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10226
Hey Chuck:

Welcome to the Realm of the Penguin!

I'll be following your blog with a great deal of interest. Thanks for sharing your experiences with us.


as for linux section.. we keep almost making one..  can't find the thread where we discussed it.. anyone know the thread i'm talking about?

Yup.

https://www.donation...ex.php?topic=13656.0 8)

10227
Living Room / Re: Star Trek 2009 - Discussion [SPOILERS]
« Last post by 40hz on May 31, 2009, 12:53 PM »
Not a bad film. It's entertaining.

Whoever was responsible for the set design does, however, deserve special credit. Especially for the interior stage sets, which are much better done than in any of the previous films. At long last the engineering sections of the ship actually look functional and to scale. Very nicely done overall. :up:

As far as story goes, the screenplay is moderately flawed (artistically and technically) in several places. It strongly believe could have been done a lot better. But even with the flaws, and occasional 'predictabilites,' it's still a decent action flick.

Maybe it's not good enough to rate a "Don't Miss" tag, but it's still good enough to be worth paying the $10 I did to see it up on the 'big screen.'

(Disclaimer: I'm neither a Trekkie nor a Trek fanboy - but I grew up with the series so I still retain a certain nostalgic fondness for the franchise.)

10229
General Software Discussion / Re: Google announces Google Wave
« Last post by 40hz on May 29, 2009, 02:56 PM »
I see you already found it  ;D
10230
Must have some Firefly fans among the developers.

"Get on the Cortex and send out a wave" was a common bit of dialog in the series.

In case you missed the show: 8)

The Cortex is a complex interplanetary network comprised of nodes and access points. In general, you can locate someone within a ship's orbit via node tracking - but from there, unless they are using landlines to connect, it's generally very difficult to pinpoint someone's location with only a Cortex trace.

A wave is an real time or recorded audio-visual transmission sent over the Cortex. Full audio and visual waves are generally only available within major Alliance systems. Once a spaceship has left a major system, or is traveling in a system too unimportant and poor to have a Cortex beacon, the sender must resort to more primitive means of communications.
10231
I don't know how many DoCo members either run their own tech businesses, or are responsible for tech sales or support, but this YouTube vid had me laughing out loud. Not to say that all tech companies are without fault with their ridiculous licensing, draconian upgrade pricing, and oftentimes poor customer service. But for people and organizations who are trying to provide quality products and services at reasonable and realistic prices, much of this clip will be all to too familiar.


YouTube.gif

The Vendor Client relationship - in real world situations

Link: http://www.youtube.c.../watch?v=R2a8TRSgzZY

I especially like the guy (above) who keeps reiterating "C'mon work with me on this." and "This is not a challenge, this is an opportunity." as he tries sell the sales clerk on a bad deal. Every year I get into two or three of these exact same discussions with people who have no intention of being anything other than a one-time client.

 ;D

(Thx to Cliff over at Xerox for sending me the link!)
10232
General Software Discussion / FilghtAware website tracks flights in realtime
« Last post by 40hz on May 27, 2009, 08:59 AM »
FlightAware is a truly amazing website.

Ars Technica has a writeup including some behind the scenes technical information from the developers.

Link to article: http://arstechnica.c...plane-in-the-air.ars

FlightAware is an incredible mashup of radar data, air traffic controller records, flight plans, and maps. Like any great mashup, it provides the public with a new window into an opaque room, and usage has exploded—often in surprising ways. But this is no ordinary mashup; FlightAware sucks in more than 1GB of new data every day, tracking almost every commercial flight in the US almost in real-time, and maintaining a historical database that now tops 60 million flights.

This is a reduced image of flights surrounding Bradley International Airport in my home state.

airtrakt.gif

And here's a friend of mine's flight out of there today as he heads off to Minn/StPaul International on business. 8)

(Safe trip, Mike! :Thmbsup:)

airtrak2.gif

Link to FlightAware: http://flightaware.com/




10233
There are two routes you can take - either bridging two wireless routers together, or setting up a wireless distribution system (WDS).

The easiest way to do this is to use two WAP Routers that already support a bridge mode. Check the documentation for what you have and look for a MODE function that  usually toggles between something like "Access Point" and "something Bridge" (client bridge, bridge mode, etc.) In this scenario, clients on the second "bridged" AP get their DHCP services and Internet connection from the primary AP.

Here are two links to get you started. The pages aren't too well laid out, and they use DD-WRT modified Linksys routers for their example. But the information is solid, and the concepts can be extrapolated to (hopefully) use whatever you have.

Info on bridging: http://www.wi-fiplan.../article.php/3639271

Info on WDS: http://www.wi-fiplan.../article.php/3628576

You'll also need to beef up the antennae. There are a bunch of DIY designs out on the web. A quick Google will get you dozens of hits. I've built a few using the information on this page:

http://www.turnpoint...s/cantennahowto.html

I've pointed two of these at each other between two buildings about 100' apart and have been generally happy with the results.

