Blogging is a useful way for me to record my
thoughts and digital travels every so often. Hope you enjoy my digital stream of consciousness.
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October 29, 2004
-
So we are 4 days and counting till the election.
I'm starting to get butterflies. I'm also starting to get optimistic.
The polls are starting to shift towards Kerry and we'll see what the
"unlikely voters" and the new registrants do on 11/2.
October 28, 2004
-
WOW! The Boston Red Sox won the World Series last night. Woke up Tim
so he could witness history. How exciting! He was angry when I
jumped up after the 3rd out in the 9th and did a little dance. They
really played well and I
love their team work and "bunch of idiots" mentality. Reminds
me of the 2001 Patriot team. Signs at the stadium: Curse RIP, 1918 Is
History, We Forgive Bill Buckner, Is This Heaven? I also took snapshots of all of the news
home pages showing Red Sox stories at 00:30 EDT.
-
Another day up in Salem NH. Worked on another computer trying to fix
the network card. Did some phone calls. Ran some computers over to
the new Derry office. Did some visibility holding signs by an
intersection. Took out the trash. Whatever needs to be done. They
sent me down to a printer in Woburn to pick up some really cool
looking Red Sox and Kerry signs that I took to Manchester, NH.
-
Yesterday I downloaded and posted a list of
side-by-side endorsements for Bush and Kerry. It makes
interesting reading. When it was posted online, it showed pages of
Bush and then, at the bottom, were pages of Kerry. It looked so one
sided that I wondered if it was done on purpose.
October 27, 2004
-
Another long day up in Salem NH working for Kerry. Someone came into
the office today and said that the Bushies had there signs out on an
intersection so we all piled into cars and got out there. I struck up
a conversation with some women holding Bush signs next to me. Took
them a couple of minutes before the vitriol to temper. The woman next
to me said that she would never again vote Democratic because we were
stealing and defacing their signs. I old her that we had sheets on
our walls of people who had their Kerry signs stolen but she wouldn't
believe me. But after 30 minutes or so we were chatting amiably.
-
The almost always hilarious Onion magazine has put out their 2004 Election Guide.
Very funny.
MIAMI, FL -- With the knowledge that the
minority vote will be crucial in the upcoming presidential election,
Republican Party officials are urging blacks, Hispanics, and other
minorities to make their presence felt at the polls on Wednesday,
Nov. 3.
Uh, the elections on on November 2nd in case anyone
doesn't get the joke. Other titles include: "Cheney Vows To Attack
U.S. If Kerry Elected", "Hundreds Of Republicans Injured In Rush To
Discredit Kerry", and "Kerry Vows To Raise Wife's Taxes".
-
This is old news now but a huge cache of explosives has vanished from a site in Iraq. Kerry
is already using it on the campaign trail.
The Iraqi
interim government has warned the United States and international
nuclear inspectors that nearly 380 tons of powerful conventional
explosives - used to demolish buildings, make missile warheads and
detonate nuclear weapons - are missing from one of Iraq's most
sensitive former military installations.
-
The Washington Post endorses Kerry.
Experts tell
us that most voters have had no difficulty making up their minds in
this year's presidential election. Half the nation is passionately for
George W. Bush, the pollsters say, and half passionately for John
F. Kerry -- or, at least, passionately against Mr. Bush. We have not
been able to share in this passion, nor in the certainty. As readers
of this page know, we find much to criticize in Mr. Bush's term but
also more than a few things to admire. We find much to admire in
Mr. Kerry's life of service, knowledge of the world and positions on a
range of issues -- but also some things that give us pause. On
balance, though, we believe Mr. Kerry, with his promise of
resoluteness tempered by wisdom and open-mindedness, has staked a
stronger claim on the nation's trust to lead for the next four years.
October 26, 2004
-
The new Treo 650 has been seen in the wild. It has Bluetooth, a higher
resolution LCD screen, a faster processor, and a removable battery.
Looks pretty slick.
