Mon. Jun. 24, 2024 – Monday Monday, so good to me…

Hot and humid, really hot and sunny. But there is still work to do, so I’ll do it like I did yesterday, when it was hot and humid… It was 98F in the shade and may have crossed 100F when I wasn’t looking.

It was too hot to be out in the sun without a hat. So I kept to the shade and took breaks. Also didn’t really exert myself or move quickly. I did make progress later in the day when the sun finally moved behind the trees and left my work area mostly in part shade. Even running the Portacool wasn’t enough to make it tolerable. Once the sun was blocked, the breeze felt cool. It is a bit deceptive though, as I still ended up dripping sweat.

I decided to keep parts of the fridge and put them on ebay. It’s striking how heavy duty the damned thing is. The wire shelves are about twice as thick as most, and the whole thing is heavier than you would expect. Even the doors were heavy. I really never liked it though, and always had to be tweaking the temp settings as the weather changed. I’ll pull the fan unit, and the light switch today. I need the light switch at the BOL for the garage fridge there. The freezer shelf looks like it might fit too.

I’m going to do pickups this morning and afternoon, then work on the garage later in the day when it’s cooler. I got some solar panels, some lawn mower stuff, a portable A/C unit, and a bunch of other household stuff. Kids are at GS camp, wife is on a business trip… cue the wild women…

Or I could work on my stacks. Yeah, better do that. Everything is spread out everywhere at the moment and it isn’t pretty. I need to get it sorted and put up. Only then can there be more stacking, with a side helping of USING some of the stacked stuff, particularly the solar stuff.

Stack something of your own.

nick

57 Comments and discussion on "Mon. Jun. 24, 2024 – Monday Monday, so good to me…"

  1. Greg Norton says:

    Later on, after the temperature warmed up, the outside door handle on that side worked fine. Still, “fly by wire” for everything on that vehicle made me wonder about the longevity, especially since those are Hecho en South Carolina and is the model I used to see broken down most often in our part of Austin.

    Aren’t all new vehicles since 2015 ??? totally fly by wire and totally computer controllable ?

    The door handle?!? The mechanism seemed to be some kind of switch with feedback to simulate a mechanical device. I thought that BMW would still have some of the old school thinking in the design.

    Feedback on the passenger door handle was nonexistent when that side was dead.

  2. Greg Norton says:

    There are lots of unsafe vehicles.   If it’s  a known issue, and in the case of the tesla doors, it is, there isn’t any excuse for the fire rescue to not know.

    The fire rescue has a fairly simple solution for just about any difficult situation.  A fire axe through a window or a roof can fix many problems.

    There goes the resale value!

    At a minimum, that is six months on the waiting list for Tesla to do the repair unless you have Tony’s panopticon insurance which monitors your interaction with the car 24/7.

  3. Greg Norton says:

    Saw my second cybertruck on the road Friday.   It was going the other direction on the highway, so I couldn’t tell if it had been painted or wrapped, but it was partly orange.

    The Jesus Truck doesn’t appeal to Subcontinent as much as the other models. They’ll talk about it for their kids, but it doesn’t catch the eye of the adults as much.

    I see a lot of the trucks around here, but, for now, Austin has a lot of Show Ya still coasting on what’s left of the tech bubble in AI.

    I imagine there are a lot of Cybertrucks driving Uber Eats or lent out through Toro. The F&I rooms are supposedly passing along the brocures for the buyers to consider as part of the finance package.

    At one Thai restaurant near Dell on a Saturday night, all of the delivery service vehicles pulling up to the reserved parking were high end, including a Ford F150 Lightning.

  4. Greg Norton says:

    I imagine there are a lot of Cybertrucks driving Uber Eats or lent out through Toro. The F&I rooms are supposedly passing along the brocures for the buyers to consider as part of the finance package.

    And from what I understand, the F&I room at Tesla is still the same as other dealers if not worse. Some things never change.

    When I started at corporate training in 1993, one of the other students in the class had just purchased a Saturn and bragged about the “non traditional” experience.

    His $400 payment was about twice what I paid financing $11k on my Ford Probe a couple of months earlier so I figure he either got hosed on the rate or the extended warranties in the F&I room.