For long distances, you'd likely need to use a true directional antenna. These can also be made at home. Can't speak for how easy or hard it is to do one of these since I've never built one.

Luck! :Thmbsup:

10234
Looks like none other than the U.S.Army idecided to upgrade to Vista according to the folks over @ Daily Tech :)

Link to full article: http://www.dailytech...le.aspx?newsid=15217

Army will upgrade all its computers to Vista by December

For those critics who bill Microsoft's Windows Vista a commercial failure for failing to surpass Windows XP in sales, and inability to capitalize in the netbook market, perhaps they should reserve judgment a bit longer.  Just as Windows 7 hype is reaching full swing in preparation for a October release, the U.S. Army announced that like many large organizations, it will wait on upgrading to Windows 7.  However, unlike some, it is planning a major upgrade -- to Windows Vista.

The U.S. Army currently has 744,000 desktop computers, most of which run Windows XP.  Currently only 13 percent of the computers have upgraded to Windows Vista, according Dr. Army Harding, director of Enterprise Information Technology Services.

ChinaArmy2.jpg
10235
Living Room / Re: Things your kids will never know - old school tech!
« Last post by 40hz on May 25, 2009, 10:12 PM »
One thing they will never know (unless they develop an interest in electronics or go for an EE degree) is the joys of getting down and dirty on a fundamental level with computer hardware.

Anybody remember the Kim-1 single-board computer trainer kits? Don Lancaster, who was one of the earliest computer hardware columnists, used to wax poetic about starting with one of these. I took his advice and never looked back. I spent many hours on this little monster back in the days when you did machine code in actual machine code. Assemblers? "We didn't need no steenkin' assemblers!" Back then, a code monitor was considered pretty posh.

kim1-ad.jpg

kim1-board.jpg

I cut my programming teeth on the 6502. After working out a simple program (and laboriously keying it in) you could actually envision the bits and bytes streaming down the circuit traces on that ugly green board. Almost felt like a mystical experience, except it came partnered with a pretty good neck cramp and watery eyes since it took forever to key the code in.

Much like the fans of vintage radios, there are people still  in love with the Kim-1. Here's a link to one Kim-1 enthusiast site for anyone who's interested: http://www.kim-1.com/index.html

In looking back, I'm glad I was there when this stuff first came out. That being said, I wouldn't want to go back there for anything. ;D

10236
Living Room / Re: What annoys you to no end?
« Last post by 40hz on May 25, 2009, 09:08 PM »
W.S. Gibert put it very nicely in his classic poem If You're Anxious for to Shine in the High Aesthetic Line


...

If you're anxious for to shine in the high aesthetic line as a man of culture rare,
You must get up all the germs of the transcendental terms, and plant them
     everywhere.

You must lie upon the daisies and discourse in novel phrases of your complicated
     state of mind.

The meaning doesn't matter if it's only idle chatter of a transcendental kind.
                      
                      And everyone will say,
                      As you walk your mystic way,

"If this young man expresses himself in terms too deep for me,

Why, what a very singularly deep young man this deep young man must be!"

...


Now I could try to do it better
Using words with many letters,
To construct a clever verse or two.

But it seems a bloody waste
When I can do a 'cut and paste,'
And share a better poet's poem with you!

 ;D
10237
Living Room / Re: Wow wowowowowow!!!!
« Last post by 40hz on May 25, 2009, 11:12 AM »
I'll take my AWESOME grilled with a generous dollop of Wow-Wow Sauce (from the Nanny Ogg Cookbook); served up with a nice sharp cheddar on the side. Add a jar of rich brown ale to help these merry companions on their way and all is right with the world.

 :Thmbsup:
10238
Living Room / Re: What annoys you to no end?
« Last post by 40hz on May 24, 2009, 10:45 AM »
People who use big words, or words that are very uncommon, to attempt to show their intelligence, education level, or just sound smart. This annoys me because 9 times out of 10 the words are not necessary. Yes, you may be a very educated person, but you do not need to attempt to prove it every time you talk, post, or express yourself.

I sympathize with this to a degree. However, once a word enters your vocabulary, it becomes PART of your vocabulary (and therefore come naturally in conversation/writing) and 1. it'd be a shame not to use it! and 2. sometimes high falutin' words just get the idea across more efficiently and accurately. Thus, I don't think that ALL big words are used because posters are attempting to show off - maybe using the big word just feels natural to them and conveys their thoughts most accurately?

+1. I love unusual, archaic, oddball words. I sort of collect them although I usually scale my vocabulary to whomever I talking to. For those friends of mine who love words, anything goes. We collect and trade them back and forth. No harm intended.

Besides, what's the point of speaking English (which contains the world's largest number of words) unless you can also play with it?

