Month: April 2013

Saturday, 20 April 2013

08:58 – I watched with disgust last night as the authorities captured the second muslim terrorist alive instead of gunning him down as he so richly deserved. I kept thinking how unfortunate it was that the cops used flash-bang grenades instead of fragmentation grenades. Or they could have just done a Bonnie & Clyde on that boat, and put a thousand rounds or so through it.


10:51 – Barbara brought her sister’s failed desktop system home the other day. At first I thought it was a dead power supply, but replacing it did no good. I suspect a dead motherboard, and the system is old enough that it made no sense to replace a bunch of components. Instead, I just picked one of the systems sitting under the table in my office. That turned out to be an old system that we’d built as a project system for (I think) the second edition of the Perfect PC book. The system is old, but it has almost zero time on it. When I fired it up, it sounded like a leaf blower. Barbara said it didn’t sound all that loud to her, and Frances said they didn’t care because the system sits in a spare bedroom where it wouldn’t bother anyone. So I went ahead and installed Linux Mint 13 LTS on it, which gives me four years of not having to worry about updating the OS. Frances and her husband are stopping over sometime today so we can get their email, Skype, and so on set up. Right now, it’s in Barbara’s office, connected to her peripherals and Ethernet cable.

As long as I have Barbara’s system disconnected, I’m going to go ahead and swap it out for her new system. The old one is a hex-core processor with lots of memory, and was originally intended to replace my main system. Barbara’s old system failed, and the hex-core system was just sitting there, so she’s been using it for the last year or more. It’s much more system than she needs, so I built an Intel Atom system for her to replace it. The hex-core then moves to my office to replace the antique Core2 Quad 9650 that’s currently my main system. Barbara uses little more than email and browser on her office system, so a quad-core Atom is more than sufficient.

I’ve already done several backups of her hard drive, so once I pull the hex-core system from her office, I’ll put her current hard drive on the shelf, replace it with a 3 TB drive, and install Linux Mint 13 LTS on my new main system.

Read the comments: 20 Comments

Friday, 19 April 2013

07:38 – Congratulations to the FBI and Boston Police. It took them only three days to identify and track down the two terrorists responsible for the Boston Marathon bombings. As I write this, one of the terrorists is dead, killed in a shootout last night, and the other is the subject of a massive manhunt. Unfortunately, a police officer was also killed last night and another seriously injured. Let’s hope the cops track down and kill the other terrorist before he hurts anyone else. In what comes as no great surprise, it appears that the two terrorists are brothers from Turkey or Chechnya, which means they’re almost certainly islamic.


08:31 – When I was adding money to Barbara’s PlatinumTel prepaid cell-phone account the other day, I checked their phone offerings. Barbara’s phone used to be my phone, so when hers died I just gave her mine. I’d intended to order another of the same model, but they didn’t have any in stock at the time. So I’ve been checking periodically to find that or a similar model. I wanted a clamshell phone with no gimmicks. All I wanted was a simple four-banger phone to make and receive calls, something that folded so that I could just put it in my pocket without worry about cracking the screen or whatever. But for several months PlatinumTel had nothing on offer other than models with slide-out keyboards and various smartphones. The other day they had $30 Alcatel One-Touch 665 phones in stock, so I ordered one for myself. I so seldom need a cell phone that this one is ideal. No contract, $0.05/minute, and very simple to operate.


11:09 – I’m hoping they don’t capture the second terrorist. That just means a trial and prison. That’s too good for him. Ideally, I’d take him alive and feed him, slowly and feet-first, into a wood chipper. But we all know that’s not going to happen. They haven’t even cut off the first terrorist’s head and posted it on a pike. So about the best we can hope for is that the cops shoot the second one and that he dies in agony before he gets to the hospital. The hospital! Why on earth did they even bother to transport the first terrorist to a hospital instead of letting him bleed to death on the street?