  5. ITGuy1998 says:

    I saw my first three cyber trucks last week, all on the same day. The first one was in the morning, and the other two later in the day. One may have been the same truck from earlier. I only saw them in passing, but my goodness, that front end stainless looked like is was really rippled on one and just rough on another one. I would like to see one up close to get a really good look.

  6. Greg Norton says:

    I only saw them in passing, but my goodness, that front end stainless looked like is was really rippled on one and just rough on another one. I would like to see one up close to get a really good look.

    Ssshh. The future of humanity is at stake.

  7. Nick Flandrey says:

    Already getting hot, sunny and blue sky.

    ————-

    @greg  Ssshh. The future of humanity is at stake.

    – not saying he’s beyond criticism, but building cars that don’t get ‘splody is HARD.   The big 5 have trouble doing it and they’ve had a lot more practice.   If you  try to do a “clean slate” design, you break the human machine interface and get door handles that aren’t really handles.  

    Some early cars had a tiller and not a steering wheel.   

    And besides, wasn’t it you that pointed out Tesla doesn’t sell cars, they sell carbon credits?  The cars are just the means…

    ————-

    @lynn, don’t forget that china is getting frisky too, and as their economy collapses, they’ll need a distraction to keep the plebes in line.

    EVERYONE seems to be getting ready.   Germany is spending money on defense.   New weapon systems are coming online, new ammo factories are being built.  Ammo orders are sucking up all the capacity.   Eastern Europe is starting to fracture and assert themselves… 

    And that doesn’t even consider the domestic situation here.

    n

  8. Nick Flandrey says:

    Just ordinary folks.

    How Joe and Jill Biden have been using their Wilmington house for fast cash – refinancing 20 times with loans totaling $4.2M – since buying $350k home… and they still owe a staggering figure

     

    NEW Joe Biden and First Lady Jill have been using their homes as an ATM, taking out multiple mortgages and refinancing their Delaware properties an astonishing 35 times, DailyMail.com can reveal. 

    n

  9. Darryl Hoar says:

    Saw a Cyber Truck in the wild last weekend on I-70.  Doesn’t matter, it’s still butt ugly.

  10. drwilliams says:

    https://hotair.com/jazz-shaw/2024/06/24/theyre-making-a-list-and-checking-it-twice-n3790820

    This efforts “alarms” the AP, which has no problem with a secret government committee led by Casey and Brennan finding that the main threats of domestic terrorism are Trump supporters, people who believe in God, and parents who insist their rights come before any PLT policies in public schools. 

    DHS has done nothing to screen bad actors invading our southern border. Pink slip them all. FBI Stasi as well. Ditto DOJ. They are all festering infections. 

    Park Service needs cleaning. Bunch of them can be reassigned to the new grizzly bear tracking project. 3-day course to qualify them as tracking collar placers. 

  11. Greg Norton says:

    And besides, wasn’t it you that pointed out Tesla doesn’t sell cars, they sell carbon credits?  The cars are just the means…

    Anymore, TSLA serves to advance the agenda of taking cars away from most of the population. 

    The carbon trading isn’t as big a deal as it used to be now that the other manufacturers are catching up with EV designs of their own.

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  12. Greg Norton says:

    – not saying he’s beyond criticism, but building cars that don’t get ‘splody is HARD.   The big 5 have trouble doing it and they’ve had a lot more practice.   If you  try to do a “clean slate” design, you break the human machine interface and get door handles that aren’t really handles.  

    If Toyota or Honda vehicles went splody at the rate of Tesla’s, there would have been hell to pay after just a handful of incidents.

    I only know of one situation where Honda refused to cover a blown transmission in a minivan, regardless of warranty status, probably their most chronic problem over the last 20 years.

    Ford is already nitpicking the EV F150 warranty claims for battery. Just wait a few more years and see what happens.

  13. Lynn says:

    @greg  Ssshh. The future of humanity is at stake.

    – not saying he’s beyond criticism, but building cars that don’t get ‘splody is HARD.   The big 5 have trouble doing it and they’ve had a lot more practice.   If you  try to do a “clean slate” design, you break the human machine interface and get door handles that aren’t really handles.  

    Some early cars had a tiller and not a steering wheel.   