10239
gothic (server admin of donationcoder) likes Redmine and wrote about it here:
https://www.donation...ex.php?topic=14117.0

it's sort of a combo bugtracking, wiki, ticket system.  however i think it's more focused to groups using it internally with registered users, rather than having lots of anonymous people submitting tickets.

Redmine can be a bit of a bear to set up.

One of the easiest ways to do it is to download a (free) preconfigured 'stack' from Bitnami.

Link: http://bitnami.org/s...itNami+Redmine+Stack

Check out their other stacks while you're there. Excellent tools. :Thmbsup:




10240
Living Room / Re: poor? Pay up!
« Last post by 40hz on May 22, 2009, 11:17 AM »
Its different when you have kids.

Truer words were never spoken.

Whole industries have grown up around exploiting a parent's guilt and their desire to do what's best for their children. That sort of thing hurts the middle-class parent. But when it comes to cash strapped parents, it does a lot more than hurt. It also draws blood.



10241
PStart, Portable Notepad++  and all the NirSoft and Sysinternals apps on the biggest USB stick you can afford.

If you're a network or server tech, don't leave home without it. :Thmbsup:
10242
Living Room / Re: poor? Pay up!
« Last post by 40hz on May 22, 2009, 10:51 AM »
This little 5" screen is what keeps my husband out of my hair and off my lap while I am trying to use my computer.

Sorry to hear that. :(

I'm in a more fortunate position in that regard. Should my beloved climb on my lap and get in my hair while I'm using a computer, I'd immediately switch it off in order to pursue some more "interesting" activities. ;)

(I could use the exercise anyway...  :-[ )

10243
Living Room / Re: poor? Pay up!
« Last post by 40hz on May 22, 2009, 09:30 AM »
Or are they poor because they make unwise financial decisions such as using a "payday loan" to buy things before they have the money?

Many times, logically "poor" financial decisions are made out of necessity. While it may be unwise to get a so-called payday loan, needing to buy food on Monday when you won't get paid until Friday might have a lot to do with your final decision. Same for rent when you have a due date that comes before your paycheck - and you have a landlord that will use even a one day delay as grounds for breaking your lease, and either asking you to leave or deciding to up your rent as a result. Or skipping a MasteCard payment one month (and taking a hit on your credit score) because you desperately needed to see a dentist, and you didn't have insurance coverage? Which you also decided let go until it became very serious (and much more expensive!) because you didn't have the money because you were paying off some back utility bills.

See how it works? Once you get behind in one area, the whole house starts falling down around your ears. That's the problem with not having money. All it takes is one unforeseen problem requiring cash to start the dominoes tumbling.

I agree that poverty is more a state of mind than a state of grace. I too have often been 'broke,' yet I have never once considered myself 'poor.' But I was brought up by a family that believed in the American Dream with a faith that bordered on religious mania. And through no merit on my part, I inherited their belief, along with an unfortunate genetic propensity for developing heart disease. (You always get some bad with the good. ;D)

Had I had grown up in a family that had suffered the "slings of misfortune" over the generations, I'm sure I wouldn't have been so optimistic. And while it's easy to tell people that they should change the way they think, I'm sure we can all agree that changing our basic attitudes is a lot harder than it looks.

Just my 2¢. (Actually, can I owe it to you until Monday?   ;D)

10244
General Software Discussion / Re: SIMPOL is here!
« Last post by 40hz on May 21, 2009, 10:47 PM »
I know if I was attempting to launch something like SIMPOL and the consumers were being "turned off" by my website I would sure want to know, IMHO.

Just a thought.
-CodeTRUCKER (May 21, 2009, 06:18 PM)

Oh, that's just me being a prick! ;D I once had career as an accountant, and (later) a corporate financial planner in a Fortune 500 company. I even have a piece of parchment with some beautifully engraved paragraphs in Latin attesting to a degree in the same - so I tend to get a mite opinionated and ornery when it comes to financial software.

I think the thing that bothered me was that the website wasn't really finished. When you are planning on releasing a product to the business community, you really can't afford to have links dead-ending, downloads not easily available, or confusing navigation. Far better to hold off until you're ready to roll.

And the amount of information required for registration is ridiculous, not to mention flying in the face of everything we've learned about how to conduct that sort of thing. In this day and age, site registrations should require little (if anything) more than a valid e-mail address.

If they're serious about this, they need to get familiar with the best practices of the software industry. Right now they're releasing a relatively unknown and somewhat unusual product in a crowded and mature market. If it were my product, I'd consider it time to be running in full evangelistic mode, whereby I'd be doing everything I could to get my product into as many hands as possible in order to create product awareness and some buzz in the press.