I’ve been reading The Grass Crown, the second in Colleen McCullough’s First Man in Rome series. Last night, I was reading a section covering the Social (Marsic) War. The Roman commander besieged an Italian town held by the rebels, who thought their water supply was secure. It wasn’t, but only because the Romans undertook a massive engineering feat to stop the flow of the river from which the town got its water. Eventually, they surrendered. The Roman commander proceeded to order the slaughter every adult male in town, and then turned out the women and children without food into the war-torn landscape to starve and freeze to death. Another Roman commander took another besieged rebel town, whereupon he set up an assembly line with 100 of his legionaries flogging all of the rebel men. After the flogging, they moved down the assembly line to another section, where 100 more of his legionaries beheaded those who’d already been flogged. The commander then turned the women of the town over to his legionaries to be raped and then killed. And, at that, the Roman commander was being merciful because these were Italians, who’d until recently been friends and allies of Rome. If he had wanted to, the Roman commander could have ordered all of the rebels to be crucified instead of being put to the sword.

This was during the late Republic. From Julius Caesar’s time onward, Rome had even less of a sense of humor about rebellion and particularly killing Roman citizens. Perhaps unsurprisingly, people thought long and hard before doing anything to piss off Rome. I think it’s time we considered emulating Rome in that respect. Crucifying muslim terrorists would be a good start.


21:17 – As of mid-afternoon, Barbara was planning to leave work at 3:30 and head home. We were planning to take Colin to the vet for his annual checkup. Then the USWS issued a tornado watch for the afternoon through 9:00 p.m., so Barbara called to reschedule the vet appointment for next Friday. At that point, she planned to stop at the supermarket on the way home and have a relaxing evening, assuming the hospital would release her dad tomorrow.

Relaxing evening. Some joke. The hospital decided to release Barbara’s dad this afternoon with almost no notice. So she went over there to pick him up and take him back to their apartment. But Dutch needs to be on IV antibiotics for a week or ten days longer, so the hospital was supposed to send a supply home with them. Barbara or Frances would have to change the supply container once a day. I wasn’t crazy about that idea. Someone who’s on IV antibiotics should be in the hospital, with qualified medical staff administering the drugs. The last time this happened, Barbara called in tears because she’d made one minor mistake in the procedure. She thought she’d killed her dad. I told her then that she or her sister shouldn’t be doing this; a nurse should be doing it.

That was bad enough, but it got worse. The hospital was supposed to send over a supply of the drug to Dutch and Sankie’s apartment, and then have a nurse come to teach them how to administer it. Well, the nurse showed up, but the supply of drugs didn’t. And to make matters even worse, the drug supply container has to be changed every 24 hours, at 8:00 p.m. Not during the day when the visiting nurse could do it, or at least Barbara or Frances could do it with less inconvenience, but specifically at 8:00 p.m., which means that Barbara or Frances would have to drive over there specially every evening at 8:00 p.m.

So of course my first thought was that they should just discard the first container before it was empty and substitute a full one, which would allow them to change the daily time from 8:00 p.m. back to something a bit more convenient. No dice, Barbara said. The hospital would provide only the number of containers needed to do things on the schedule they mandated.

Not that that turns out to matter much, because the hospital released Dutch knowing that he couldn’t even stand with his walker, let alone walk or even get out of a chair. Barbara assumed, of course, that they’d had him up and walking every day. They hadn’t. He’d been in bed constantly for the entire week. He’s completely helpless, and needs someone who’s able to physically manhandle him into and out of his chair and so on.

But of course the hospital never did bother sending over the drugs that Barbara and Frances are supposed to adminster. So I got a call from Barbara about 8:35, saying she was at the hospital emergency room with her dad, pleading with them to give him the drug that they say is so important he get at 8:00 every evening.

Then, adding insult to injury, the hospital tells Barbara that they wanted to release Dutch to a nursing home, but Barbara refused to allow them to do so. She told them that she’d done no such thing. When the social worker called earlier in the week, she said the hospital planned to release Dutch to a nursing home so that he could get physical therapy. Barbara told the social worker that the physical therapy, and occupational therapy as well, could be done at her parents’ apartment.

What concerned me the most was that Barbara said as soon as the emergency room gave her dad the IV antibiotic, she was going to drive him home. Presumably she intends to stay the night, since Dutch sure can’t be there on his own or with just Sankie. I told her she should tell the hospital to keep her father until he’s actually in a fit state to be discharged, and that doesn’t include being on IV antibiotics or being unable to rise from a chair. She said the hospital told her they couldn’t refuse treatment, but Dutch would have to pay for it. Bastards. They had no business discharging him in the first place.