    My personal favorite is the old Stanley Steamer.  An hour before you go anywhere, go outside and build a fire in it after putting 20+ gallons of water and a 100 lbs of coal in it.  You were good for a 100 miles or so.  Unless you got stuck in the muddy “roads” due to the extreme weight of the vehicle.  Adding more water to the steam boiler was a little dicey as you had to blowdown the steam pressure in it first.

    Jay Leno owns one and was lighting it with a propane torch a couple of years ago.  It exploded in his face, literally, during the lighting the fire process.  He has pieces of his butt skin transplanted on his face and hands now.  He makes jokes about it but it was incredibly painful.

    My great grandfather delivered the rural mail in Pottsboro, Texas in a Ford Model A for over 20 years after he was the town schoolteacher.  The job paid cash during the Great Depression.  He liked the accelerator on the steering wheel column and the transmission shifter pedal on the floor.

  14. Lynn says:

    Ford is already nitpicking the EV F150 warranty claims for battery. Just wait a few more years and see what happens.

    Class Action Lawsuits are coming. BTW, the labor on replacing the EV batteries is $2,000 to $4,000 since you have to dissemble the vehicle frame too. I hope that they do not leave any bolts out.

  15. Lynn says:

    “Florida family sues NASA over space junk that crashed through home”

       https://www.chron.com/news/space/article/nasa-lawsuit-space-junk-19530754.php

    “The 1.6-pound metallic stanchion put a hole through the roof.”

    I smell Sovereign Immunity.

  16. Lynn says:

    “Bipartisan nuclear bill heads to Biden’s desk as some analysts question potential safety impacts”

       https://www.utilitydive.com/news/advance-act-nuclear-bill/719629/

    “A Union of Concerned Scientists official said a required update to the NRC’s mission statement would “erase 50 years of independent nuclear safety oversight.””

    Ten+ years to review a nuclear power plant design is just obstruction.

  17. Lynn says:

    I’m just link dumping because I DON’T CARE.   WW3 is around the bend, and someone doesn’t read the manual for their “spaceship” car?

    “Why it’s too late to stop World War 3”

        https://www.yahoo.com/news/why-too-stop-world-war-120000865.html

    “Imagine, for a moment, that the Iranian government ann­ounces it has developed a nuc­lear bomb and threatens to use it on Israel. The United States reacts with the threat of military intervention, as it did in 1991 and 2003 in Iraq. Iran signals that it will not tolerate a third Gulf war and looks for allies. American forces mass to enter Iran, which orders national mobilisation. Russia, China and North Korea express their support for Iran, and Washington expands its intervention force, bringing in a British contingent. Russia enters the game, raising the stakes in the expectation that the West will back down. A nuclear standoff follows, but with tense and itchy fingers on both sides, as leaders gamble on the risk of not striking first, it all ends in disaster. The Third World War begins with an exchange of nuclear fire, and the rest, as they say, is history.”

    I would build a bomb shelter if I could but the ground water table is too high around here.  Plus I am only 30 miles away from an interceptor base and a quarter of the operating refineries in the USA.

    I am also only 30 miles away from two of the largest nuclear power plants ever built and at least a dozen chemical plants.  Plus four ? five ? LNG liquefaction plants.

  18. Lynn says:

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/why-too-stop-world-war-120000865.html

    @lynn, don’t forget that china is getting frisky too, and as their economy collapses, they’ll need a distraction to keep the plebes in line.

    EVERYONE seems to be getting ready.   Germany is spending money on defense.   New weapon systems are coming online, new ammo factories are being built.  Ammo orders are sucking up all the capacity.   Eastern Europe is starting to fracture and assert themselves… 

    And that doesn’t even consider the domestic situation here.

    Yup, China – Taiwan is number two scenario on that page of bad things coming.  I had forgotten that Taiwan used to be a Japanese island before WWII.  I have a new friend who is a Taiwanese legal immigrant with a Japanese wife.

    And our definite financial implosion of the USA in 2029 has just breached the horizon.

  19. Lynn says:

    “Elon Musk won his Tesla pay battle. Now he has to win his legal war.”

       https://finance.yahoo.com/news/elon-musk-won-his-tesla-pay-battle-now-he-has-to-win-his-legal-war-080001638.html

    “Tesla filed court documents last week before the same Delaware Chancery Court judge who previously voided Musk’s compensation, arguing the June 13 shareholder vote offered a “principled resolution” to end the dispute in Musk’s favor.”