They need to provide easily obtainable downloads, minimal registration hassles, a newsletter chock full of useful information and case studies, and a ton of sample applications for people to look at and build on. In short, they need to come out with both guns blazing if they hope to be anything more than a niche product. Taking a high-brow marketing approach seldom works. One superb business application (Javelin Plus) made the mistake of doing that back in the days of DOS, and is now remembered as an interesting bit of software history rather than the application that perfected and ultimately replaced the ordinary spreadsheet.

FWIW, I did pop a few suggestions over to them. It will be interesting to see how they react.

I intend to give this little urchin of theirs a tryout, although I think their asking price of $499 for the "Pro" version is a little on the proud side. Be interesting to see how well that number works out for them.

Also, thanks for finding and sharing your find on the forum 'CT'. I sometimes wonder what's become of a few apps that seemed to have disappeared over the years. Superbase was one of them. :up:

 8)

10245
Living Room / Re: poor? Pay up!
« Last post by 40hz on May 21, 2009, 09:58 PM »
Right in keeping with something noted by many financial planners and counselors:

Once your net worth exceeds one million dollars, "The System" starts working for you rather than the other way around. So the name of the game is to get your net worth up above $1 million as quickly as possible. Because once you hit that million, it becomes relatively easy to move up to $10 million and beyond. Once you're a millionaire you become eligible for tax breaks, investment opportunities, and favorable credit terms only offered to the very wealthy. Our society is set up to reward what it considers "success."

As Steven Schwartz so nicely put it in the song All for the Best from the musical Godspell:

Some men are born to live at ease,
Doing what they please,
Richer than the bees are in honey...

Never growing old,
Never feeling cold,
Pulling pots of gold from thin air.

They are the best in every town,
Best at shaking down
Best at making mountains of money...

They can't take it with them, but what do they care?

They get the center of the meat,
Cushions on their seat
Houses on a street where it's sunny...

Summers by the sea,
Winters warm and free
All of that, and we get the rest...

Yes, who is this land for?
The sun and the sand for?
You guessed!

It's all for The Best...

Probably be a lot funnier if it weren't so sadly true.  :-\

10246
Terrific find. Beyond cool!  8)

Thanks for sharing it. :)

10247
This just showed up at Daily Cup of Tech.

http://www.dailycupo.../science-news-cycle/

PhdComics.gif

Looks about right to me.  ;D

(That's why I've stopped listening to most broadcast news shows.  8))

10248
General Software Discussion / Re: SIMPOL is here!
« Last post by 40hz on May 21, 2009, 11:28 AM »
And I also get suspicious of the somewhat dumbing-down they've got going - "you're probably too dumb to use C/Java, but you can sure use our product" >_<.

Perhaps I'm being a bit elitist here, but I wouldn't trust software by an author who feels java is too complicated. Especially not if that software has anything to do with billing, money, etc.

Good point.  :up:

But then again, weren't spreadsheet programs and their so-called "macro" and scripting features developed for business people who were "too dumb" to learn how to write financial programs using a "real" computer language like COBOL, FORTRAN, RPG III, or C? I remember being told that by my corporate IT guys when Lotus 1-2-3 first came out and I was on the steering committee that blessed-off on licensing and deploying it company-wide.

Seems the IT guys where I worked were getting worried about how the MBAs were now able to do their own financial modeling and analysis without having to petition the IT department for a programmer or mainframe time.

FWIW I don't think 'closed' or 'proprietary' should be automatic deal breakers for software intended for use in developing financial apps. There are few software products more proprietary or closed than spreadsheets. But that doesn't prevent a huge number of companies from depending on MS Excel for critical financial information and analysis.

Unfortunately (at least from my experience) a lot of financial people make the mistake of using a database when they should be using a spreadsheet; and a spreadsheet when they should be using a database. And then there are all those cases when you really need an app whose function lies somewhere in between.

I think SIMPOL is looking to fill the platform gap for business cases which can't be adequately handled by either a standalone spreadsheet or a small database app.


Just my 2¢

---

P.S. You are right about the product name, the website, and the overall marketing. It doesn't exactly inspire confidence.
10249
bob-and-bob.jpg

"We personally believe Mouser is executive material."

10250
you up for something like that?

sure.

however my limited experience with companies tells me they won't approve it unless i charge them a very high fee for a corporate site license.  that seems to be the main way they know it's legitimate software  :D

and so i will include a bill for $10,000.

Mouser! This is large, hulking, no-brain corporate IT you're gonna talk to.

Stop thinking so small. 8)

Make it at least $50K for the initial license plus $7K for annual maintenance and upgrades. Play your cards right and they might even cough up an additional $10K for 'training' and 'support' tokens.

(Don't laugh. I've seen some of the Big Boys go for deals as ridiculous just to get the issue off their desks. They were going on vacation the following week and wanted it 'done' before they left.  ;) )

pricelinescreenshot.190.jpg

"Now you're negotiating!"
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