October 25, 2004
-
The war of the lawyers continues as Ohio
Republicans are trying to invalidate voters. It sounds bad but
unfortunately, the Democratic party has a long history of "over
registration" and double voting to live with. I certainly think that
there needs to be people watching closely for fraud but we must error
on the side of letting people's votes be counted.
Republican Party officials in Ohio took formal steps yesterday to
place thousands of recruits inside polling places on Election Day to
challenge the qualifications of voters they suspect are not eligible
to cast ballots.
-
Worked up in Salem doing a variety of tasks. Drove around two 6 town
halls to get the latest lists of absentee voters. Then made a number
of calls two people who had already volunteered to confirm that they
are working with us in the Salem/Derry area. Seems that inner-party
politics is rearing its head because the Boston Kerry office has said
that they are going to be calling our volunteer lists. God knows why
they need them. Got into a fight with the woman who runs the office
because she was considering this list of names/numbers on her wall as
the master list instead of the spreadsheet that a volunteer was
keeping up to date. "I've been doing it this way for 20 years". Yeah
but multiple people have to work from this list and we can't read your
writing. What an idiot.
-
Came back last night after being in Pittsburgh for a ceremony for my
little niece Shivani. So cute. Her mom, my brother's wife, is Indian
and they have a hair cutting ceremony where the baby's head is shaved.
Tim, my son, would not have been an issue because he was basically
bald until he was 2 but Shivani had a head of dark hair. She did
great and managed to look even cuter with a buzz cut. She is just on
the verge of crawling and I'm sure we'll get a full report in a week
or two.
-
Interesting. The Eleven Satanic Rules of the Earth. Most seem pretty
reasonable. Maybe there are 111 and these are only the ones that they
can print. I liked this one.
10) Do not kill
non-human animals unless you are attacked or for your food.
This implies, I guess, that human animals are a different
story. Oh, and this one sounds pretty sane too.
11) When walking in open territory, bother no one. If someone bothers
you, ask him to stop. If he does not stop, destroy him.
-
Interesting blog of audio, visual,
and text material being removed from the Whitehouse web site
either because of the election or in preparation of Bush's removal.
As reported previously here, here and here, it looks
like the scrubbing of various historical documents and other elements
of the White House Website is continuing! And may be wider and more
systematic than previously known.
October 22, 2004
-
Wow! Over 7,000 people have already expressed an interesting in flying on
SpaceShipOne after it becomes Virgin Galactic. This is the
continuation of Burt Rutan's space program being run by Scaled Composites. They will be
building 5 spacecrafts for Virgin each of which will be able to take 5
or 9 passengers on the 3.5 hour trip into space -- the actual time of
weightlessness will be less than 5 minutes. I'm not sure if I'd go
for that price. I'm sure it will come down however after competition
comes up to speed.
-
Paper talking about data processing
on large computing clusters. Haven't read it but it looks
interesting. Supposedly the theory behind google.
-
Wow. Up to 1
terrabyte of RAM in a drive unit. 2 million random I/O requests
per second. 12 gigabytes per second of random sustainable data
bandwidth. Requires 5 kilowatts of power.
October 21, 2004
-
Good day working for the Salem Kerry office. They are making me the
visibility coordinater for events up to and including election day.
It means I have to make sure volunteers are around with signs in
visible places in the area and at the polls on 11/2. Finally started
doing some telephone calling. It's tough work because most people are
angry to be bothered. But we need to be able to remind people about
the election, make sure they have a ride, and provide them information
about the candidate if they are unsure. They have databases where
voters can be coded as refusing to talk or not interested and they
will never be called again. It is a necessary evil I guess.
October 20, 2004
-
Bit the bullet and swapped out their firewall box for an OpenBSD
server up in the Salem NH Democratic office. The server provides
DHCP, windows share, NAT, and firewall. Also figured out that the
network line from the closet out to the main array of computers was
bad. It was losing a lot of packets across this one cable which was
wrapped in power lines. I remade it which solved a ton of problems.
