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Random thoughts, post-funeral

Went to a funeral this afternoon. When I got up this morning with Katherine it was sunny. When we went to her swim class at 9:30a, it was 60 degrees…

Went to a funeral this afternoon.

  1. When I got up this morning with Katherine it was sunny. When we went to her swim class at 9:30a, it was 60 degrees outside.

    It had started snowing when I got to I-70 at 2:30p, and was coming down heavily in Evergreen when I arrived there for the service. Coming back around 4:30p, it was 25mph time on I-70 coming down the grade at Gennessee (thank you, Subaru), and it was around 30 degrees most of the afternoon at home, and dropping.

    Colorado spring weather. Go fig.

  2. The Bergen Park Free Evangelical Church uses the Episcopal Book of Common Prayer, which was convenient, if unexpected. I also knew all the hymns. It made for an odd cross-fertilization between Religious Life and Job Folks, as a number of other people from the company (including several from Houston) were there. (And interesting, in a random way, to see who went up to communion, who seemed to know what hymns, etc.)

  3. The church itself was an interesting mix of pineboard siding, loving-hands stained glass, and hi-tech sound system and projection system. It was also packed full with friends, co-workers, and family. Steve had a wide circle.

  4. I so have to plan my funeral, including what readings, what music, and what themes are not to be part of the proceedings. My preference is that the priest, to the extent he knows me, talks about me, and to the extent he doesn’t, simply shuts up.
    Themes not to be part of the sermon include (A) “I don’t know anything about Dave, but let me generalize from knowing that he worked with computers,” (B) “Aren’t we all lucky that we’re saved by Christ, unlike (explicitly or implicitly) those other poor, damned souls,” and (C) “Dave believed X, Y, and Z. Thus, he is saved (see (B)).”

    As to (A), folks trying to draw forth stereotypes from my interests is the last thing I want (hell, I’ve lived with the negative consequence of it for forty-odd years). As to (B) I don’t believe it and I certainly don’t want it thrown in the face of those who have been good enough to attend my funeral service. As to (C) it is highly unlikely that the officiant will truly know what I believe, and the more orthodox it sounds, the less likely it is to be true, beyond a general belief in the existence, omnibenevolence, and purpose of the Deity (with a variety of theological extrapolations from that which hit on enough Christian bits to qualify me as such, or at least make me comfortable in Christian settings, but which also include some bits that would probably get me stoned in some quarters, and I’m not talking about taking drugs here).

  5. It’s amazing how some songs, normally heard played stirringly on the organ by a very competent competent organist, can sound a lot dorkier when played on the piano by a barely-competent pianist. Especially when the words are projected on the screen from a badly laid out PowerPoint presentation.

  6. Steve was a great guy. He had his faults, as do we all, and his temper was occasionally one of those, but, in general, he was a rare combination in the IT world of competence, enthusiasm, helpfulness, and interests in things outside of the IT/job realm (family, outdoors activities). It was a pleasure hiring him, a pleasure working with him, and I’m sorry (both personally and from a corporate aspect) that he’s gone.

  7. Dude died of a heart attack. Makes one think of what impact one’s own death would have if it happened, say, RIGHT NOW. Loved ones taken care of? Final messages sent? Things you always meant to do done?

    Gives one pause.

    What would I regret (presuming I would have a post-death existence to have regrets over) were I to die right now? Not regret as in, “Wish I’d done that differently” (though of those, I have a few), but regret as in, “Wish I’d gotten that taken care of before I died.”

    Hrm.

Abandoned

I’m sure there’s some great gaming fodder in this fun (if cryptic) collection of photos of abandoned Japanese buildings and sites. Normal buildings, sure, but also tramways, amusement parks, hotels,…

I’m sure there’s some great gaming fodder in this fun (if cryptic) collection of photos of abandoned Japanese buildings and sites. Normal buildings, sure, but also tramways, amusement parks, hotels, etc. Creepy fun.

(via BoingBoing)

Too clever for me

“Okay, you let us sleep in until 8. You can have one more chocolate Easter egg.” “That makes four!” “Yup.” “Can I have another one?” “How many have you had…

“Okay, you let us sleep in until 8. You can have one more chocolate Easter egg.”

“That makes four!”

“Yup.”

“Can I have another one?”

“How many have you had now?”

“Four.”

“If you can tell me, if I gave you six more, how many you’d have, you can have another one.” (Expects various calculations, finger counting, requirement of restatement, struggling …)

(Without hesitation.) “Ten!”

“Um.”

“On my Gerald McGrew CD, after the music, they have this song about numbers, and …”

“Go get another chocolate egg.”

