of what I can only describe as an uncomfortable situation. In the end, it’s the consumer that owns the responsibility to protect their money and to get the best deal. Dealers essentially lay out a big web designed to catch whatever prey is willing to get stuck in it. The gist of the article to me was that you should deal with the Internet manager who generally operates on a volume commission as opposed to a per deal commission. You should set up financing before you go shopping. You should research prices using carsdirect.com, edmunds.com, consumerreports.com, kbb.com and wherever else you can find that kind of information. All of these things will help to keep you out of the web by keeping you from having to negotiate.

This is a short one. The boy wants me to do something.

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I Heart My Droid

Motorola Droid Gonna try not to be wordy.

Pros = Fast browser, many apps, great UI, not Windows dependent, Not Windows, GPS, voice turn-by-turn, great video, great wifi

Cons = hard to use still camera, battery management through application process killing, reserving judgment on the battery but it looks like a charge every night and maybe in the day sometimes kind of phone.

Compared to Windows Mobile <=6.1? A joke to even try to compare them. I’ve owned a lot of Windows Mobile devices since 5.0 and they all suffer from the same problems. They are not in the same class as the Droid OR the iPhone and offer no real benefits over either. Mobile word and excel is a joke at best and that’s pretty much the end of what you get “over” the iPhone or Droid.

Compared to iPhone? No iTunes = GREAT! I’ve never owned an iPhone but just having played around with them in the past, I think it is at least on the level and possibly better considering the open architecture. No AT&T but I have the Motorola Droid which I guess is Verizon only so you could say the same thing about the Droid from the other side. When will carriers stop hog tying us to them? I’d have bought Verizon anyway because I need their network to work at the house.

I got a discount on the phone and accessories with my company association. Cost wise it was cheaper than a new iPhone with comparable storage. Plus I upgraded both our phones so the wife has a Droid too. She’s medium techy and likes it and that says a good bit.

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Tech Center Dust

Tech CenterAnyone who has had to work inside a tech center knows these places can get pretty elaborate. When technology gets too big and noisy or the requirements call for it, we sequester it to these big unmarked buildings with big elaborate security schemes, huge redundant power facilities and gigantic pipes to the Internet and other datacenter facilities. We also know it’s not uncommon to work in a facility built by germaphobes. What’s funny is we all also know about the terrible dust. It gets into everything and is pretty much a mystery to me. I can’t explain it. My hair feels dirty, my face feels like sand paper… it’s a lot like working in a cotton mill. You can’t stay clean no matter what you’re doing. I am sitting here waiting on a technician to call me back… which takes forever… and I am absolutely filthy.

My account rep just called and told me no one is responding to emails or Instant Messages, so he doesn’t know when I will be helped. Maybe I should just go work in a cotton mill… I’m outta here.

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Rock Bottom

I can’t help but sometimes post something like this which if read by any teacher from my past would undoubtedly make them feel a miserable failure. Even still, I will brave the shame of proving I am only marginally literate because I think this thought is important.

I was thinking about what Woodrow Wilson said in his twilight years and how tilted his commentary was toward the anguish he experienced after signing the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. He regretted it, but signed it because he was scratching the backs of those who scratched his back… now we all feel, well, scratched. He said that he had ruined the country unwittingly, but I think that in itself is not quite honest. He should have said he knowingly ruined the country for his own political gain. He knew when he made the deal to sign the act it was a bad thing for the country. No doubt he probably figured it would happen sooner or later anyway because the international bankers always get their man. To read the sanctioned history, the act was supposed to provide an “elastic money supply”. This is a trick of language meant to confuse you into thinking a monetary system based on the full faith and credit of the US government cannot work. Put simply, it can.

I was thinking about our current situation and how much it feeds back to that fateful act of signing a bill into law by a President long departed. Nowadays it is a distant and ignored fact of history that our monetary policy, indeed control of our very currency, was annexed to a private organization in 1913. It is also an unknown to even the most educated among us in society that the Federal Reserve Banks are private corporations controlled by a board that is loosely tied to our government. Without spending too much time on this topic, we are now of course subject to the “business cycle” which is generally accepted now as a natural economic occurrence. We also now have experienced outright depression and many harsh downturns, and a few recessions, all because of the decisions of the money changers of the federal reserve system and the central banks of the world. I’ve also laughed out loud at people who try to blame the current economy on the poor for having the GALL to buy houses using money lent to them by banks. How DARE the poor have a place to live! This is sheer lunacy, of course. Our entire economic system is Enron times 10 trillion. But this isn’t my central point. My observation is that we’re entering into a strange and terrible darkness, and I think we will be a different group of people when we find our way to enlightenment.

I have spent considerable time talking to the elders in my family about tough times in the past. The Great Depression in particular marked their upbringing and fixed in their minds the realities of life and how fleeting money can be. It made many of them regard banks with contempt. On the one side of my family there were farmers. What has always struck me was while things were tough, money was pretty well not existent, they always brighten up when they punctuate the story with how they always had plenty to eat. They worked the fields against merciless heat, from can see to can’t see, and always had plenty. They admired their fathers and mothers and appreciated the smallest things, wearing flour sacks to school. It’s something that they yearn for those days when it was so tough.

It was one of “those” times. I look at them with respect primarily because they lived through and kept their dignity. Maybe their dignity was etched by the difficulty of those times. Maybe their own relationships were realized because of the same reason. I wasn’t there, but my perspective is they had much to be thankful for in a time where much of what we habitually covet was in startlingly short supply.