October 19, 2004
October 18, 2004
-
So my first day up in Salem New Hampshire working for the Kerry
campaign. Massachusetts is pretty much locked up for Kerry so the
action is up North. Lot of dedicated people in there for sure. They
had me drive around to a number of town clerks offices to get some
documentation and I worked on trying to improve their Internet
connection which is terrible. It's very pretty now that the leaves
are changing.
So their network connection is terrible --
probably due to their location at the end of a Comcast cable run. I
decided to walk around the local businesses to see if we could
piggy-back. The mortgage company has a T1 upstairs as well as a
picture of George W on their bulletin board. Oh well.
October 15, 2004
October 13, 2004
-
Just put up a new brain teaser entitled Bad Shipping on my teasers
page. It's a tough one. Monty sent it to me last night and it took
me a good hour to solve it.
-
They may be hiding the senior Al-Qaida members in Jordan the BBC reports. Jordan is
denying this however.
A Haaretz correspondent has
learned from international intelligence sources that the CIA is
running a top-secret interrogation facility in Jordan, where the
detainees - considered Al-Qaida's most senior cadre - are being
held... A report on these prisoners issued Tuesday by the Human
Rights Watch organization claims they are being held somewhere so
secret that U.S. President George Bush asked the CIA heads not to
report it to him.
-
Scary story alleging that voter
registration forms were thrown out by a registration company,
Voters Outreach of America.
[An employee of a private
voter registration firm] says he got into a beef with the company over
a pay dispute, and witnessed his bosses ripping up registration forms
that had been filed by democrats. "They were thrown away in the
trash. I grabbed them out," said Eric Russell. One of those forms
belonged to Daren Gray, who was shocked to learn that the
re-registration form he filled out was never turned in.
-
Interesting story from the Guardian about a peasant photographer Li Tianbing in China. Here are some of Li's pictures.
Li estimates he has taken 300,000
pictures of village weddings, communist party meetings and spring
festival family gatherings using the most natural facilities.
Developing the prints, he works with chopsticks by the light of a
candle inside a red paper lantern. For enlargement, he shortens the
height of a pipe from the ceiling that lets in an adjustable circle of
light. "It doesn't get much more basic," says Li. "But you have to
take account of the weather, which can be tricky. On a sunny day, you
only need to open the door for one or two seconds to expose the
film. But you need a bit longer when the clouds roll in."
October 12, 2004
-
Hosted one of the MoveOn.org's Vote for Change house parties at my place last
night. Very uplifted to meet so many kindred spirits who are as
passionate as I about working to vote Bush out of office on November
2nd. We watched the Vote for Change concert with Springsteen, Dave
Matthews Band, R.E.M., and the Dixie Chicks and wrote letters to folks
in the swing states. I've not physically written that much in a long,
long time.
-
Here's a brutal piece about the horrors of war and
the anguish of returning home regarding soldiers returning from
Iraq. And to think that we didn't do everything in our power
to avoid it.
"There are no clear enemy lines," says
Steve Robinson, the film's narrator and executive director of the
National Gulf War Resource Center. "The battlefield completely
surrounds the soldier: it's above you, it's below you, it's to the
left, it's to the right. It's 360 degrees you don't know where the
enemy is. That is an incredible amount of pressure to operate under."
Robinson believes that post-traumatic stress disorder will be this
war's most destructive legacy, just as Agent Orange afflicted Vietnam
veterans for decades, and Gulf War Syndrome still sickens soldiers who
served during the first Iraq war.
October 8, 2004
October 7, 2004
-
I remember a couple of years back finding some sites which "prove"
that the moon landings were staged. One of the interesting bits of
"evidence" presented was that we have yet to see a picture from the
earch or a satelite of the landing sites on the moon. Interesting
question. We decided to figure out what resolution the Hubble space
telescope had and we figured out that at the distance from the
hubble to the moon there is a 10m/pixel resolution. We figured that
at least you would need a 1m/pixel resolution to see the landing
sites.
