Printer Cartridges and Hard Drives

I resurrected an old HP printer today, but the ink cartridges in it had long ago, apparently, dried up. So it was off to Office Depot I went. Once there, I browsed for a bit, and then found the cartridges, paid and left the store. As I got into my car, something that I had seen whilst browsing came back to me. It was an amazing price on a hard drive. So back in I went to check it out. It was a Maxtor, 200 Gb, 7200 RPM drive, for $99. I just can’t get over how cheap drives are now. The first hard drive I ever bought was back in 1989. I paid $200 for a 20 megabyte drive. This drive today was $0.50/gigabyte; quite a difference.

Anyway, I thought about it for a while, since it was such a good price, but I don’t have any spare drive bays in my computer. I have already bought an external USB 160Gb drive, so I looked at buying an external enclosure for this drive, but they were $69, and I didn’t want to spend that much more. I actually left the store then, and was almost out of the parking lot, when it occurred to me that if I removed the 60 Gb drive that I use for backups from inside my computer, I could put the 200 Gb drive in, effectively gaining 140 Gb. So I went back and bought it. Once installed, this will bring my total disk space up to 460 Gb. Sweet. I’ll get an external enclosure later for the 60 Gb drive and strap it back on later…

Amusing Dialog

Yesterday afternoon, around 17:30, Thomas, my wonderful 6 year-old son, came into the Office of Death™ and the following dialog ensued:

Thomas: Hey, Dad. Whatcha doin?
Me: I’m about to quit for the day.
Thomas: Really?
Me: Yep. Hey, wanna shoot some hoops?
Thomas: Cool. Can I go to the bathroom first?
[Thomas leaves the room.]
Me: No! You can’t! [Imitating the Soup Nazi from Seinfeld] No bathroom for you!
Thomas: [From down the hall] That was a rhetorical question!

He’s so smart… 🙂

Tsunami: Unbelievable

I can barely comprehend the death toll that is now being reported from the earthquake and subsequent tsunami over the weekend. The latest numbers are around 60,000 80,000 and that’s really hard to believe. Not that I doubt the figure; I’m saying it’s just hard to wrap my brain around that many deaths. I can’t imagine the suffering that the survivors are enduring.

There are some satellite photos of the beach in Sri Lanka here, here and here. The first photo is from January, just as a frame of reference. The second shows the waves coming in and the third is after they hit. Amazing. And there are some stunning videos here.

Update: CNN has the latest counts.

Three Things

I have three things to say today. One about a book, one about a film, and another about my son.

First, the film. I watched Dead Man, a 1995 Johnny Depp film, last night. A few funny moments, but overall a load of crap. It was sort of a surreal re-imagining of a Western, with lots of foul-mouthed cowboys and an Indian who quotes William Blake. I didn’t get it, and thus was unimpressed.

Second, the book. Yesterday, I finished reading Lynne Truss’s excellent book on punctuation called Eats, Shoots & Leaves. While a book on punctuation sounds about as exciting as reading a dictionary, it was actually extremely funny and made many good points about society’s slide into a punctuational abyss, thanks, largely, to the rise of email and other electronic communications. I have remarked before about how a great many people seem to lose all grasp of grammar, spelling and punctuation when they send emails, and Ms. Truss makes the same point. But this book is not just a lament for declining punctuational standards. There’s a lot of history about how we came to have the various symbols that we use to craft our writing. It’s very interesting and, yes, very funny.

Finally, a conversation with my boy, Thomas. Picture it: McDonald’s; Last Saturday; 11:45 AM.

Me: OK. After we finish eating we’re going to make stops at SAM’s, Wal-Mart, Bed, Bath & Beyond and Target. Then we should be able to go home.
Thomas: That’s gonna take forever! If I could invent a time machine, then we could skip all that and be home, with everything we need!
Me: Thomas, if you could invent a time machine, you’d be a billionaire.
Thomas: (Furrowing his brow.) No, Daddy. A “scientist.”

I guess he’s right…

A Bit of a Mixup…

I took some time off today to go down to the Festival of Trees, which benefits Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and had a good time. My wife was on the team that created my son’s school’s tree for the festival, and it won FIRST PLACE in the School division. Their tree beat out 99 other trees, which is pretty impressive.

But that’s not the mixup. We were looking at some displays of Christmas from other countries. When we came to the display for the Philippines the following conversation ensued between myself and my son, Thomas:

Me: Hey, Thomas. This one’s from the Philippines.
Thomas: Ooo, Daddy. Those are baaad people.
Me: …
Thomas: Baaad people.
Me: Oh! No, Thomas, you mean Philistines!

Just a wee tad bit different… 🙂

First Day At the New Company

Well, today was “Day One” of the new company. We spent all day in a conference room, trying to nail down what our “product” is, and boy did we make progress. After one particularly good session, I opined that “We came in with a kick-ass product, but now it’s way kick-assier.” That may well become our rallying cry… 😉 Seriously, today was an excellent day. We made major progress towards deciding exactly what we’re going to provide, and a little bit of the “how.” This is a very exciting time.

