WRITING: This morning I threw coins

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Ah what a wonderful machine we've been given for our journey thru life. This morning, I picked up four coins that had fallen form my pocket. I have the required change bucket on my dresser that finances my AC gambling from time to time. So as I sat on my bed coins in hand, I "willed" them from hand to jar. OK! I threw them one at a time. Four for four. It was truly amazing. I don't think I had ever done that before. But I carefully thought about it. I visualize the coins arcing like a basket ball free throw and landing with a clink. I swear while practicing I though I heard the thunk. So ever so gently, I took three pactice strokes, as I was taught in gold school, and practiced my motion. Deep breath and launched each in turn. I was in the zone. If I had any sense, I'd have gone back to bed for the rest of the day. Having achieved the flow, my day's work should have been complete. So I got up, tapped this on my keyboard, and I am off to face the day serene in the knowledge that at least once today I was in the flow following my bliss and in one with the universe. Now off to work were all this can go by the wayside. Hi ho, hi ho, {with apologies to the Seven Dwarfs}


RANT: No one remembers DDay … … I do?

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

It probably was the watershed event in WWII. It represented the beginning of the end for some very dangerous and sick people. It was the turning point for the extermination of millions. And, it was very expensive for the men that landed there. One has to wonder how the world would have been different if we had some more of those men back to lead us. They always talk about the best being left on the battlefield. I think that is true of every war. Just last weekend, I had the honor of talking to an 84 year old DDay vet. Crippled by a wound received that day, who lamented how the local township was going to enforce the meter outside his house despite the handicap plate he has. Honor American veterans? Please, don't make me laugh. But, I remember them and will pray that all of us take their sacrifice to heart and make America that shining city on the hill. It's the least we can do. And we won't have to die to do it.


LIBERTY: FREETALKLIVE has a great interview with Loretta Nall

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

The boys at ftl really hit the bulls eye with this interview.

Loretta Nall is Libertarian candidate for Governor of Alabama. She describes how she changed the focus of a whole debate about the War on Drugs. 

I especially like her quip about having the two candidates for Sheriff "by the gonads" in front of a live audience. They reversed their positions on the War on Drugs within minutes of promising to "eradicate" drugs! 

It is a race issue (i.e., more blacks get imprisoned for drugs than rich white boys and girls). It's a class issue (i.e., rich people hire lawyers; poor people take plea bargains). It's a crime issue (i.e., violent criminals fight over turf like in Prohibition Days and drugs are so expensive that addicts commit crimes to get them). It's a fact of life issue (i.e., the rate of drug addiction hasn't changed over eons). It's a freedom issue (i.e., the Fourth Amendment is trampled by the drug warriors). 

And, I could go on and on. Listen to her on the interview clip. Review some of the FACTS about the drug war. And tell me that it isn't a joke! We've lost. What we are doing doesn't work and can't work. So let's try something new. Liberty!

Now I don't want everyone to be a drug addict. But, clearly that doesn't happen. If we put our energies into understanding, rehab, and finding the "cure", then we would be far better off.

If what we are doing doesn't work, then how can doing more of the same work any better. It's like visiting LA or Chicago and trying to use a map of NYC to get around. Even a child would say, that's dumb. Why is this any different? We have a map (i.e., the War on Drugs) that doesn't work. Let's try a new map (i.e. cure versus prohibition).

It didn't work in the Twenties, it doesn't work now! 


TECH: “MOZY” the auto backup service didn’t. Why?

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Once again this week, MOZY is signalling that it hasn't abcked up in week. Why? It's had ample opportunities. So, there clearly is something that I'll have to report to beta test hq. Hmm. How did this get through alpha? 


TURKEY: What email do you use? … … Never your employers!

Monday, June 5, 2006

I recently heard of a colleague being let go.

I'm not sure if he was stripped searched and marched out of the building. BUT, that was a common occurrence on Wall Street.

There they were always trying to prevent brokers from taking their "book" home. The book was their customer list with all the details. That book was essential to a broker getting a new job and bringing all his old clients with him. The Old Firm would believe that those customers were "theirs". It was entertaining to watch the squabble. The "rules" said that the departing broker couldn't tell "his" customers on the old firm's time or phone about the change. So the first thing the broker did, when they departed or were thrown out, was to contact all the old clients to get them to move their accounts to the new firm with the broker. Great fun.