-
This is cool. Back in 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts
put a laser ranging retroreflector array in the Sea of Tranquillity. They shine a
laser through a very carefully aimed telescope and then using
specialized equipment then can detect the return signal which is only
1 photon every few seconds. They are able to measure the
moon's distance to within 3cm of accuracy. With this information,
scientists now believe that the moon as a liquid core. Did not know
that.
-
So I bought some DVD-R, cases, and labels today. With the help of my
Mac G4, Imovie, and
IDVD, I am wandering
into the DVD burning realm to document the cable coverage of the two
SpaceShipOne launches over the last 10 days. Pretty cool. Imovie is an excellent
program for most basis video editing but it still takes time to
import, edit, tune, and export movies. IDVD is pretty good but I
still fight with the interface a bit -- this may improve as I use it
more. Certainly I would not run iDVD without at least a G4 and 512mb.
Still, I'm looking forward to checking one of my burned DVDs this
evening.
-
So I missed the fact the other night that Cheney mentioned
factcheck.com not .org which he probably meant. The guys who own
factcheck.com have now redirected their URL to an anti-bush site
georgesoros.com. Of course, both factcheck.com, factcheck.org, and
georgesoros.com are all melting under the load. But still funny. We
were laughing at work picturing the system administrator choking on
his dinner and rewinding his Tivo to hear Cheney say his domain name
before breaking out into a cold sweat and calling his ISP to try and
contain the deluge.
-
Cool picture of hurricane Ivan from the International Space Station.
-
So there is a space
elevator competition next year. Space
elevators have been proposed for years as an alternative to rocket
launches. Wires would be run from a space station anchored with a
large mass (maybe from an asteroid) down to the ground. Vehicles
could then travel along the wires to get into space. The problem is
the weight of the system. The wires need to be super strong and super
lightweight otherwise the weight of the miles of cables would pull any
orbiting mass back down to earth. They are talking about using carbon
nanotube composites to make the ribbon. Arthur C. Clarke wrote a
story about this in his Fountains of Paradise (isbn.nu.
-
A while back I stumbled onto this PCI card which emulates a VGA card and
PS/2 keyboard over a serial port. Basically it lets you drive
your computer from a serial console and is operating system
independent. Very cool.
-
A friend works at a company with a large number of hosted machines.
They have been experimenting with 32-bit versus 64-bit opterons boxes
and have found that in 32-bit mode, they comsume something like 120
watts and in 64-bit mode they consume 90watts more. Wild!
-
Another great product from Thinkgeek.com. This time it's a PC EZ-Bake
oven. Unfortunately, it's an April Fool's joke or something.
-
In 1917, British cryptographers deciphered a telegram from the German Foreign Minister offering the Mexican
government United States territory in return for joining the German
cause. Woodrow Wilson was elected President for a second term,
largely because of the slogan "He kept us out of war". The telegram
helped fuel anti-German opinion in American and drew the US into the
war. Code breaking experts say that it is one of the most important
cryptanalysis in history.
-
Jimmy Carter speaks about the Florida election disaster in 2000 and why it might happen again
next month. Foxes left to guard the hen house for sure. What a
disaster.
October 6, 2004
-
John Perry Barlow's comments about how he's supporting Kerry anyway. He furious, as am I, with the idea that
Kerry and the Democrats have not been able to crush "worst
administration in [his] lifetime". I think that it shows some basic
problems with our politics and politicians.
Kerry's
failure to capitalize on the failures of the worst administration in
my lifetime is unfathomable. The systematic ineptitude of his campaign
organization so far fills me with grave concerns about his ability to
form an administration that wouldn't make us nostalgic for Gerald
Ford's.
-
Hilariously cool video showing this asian dude wailing on an electric drum keyboard unit. How about
drums!
-
Pretty wild interactive light floor invented by a former Lycos Employee.
Interesting concept. This event looks particularly bizarre.
-
Here is the Memorandum of Understanding for the debates. It is a 32 page
agreement between Bush and Kerry campaigns covering every aspect of
the three Presidential debates and one Vice-Presidential debate.
-
Fascinating article comparing drunk drivers to drivers using cell phones.