On an implementation note, I was originally planning on building the product using Struts, but after having lunch with a friend last Tuesday, and doing my own research, I’m about 93 2/3% certain that I’m actually going to use Tapestry. (Thanks, Tom!) I am about 2/5 of the way finished reading Tapestry in Action by the Tapestry creator, Howard Lewis Ship. It’s quite a bit different from Struts, and I really like the MVC model that it provides. It seems a lot more OO to me, and quite a bit simpler to work with and maintain.

New Company

Some of you who know me have already heard the news, but yesterday was my last day at BravePoint. A friend called me recently with an absolutely killer idea for a company. So I jumped. We officially start next Monday and I can’t wait. It’s just the two of us that constitute the company; he’s the business guy and I’m the technology guy. I can’t say what the product is (not yet, anyway), but it’s going to be huge. This is important work, and I’m very excited to get going.

Stay tuned for more details.

I Feel Much Safer Now…

I’m sitting at the Atlanta airport as I write this, on my way to Washington D.C. for RubyConf 2004 and I am not happy. First, I tried to check my one bag at the AirTran counter outside the terminal, but was told I couldn’t. No reason given. Then I went inside and queued up at the end of an enormous queue. After a minute or so, one of the guys who had been working the outside counter came in, saw me, and told me to go to a much shorter line. I did so, and was promptly accosted by a bitchy AirTran worker who told me to go back to the other line. I said “So why did the skycap tell me to get in this one?” “I ‘on’t kno,” was the response. She then ambled off to harass some more passengers. So, still in the short line, I make it to the counter very quickly, only to have the lady behind this counter say “This line is for people who already have boarding passes.” I ask her the same question, but she was most helpful and took me anyway. Very nice.

I then walk into the security area, noticing that there is virtually no line at all. When I present my id and boarding pass to the TSA guy, he tells me to follow him. He deposits me in a glass cattle chute with about 100 other people, hands me my pass, turns and leaves without another word. I quickly find out that I have been “randomly selected” to get man-handled by the TSA. I ended up waiting 40 minutes, 40 bloody minutes to get to the screening area. Several of the TSA members were downright rude, apparently drunk with power. After going through the metal detector, a TSA guy picks up my bag and the tray with my laptop, phone, etc, and takes it to yet another station. I am commanded to sit down by one asshole, who then heads off, presumably to bark at someone else.

My TSA handler then says “I’m gon’ search yo bag,” to which I respond, “OK…” as if I could refuse. Another handler then walk up, telling me what yoga poses to assume while he wands me. Then I get frisked. At this point the woman says “I’m gon’ test yo bag,” to which I respond, “OK….” She swiped some sort of cloth inside the bag, ambled off, then came back and told me that I was “free to go.” Thanks, let me take that perp walk again….

The Federal government, specifically the TSA, is doing everything it can to destroy air travel in this country. This “random screening” bullshit is nothing more than a touchy-feelie feel-good show. There are only two descriptions of people who should be screened:

  • people who look Arab or have Arab names
  • people who look Muslim or have Muslim names

Screw what people might think about gasp! “profiling.” The only people (and I use that word loosely) who are trying to commit terrorist acts against the United States are Muslims and Arabs. That’s it. I defy anyone to prove otherwise. (And don’t tell me that Timothy McVeigh was a “white Christian.”) If Muslims and Arabs don’t like the scrutiny, then they need to start cleaning house with their own people. Forcing little old ladies and mild-mannered software developers to submit to this indignity does nothing to make the skies safer. All it does is piss off people like me and make me hate flying even more than I already do.

I used to love flying, but now I generally avoid it. I’m not alone. Some of the other people chosen to get the TSA Screw-Job were saying that they only fly if the drive is more than 6 hours. I’m in the same camp.

On the upside, my flight pushed back from the jetway at precisely the time specified, and then 10 minutes later we were in the air. We then landed 30 minutes before the specified time on the ticket. Wow. I then rode some enormous double-wide bus to get to baggage claim, which was interesting. A quick ride to the Enterprise rental agency, then a 15 minute drive, and I’m at my hotel. Now to relax…

Contrails or… Chemtrails?!?

I took these photos this morning on my way to work, around 0730. The first is taken from the car, as I was about to pull into my office’s parking lot. The other is taken from behind my building in the parking lot, about 4 minutes later. Those are contrails, though the Tin-Foil Hat Brigade will have you believe they are actually chemtrails; a sinister government plot to dump chemicals on unsuspecting citizens. Yawn… I will say that I’ve never seen contrails quite like those before, so similar and so close together, unless it was sky-writing. Anyway, I thought the trails were interesting… (Click for a larger version.)

Cirque du Soleil: Alegria

We went to see Cirque du Soleil: Alegria in Atlanta last night. O boy, what a show. It was awesome, though I believe the La Nouba show at Disney World is awesome-er. The music of Alegria is wonderful, but the show is just not quite as “big” as La Nouba. Most of the acts have a single actor focus, whereas in La Nouba most of the acts featured multiple actors doing something at the same time, with lots of “etc” stuff going on all over the stage. The “Russian Bars” segment and the “power track” trampolines were incredible to watch. The clowns are quite funny and entertaining. I would definitely go see it again. Thomas was ready to see it again as soon as he realized it was over… 🙂