I got to know some of these characters. One old coot had a large supply of carbon paper. If he wrote anything, he'd make a carbon copy and "file" it in his briefcase. Each night, home it would go. When they nuked him, as they eventually did to anyone who was too successful or too unsuccessful, I know that they lost EVERY single one of his clients. They were convinced he was hacked into their computer system. To lose every single one was extraordinary.

About a decade later, I ran into him and he laughed as he told me he had a room at home where he had carefully filed and indexed every page.

And, he said he was still doing it. If they ever stopped producing carbon paper, then he said he'd retire.

OK what's the point for all us turkeys?

Don't EVER use your employer's email for networking activities. You can be cut off. With free gmail accounts galore, there is no reason to do it.

This colleague, now departed, used his corporate email and now I can't reach him.

Don't make that mistake. If you have, fix it!

 

 


WRITING: Never heard of “the tomato effect”?

Monday, June 5, 2006

The Tomato Effect

(1) A term asserted to be used in medicine menaing the rejection of effective medical treatments because they conflict with currently accepted medical theories.

(2) It is reported that the tomato was not eaten in the US until 1820 because it was beleived to poisonous. This even though Europeans had been eating tomatoes for years with no ill effects.

(3) A movie exploring the possibility of foul play in the death of doctor practicing "Environmental Medicine". (See http://www.rabble-rouser.com/about.html)


ALUM: JASPER BASEBALL LOSES IN REGIONAL FINAL

Monday, June 5, 2006

http://www.gojaspers.com/article.cfm?doc_id=6845

***Begin Quote***

Lincoln, Neb. (June 4, 2006) – Miami completed a three-game sweep of the NCAA Lincoln Regional field to capture its 10th straight win in regional play and its 13th consecutive regional title with an 10-4 victory over upstart Manhattan at Hawks Field on Sunday evening. Manhattan ends its season with a 34-23 record. 

***End Quote***

Well done to those men!

Considering that Jack only slays every giant in fairy tales, this is a heroic effort. They did put a few of those giant state skoolz in their place along the way. The gnat can be annoying.

Well done. 


LIBERTY: Gubmint enforcing cellphone while driving ban … … FUGETABOUTIT !

Monday, June 5, 2006

http://techdirt.com/article.php?sid=20060602/0151254

***Begin Quote***

most people seem to ignore such {cell phone} bans anyway 

***End Quote***

Forget the government trying to force people not to use cell phones when driving. (Don't get me started on government.)

How about a simple solution?

Insurance companies shouldn't have to cover the cost of your accident if it's found you're on the phone at the time of the accident, or were on just prior to.

Simple and elegant?

I know that if I got that letter from my insurance company it would make an impression on me.

Think of it: insurance company lawyers would be sure to enforce that provision. They'd be on it far better than any "state revenue collection" agent (aka cop) — after all we know that with gubamint, it's all about revenue from radar traps, rather than safety.

I bet that "simple change" would change behavior.

IMHO


RANT: If Lincoln had powerpoint at Gettysburg … then what?

Sunday, June 4, 2006

http://www.norvig.com/Gettysburg/


LIBERTY: The Constitution as an excuse instead of a restraint

Sunday, June 4, 2006

http://www.lewrockwell.com/reese/reese284.html

Original Intent
by Charley Reese
***Begin Quote***

They would be disturbed at how we have allowed politicians and judges to turn the Constitution into an excuse instead of a restraint.
***End Quote***

(1) Return the foreign policy to not meddling in the affairs of others. 

(2) Disband the standing army and decommission the myriad of TLAs with guns and "police power".

(3) Return sovereignty to the states.

(4) Return to U.S. senators that are selected by the state legislatures.

(5) Eliminate any federal mandate on the states (i.e., one man one vote).

(6) A party should be Constitutionally limited from a majority in the Congress when the hold the Presidency. (Not sure how to word that one?)

(7) Federal judge could be impeached by the legislature of the state in which he sat.

(8) Federal government, as an agent of the states, can only pass laws about the states not citizens of those states.

(9) No federal involvement in education, welfare, medical care, foreign aid and domestic pork-barrel projects. 

I can live with that! I'm voting Charlie for President. We'll sort out the details later!


TURKEY: “Why bother networking … …

Sunday, June 4, 2006

http://ripples.typepad.com/ripples/2006/06/networking_made.html

***Begin Quote***

Why bother networking if it doesn't extend your network of friends?
 