    “Tesla has said 72% of votes cast by shareholders, excluding Musk and his brother Kimbal, were in favor of the compensation package.”

    “One is a request from the shareholders’ lawyer for $6 billion in legal fees, which Tesla disputes.”

    I wish that I could bill people for thousands of hours at thousands of dollars per hour.

  20. Greg Norton says:

    Ford is already nitpicking the EV F150 warranty claims for battery. Just wait a few more years and see what happens.

    Class Action Lawsuits are coming. BTW, the labor on replacing the EV batteries is $2,000 to $4,000 since you have to dissemble the vehicle frame too. I hope that they do not leave any bolts out.

    Water pump replacement on the 2016 Exploder was $3000 labor to replace a $150 part since the engine has to be partially disassembled and the seal bead applied by hand instead of using a gasket.

    I’m noticing that all of the Exploders and Edge (also affected) of that generation are starting to disappear from the roads where they were everywhere just a few years ago. Ours was paid off when the pump leak was caught, but it was within a 84 month loan period, which wasn’t common but still available back then.

    Vehicles cannot be financed beyond 96 months, but, pre-pandemic, the big Chevy dealer in town did 90 to move the four cylinder Silverado pickups with the teeny engine driving the 10 speed transmission developed with Ford which GM was never able to make work right.

    The Chevy dealer did not survive the economic fallout of the pandemic. The Geico Gecko owns the franchise now.

  21. Greg Norton says:

    “Tesla has said 72% of votes cast by shareholders, excluding Musk and his brother Kimbal, were in favor of the compensation package.”

    Vanguard and Blackrock were initially in the “no” column, but someone must have dropped a dime. 

    $56 Billion is 10% of the market cap. So where does the earnings growth come from moving forward?

  22. Greg Norton says:

    I wish that I could bill people for thousands of hours at thousands of dollars per hour.

    Go to law school. The only time it is too late is when you stop breathing.

  23. Greg Norton says:

    Yup, China – Taiwan is number two scenario on that page of bad things coming.  I had forgotten that Taiwan used to be a Japanese island before WWII.  I have a new friend who is a Taiwanese legal immigrant with a Japanese wife.

    Formosa was a Japanese colony for 50 years.

    The Chinese relations are actually Taiwanese, not Mainland.

    After spending four years on the West Coast around them, I have no idea why Beijing wants the heartache of trying to occupy that place beyond Number One Son teaching Number Two Son who is boss.

    Ethnic Chinese Number One Sons live to teach that lesson about being boss.

    Yeah, they’re not keen on Skippy the Inlaw either. Rather than deal with it, Number One Cousin is banned from the house since we moved to Austin.

  24. Lynn says:

    I wish that I could bill people for thousands of hours at thousands of dollars per hour.

    Go to law school. The only time it is too late is when you stop breathing.

    98% of lawyers are slaves to other lawyers reviewing paperwork at $50K per year.

  25. Lynn says:

    “James Patterson by James Patterson: The Stories of My Life” by James Patterson
       https://www.amazon.com/James-Patterson-Stories-My-Life/dp/0316397539/&nbsp?tag=ttgnet-20;

    A standalone autobiography of a prolific murder mystery, fantasy, comedy, teen, children, romance, science fiction, memoir, and non-fiction author. I read the well printed and well bound hardback published by Little, Brown in 2022 that I gave to my mother that she passed back to me after reading. I hope that there will be a sequel some day. After all, there are now thirty-three of his Alex Cross books alone of out of his around two hundred novels and novellas published to date.

    If you are interested in one of the most prolific authors ever, you need to read this book. He not only talks about his life and accomplishments but talks in detail about his writing style and methods and about his co-authors that he uses extensively. He has sold over 425 million books as of 2022 which puts him right behind J. K. Rowling. He notes that he works on 30 to 35 books simultaneously in separate notebooks, all written in longhand using a #2 pencil. The only thing that his autobiography is missing is his life pictures. 