Next time I’ll try trig.

High Definition Serenity

Some nice (!!!) screen caps from the HD version of the Serenity trailer — which requires QuickTime 7, which isn’t available for Windows yet, so these screen caps are pretty…

Some nice (!!!) screen caps from the HD version of the Serenity trailer — which requires QuickTime 7, which isn’t available for Windows yet, so these screen caps are pretty spiffy to see.

(Note that the images on the page are actually links to the larger ones — which are 1920×816. And photo-quality.)

Shiny …

My hero

Everything I learned about being a father I learned from Calvin & Hobbes … (Well, that’s not true; I learned a lot from my dad, too, but that sort of…

Everything I learned about being a father I learned from Calvin & Hobbes

(Well, that’s not true; I learned a lot from my dad, too, but that sort of ruins the joke. 🙂 )

Why I’m glad I’m getting to see Serenity next week

No worries about spoilers for the following four months….

No worries about spoilers for the following four months.

A Black Kettle of Biblical Proportions

Something about Motes and Beams would likely fit in nicely with this conversation: The authors of the best-selling “Left Behind” end-times thriller series call the new apocalyptic NBC mini series…

Something about Motes and Beams would likely fit in nicely with this conversation:

The authors of the best-selling “Left Behind” end-times thriller series call the new apocalyptic NBC mini series “unbiblical” and “weird.” Jerry Jenkins, novelist of the “Left Behind” series, which has sold 62 million copies since its debut in 1995, said “Revelations” is “a mishmash of myth, silliness, and misrepresentations of Scripture.”

The six-episode “Revelations,” which debuts tomorrow night, is about an astrophysicist and a nun who realize that the events described in the book of Revelation are taking place.

“‘Revelations seems to draw from everywhere and nowhere,” said Jenkins, who has viewed the first “Revelations” episode. Tim LaHaye, the creator of “Left Behind” and a prophecy scholar, agreed.

“This story is based on some writer’s imagination about the book of Revelation,” LaHaye said. “However, the writer clearly has not studied the book or maybe even read it. … This is a good example of someone who doesn’t know the message [of ‘The Passion’ or ‘Left Behind’] and doesn’t know that he doesn’t know.”

Regardless of one’s beliefs about the End Times* and the Book of Revelations, that Jenkins and LaHaye — both of them frequently criticized for sloppy adaptation of the Apocalypse in their popular book series — would single out a TV show for its inaccuracies is a great laugh.

For me, at least.

*My own view? I go with the “Nobody will know the day and hour” approach, and simply don’t worry about it. From a religous standpoint, I’m at least as likely to simply keel over dead after hitting Post on this blog entry as I am to face the End Times, so my priority should be how I’m living my life, including how I treat others and God, right now, not idly speculating as to whether Kofi Annan is the Anti-Christ or whether the expansion of the EU proves or disproves that the Tribulation will begin in Saskatoon in 2007. Crikey.

(via the Flea)

Color me shocked

Well, I sure feel safer, don’t you? Last week, reports from several government departments confirmed what most business travelers and other frequent fliers already knew: after spending more than $5…

Well, I sure feel safer, don’t you?

Last week, reports from several government departments confirmed what most business travelers and other frequent fliers already knew: after spending more than $5 billion in federal funds on the [TSA], airport security is hardly any better now than it was before 9/11.

Created to impose tight federal control over commercial airport security after the 2001 terrorist attacks, the agency continues to get failing or barely passing grades. Covert screening tests by the Government Accountability Office and the inspector general for the Department of Homeland Security showed virtually no improvement in overall screener performance since similarly poor performance reviews last year, said Representative John L. Mica, the Florida Republican who is chairman of the House aviation subcommittee.

“Over the last three and a half years, we have spent billions of dollars creating a Soviet-style centralized bureaucracy that has resulted in great inefficiencies and inflexibility, with little improvement in screener effectiveness,” Mr. Mica, a long-time critic of the agency, said in a statement last week.

In its reply, the agency said that it needed more money to improve performance with better technology, like new machines for detection of explosives.

*sigh*

Now, based on my experiences in Denver, I would say that DIA TSA personnel are generally more competent and civil than the lowest-bidder quack security folks we had pre-TSA. (Not sure I’d say the same about the LAX security folks, though.) Far worse than the personnel, though, are the screwball restrictions (and vague, local, “Whatever I say, goes” overriding restriction) on baggage contents. I think that, more than the personnel themselves, is what’s torqued most folks off, and opened TSA to the most ridicule.

Feh.