Read the comments: 21 Comments

Thursday, 18 April 2013

07:58 – The lead article in our morning paper is about the efforts of local Republican state legislator Debra Conrad (formerly Conrad-Shrader; apparently she’s gotten a divorce) and a large group of other Republican state legislators to pass a bill that would (a) allow medical personnel to refuse to participate in performing abortions, and (b) allow employers to exclude contraception coverage from the health insurance they provide to employees. In other words, they’re striving to make North Carolina just like North Dakota, which has, de facto if not de jure, outlawed abortion.

Conceptually (so to speak), I have no problem with either of the measures in their bill. Medical personnel should be free to refuse to perform abortions, just as their employers should be free to fire such people, who are refusing to do their jobs. And employers should not be forced to provide medical insurance that covers contraception. Indeed, they should not be forced to provide medical insurance at all. I’m all in favor of personal freedom. But this bill isn’t about increasing personal freedoms. To the contrary, it’s all about restricting personal freedoms.

This bill is really about forcing women to have babies whether they want to or not. What these maniacs would really like to do, if they could get away with it, is outlaw contraception and abortion, period. In fact, I suspect they’d like to make it illegal for women to refuse to have sex. The only purpose of women, as far as they’re concerned, is to produce babies. Lots of babies, who can then be raised to be good little Christians. Preferably Southern Baptist.


13:03 – I’m glad someone said it: Godless in Boston mourn, too


16:20 – Oh, my. Cyprus has now decided that their bailout isn’t a done deal, but requires approval of their legislature. It’s anyone’s guess what the legislature will decide, but anti-EU feeling is certainly rampant among the legislature, reflecting the feelings of the general population. From the point of view of many Cypriots, dealing with the EU after the bad faith the EU has shown them is simply feeding the hand that bites them. If Cyprus decides not to participate in the bailout, the ECB can no longer legally support Cyprus, which then crashes out of the euro in a matter of days. That’s assuming that Merkel doesn’t order the ECB to continue supporting Cyprus until after she’s re-elected, or so she hopes. In reality, Merkel’s re-election is by no means certain.

Read the comments: 44 Comments

Wednesday, 17 April 2013

07:55 – All we can do now is wait for the FBI to determine who committed this outrage. If there’s one thing the FBI is good at, it’s accumulating and sorting through huge amounts of data, which is what they’re doing right now. FBI analysts are going through thousands of business surveillance and cell-phone videos and photographs frame by frame, looking for images of the person or people who placed the bombs. Eventually, they’ll have recognizable images of the perpetrator or perpetrators, and at that point things will begin to unravel quickly for the terrorist or terrorists. Someone will recognize and identify one or more of the people in the images, and a massive manhunt will be underway. Let’s hope the criminals aren’t taken alive.

Meanwhile, for most of us, life goes on. UPS showed up yesterday with the 2,000 beakers I was waiting for, along with some other stuff I had on backorder. Over the next few days, I’ll be doing final assembly on a few dozen more science kits. I’ll also be checking out Barbara’s sister’s desktop Linux box, which needs to be repaired or replaced. Fortunately, Frances does most of her computing on her pad and her husband uses a notebook, so they’re not in a big rush to get this system back. I can take my time and get it right.


Read the comments: 62 Comments

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

07:40 – There doesn’t appear to be a lot of hard information available yet about the Boston Marathon bombings. After watching video of the event, my first impression is that this is very unlikely to be state-sponsored terrorism. Although so far no group has claimed responsibility, I think it’s more likely to be domestic terrorists like a lunatic-fringe anti-abortion group or white separatists. From the appearance of the explosions, the bombs appear to have been small and crude, perhaps something as simple as a kilo or two of black powder surrounded by ball bearings. The brilliant white flash one expects from a detonation of high explosives was missing, and there was far too much smoke. If I’m right, these devices could have been built by almost anyone, using materials they could have purchased at a Home Depot.


07:59 – I’m surprised that we haven’t yet heard any demands for new bomb-control legislation.