    You can see the author’s entire bibliography at:
       https://www.jamespatterson.com/landing-page/james-patterson-home/james-patterson-checklist/
    or
       https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Patterson_bibliography

    I plan to reread one of the author’s science fiction books next, “When The Wind Blows”, about extreme DNA modification.

    My rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Amazon rating: 4.6 out of 5 stars (4,407 reviews)

    Lynn

  26. Lynn says:

    Yeah, they’re not keen on Skippy the Inlaw either. Rather than deal with it, Number One Cousin is banned from the house since we moved to Austin.

    I take it that Skippy is you.  

  27. CowboyStu says:

    WRT novels, after finishing Rick H’s “The Red Rock Redemption”, I started on James Patterson’s “Lion & Lab” as it had just become available from my town’s public library.  I am now halfway through that and when I finish that, back to one of Rick’s other Redemption novels.

  28. Greg Norton says:

    Yeah, they’re not keen on Skippy the Inlaw either. Rather than deal with it, Number One Cousin is banned from the house since we moved to Austin.

    I take it that Skippy is you.  

    Yup.

    Smartness and sarcasm are not appreciated.

  29. paul says:

    I have a Will Ferrell 3 movie collection.  And yeah, not expecting  a lot…. but, I bought it, gotta watch it or waste my money.

    “The Other Guys” was a decently good movie. 

    “Step Brothers” is just moronic.  Good for a laugh or two and that’s all.  I kept watching and hoping it would get better but no.   I think I had brain cells die while watching it . 

    Tonight is “Talledega Nights”.   Shrug.  I’m not expecting much.

    An interesting thing is the packaging.  Usually a three disc set has the “flap” with a disc on each side.  Not this set.  One post for all three discs.  Huh.

  30. paul says:
    Smartness and sarcasm are not appreciated.

    Au contraire.  

    Smartass sarcasm is always appreciated.  It is, to me, a sign of a fart smeller.  Er, a smart fellow.  

  31. drwilliams says:

    Kansas AG Kris Kobach accuses Pfizer of misleading vaccine marketing in lawsuit

    https://kansasreflector.com/2024/06/17/kansas-ag-kobach-accuses-pfizer-of-misleading-vaccine-marketing-in-lawsuit/

    “Why wouldn’t they [Pfizer] just admit that there were some signs it might be unsafe for pregnant women?”

    –Ace at AoSHQ

    ‘Cuz some peoples might decide to identify as wyminz, or more specifically, pregnant wyminz, which is perfectly within the rules of the Biden PLT’s and would cause them to tie themselves in knots with their own intestines.

    BIGCorp HR Admin in Yoga Pants: “You have to get The Jab”

    Loyal Employee: “Gee, I’d love too, but I identify as female and happen to be pregnant, and Pfizer says jab is not a good idea. Would BIGCorp be willing to assume the liability?”

    BIGCorp HR Admin in Yoga Pants: sputtering… Well, you’ll have to submit a lab test result.

    Loyal Employee: Oh My! I think my veracity has been questioned and my civil rights violated! Could I have that demand in writing in case the recording isn’t enough for my attorney?

  32. RickH says:

    Regarding big bright explody things targets: Within a 25-mile radius from my house:

    • Indian Island Munitions base (opposite Port Townsend)
    • Hood Canal Bridge (major traffic road)
    • Bremerton Naval Base
    • Kitsap Submarine Base (training and resupply – probably including nuke subs)

    Another 10 miles to Seattle. Then the Tacoma Narrows bridge

    “Oh, look at the bright light !”

  33. paul says:

    We had a friend years ago that liked to use Big Words.

    Like, “canine excrement” and we’d say “You mean dog shit?”   And we would toss “big words” back at him.     

    It became a game.  Good times.   Toss in a bit of smartass sarcasm and life was good.

  34. Greg Norton says:

    Regarding big bright explody things targets: Within a 25-mile radius from my house:

    How far is Joint Base Lewis-McChord?

    That place used to do strange things to my GPS whenever we drove by the base exits. Lots of creepy things go on at that facility.

    Plus “Cops” films frequently in that area. 🙂

  35. nick flandrey says:

    Sweet.  Just won a honda EU3000i like the one I have.   It looks pretty faded, but I should be able to fix anything wrong with it short of the motor being blown up.  And it’s a Honda, so that is unlikely.