When drivers were conversing on either a hand-held or
hands-free cell-phone, their braking reactions were delayed and they
were involved in more traffic accidents than when they were not
conversing on the cell phone. By contrast, when drivers were legally
intoxicated they exhibited a more aggressive driving style, following
closer to the vehicle immediately in front of them and applying more
force while braking. When controlling for driving conditions and time
on task, cell-phone drivers exhibited greater impairment than
intoxicated drivers.
Wow. No difference between hands-free and
hand-held which argues that it is cognitive impairment, not the
mechanics of the phone which are at fault.
-
Encouraging article from MSNBC about the response to the first
presidential debats and how Kerry's
solid performance has evaporated the Bush lead.
With a solid majority of voters concluding that John Kerry
outperformed George W. Bush in the first presidential debate on
Thursday, the presidents lead in the race for the White House has
vanished, according to the latest NEWSWEEK poll. In the first national
telephone poll using a fresh sample, NEWSWEEK found the race now
statistically tied among all registered voters, 47 percent of whom say
they would vote for Kerry and 45 percent for George W. Bush in a
three-way race.
October 5, 2004
October 4, 2004
-
I was working on an Imovie last night into the wee hours of the
footage from CNN of the first X-Prize launch of SpaceShipOne. Fun.
I hope to put out my DVD to a couple of friends soon.
-
SpaceShipOne made the google image. Cool!
-
I flew out west on JetBlue. I
was very impressed. US$99 each way from Boston to Long Beach, CA..
No meals but drinks and snacks. They give you the can of soda not a
half glass. The pilot made announcements about the flight while
standing at the front of the plane when coming home. We unloaded and
loaded in Long Beach from both ends of the aircraft. A lot of
innovation and efficiency. I'll be flying them again.
-
So I wore my He's Still
Free, What About You tshirts on my flight out and back from Long
Beach on JetBlue without incident. On the way out one of the TSA
security folks said "oh cool t-shirt". On the way back the woman
working the xray asked if I wore that specifically when I was flying
and I said yes. I also got complements from other passengers and a
stewardess.
-
The free radio station in Santa Cruz was shutdown by the FCC. I love
how they had their guns drawn when they went into the building. Those
damn radio commies!
Santa Cruz, CA- Yesterday, at about
9:20 am, agents of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), pulled
the plug on Free Radio Santa Cruz, an unlicensed, low-power fm radio
station which began broadcasting in the spring of 1995 to return
community control and accountability to our local media. The FCC
action came about an hour after more than a dozen agents from the US
Marshals Office, some carrying assault rifles,"secured" the property
of the Zami student housing co-op on Laurel Street, where the station
had been broadcasting for about 5 months. US Marshals stormed the
building, and forced the residents outside, some in their
pajamas.
-
Just finished blogging the X-Prize
winning flight of SpaceShipOne. Pilot Brian Binnie flew Burt
Rutan's ship up to 368,000ft shattering the X15 height record and
winning the US$10m X-Prize.
-
Back home from a west coast vacation. I went out there as a space
geek to watch the first launch of SpaceShipOne in its
attempt to win the X-Prize. Here's my diary of the
event. Here's the press release from the launch. Lots of fun!
It's
official: X-Prize officials say Mike Melvill climbed to 337,500 feet
this morning. That's almost two miles higher than he needed to fly to
meet the first objective of the $10 million first prize. As for the
unintended series of rolls, Melvill told reporters at the Mojave
Spaceport Wednesday, "It was probably something I did." He suggested
that he might have inadvertently stepped on the rudder pedal during
the spacecraft's boost phase. He said the whole thing was "kinda
cool."
-
I strongly recommend the fabulous Black Sky: The Race for Space program on the discovery channel.
It chronicles Burt Rutan and Scaled Composite's bid to build and fly
the first privately funded vehicle to go higher than 100km. Part 2 is
being shown on 10/7, from 9-10pm ET/PT. Part 1 is being rerun on
10/10, at 4pm ET.
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