Read the comments: 43 Comments

Monday, 15 April 2013

07:58 – We still don’t know exactly what the problem is with Barbara’s dad. At one point yesterday they were talking about moving him to the ICU, but they decided not to, so he’s on a regular floor. They started antibiotics immediately, in case his lung infection is bacterial, but we won’t know for sure until the results of the culture come back. At this point, it appears that Dutch isn’t in any immediate danger.

We’d planned to do a Costco run and have dinner with our friends Paul and Mary yesterday. Barbara was adamant that we proceed with our plans, even if I had to go without her. But she called from the hospital around 2:30 and said she was on her way home. So we went to Costco and then out to dinner normally, and then came back home so Barbara could watch the end of the Masters golf tournament. Barbara’s going to work late this morning. She has to stop over at her parents’ apartment to pick up the checkbook and her mom, drop her mom at the hospital, and drop a couple of checks at her parents’ accountant’s office to send in with her parents’ tax returns.

All of the neighborhood dogs know that I carry dog treats when I’m walking Colin. Sophie, Kim’s 5-month-old Yorkie, learned that the first time I gave her one, and now every time we visit Kim and Sophie Sophie begs shamelessly for treats, standing with her front paws on my leg and bouncing up and down. I always give Colin his treat first, because to give Sophie hers first would offend Colin’s sense of order. He is, after all, both the senior dog and my dog.

So, yesterday, I was handing a treat to Colin, but we dropped it. Colin bent his head down to pick it up off the sidewalk, but Sophie got to the treat at the same time Colin did. She lost the struggle for the treat, of course. Colin is 15 or 20 times her weight, and her whole body is about the size of his head. But I was amazed that he didn’t even growl or show his fangs at her, even though she was literally trying to pull the treat out of Colin’s mouth. Kim was watching fearfully and probably assumed her puppy was about to be eaten. After seeing what didn’t happen, I told Kim that if she needed any evidence that Colin wouldn’t hurt Sophie she’d just gotten it in spades.


11:08 – Barbara just called to let me know she’d gotten to work. Her dad is doing better. He has pneumonia, again, but it appears to be responding to antibiotics. He’s still very confused. He told Barbara he’d been in the hospital for two days and they’d given him nothing to eat. She tried to convince him that he’d just gone in yesterday afternoon and that they were in fact feeding him, but he’s as contrary as usual. Some of his confusion may be due to the illness and some to the antibiotics they have him on. They’re moving him from intermediate care to a regular room today.

Read the comments: 63 Comments

Sunday, 14 April 2013

09:01 – The taxes are in the mail, so I can forget about taxes for another year. Except, of course, for quarterly estimated tax payments, quarterly sales tax returns, and so on.

Barbara and I are watching The L Word and series five of Mad Men. Both are excellent, but The L Word is the better of the two. Oddly, it appears that only one of the actresses playing major roles in The L Word is actually gay. Several of the others are married (to men) according to Wikipedia. A couple of the primary actresses have never been married, but that of course says nothing one way or the other. I’m rather surprised that there was no outcry from the gay community, or at least none that I heard about. Having straight actresses playing lesbians seems a bit like having white people playing blacks.

Mad Men, as always, is well written but very dark and depressing. Nearly all of the major characters are weasels or weaselettes. The one exception is Megan Draper, wife of the lead character, played by Canadian actress Jessica Paré. What is it about Canada that it turns out so many adorable women? I think we should invade Canada and steal their women. In return, we can give them some of ours. I have a list, starting with some female politicians who are frequently mentioned in the comments here.


14:31 – Barbara got a call from her sister about 1:30. Her dad apparently collapsed at lunch and the EMTs were on the way. Frances told Barbara to meet them at the hospital, so Barbara got dressed and headed for the hospital. Frances is driving Sankie to the hospital. At this point, we have no idea how serious Dutch’s condition is. Of course, Dutch is 90 years old, and we all fear the worst.


15:00 – Barbara just called from the emergency room. Her dad is okay. He had a temperature around 103F (39.5C), which is enough to make a young person feel pretty ill, let alone someone who’s 90. The EMTs also had a hard time finding a pulse. Barbara says he not in any serious danger now other than the obvious for someone 90. They’ll probably admit him. Barbara is going to come home. As she said, there’s nothing she can do there.

