@Home Again

This is what the power of the Internet is all about... It's about the ability for my girlfriend's sister to send her a picture of her new haircut... This is the Information Superhighway at its best... But seriously, it's about what you can do now that webcams have gotten so cheap. You can pick up a nice USB color camera for under fifty dollars quite easily, making it possible to send images in seconds. In the old days, the best you could do is use a polaroid camera and Fed Ex. Now you can transmit your image anywhere in the world in seconds for next to nothing...

Oh, and I like the haircut, Karen...

It looks like Jean Carnahan will be appointed if her deceased husband is elected. That's got to put John Ashcroft in a tough place to campaign from, how do you campaign against a widow who just lost her husband of 46 years and her son? How do you campaign against a dead man? If I were Ashcroft, I'd start reading the help wanted ads:

"I think this is very real," said Jennifer Duffy, who tracks Senate races for the Cook Political Report. "The Ashcroft campaign must feel some combination of panic and utter frustration." Democrats keep campaigning in Missouri, she said, distributing 700,000 pieces of literature over the weekend informing voters that they can cast ballots for Mel Carnahan even though he's dead.

In case you missed it, the New York Times endorsed Al Gore for President:

To be blunter, Mr. Bush's entire economic program is built on a stunning combination of social inequity and flawed economic theory. He would spend more than half the $2.2 trillion non-Social Security surplus on a tax cut at a time when the economy does not need that stimulus. Moreover, as Mr. Gore has said repeatedly and truthfully, over 40 percent of the money would go to the wealthiest 1 percent of taxpayers. Mr. Bush would expand some programs for schools, but he also embraces the Republicans' ideologically driven approach of using vouchers to transfer money from public to private schools. There is nothing compassionate or conservative about blowing the surplus on windfalls for the wealthy instead of investing it in fair tax relief and well-designed social programs.

I personally am for whichever candidate would devote more of the projected surplus to paying down the national debt. That's how Keynesian Economics works, you deficit spend when the economy is poor, then you pay off the deficits when the economy is good. Bush wants to deficit spend when the economy is poor, and give tax cuts when the economy is good. Try this with your own finances for a year, and see how well you do. To use myself as an example, right now, my monthly income exceeds my expenses. I could either buy myself a leather living room set, or pay off my student loans early. Which is the more responsible thing to do? What leap of logic tells you that the same rules don't apply to the national government?

Politicians and pundits like to make a large distinction between spending programs and tax cuts. They're the same thing, really, they're a drain on the federal budget. I personally am in favor of neither at this point, but if we've got to have one of the two, I'll take the social programs...

I'm still @Home. I'm waiting for them to come fix my cable modem. The replacement unit on Friday didn't work either, they think it's a line problem now. I'm trying to stay off of the phone, because they always call before they come out, but I need to use the Internet. I just put a voice mail message on my phone that tells them that I am home, I'm just using the phone line, and to please come out anyway....

And yes, I've checked, DSL is not available to my house....

Update: I'm back at work, but still no cable modem... They tracked down the line problem, replaced some of the hardware, so now I'm getting more lights on the modem, but still no connection. It may or may not be up when I get home, they have to re-synchronize the router information, which they tell me can take a few hours...

Update #2: It works! I started pinging my computer continuously from work, and it now looks like it's live. Now I just have to catch up with the half-day of work I missed...

The Undead

It's a good thing I got that new computer yesterday, as I managed to fry my "old computer's" motherboard today. I was swapping some more RAM and a SCSI card around, and now my computer won't boot. I smelled a faint acrid scent, which was probably something shorting out. I guess I'll be making a run over to Apex Computers in the next couple of days, and buying myself a new board... My new job starts on Monday now, so CHFA is getting less than two weeks out of me before I leave. This was their choice, they didn't want to do the paperwork to pay me for an additional three days in the next month. My new employer is happy, they get me sooner. I'm happy, I'm out of here sooner. My co-workers are unhappy, they get to try to take over my job while searching for my replacement. We're interviewing one candidate tomorrow, on paper, he looks to be qualified, but I don't know if he'll want to give up his current position for this one when he finds out how little they want to pay him...

Thanks go to J Dylan, he sent me the codes from three more Pepsi Bottlecaps! I'm up to 6,000 points now, I need to find 39 more caps to get the game I want...

My new position came with a new computer, for home use! I picked it up last night, then spent the rest of the evening installing the OS and swapping hardware between it and my "old" computer. The new box is a nifty Dell Dimension Pentium III 700Mhz. I upgraded the RAM from 128 to 256MB, then swapped the Rage 128 Pro for my trusty Voodoo 3. My favorite thing about the system is the monitor, it's a 19 inch Trinitron with a flat screen. It makes my old Samsung 17 inch look like crap in comparison. I'll never want to quit my job, just so I don't have to give that screen back...

Jeremy's weblog appears to have risen from the grave. It's amazing what you can do when you're working a boring graveyard shift.

@Home

I spent four hours on the phone with tech support at @Home last night. My cable modem was down when I left for work yesterday, but I thought there might have just been a brief outage. When I came home and discovered it was still down, I started calling in. After four hours of waiting on hold, getting disconnected, and being told to try various stupid things, they finally admitted that the box was shot. They helpfully told me that someone would come out and replace it, on the third day of November. One of the techs actually told me that the cable modem shouldn't be plugged into a surge protector, as "that can reduce the amount of power that it gets". Right, yeah, sure.... This morning, I called the local cable company and told them that if it was going to take that long, I'd like to just bring the box in and swap it myself. They were exceptionally helpful, and said that someone could certainly be there sooner than that, and would today at noon be okay? So, I'll be going home for lunch today, and hopefully will be back on-line before I return...

Broadcast Storm

It's probably a sign that you're spending too much time on-line when you post your Christmas List on the net. I did it so that I could update it later, as well as provide URL's to reference the stuff that I wanted. Now I just alert my relatives via e-mail, and point them at that URL. While I'm not much of a Christian, my family does celebrate Christmas quite well. But for us, it's more about being together with family who are spread far apart, not about gifts or the birth of a Messiah.

I am, however, willing to accept suggestions or critiques for my list. What else should I be asking for? I always think of some stuff that I really need, about two weeks after Christmas...

We've suffered through a broadcast storm here today. Our campus is one large "virtual subnet" so a broadcast goes to every computer. Obviously, this caused some problems, as our connections to the servers bounced up and down. Even now, I can't get Outlook 2000 to connect to the IMAP server, I'm in need of a reboot, but I don't want to abort my 650MB download of an .iso image of Mandrake...

At least the network admins found out who did it, apparently someone wasn't too handy with their copy of DriveImage...

First Nog

Netscape Communicator 4.76 is available now. Probably just some bugfixes in it, the only thing I've noticed is that it now includes RealPlayer 8 Basic, rather than 7. I got mentioned over at Extenuating Circumstances today. Welcome to anyone who found this page via them. I'm not sure what "refreshing contemporary commentary" is, but apparently I'm full of it...

I drank my first egg nog of the year today. "J Dylan" and I discovered some at Hy-Vee the other night, so I bought a quart. Who (besides me) buys egg nog in October? Mmm...tasty yellow nectar of the gods...but I forgot to buy nutmeg...

Looking over that Hy-Vee link, I've decided that I want to work on the "Cheese Island" someday....mmmm....