War is Peace, Ignorance is Strength, Prevention is Permission

On the heels of the oh-so-effective CAN-SPAM Act of a year or two ago (the one that (a) didn’t do a thing to stop real spam, but (b) gave vendors…

On the heels of the oh-so-effective CAN-SPAM Act of a year or two ago (the one that (a) didn’t do a thing to stop real spam, but (b) gave vendors rules they could use to legally spam people), we now have the Junk Fax Prevention Act of 2005 (S.714).

The purpose of this bill is to fix a bad FCC ruling. We agree with the purpose and the approach.

But in the process of “restoring,” they are adding a brand new “exemption” to the TCPA that was never there before to allow advertisers to legally send you advertising by fax WITHOUT your prior consent. They thought they had this before and now 14 years later discovered that they hadn’t had it so they want it to cover themselves even though none of the witnesses that testified at the committee hearing on this bill have ever been sued (e.g., the person from NAR with 1.2 million members says they send faxes to member, the members send faxes to their client, etc. and nobody has ever been sued).

The way they are doing this is to allow unlimited faxing of ads (until you get sick enough of it to complain and your complaint meets certain requirements) if you have an “Existing Business Relationship,” but the definition of an EBR is so loose that it will be trivial for junk faxers to establish an EBR with virtually any business or consumer. A spammer can establish an EBR with your company just by visiting your website, calling your phone, or sending an email (provided someone replies, even an auto-responder). That gives them the right to LEGALLY send advertising to your fax machine.

Not only that, the current bill creates a never-ending EBR, so they can junkfax you forever until you opt out. So someone who spoke with you 20 years ago can legally send you junk faxes as soon as this bill passes. And, like spam, once you’ve opted out, you’ve just proven that it’s a real fax number and you look at your faxes … now your number is more valuable to sell to others.

Want to be that there will be an exception for the US Government (or at least Congress) to that particular exemption?

(via J-Walk)

Memo to self

Do not assume that, just because it was sunny yesterday, you don’t need to bring a jacket with you to work in April. And gloves. And maybe a hat. Damn,…

Do not assume that, just because it was sunny yesterday, you don’t need to bring a jacket with you to work in April. And gloves. And maybe a hat.

Damn, it was cold at lunch …

I’ll settle for restaurants, sure

While supporters are lamenting (angrily, in some cases) that the state senate has “gutted” a statewide smoking ban to only cover restaurants — excluding bowling alleys, bars, and bingo parlors…

While supporters are lamenting (angrily, in some cases) that the state senate has “gutted” a statewide smoking ban to only cover restaurants — excluding bowling alleys, bars, and bingo parlors — given that I visit very few of the latter and quite a few of the former, I’ll be pleased to see the bill pass. Assuming that the folks who will only settle (for the moment) for it applying everywhere don’t end up scuttling it.

Frankly, I’ll confess that this is an area where my relatively libertarian views of governemental regulation fall by the wayside — and I’ll not pretend that the “protecting the workers” excuse is my motivator. I don’t like being in restaurants that allow smoking. I dislike the “smoking or non-” question when I walk in. Screw it. Forbid it in restaurants, and I’ll be a happy camper, philosophical consistency or not.

You can’t take the sky from me!

Just got this note from my boss (subject line: “Heavy Heavy Sigh”): Due to circumstances beyond my control, I have to postpone our meeting next week. I apologize, but I…

Just got this note from my boss (subject line: “Heavy Heavy Sigh”):

Due to circumstances beyond my control, I have to postpone our meeting next week. I apologize, but I can assure you that I have no choice. I will follow-up later to reschedule.

Which means …

GLEE!

Now, alas, having that meeting postponed throws a bunch of other plans all higgledy-piggledy, and it’s (from a work standpoing) a real let-down and PITA.

But from a personal standpoint?

Feeling much more Serene.

Continue reading “You can’t take the sky from me!

Okay, you can teach “Intelligent Design” in the school, if …

… you make it clear that this is the cosmology you’re covertly trying to convince us of. (via the Flea)…

… you make it clear that this is the cosmology you’re covertly trying to convince us of.

(via the Flea)

Down from the mount

The granite Ten Commandments monument that was at the center of Roy Moore’s courthouse challenge has finally found a new home. The 5,280-pound granite monument will be on display at…

The granite Ten Commandments monument that was at the center of Roy Moore’s courthouse challenge has finally found a new home.

The 5,280-pound granite monument will be on display at CrossPoint Community Church [in Gadsden, AL]. Moore picked the site because he attends the church and because it operates a Christian school, said Rich Hobson, a spokesman for Moore and president of the Foundation for Moral law.

A ceremony is planned for 1:30 p.m. Friday to mark the installation of the monument in the gathering room outside the Southern Baptist church’s new sanctuary.