***End Quote***

On this chilly morning as I sit and reflectively blog, I'd pontificate that "networking" is very different than "friendship".

As an injineer that has to have a taxonomy for everything, one has: spouses (high value / low maintenance if you pick right),relatives (thankfully not a greatly expanding number requiring loans, gifts, and high maintenance / low return); in laws (enough said); friends (great joys); acquaintances (casual contact); fellow bloggers (who tell you that your full of soup as needed); coworkers (limited to the lifespan of your corporate life); and service  people (usually nice people you meet along the way who do stuff for you). There's a formula for everything. And, we take two parts of this and one part of that to make shazaam.

[Note the careful attention to the engineering rule of thumb five plus or minus two. (1) spouses; (2) relatives; (3) in laws; (4) friends; (5) acquaintances; (6) fellow bloggers; (7); coworkers; (8)service people. Oops! Ok combine relatives and in laws! And it now fits the rule. As I was saying: Note the careful attention to the engineering rule of thumb five plus or minus two. (1) spouses; (2) relatives and in laws; (3) friends; (4) acquaintances; (5) fellow bloggers; (6) coworkers; (7)service people. An injineer can always make the observed data fit the predetermined answer. Why do you think tuition is higher, the math is harder, and the wages better?]

Seriously, maybe networking contacts can become friends and acquaintances. Maybe that is what one needs to do. Convert the business of networking into "making friends and influencing people". I'm not so sure. But I'll take it under advisement. Till then, networking contacts don't fit into my paradigm cause it breaks the rule of five.

Maybe I need some new rules?
[FOOTNOTE: The rule of five says that people don't understand or remember things that are fewer than 3 (insufficient distinctions) and greater than 7 (too many choices). So engineers always try to ensure that stuff conforms to that rule. Next week's lesson: Why bridges don't usually fail or multiplying the right answer by ten just to be safe! That's why you don't have to worry about following a 9.5 ton truck on a one ton bridge … usually!]


TECH: “OUTLOOK” does a “LOOKOUT”

Sunday, June 4, 2006

Most interesting.

This morning a routine email out to my isp started failing.  OK, no big deal. Often stuff has to try more than once to get out. After the third try, it was time to look into it. The message was "needs authentication". Huh? I haven't changed anything in my email accounts since I abandoned a spammy email address and created a new one. But that was a while ago. OK! Let's debug. Can we do the Outlook Lookout test account? Hmmm, everything works EXCEPT the send. OK, let's look at the email address. Looks good. Other settings? Hmmm, the outbound "needs authentication" box is unchecked. That's not right. Check it. Test it. OK. Send mail. OK. Hmm so how did that box get unchecked. Ghosts? The wicked witch of the west. Or just Outlook donning it persona of Lookout and making life interesting for the poor dumb user. And, people wonder why I want to leave Microsoft? At least, an open source vendor would be interested in my problem. Or at least feign interest if I was a donor. Heck, the beta software guys actually respond. Sigh!


LIBERTY: “the Invisible Hand of Adam Smith is the same as the hand of God”

Sunday, June 4, 2006

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig6/vuk4.html 

Step-by-Step Socialism
by Vedran Vuk
***Begin Quote***

Poverty is whatever the opponents of freedom make it out to be. Have capitalism and semi-free markets not increased the wealth of the poorest in America ten-fold?! The luxuries considered standard to the average U.S. citizen would have been marvels to kings and queens of a hundred and fifty years ago!

If capitalism in another hundred years improves the situation of the poor ten-fold again, the obstructers of liberty will still call it poverty! Not because the lower 20% don’t have enough but because the upper 20% have a hell of a lot more. 
***End Quote***

Very insightful. Like the fellow who said that he wanted to come to America because the poor people were fast. Even he realized the fallacy of the "poverty hustlers".  You know, those are those people, who appear to make their living out of lecturing us, that we are not doing enough about hunger, poverty, and homelessness. 

The bottom fifth is not "poor".

Those souls in the Third World, being starved to death by their respective government, are poor.

Now, I have no doubt, that there are people in America that are "poor". I also know that I see an awful lot of "welfare queens". An, they are not all at the welfare office drawing a gubamint check. We have lots of "welfare" recipients that don't have to endure the indignity of appearing at the welfare office for it. 