    Once it’s running I can get the sync cable and run them both to get 30A of 220v.  I’ll probably buy the propane conversion for it too, since the tank looks a bit rusty.

    Should be about $560 to bring it home.  They are about $2K new, and you are lucky to find one for $1K used.

    ————

    my plan for the garage is coming up short, literally.  I don’t have enough room for what I wanted to do with the cabinets.  I’m going to just get the stuff back in the garage with the chest freezer sideways where it will fit for now.

    Dunno how I missed it by 2 feet, but I did.

     n

  36. Greg Norton says:

    Today’s Tyler Durden cowardice reporting on Julian Assange’s release.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/assange-be-freed-doj-agrees-time-served-plea-deal-wikileaks-founder

  37. RickH says:

    How far is Joint Base Lewis-McChord?’

    Maybe 60-70 ‘crow’ miles. Great ‘bright light’ potential.  Along with the Tacoma and Seattle shipyards nearby. 

  38. Lynn says:

    my plan for the garage is coming up short, literally.  I don’t have enough room for what I wanted to do with the cabinets.  I’m going to just get the stuff back in the garage with the chest freezer sideways where it will fit for now.

    Dunno how I missed it by 2 feet, but I did.

    Welcome to getting old.

    Measure twice, cut once.

  39. Lynn says:

    “A Minnesota Dam Is In “Imminent Failure Condition” “

        https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/minnesota-dam-imminent-failure-condition

    “A century-old concrete gravity dam on the Blue Earth River in Rapidan Township, near Rapidan, Minnesota, is in “imminent failure condition.” This has sparked concern about America’s aging infrastructure.”

    “This is yet more evidence of America’s crumbling infrastructure and the inability of the government to allocate taxpayers’ monies efficiently while political elites in Washington bankrupt the nation with endless foreign wars.”

    My ex-Minnesota employee and I have been watching this all day.  His wife and kids are just up the hill visiting her parents.

  40. Lynn says:

    Oh, how special !  My web server has a new C++ compiler that is C++17 compliant.  I have a bunch of new warning messages.  Bite me !

    Code like:

    cgistuff.cpp:61:21: warning: ‘char* strncat(char*, const char*, size_t)’ specified bound 100000 equals destination size [-Wstringop-overflow=]
      61 |             strncat (g_logfileBuffer, str, sizeof (g_logfileBuffer));
         |             ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Sigh.  I hate new compiler versions.

  41. Ray Thompson says:

    Regarding big bright explody things targets: Within a 25-mile radius from my house:

    Within 7 miles from my house:

    K25: Where uranium was enriched
    X10: Oak Ridge National Laboratory, nuclear research and the fastest computer in the world
    Y12: Where  nuclear weapons were built and disassembled

    Within 20 miles from my house:

    Watts Bar Damn Nuclear Reactor
    Several large dams on the TN river
    The mayor of Knoxville who thinks she is a close cousin to God.

  42. Greg Norton says:

    How far is Joint Base Lewis-McChord?’

    Maybe 60-70 ‘crow’ miles. Great ‘bright light’ potential.  Along with the Tacoma and Seattle shipyards nearby. 

    Yeah. The former McChord AFB is an airlift wing and that runway will probably accommodate a B52.

  43. drwilliams says:

    @Lynn

    “A Minnesota Dam Is In “Imminent Failure Condition” “

    “This is yet more evidence of America’s crumbling infrastructure and the inability of the government to allocate taxpayers’ monies efficiently while political elites in Washington bankrupt the nation with endless foreign wars.”

    Serious flooding throughout the Midwest as the drought of the last three years has been erased and then some. 

    Now the corn is drowning.

    Funny how we could afford the infrastructure with half as many people and them much poorer. Maybe deficit spending does have consequences, particularly spending unconstitutionally conjured out of thin air by the Executive Branch.

  44. Greg Norton says:

    cgistuff.cpp:61:21: warning: ‘char* strncat(char*, const char*, size_t)’ specified bound 100000 equals destination size [-Wstringop-overflow=]
      61 |             strncat (g_logfileBuffer, str, sizeof (g_logfileBuffer));
         |             ~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Sigh.  I hate new compiler versions.

    If strlen(str) is equal to sizeof(g_logfileBuffer), strncat will not terminate the buffer with ‘\0’ when the concatenate operation completes.