Read the comments: 14 Comments

Saturday, 13 April 2013

08:46 – I’ll mail the tax returns today. At least I didn’t have to write a big check to the state. I did have to write a big check to the feds, to go along with the big checks I’ve been writing to them every quarter for estimated taxes. Grrrr.

I just got a UPS Ship Notification email to let me know that the 2,000 beakers I ordered the other day will arrive Tuesday. That’s a big relief, because I’ve been watching our stock of finished biology and chemistry kits dwindle, with no way to build more kits until the beakers arrive. The moment the beakers show up, I’ll get started on building two dozen more biology kits, followed by two or three dozen more chemistry kits. With what’s on hand, that should be enough to carry us for the next 30 days or so, by which time we’ll have bigger batches of kits ready to assemble.


Read the comments: 46 Comments

Friday, 12 April 2013

12:19 – The news reports over the last couple of days have said that the Troika was requiring Cyprus to sell its gold reserves, about €400 million worth. As it turns out, they’re not requiring Cyprus to sell those reserves; they’re requiring Cyprus to transfer all its gold reserves to the ECB. In other words, the ECB is robbing Cyprus of its gold at gunpoint. Why is that, I wonder. Could it be that the eurocrats realize that Cyprus has already been pushed too far, and may well decide simply to leave the euro? If so, having those gold reserves would make it easier for Cyprus to return to a national currency. We can’t have that, can we?

Merkel and the rest of the Northern Tier eurocrats are taking an increasingly hard-line approach toward funding bailouts. They’ve announced that under no circumstances will the Troika exceed the €10 billion they have already committed to. If that’s insufficient–and it is grossly insufficient–tough luck. They’ll let Cyprus collapse, convinced that there will be no “contagion”. They’re wrong, in spades, but that’s their attitude. Meanwhile, the other weakling members of the eurozone–particularly Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Slovenia–must have a deep sense of foreboding. The so-called “unity” of the eurozone is rock-solid, unless it’s going to end up costing Germany money. In that case, Germany will tell everyone else to get screwed. As I’ve been saying for a long time, ultimately the eurozone crisis is a cat fight about who’s going to get stuck paying the bills for this abomination of a currency. Germany is determined not to be the one stuck with the bill.


Read the comments: 16 Comments

Thursday, 11 April 2013

07:35 – Poor Cyprus. Until yesterday, everyone seemed to be agreed that Cyprus needed €17 billion to avoid bankruptcy. The Troika would provide €10 billion of that amount as a bailout loan, and Cyprus itself had to come up with the other €7 billion. That was sufficient to gut the Cypriot economy and bankrupt its large banks. But today it turns out that things were worse than first believed, boosting the required total to €23 billion. And Cyprus has to come up with the entire extra €6 billion, nearly doubling its required share. Meanwhile, the Troika expects the Cypriot economy to contract by a disastrous 8.8% in the next year. That’d be bad enough, but no one really believes that prediction. The Cypriot government itself is expecting a contraction closer to 13%, and most economists think even that’s extremely optimistic. My own guess is that a 30% to 40% contraction might turn out to be closer to reality. Poor Cyprus. Until recently, it appeared to be a reasonably prosperous country. Now, it makes the Greek economy look good. And Portugal and Slovenia are now teetering on the edge of collapse as well.

Work on science kits continues.


14:04 – As of this morning, I still had 600 each of the 50 mL and 100 mL plastic beakers on backorder with one of my main suppliers. This is a show-stopper for us. We’re out of those beakers, which are in every kit we offer, and we can’t build more kits of any type until we get more. So I just checked with another of our major suppliers, who had 6,000 of the 50 mL and 8,000 of the 100 mL beakers in stock. I just issued a PO for 1,000 of each and notified the first vendor to clear the backorder. A thousand of each is sufficient to build 500 of the CK01A chemistry kits or 1,000 of any of the other kits, so we should be in good shape for the next few months anyway. I hate tying up working capital and storage space on a lot of units of particular items, but not when the alternative is running out and ending up dead in the water.

Read the comments: 68 Comments
// ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- // end of file archive.php // -------------------------------------------------------------------------------