Let's start by cutting corporate welfare. Price supports! Here's a pet peeve. We have sugar price supports and sugar quotas. Now let me understand this I have to pay more for sugar and anything that contains it so that corporate farms that are growing it are incentivized to keep growing it. AND, since this cost is unavoidable, it's a tax. So everyone pays a sales tax to keep the sugar flowing. Does that make ANY sense at all? We have milk price minimums at the federal level. Again, it's a tax. Does it make any sense at all?

Let's examine all the wealthy welfare. Just off the top of my head, I can target Federal Flood Insurance that encourages wealthy people to rebuild expensive homes on dangerous coastlines at taxpayers' expense. I can site Sam Donaldson's sheep farm in Arizona that gets millions. And, don't forget the minimum wage that helps the unions and the gubamint workers. (And, you thought it was about helping poor people; silly taxpayer!)

So, in short, the bottom 20% needs a tax cut, a cost of living decrease, and the free market to elevate tehir living standard.

There's a bumper sticker quote to the effect that "no one ever taxed themselves to prosperity". Wow is that true! 


TURKEY: What is networking?

Saturday, June 3, 2006

http://ripples.typepad.com/ripples/2006/06/networking_made.html

***Begin Quote***

Networking is the process of extending your network of friends. It is not a matter of running around passing out business cards.
 
***End Quote***

Nah, I don't like that definition at all.

I do agree that it's not passing out business cards. It's also NOT collecting a lot of them either.

Any more than doing the LinkedIn version of the Vulcan mind meld with a grazillion people is networking.

I would define "networking" differently.

IMHO

Networking is an ongoing conversation between two people for the purpose of exchanging information about mutually agreed topics. It's characterized by the personal meetings or at least communications as needed.

There's an implied agreement that each participant is responsible for what they get out of it. There are no guarantees or warranties. It's a best effort.

There are certain unwritten rules. The initiator is not allowed to ask for a job, a loan, or an excessive amount of time. The receptor is obligated to give full attention, honest feedback, and follow through on anything promised.

When a face to face networking meeting occurs, I believe it is best when it is very scripted and short (less than 30 minutes). The initiator is expected to have familiarized themselves with the public persona of the receptor. The receptor is expected to have reviewed any documentation that the initiator has supplied in advance. After hello, the initiator asks the receptor to explain their current scope (5 minutes). The receptor then asks the initiator to describe what they are looking for and their unique value proposition. The initiator gives their long version of their elevator speech (5 minutes). The receptor then comments upon it (5 minutes). The initiator is then expected to ask two or three questions (5 minutes). Then the initiator concludes by asking for the names of two people who could help him, thanks the receptor for his time, and leaves. Thirty minutes tops UNLESS the receptor extend it.
 
There maybe a perceived disparity between the two people in organizational stature, education level, age, or experience (i.e., overall work history; industry focused; skills). Whether a greater or lesser, everyone wins in networking. At the very least, even if there is nothing that one person could possibly do (e.g., a new college accounting graduate networking with an old F500 cfo), there is the psychological benefit from helping. Or, perhaps the greater is "paying back ghosts" (i.e., releasing self-imposed obligations for past help received when there was a similar disparity). Those "ghosts" provided help to the now greater, who was the lesser then, and couldn't reciprocate. That kind of help comes with its own obligation that an individual carries in their soul. Like a karmic debt, it needs to be discharged. Also, the lesser can help the greater improve on their thinking, mental models, or coaching skills without recognizing it. The benefits to the greater are not always obvious even to the greater person. The lesser isn't imposing on the greater because there was mutual agreement to meet.

So if we think about the model of data, information (data in context), knowledge (actionable information), and wisdom (understanding the nuances of knowledge), the networking parties operate on any, or all, of the four levels. It can result in the exchanging, sharing, or developing new insights to their mutual or individual benefits.

Networking is that ongoing conversation inside a personal relationship between two individuals to their mutual benefit.

IMHO 


TECH: “NUANCE” support “IBM VIA VOICE” sucks — buyer beware!

Saturday, June 3, 2006

http://www.gripe2ed.com/scoop/story/2006/6/2/04149/00911

http://www.gripe2ed.com/scoop/story/2006/4/11/0950/03255

Important points to note about the "doc with the broken software"

(1) It was the install that was broken, as well as the software.

(2) I paid for the support incident for which I got one email message to "try again".

(3) After a while, it is just not worth fighting about. They count on that! Give up; they win.