    Very dangerous. The warning is meaningful in this case.

    See if strlcat is available. That will gracefully handle the condition where sizeof(g_logfileBuffer) equals strlen(str) by writing a ‘\0’ to g_logfileBuffer[strlen(str) – 1].

    The alternative is to do strncat(g_logfileBuffer, str, sizeof(g_logfileBuffer)-1) to silence the compiler’s complaint.

  45. Greg Norton says:

    The alternative is to do strncat(g_logfileBuffer, str, sizeof(g_logfileBuffer)-1) to silence the compiler’s complaint.

    On second thought, forget that suggestion. It has been a while since I messed with strncpy/strncat since the static checkers at work won’t pass a commit using those functions.

    I also favor macros defining buffer sizes rather than sizeof().

  46. Greg Norton says:

    See if strlcat is available. That will gracefully handle the condition where sizeof(g_logfileBuffer) equals strlen(str) by writing a ‘\0’ to g_logfileBuffer[strlen(str) – 1].

    Or make g_logfileBuffer a C++ stringstream.

  47. Ray Thompson says:

    Or make g_logfileBuffer a C++ stringstream.

    Or use COBOL.

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  48. Ken Mitchell says:

    Rains up north; my little brother, who lives in Omaha, has sent me a link to a livestream camera watching the Missouri River in Omaha. There’s apparently a LOT of flooding north of there, and the water is bringing down lots of trees, branches and other floating debris.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2hhwHvxUmpI

    There is a park across the river; you can see that some of it is already under water.

  49. drwilliams says:

    Time Magazine Declares War on Pets

    Jessica Pierce describes herself as a bioethicist and a philosopher

    Pierce worries that buying and selling animals like a commodity makes it “difficult for us to appreciate the experiential world of the animal from their own perspective.” She also frets over housepets experiencing physical confinement, social isolation, and chronic exposure to stress, claiming that such factors can lead to poor health outcomes and shorter lifespans.

    https://hotair.com/jazz-shaw/2024/06/24/time-magazine-declares-war-on-pets-n3790842

    Fauci is married to a bioethicist, Christine Grady, who is head of the Department of Bioethics at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, MD. Her PhD is in philosophy.

    I have waited in vain for bioethicists as a group to deliver a strong condemnation of Fauci’s illegal funding of gain of function research, or a broader stance against GOF research in general. My evaluation is that the ethicists are all whores to their salaries, mostly paid for by taxpayer funds.

    this article honestly sounds to me as if it was written by someone who has never owned and lived with a pet in their life, particularly a dog or a cat.

    –Jazz Shaw

    Anyone that thinks that a dog or a cat has a longer lifespan in the wild is a complete idiot.

    And what do bioethicists says about taxpayer-supported dog owners that keep dogs that bite people? 

    [crickets]

    yea, verily

  50. Lynn says:

    I also favor macros defining buffer sizes rather than sizeof().

    I prefer sizeof since it is always the size of the buffer.  People can and do mess with macros.  

    I can tell stories, many stories of great incompetence.  My favorite is when three programmers changed the same macro and then tried to commit it.   Oh the screams, oh the yelling, oh the ceiling tiles moving in unison with very loud voices in the next office with the door closed.  The conversation went Chinese in a hurry.

  51. Alan says:

    >> Class Action Lawsuits are coming. BTW, the labor on replacing the EV batteries is $2,000 to $4,000 since you have to dissemble the vehicle frame too. I hope that they do not leave any bolts out.

    First are the lawsuits to break the questionable arbitration clauses.

    And don’t worry about the bolts, Junior over there workin’ on your truck had one semester of auto shop before he dropped out of High School.

  52. Nick Flandrey says:

    I think I caught up on my water intake.  Output is looking normal… so I’m off to bed.

    n

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  53. Alan says:

    >> Tonight is “Talledega Nights”.   Shrug.  I’m not expecting much.

    Has the famous DE (#3) quote: Dale Earnhardt Sr. is credited with saying, “Second place is just the first loser” in Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006).

  54. Alan says:

    >> I wish that I could bill people for thousands of hours at thousands of dollars per hour.

    Billing is the easy part…it’s the collecting that’s hard…

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