Which sounds like just the right place for it, and I (sincerely) hope that the congregation there gets both enjoyment and inspiration from it.

At CrossPoint Community Church, administrator Randy Stafford said Moore believes students need to see the Ten Commandments, and the church’s 600-student school, Coosa Christian School, played a major role in his decision on where to display the monument.

And, again, that’s just ducky. It sounds like the perfect thing to have at a school.

A private, Christian school, that is.

(via Religion Clause)

URL ABCs

These are my URL ABCs: A is for archive.gamespy.com/comics/dorktower/ – Glee! Faboo geeky comic humor. B is for boingboing.net/ – The closest to trendy that I get. C is for…

These are my URL ABCs:

URL ABCs represent the first URL that comes up as a suggestion from the URL bar when you type that letter. Mozilla browsers do something fancy to sort by last-used/most-used; IE seems to just drop them in alphabetically. The idea, of course, is that this semi-random core sample will tell you something about me (and what that is, I probably don’t want to know).

The Defective Yeti site for this has a nice form you can fill in that will format the above list.

Dollar for your thoughts

First off, it’s clear that a dollar coin should be practical. Almost every other Western nation, including our nation to the north, has something like that, and it works just…

First off, it’s clear that a dollar coin should be practical. Almost every other Western nation, including our nation to the north, has something like that, and it works just fine for them. And it saves them oodles of (so to speak) money, since the cost-over-lifetime for dollar coins for the Treasury beats that of dollar bills.

But the US has tried twice since 1979 to introduce dollar coins — with the Suzy B., and then with the Sacajawea — and it’s flopped.

Now for most people, the reason is obvious — there is cost (cash register drawers, vending machines) to making the cutover, as well as habits to be changed, so, given their druthers, most people and businesses won’t do it if they have a choice. And, in fact, they have had a choice — dollar bills have been printed right alongside each of the dollar coin runs, which means that …

… well, that nobody’s made the change. You can argue that the Suzy B was too much the size of a quarter, or that the Sacajawea was … well, whatever aesthetic was wrong with it. But that’s trivial as a reason. The fact is, the government has only pushed the issue where it’s had control over the local currency, such as at military bases, but nowhere else. And, so, it hasn’t been adopted.

Now the answer to all that is obvious: at a mimimum, if Congress and Treasury want the dollar coin to succeed, they should simply stop printing dollar bills. If they’re even more eager, they can pull the old bills out of circulation, but the lifetime of a dollar bill is short enough that they’d all be gone soon enough.

Problem solved. People would adjust. Businesses would adjust. Nobody’d be giving it a second thought in five years.

Which, of course, means that this particular answer won’t be adopted. Instead, Treasury is going to try to encourage use of new dollar coins by (da-da-da-daaaah!) making them collectable. Giving up on actually making them necessary, or even desirable, the intent is that folks will simply keep them. Which, I suppose, makes the government some added dollars.

Supporters realize that the dollar coin is the Rodney Dangerfield of American money. So they make clear that any new coin would augment — not replace — paper currency. In fact, although the coins would enter into general circulation, their biggest selling point is that people might hoard them.

The idea steals a page from the popular 50 State Quarters series, in which the engraving on the 25-cent piece rotates to honor all the states. That legislation was also the brainchild of Rep. Castle. The subjects depicted on the dollar coins would be the U.S. presidents. The plan is to introduce four new ones a year beginning in 2007, honoring each of the nation’s chief executives in the order of their service.

Uh … yippee?

Frankly, I doubt lightning will strike twice. Folks were willing to collect commermorative state quarters because (a) quarters are cheap, and (b) it was a new idea. Dollars are four times as expensive (duh) and the novelty has worn off.

On the bright side, at least we’ll soon have close to fifty poorly circulated and unhelpful dollar coins to write about.

(via K2)

(This is an update from this story, I discover.)

When it rains, it pours

So not only do I get to be irked at being forced to miss the Serenity sneak-peak because of a long-overdue and long-desired business meeting, I get to be embarrassed…

So not only do I get to be irked at being forced to miss the Serenity sneak-peak because of a long-overdue and long-desired business meeting, I get to be embarrassed by discovering, regarding the business trip I was supposed to be on last week, and which was eventually cancelled because of circumstances beyond my control, I never cancelled my travel plans.

Meaning I have to tell my boss that, with our tight travel budget, I just blew a round-trip ticket and at least one night’s stay at a Pasadena hotel.

Which means that any (unjustified) anger I have at his scheduling the meeting so unfairly during the week it turns out I could have seen the the flick has to be quashed by, well, feeling stupid.

