New Toy

New toy at twc central:

With a 2.2Ghz dual core and only 4GB of memory, it’s not a barn burner, but capable enough for a lappy to take into the entertainment room and use while keeping my Wonder Woman company as she’s booking it on her classes for her next degree (yeh, another one *heh*) or watching one of her fav shows while doing some light gaming or FB stuff on her lil lappy. (She multi-tasks–a lot. ;-)) This, in preparation for moving my office into the basement–when she’s around, I kinda like to be around her, and a basement office would put a cramp in that… unless I also moved the entertainment room downstairs, and that’s another project I just don’t want to add to my plate right now.

Anywho, even though it comes with Win7 Premium, I’ll likely use the 320GB hard drive to install a few VMs–Ubuntu, a couple of different Windows versions–heck, maybe even Win98 and some old Win9X software–using VirtualBox. As I said, a new toy.


BTW, I am going to do some burn-in testing during its first month of usage to determine whether I might need to take advantage of Newegg’s “first month replacement” policy, but there is one burn-in test program I think I’ll eschew:

“Keep in mind, use this program at your own risk. By using this program, you agree that neither I nor Intel shall be responsible for including, but not limited to: burned up CPU, fried motherboard, spontaneous room temperature increase, hair loss, or mental stress.”

I’ll just say no to the potential hair loss… 😉


Well, I did break down and buy a Microsoft RF/USB mini-mouse to match the one we got for my Wonder Woman. Some things are handy to do with the touch pad, others are just handier to use a mouse for. The lil lap desk is juuuuust large enough to allow a 4″ mousing space (if I hang the ‘puter 1.5″ off the lefthand side *heh*). I will probably mod the lap desk later to add a mousing deck on the right, but for now this works fine.

Upcoming: Celebrate “Freedom from British Royalty by Celebrating Freedom from American ‘Royalty'”

From the Fairtax.org site:

The FairTax TV Show

On the day we celebrate our Declaration of Independence from British royalty we can celebrate the very idea that can give American taxpayers independence from the corrupted tax system that so benefits American royalty. Make plans now to help advance the FairTax campaign using this special 30 minute national broadcast.

At 1:30 PM on July 4th your FairTax National Victory Campaign will sponsor the first ever FairTax nationwide television program!

The full length 30 minute show will air on the Fox Business Channel across the nation.

Those featured include Neal Boortz, Newt Gingrich, Michael Reagan, Mike Huckabee, yours truly and many average Americans who have come to know and appreciate the FairTax and what it can and will do for our nation.

It is rare, almost unheard of, for a citizen financed organization to sponsor a national television program! You have every right to be proud, very proud of your achievement!

As Neal Boortz says:

“The FairTax is the biggest, most massive transfer of power from the Government to the people in the history of this country since the Declaration of Independence freed us from the King of England.”

And what better way than Independence Day for the very first FairTax nationwide television program?

We need to promote the show across the United States, to let people know about it and urge them to celebrate July 4th by learning about the FairTax—the New Declaration of Independence for these United States!

Spread the Word

There are a few ways that you can help promote the first ever national FairTax TV show:

Have an Independence Day FairTax BBQ at your house. Invite your friends, families and neighbors over for ribs, corn on the cob, watermelon and the FairTax! What could be more “apple pie” American than a celebration of our Declaration of Independence from both the British crown and the IRS! Make this the “FairTax Fourth of July”.
Post the FairTax TV show ad on your favorite websites. Click here to get the ad.
Send the link to the FairTax TV show to your friends. Click here for a one-minute promotional video about our show.
Tell the media—call your favorite talk host with the news or write a letter to your local newspaper “Letters to the Editor” page.
Suggest the TV show to your favorite local organization. Tea Party? Coffee Party? Local union? Republican and Democratic Clubs? Senior citizen organizations? Local FairTax groups?

Here is an entertaining and educational advocacy piece for the FairTax.

I’m assuming, for now, that is 1:30 Eastern time, so adjust your viewing accordingly.

Very Nice!

I’ve been (and still am) more busy than usual for the past coupla months, so I skipped the official debut of Ubuntu 10.4. Just did a 10-minute install of the OS (from an iso image, using Virtualbox–no burning of yet another CD). That’s about 10 minutes less install time than my most recent virtual XP machine install. And that’s including the installation routine’s check for and download of updated files.

Looks slick. Very, very clean and sharp. I’ll have a little time later to play with it, but now that the rain’s stopped, I need to get “out there” for some of my rain-delayed “outside work”.

Squirrels apparently line-dancing in the rain, today, as my internet connection’s slowed to a measly 3mbs crawl. Almost unusable. *heh* Drives me out to get working, anyway… 😉


Note: the VirtualBox/Ubuntu install happened mostly in the background while 42 other apps and services, including an Opera session with ~40 tabs open, Thunderbird (checking for new mail every five minutes) and Lightscribe (burning a label on a OneNote 2010 DVD) were running on the host machine. Not bad.