Today, we are facing a terrible reality of our own and the effects are global and huge. I read today that Panasonic, a Japanese company will be letting 5% of their workforce go. 5% isn’t bad, right? Well, it’s 15,000 people. No doubt many of them will be in Japan, but many will be right here in the US and other countries. And the worst part of all is those jobs were secure in November when a profit was predicted by that company. Now they’ve lost 10’s of BILLIONS of dollars. How can so much change for so much worse in such a short time? This is really just the beginning too. We’ve already seen the list of employers cutting back growing by leaps and bounds.

I predict that in 30 years when this economic cycle is completely behind us we will have been changed by it. I predict our children and grandchildren will look at us and think to themselves that we lived through “those” times. I predict we will be forced to find new strengths in each other and ourselves before this is over. We’ve all been touched by this already. The genius reporters at CNN reported how many people are moving back in with parents, shacking up with friends and making other such arrangements because they have lost their homes. What would you do if you lost your home? Would you move in with your parents or friends? I hope you have family and friends to group together with and make things work. I think those people are the luckiest of all.

Even though I am a cynic and a skeptic about significant change coming from Washington, I believe there will be change simply because our ways of living are not sustainable in their current form.

I strongly feel it is time to get the money changers out of Washington and out of the driver’s seat. We mistakenly call countries “companies” because we do not see the line between them. We’ve worked hard to separate church and state. At the same time, we’re merging business with governance and we’re completely blind to the errors. Our answer is not in corporate welfare or even social welfare. Our answer lies in our gut and our resolve to do things differently. And yes, we’ll have to all make the change at once. That kind of unity will only come after we have hit rock bottom.

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The Time of ClosetFell

So I am a geek, right? I have my home network set up with SmokePing, which is a great tool for measuring and graphing latency. In addition to being a great tool to graph latency over time, it’s a great tool for figuring out when weird stuff happens. Because now, my network is sort of a well monitored organism within the house. When it is affected, one of my monitors will most likely reflect that.

The other morning when I went into my closet as I am oft’ to do, I was a bit surprised to find everything of mine in the middle of the floor. This is my de’marc room, BTW. I have a wire shelf above the door along the left wall which houses my primary DNS server, one of my wireless gateways and several boxes of stuff I don’t touch a whole lot. Phone and wired network terminations are done in here on the left hand wall near the door as well. There was another wire shelf along the back wall of the closet as well. Both shelves had decided to give up the ghost. I swear I will never buy another shelf like these. 9.5 years and they fall out of the wall.

What was odd about this was that I had no idea it had happened. It made me turn the clock back in my head and relive the previous evening. Was the closet a shamble when I went to bed? Maybe it had fallen during the day and I just was at work when it did or something. No. I put away a few shirts the evening before. It happened during the night. Ellyn can’t sleep through anything like that.

Ellyn!!! (what?!) Did you notice the closet was a complete shambled mess?! (… uh …?) Come Here and Look at This!! (… the sound of steps coming down the hall …) *shock* *amazement* *horror*

Neither of us woke up to the sound of multiple computers and other junk falling from the top of the closet, into the floor. As it turns out, Amrin did wake up and ask Ellyn about it. She didn’t hear anything so she told him to go back to sleep. We probably need more curious dogs. They were asleep through he whole thing too, I guess.

So why this post about this experience? Smokeping is cool.

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Georgia Code

Just what I mean.  Click here to access the site.

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Lego Defenders of My Desk

Sometimes you need a little backup. I have two little backups. So back up.

The lights in the eyes are courtesy of Ray, who sacrificed a really cool Christmas card for the effect.

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Amazon Kindle

Amazon Kindle

I know you all were probably already aware of this thing, but I wasn’t. Amazon is selling out of these at $400 a pop. It’s an electronic book, one which I have never seen but am at least somewhat impressed by. It is essentially an electronic book that receives book content over the cellular network and displays it for reading.

I had two thoughts. One is that I experience eye strain while reading from a computer monitor for too long. This fact makes me extremely curious about the electronic paper display in this device. The pictures on-line make it look like a page from a laser printer. If that is truly the effect they have achieved, I might enjoy reading on this thing.

My other thought was I wouldn’t want to pay for more cell service to give this thing access, but I was surprised to read that Amazon takes care of that. So you pay $400 for this thing which will do at least the following:

  1. Hold 200 books
  2. Expand to hold more books
  3. Download a new book on the fly (waiting for wifey’s haircut to be finished) as you think of it.
  4. Release the 700′ of wall space you have dedicated to bookshelves.
  5. Allow you to subscribe to and automatically receive magazines and newspapers.

Of course you must pay for each book that you decide to download. Those appear to be something like $10 per book. I don’t have a clue as to the competitive pricing on the subscription items. I am also not sure about the ability to back the device up in case of a failure or if the media you download is viewable on any other device or not. It is shipped with a USB 2.0 cable but the system requirements claim a computer is not required.

All said, I think it’s a great little device. $400 still sounds steep even though your entire library could fit into the space of a single (small) book. With the included cell access (which is a HUGE convenience here) and the apparently competitive book prices per download, maybe the $400 would be worth it?

Anyway, it’s still very cool.

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Are You a Vonage User?

Vonage Logo

So Vonage lost their patent dispute with Sprint/Nextel. Another $69.5 billion owed on top of the ~$58 billion + royalties they already owe Verizon. Of course they will appeal, but this is sad. Let’s not mince words here. Sprint and Verizon couldn’t care less about those patents. Instead of trying to work out an amicable deal, they want to take their ball and go home. For them to compete with Vonage would mean they would have to give us consumers a better deal and that’s not what making money is all about. All they care about is keeping us paying by the minute to stay connected, hence the lawsuits against Vonage. Why any court would require such an outrageous sum of money in retribution is beyond me. Those amounts look punitive to me.
I hope Vonage finds a way through this mess.

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