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.


The Positive Side of the iPhad

The fact that the iPhad is so very limited–no multi-tasking as one example–and locked into the Apple straitjacket could be an advantage for naive and/or stupid users who would otherwise be more prone to fall prey to sophisticated phishing/malware attacks. After all, since it won’t multi-task, stupid users can’t infest it with keyloggers that run in the background.

So there you have it: a “computer” for folks who belong in Assisted Computing Sanatoriums…

I just knew I could find something to like about it!

Flash-less “Smart” Phones…

…are dumb.

With web content as it is currently, anything Flash-less is almost like time-warping back to 1993. Almost. Anyone really want the Cello Browser on anything? *heh* Sure, there is a lot of crap Flash (ads, especially), but a mature mobile browser can block things like that granularly when one wants to (Opera Mobile could do so up until version 10, but reports have that feature AWOL in recent Mobile builds for some strange reason), and since some of my essential sites use Flash well, anything Flash-less is simply not on my horizon.

Just one more reason why–for me–the pickin’s are slim on the “smart” phone menu. Still waiting on a compelling reason to buy a so-called “smart” phone and data plan (some might rightly say I’m just too cheap *heh*). Somehow right now, being unplugged (except for the inevitable calls-only throwaway cell phone–so when the number gets around too much and I become too accessible, I can simply toss the thing and start over) for large chunks of my day seems a Good Thing.


This post brought to you as a result of

  1. Someone griping in my hearing about slow-loading Flash on his Android phone (little wonder, since the software’s still in beta) and
  2. Someone else discovering, as I watched in amusement, that his iPhone couldn’t access work-related web content because it’s Flash-less.

Dog Days

Been getting more sweat-inducing work recently. Long story, but good outcome.

We’re staging in our own implementation of zoned AC here at twc central, and my office hasn’t been put in the loop, yet. One-a these days… 😉 But since I’ve been getting some serious shirt sleeve time in the humidity (though only upper 80s) outdoors for the past week or so, no AC with a room temp of 86F isn’t all that bad. Of course, that’s near the computers. The other side of the room’s only 82.4 right now. *heh* Balmy. Can’t wait to move my office to the basement…

Went shopping for a new dishwasher on my birthday. Going to wait on buying and having our selection installed until I can definitely schedule to be here for the installation, though. My schedule right now is too crazy. Maybe the end of June. Set the $$ aside and plan the work… And no, I’m not stupid enough to do the installation myself. Almost, but not quite. (I will pull the old one out, though. I can do something like that on one of those nights when sleep eludes me ;-))

As soon as I have my table saw back, I have several projects around the house to do this summer. Should be fun.

And then there are the lil compy projects I have on standby… While I really like various ‘nix distros, and for normal, everyday computing I think Linux or BSD are really quite easily Good Enough (and in many ways superior to Windows), I really have to stay current with M$ software, since that’s where folks need help. (Hmmm, seems there ought to be something to say there… ) Oh, my calls for help with Apple computers are about as great in terms of percentages of users *heh*, it’s just that there really aren’t very many Mac users in America’s Third World County and hereabouts.

And Linux users? The population is pretty much confined to a few geeks and some users I have switched over to Linux.

So, more Microsoft products to play with on twc central computers. I have several licensed copies/versions of XP and Windows 7, and even copies of Windows Server 2008(R2) and Windows Home Server to play around with this summer. Heck, if WHS is “Good Enough” I might just keep that around for other users here at twc central. Then there’re copies of Office 2007 (which I’ve been avoiding using) and 2010 I probably ought to install and noodle around with. If my schedule ever slows down enough, I think I can find things to keep busy.

Oh, this post is being written in a new WinXP64 VM session. No reason to have XP except for the fact that so many folks still use it. Nice the way Virtualbox runs just about any OS so very nicely in VMs. A full installation of XP in a Virtualbox session is MUCH better (more complete, “real”) than M$’s “XP Mode” available in Win7 Pro and up. Not that it’s all that great to begin with. I never warmed up to XP, so all I can say is, it works at least as well as XP on a physical machine.

(Rambling any? Tired and just… rambling.)

Felipe Calderon’s Argument FOR Strict Border Control

In Calderon’s world, sauce for the goose is not sauce for the gander…

Say again, Phil? What was that? Yep. Mexico’s strict enforcement of its southern border goes far, far beyond current U.S. federal law and the Arizona law Calderon claims goes against “human rights”, and Calderon unwittingly admits as much to Wolf Blitzer.

[audio:What-a-maroon.mp3]

Of course he and his lapdog, Barry “Franchesca” Soetoro, expect that the vast herd of sheeple won’t twig to their scam.

Rediscovery

Listening to Franz Schubert’s Symphony #3 recently–for the first time in many years–it struck me just how amazing he was as a composer. Oh, the symphony itself is almost a template of the “perfect” Classical Period symphony, after the more mature works of Haydn and Mozart, and is absolutely wonderful in and of itself, but that’s not what slapped me upside the head with awe. No, it’s that he was so bang on the money with the Classical Period form and ethos in the symphony, and yet his lieder–written before there was a Romantic Period–are such perfect examples of Romantic Period music in technique and ethos. While it can be said of Beethoven that he spanned both the Classical and Romantic periods (and in some ways that he spawned the Romantic period), Schubert simply lived and composed music fit for each simultaneously.

Still, while his instrumental music is (mostly) Classical–and very good examples of that genre–it is his lieder that demonstrate his rightful place among the greatest of luminaries of classical music. Sad that he–like Mozart–lived such a short life. Had he lived to the age Brahms lived, what wonders might we have as a legacy from his creative hand and ear, given the wonders he left at the young age of 31? Ah, for a peek at an alternate universe where the mind that composed the insightful Die Winterreise, which dealt with the memories of an old man, had actually lived to the ripe old age he depicted with such songs as Der Lindenbaum, begun at the “ripe old” age of 26(?) and “corrected” by him shortly before his death. Still, as a certifiable Olde Pharte, now, I can attest that Schubert captured Müller’s lyrics, which themselves capture the sense of the retrospective of old(er) age well (and Müller himself died at age 33!).

Ah, well, I ramble.

Still, it’s a wonder to re-realize that my favorite composer of song had depths far beyond the listening area I generally grant his work. Delightful! I should never have let so loong a time elapse between hearings of his instrumental works.

Oh, links? Nah. Go find your own fav Schubertian works. 🙂 I’ve posted several of his lieder (sung by Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, of course) here in the past, but you deserve the joy of discovering his beautiful music in your own way.