(4) After that, it is useless to resist. As a result, I will not BUY software retail. I will use Open Source and make a donation. But if it ain't fully functional, then I don't trust you.

(5) Guarantees, warranties, and rebates are worthless because they are not honored.

AND

(6) Never recommend anything altruistically because no good deed goes unpunished.

(7) Scansoft aka Nuance Sucks!


TURKEY: A baby turkey reminded the big fat turkey … … about 2GET2!

Saturday, June 3, 2006

Reinke's Big Turkey Sales Funnel (aka 2GET2)

IT TAKES:
 10 Leads     to get to     one Qualifing lead (salary; geography; suitable)
 10 Qualified Leads     to get to     one Lead on Something Worth Submiting On (after research)
 10 Submittals     to get to     one First Phone Screen (Get passed the researcher)
 10 First Phone Screens     to get to     one Second Phone Screen (Get passed the headhunter)
 10 Second Phone Screens     to get to     one in-person Interview with the heahunter (if needed)
 10 Headhunter Interviews     to get to     one First Interview with the target's HR (for presentability)
 10 HR Interviews     to get to     one Second Interview with a peer (for tech qualifications)
 10 Peer Interviews     to get to     one Third Interview with the Hiring Manager (for rapport)
 10 Hiring Manager Interviews     to get to     one Fourth Interview with the Big Boss (for chemistry)
 10 Big Boss Interviews     to get to     one Offer (salary too low or too high)
 10 Offers     to get to     one Acceptable Offer (Perfect!)

 1 Acceptable Offer is all you really need     

Is it really a 1 in a 1,000,000,000,000 shot?

Nahh, who says 10 is the right number?
And that this is the right funnel for you?
Or that you have to touch every base?

(Believe it or not, I have had process with more steps. I've had one that went two steps. It’s all about managing YOUR expectation and getting thru all the “no”s to get to the one “yes” you want!)

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License
Copyright 1994 Ferdinand John Reinke All Other Rights Reserved 


TECH: Verizon Wireless Broad Band (VWBBie) in Seaside Heights speed test results

Saturday, June 3, 2006

479.2 kilobits per second
Communications 479.2 kilobits per second
Storage 58.5 kilobytes per second
1MB file download 17.5 seconds
Subjective rating Not bad


TECH: “ELEPHANTDRIVE” the auto backup service says they’ve fixed my problem.

Friday, June 2, 2006

Well we'll see. Let me try to back something up.


LIBERTY: To Conquer Diabetes … exclude the Federal Government!

Friday, June 2, 2006

http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art43486.asp

Diabetes Site
Cindy Kimura
BellaOnline's Diabetes Editor
Conquer Diabetes Call-In

***Begin Quote***

{Content deleted at the request of the author. You'll have to visit her site to see what she said. I still think what I posted was a fair use quote, but I am an easy to get along with type. In summary she urged that you call the Congress to support R&D funding. I assume that because I differ with her tactically, not strategically, she wants to use "force" one me to silence my pov. Oh well. She'll learn that begging politicians for a pittance is a losing tactic as well as demeaning.}

***End Quote***

Dear Ms. Kimura,

While I am sure that you have the best of intentions, I don't agree that going hat in hand to the Federal Government is the best way to solve the problem. I am not unsympathetic to your quest. I'd like nothing more than to see Diabetes conquered in our lifetimes. My wife is a Type 1 and my best friend is a Type 2.

However, I am fundamentally opposed to using tax money for any such purpose. No matter how noble.

First, if it is a good idea, then funds should be able to be raised voluntarily. My experience is that funds raised that way are used more effectively and efficiently. I personally contribute to the Joslin Institute. Not because of the tax deduction, but because of the pioneering work that they do. I think that they have a real chance at a cure.