Week Eaten By Locusts

Locusts die by thousands… *heh*

This hasn’t been an exactly toxic week, but it’s been… interesting. The proverbial one-armed paper hanger is a slacker. Heck, I’ve not even had time to find Mass Media Podpeople Hivemind “news” to mock. Did make time to wind down a bit with the season opener of Burn Notice last night (a little disappointing, but then maybe my week colored my viewpoint).

Off to the “races” again today. 7:30. Getting a slow start today.

Say “Hi” to life for me. I don’t have time for it right now. 🙂

Memorial Day

On Memorial Day, we honor servicemen (and women) who have paid for our freedoms with their lives. Just spend some time giving thanks for all the folks you know/knew personally who paid the ultimate cost personally for your liberty, today.


poppies.jpg

We Shall Keep the Faith

by Moina Michael, November 1918

Oh! you who sleep in Flanders Fields,
Sleep sweet – to rise anew!
We caught the torch you threw
And holding high, we keep the Faith
With All who died.

We cherish, too, the poppy red
That grows on fields where valor led;
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies,
But lends a lustre to the red
Of the flower that blooms above the dead
In Flanders Fields.

And now the Torch and Poppy Red
We wear in honor of our dead.
Fear not that ye have died for naught;
We’ll teach the lesson that ye wrought
In Flanders Fields.

Today, large numbers of Americans hold such sacrifice in disdain. Indeed, in recent years, many have attended and participated in “demonstrations” that have celebrated the terrorist savages who seek to kill not only American servicemen and women but civilian non-combatans as well.

Moina Michael’s poem was instrumental in establishing “Decoration Day” (now Memorial Day) and in establishing the (apparently dying) tradition of wearing a poppy in honor of our fallen military. That the more well-known “In Flanders Fields” (John McCrae, May 1915) is “better” art, I’ll not dispute. But Moina Michael’s poem has a heart that’s sadly missing in all too many Americans today who cannot comprehend, let alone echo these lines:

We cherish, too, the poppy red
That grows on fields where valor led;
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies

Would that we too teach our children well, that duty and honor and sacrifice are due our deepest respect and support.

One last note: In order to maintain some sense of connection with my curmudgeonly side, I’ll not explain the significance of the phrase “Flanders Field”. For those who read this who either had competent history teachers in grade school or who have taught themselves from readily available history texts, it’d be superfluous. For those who don’t know the significance of the phrase when they read it here, well, they have computers and an internet connection. I’ll not be their crutch–especially if such persons are even too lazy to click the link above. One word: Google. Folks who are too lazy to click the link above or type a search into a Google search box are just hopeless. *heh*


Let me encourage you to “buy” a poppy from an American Legion member; to spend some time thinking on what that poppy represents; to spend some time this weekend in quiet contemplation and prayer, being thankful for those who gave their lives to preserve your liberties.

Devolution

Its seems, given evidence from D.C., that the Republic has devolved from republic to democracy to kleptocratic kakistocracy.

No. No links. I’d have had to do one per letter in each sentence in this post. Just read the “news” and weep.


(Of course, such a devolution was assured once our “feddle gummint” started down the road into a more and more democratic reality. See this blogs header for but one of the reasons… )

Shenandoah–Soothing Saturday Sounds

Made available via the Garritan Libraries’ Rimsky-Korsakov Principles of Orchestration Online, Shenandoah:

[audio:garritan_ShenandoahGPO.mp3]

When I was a music student, *mumble-mumble* decades ago, I couldn’t afford a copy of the Rimsky-Korsakov text (and it wasn’t required for any courses, anyway), so though I had a yen to peek under its covers from time to time, I never owned a copy. I still don’t, but the Garritan resource gives me the whole thing PLUS an interactive text (recordings of musical examples in the text can be played) and a discussion board where folks who’re studying and using it can hash things out together, share samples of work applying the principles, etc.. Absolutely wonderful! Thanks, Garritan!

A Nice Idea, But…

…some of the talking points are Greenie Gobbledegook.

What am I talking about? This:

The talking points about “zero emissions” and “cleaner air” are hogwash, though. “Zero emissions”? Not at all. Where does electricity in the U.S. come from? Over 70% is from fossil fuels. Acceptable “greeniee weenie” methods of producing electricity are way, way down the line, about 13% of what is produced by another minor player (nuclear power generation). So “zero emissions” from an electric car is just a flat out lie.

“Cleaner air”? Well, perhaps. That would depend on where you got your electricity. Live near a nuclear power plant or a hydroelectric (still just 29% of nuclear) power plant and perhaps driving a Tesla would result in “cleaner air”.

Selling the thing using Greenie Gobbledegook is just silly, if anyone were to look at the facts.

Still, if I had an extra $50K sitting around, I’d find the idea of ordering one attractive, even though I found the early prototype of the Tesla sports car more attractive for its “infinite range” option–a towable electric generator that would kick in when the charge got low on the battery pack.

Still, the “S” car seems nice.

Deliveries start in 2012.