Rrg.

Coverage

I don’t know that I agree that these are the 25 All-Time Greatest Covers of American Comic Books — in fact, I distinctly disagree with some of the selections. That…

I don’t know that I agree that these are the 25 All-Time Greatest Covers of American Comic Books — in fact, I distinctly disagree with some of the selections. That said, it’s an interesting selection, some of which are on comics I actually own. The lack of any Simonson Thor issues, or Adams or Byrne X-Men, is a real gap to me. The Bolland Wonder Woman #72 cover is actually fairly weak, certainly in relation to his other work (and in relation to the story within, and other WW covers). On the other hand, Buscema’s Silver Surfer #4 is, indeed, faboo.

I disagree with some of the 12 Dumbest Covers, too — too driven, in some cases, by dumb comic ideas than on bad artwork (though that’s in display, too). The Lois Lane #106, for example, is actually not a bad cover, even if it’s a goofy idea.

(via J-Walk)

Well, we can’t have that now, can we?

There’s a new technology out there that vaporizes booze and lets folks inhale it. It is said to create a “zero-carb” and zero-hangover buzz. The devices are sold on the…

There’s a new technology out there that vaporizes booze and lets folks inhale it. It is said to create a “zero-carb” and zero-hangover buzz.

The devices are sold on the Internet by a European company called AWOL, which stands for ”alcohol without liquid.” The AWOL machine consists of an oxygen generator that blasts air into a hand-held vaporizer containing the liquor — preferably 80 proof — of your choice. AWOL machines range in size from desk-top variety to industrial-sized pipes for multiple users in a club.

Egads. Such a horrible danger demands immediate legislative attention!

”It’s not something I wanted to see proliferate throughout state. We’re getting ahead of the curve here,” [Florida state representative Bob] Henriquez said. ”I’m no prude. I just see this as a cheap and trendy way” to abuse alcohol.”

Well, heavens, we certainly mustn’t allow people to get drunk in a “cheap and trendy way,” when the old ways are so self-evidently better. Not to mention that the old ways are backed by serious money.

The push for the prohibition is not unique to Florida. Thirteen other states are considering similar legislation — and even Congress is giving it a shot. The Distilled Spirits Council of the United States is urging the states to ban AWOL.

Peter Cressy, council president, said its members aren’t threatened by the competition posed by AWOL but worry about abuse, putting him in the difficult position of opposing a hangover-free buzz.

‘This would strongly suggest that the purpose of this device is to get a buzz. We don’t think getting a buzz is a good idea. . . . It gave us grave concern that it was marketed as the `ultimate party tool’ and reducing hangovers,” Cressy said. “Our trade association has long been a leader in fighting abuse of our products.”

The Distilled Spirits Council being, of course, focused on American drinking solely for the aesthetic and gustatory experience, not because people enjoy getting tipsy (a/k/a “abuse”).

Now, I’m certainly not in favor of folks actually abusing alcohol. Kids at college dying from alcohol poisoning, people getting drunk and then getting behind the wheel, etc., are all, no question, bad things. But for the folks who sell (relatively expensive) bottled alcohol protesting that the AWOL system is EVIL AND NEEDS TO BE OUTLAWED because the AWOL system because the apparent intent is intoxication (vs. elegant sipping of a nice single-malt and enjoying its peaty insouciance) strikes me as absurd.

Just as absurd is that there does not appear to be any current crisis. Few, if any, AWOL systems have been distributed as of yet, which not only means that the problems presented are hypothetical, but it makes the driven-by-threat-to-profits nature of the whole exercise all that much more apparent.

I don’t see myself as ever making use of an AWOL (I actually do drink, to at least some degree, because I like the flavor of what I’m drinking, not just to get smashed), but I don’t see banning the AWOL as doing anything to reduce the dangers of Demon Rum, only to reduce the dangers to the bottom line of the Distilled Spirits Council.

(via BoingBoing)

Perspective

What if video games had come before books? How would people react toward the latter taking mind-share and time away from the former? Books are also tragically isolating. While games…

What if video games had come before books? How would people react toward the latter taking mind-share and time away from the former?

Books are also tragically isolating. While games have for many years engaged the young in complex social relationships with their peers, building and exploring worlds together, books force the child to sequester him or herself in a quiet space, shut off from interaction with other children. These new ‘libraries’ that have arisen in recent years to facilitate reading activities are a frightening sight: dozens of young children, normally so vivacious and socially interactive, sitting alone in cubicles, reading silently, oblivious to their peers.

Marvelous. And (from the perspective of how people would doubtless react) all too believable.

(via Kottke)