Second, the Federal Government is neither effective or nor efficient in what they do. You and I will long be dead and buried before they develop a cure or have any hand in developing one. Allowing them to call the shots is just plain silly. What expertise do they have as leaders in Diabetes Research to decide what the right amount is? How can they decide what is the next best use of the next dollar of diabetes research money? How can they determine diminishing returns? When you say call and urge, how do we know what the right number is? It is egotistical to think that this process will deliver anything but strife as the different special interest groups "battle" for a part of the budget. Isn't it much more efficient, effective, and peaceful, if we return this to the people for a decision? Let's cut the Federal Government out of the equation, and thus we lose their "handling fee" (estimated to be a half to 85 percent), and put that money back into taxpayers' hands. Let's assume the breakage of sending a dollar to Washington is 50% just to make the math simple. So if you had a check from the Federal Government representing your share of the R&D budget let's say it's a dollar, then you could send it to say Joslin. Now, instead of sending two dollars to Washington to get a dollar check to donate, how about if you just keep the two bucks. Then, you can send it to Joslin. The AIDS activists can send their two bucks where they want. The Parkinson advocates can send it where they want. You get the idea. It's effective because the research organization will have to impress you with progress to keep you contributing. It's efficient because the "handling charge" of the Federal Government will go to the charity. And, it's peaceful, because the various groups don't have to squabble among themselves and give the Federal Government the ability to play one off against the other.

Third, if you really want progress, then focus on "shooting" the FDA! It slows the process and makes it fantastically expensive. Eliminate them and the whole R&D pipeline will speed up and cheapen. Besides, do you really think the Drug Companies want to kill their customers? And, even if you do, do you think that the FDA is an effective remedy? If so, look at the Viox and such deaths.

Fourth, I can only think of one disease that was "cured" lately. That was polio. The March of Dimes flattened it. Without the Federal Government. My only gripe with them was that they didn't have the good sense to go out of business. They "adopted" another disease. And one that will have no cure. "Birth defects" probably can't be eliminated or cured, only minimized. But, if they can attract donations, then that's OK! When they get tax money or United Way, which is not voluntary for most people, then it's NOT OK.

So, if I was king, I would suggest to my subjects that I wasn't wise enough to figure out what to do. But, what I did know was that we, as a people, needed to develop a consensus. The logical addition of all our opinions would be better than mine alone. Since I wasn't smart enough to cure any disease, I would help my subjects figure it out what diseases we had and how to move ahead. So, I'd order the king's clerks to summarize the cause of all deaths for all the land. I would invite the king's doctors (a panel of fifty distinguished people selected by their peers serving pro bono) to identify the 50 biggest problems (either by deaths or death rate) and the organizations working on those problems. I'd proclaim the list throughout the land and invite my subjects to contribute to the charity of their choice. I, of course, would visit each organization (one per week) and encourage them to find a cure. If they did, I bestow a meaningless honor on the ones that cured their disease and went out of business. I'd compliment my subjects on their wisdom and remind them that we still had a list of problems. Notice that never once did I make anyone do anything. Or really really spend a lot of tax money.

I hope this little rant convinces you that, if you really really want to cure diabetes, as I think you and I do, that a different strategy will be required. After all, look where the current model has gotten us. Some wag defined insanity as doing the same thing and expecting different results. Depending on the Federal Government, to me, defines insanity.

Respectfully submitted for your consideration,
FjohnR

Ferdinand John Reinke
3 Tyne Court
Kendall Park, NJ 08824
732-821-5850 (Home Office)
781-723-3746 (Fax)

http://public.2idi.com/=reinkefj (Email form)
http://www.reinke.cc/ (Web page)
https://reinkefj.wordpress.com/ (Blog)


TECH: “SYNCURA” appears to work more quickly now … fwiw!

Friday, June 2, 2006

http://www.syncura.com 

SYNCURA is "snappier" than it used to be. I am using it to keep my "team member" machines in sync. So basically, I take an encrypted file and drag 'n' drop into the team directory and it gets shared among a community of platforms I use. I'm not yet comfortable putting unencrypted sensitive stuff up "in the air" yet. Have to think about that.


TECH: UNBUNTU LINUX first look … … looks … … GREAT!

Friday, June 2, 2006

I downloaded the Dapper Drake (i.e., UBUNTU 606) with the help of the FREEDOWNLOADMANAGER. It was needed because just a plain old download would fail 66% into it. Don't know why? Burned a disk of the iso that didn't work. Tried again and it did. Came up a little slow. Not used to booting from a cdrom. Worked flawlessly. Detected my wireless lan. Connected to http://freetalklive.com and virgin classic rock radio. Downloaded a podcast from FTL but could figure out how to listen to it. Listened to Virgin rock while I poked at the included sip phone. I want to put it up on some of the old hardware in the garage and see how an install goes. I have a box that can be reformatted. This might be the version that pushes Microsoft out of the operating system business. Besides have you seen the rumored prices of Vista and the footprint it needs. Interesting interesting.


RANT: Spelling bee … I never even heard of any of these words!

Thursday, June 1, 2006

Where dod they get them? If I was there I'd probably blurt out WTF or worse!


TECH: UBUNTU Dapper Drake release 6.06 is out

Thursday, June 1, 2006

Downloading is a challenge.


TECH: “ELEPHANTDRIVE” the auto backup service can’t connect to their HQ

Thursday, June 1, 2006

From: feedback@elephantdrive.com
Sent: Thursday, June 01, 2006 7:35 AM
To: reinkefj Subject: ElephantDrive Customer Support

Thanks for your interest in ElephantDrive!  A customer service representative will contact you shortly to answer questions or assist with problems with the ElephantDrive platform. Our CURRENT AVERAGE RESPONSE TIME is less than 24 hours.

As of 5/31/2006 11:51 AM PST, we are still observing a larger than normal response from the various postings last week.  We have added additional web and application servers and the platform should be running smoothly now, if at times a bit slow.

Thanks for your patience and apologies for any inconvenience.  We look forward to continuing to serve all your online storage needs!

Sincerely,
The ElephantDrive Staff

——– Original Message ——–

> Name = reinkefj
> Email = reinkefj@gmail.com
> Problem = Elephant Desktop reports "unexpected login error"
> Steps = Connecting to Elephant Drive Headquarters?
> OS = Windows XP
> CPU = Intel Pentium 4
> CPU Speed= 2 GHz or more
> Memory = 1 GB

************

Sigh 


LIBERTY: “primary elections are intraparty affairs” … If so, why does the taxpayer pay!

Thursday, June 1, 2006

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=16691349&BRD=1091&PAG=461&dept_id=425716&rfi=6

EDITOR'S NOTE
By: Hank Kalet, Managing Editor    05/25/2006
Primary decision: Post resists temptation to endorse.

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The South Brunswick Post does not endorse in primary elections.

I will admit that there was a temptation to enter the fray this time around, because township Republicans have so far failed to field a candidate for mayor and the June 6 Democratic primary contest between incumbent Mayor Frank Gambatese and former Mayor Debra Johnson could end up determining who will be mayor come January.

But we decided to resist the temptation for three reasons:

1. We believe that primary elections are intraparty affairs that should be determined by the political party in question.

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Added: Thursday June 01, 2006
Why do taxpayer pay for primaries?

> "1. We believe that primary elections are intraparty affairs that should be
> determined by the political party in question."

Then why do I have to pay for them?

If it's truly a private matter for that club, why are tax dollars used for it?

I don't monitor, nor pay for the elections at the vfw, american legion, kawanis, the local churches, the third grade class president at Constable school.

So why do I pay for these clubs to elect candidates?

f reinke, kendall park, nj


LIBERTY: A steroid policy? … here’s an idea. End the drug war now!

Thursday, June 1, 2006

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=16691777&BRD=1091&PAG=461&dept_id=425723&rfi=6

The South Brunswick Post
EDITORIAL
05/25/2006
Don't base steroid policy solely on test.

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The state and the athletic association that oversees high school sports competition want to keep steroids out of high school sports.

They will begin testing athletes who reach state championship games for a variety of performance-enhancing drugs. Under the new state policy, which received unanimous approval from the executive board of the New Jersey Interscholastic Athletic Association, 5 percent of championship-level athletes would be tested beginning in the fall. The tests would take place following championship-round games. Athletes found using steroids would be suspended for a year.
 
***End Quote***

Added: Thursday June 01, 2006
End the drug war now!

I can't think of a more intrusive demeaning thing that can be done to young people than the pee in the cup test.

It is a violation of human dignity.

People will always do dumb things. The dumbest is to think that the collective "we" can prevent people from doing what we consider "dumb things". When we allow this nonsense, human beings will demonstrate just how adaptable they are. You watch at the ways to evade, avoid, cheat, and otherwise take this "noble idea" and turn it into a joke. I recently read you can not only buy "clean" urine on the net. But you can also buy an appliance to make it look like its yours to the casual observer.

Where there is a will there is a way!

Keep on coming up with "dumb" ideas and crafty people will figure out a way around it.

End the drug war now! "We" lost.

Like most "wars", aka drugs, poverty, hunger, vietnam, terror, we lose! Stop them now!

f reinke, kendall park, nj