02 June 2011
01 June 2011
06 May 2011
The Best of Times, the Worst of Times
It’s that time, not only of the year, but of my life. The time is, high school graduation. For the past almost 30 years I haven’t given two shakes about high school graduations. I knew they happened. They talked about them on the news. A few weeks before we knew to stay in as prom season rolled into full-swing, and the restaurants were full of pimply faced teenagers trying their darndest to act all grown up, dressed to the nines and wining and dining their dates.
But this year is different. No. 1 Son is graduating from Topeka High School – my alma mater. Two days ago he played his last band concert during the annual “Dogs on the Lawn” band fund-raiser. At the end, they had the Seniors step to the front, and us parents join them, and we sang the school song, and the school fight song. It has been nearly 30 years since I sang either of those, but they came back to me just like it was yesterday. Amazing really.
I’m not sure I’m ready for the boy to graduate high school. Hell, I’m not sure he’s ready to graduate. He’s the emotional type. He looks at high school graduation not as the end of the beginning, but rather, as the beginning of the end. He is kind of lost (as I was at his age) in that he doesn’t really know what he wants to do with his life. It’s a hard time for kids that age, looking back, all I knew was that I was glad to be rid of school, and I went to a college nearly 400 miles away just to get away from the ‘rents. But he’s not like that. He has no interest in putting any distance between us and him. We joke that he’ll be 40 and living with us. Sometimes…just sometimes…I wonder how far off we are on that mark.
15 March 2011
Only in Kansas
13 March 2011
Movie Thoughts: Sunshine Cleaning
Amy Adams and Emily Blunt portray sisters who start a bio-waste & crime scene cleaning service as a way for Adam's character to send her child to a private school (after having been expelled from his regular school).
One of my long time favorite favorite actors, Alan Arkin, plays the role of the women's kooky off-beat father.
All in all, it was a fun movie to watch, with a couple of laugh out loud moments.
Movie Thoughts: Daybreakers
I will say that lately I've been avoiding vampire movies - pretty much since the Twighlight movies started up. Those simply can't hold my interest. As someone said - the Twighlight movies turned vampires into sparkly faggots. A sentiment with which I agree.
Daybreakers, however, returns the vampire monster to it's rightful place a something to be feared; but with a Wall Street corruption kind of twist.
Set in a world where vampires have become the norm, and humans have become an endangered species, a small group of humans search for a way to survive, even as the supply of human blood dwindles to nothing.
Daybreakers isn't really a horror film so much as it is a well plotted and well acted thriller. Ethan Hawke, Sam Niell and Will Dafoe star.
30 September 2009
The Do-it-yourself LoJack….kinda
Having two working laptops in our house, one of which gets carried around by me quite frequently, I have often worried what I’d do if one of them ends up getting stolen. It happens all the time. I’ve thought of LoJack, but my fears, I guess, just don’t justify the cost.
This is rather cool. Over at TechRepublic, I learned of an open source (read – FREE) software program for Windows, Mac and Linux called “Prey”
The software puts you firmly in the “big brother” seat in the even your laptop is ever stolen. I would assume it would work just as well on a desktop, I don’t know.
Once you install Prey, it will send an email to a email address you specify,in a time interval you specify…say…every 3 minutes,or 10 minutes, or 1 hour. The email will contain information like:
- Computer status
- List of currently running programs
- Network (including Wi-Fi) information
- A screen shot of the desktop
- A picture of the thief (if your laptop has a webcam)
Now, I know what your thinking “Gee, that’s cool, but I don’t wanna fill up my email box when the laptop isn’t stolen.” Well, the folks that created Prey thought of that too. When you setup and configure Prey, you can set it to check a specific URL. If it finds that, it will send the data to the specified email address.
I’m going to download and install this on my laptop this evening, I’ll add a post in the next day or two about the experience. The URL can be a specific web page, something like, say “http:myownhometown.blogspot.com/stolenlappy.htm”. Something you can create as soon as the laptop goes missing.
15 September 2009
Mayberry 2.0
We’ve been watching “Eureka” on the SyFy channel for three seasons now, and something I have only just noticed is; “Eureka” is an updated version of “The Andy Griffith Show”. A tad bit about the town; Eureka is a town situated in the mountains – one gets the feeling of the pacific northwest. Built and funded by the US Government the town is home to the brightest (and quirkiest) minds in America.
Enter into this mind vault the down-home simple sheriff, Jack Carter. Carter is a modern day Andy Taylor (except Carter carries a gun – even if I can’t ever remember him removing it from his holster). Taking the role of Barney Fife is ex-army ranger, Deputy Jo Lupo (and yowsers…what is it with hot women and big guns? anyone know?). Down the street is Henry Deacon in the Gomer/Goober Pyle role as the town mechanic – who’s also some kind of astro/quantum physicist/mechanic type guy. Carter lives with his daught (opie anyone?) in a “smart house” run and controlled by a computer named SARAH (Aunt Bea – natch). There is also the guy that runs the town’s coffee shop/eatery “Cafe Diem” – who takes the place of Floyd the barber.
There are of course others, a couple of possible love interests for the single dad Carter, and some wacky scientists and engineers thrown into the mix. Overall, it is an enjoyable show – got kinda wonky towards the middle/end of the second season, but seems to be pulling the reigns back in about now.
02 October 2008
Microsoft gets...perky?
You may, or may not, know, in the cut-throat, dog-eat-dog (which, by the way, is kinda sick, in a cannibalistic kind of way), Microsoft ranks a distant 3rd. Behind (of course) Google and Yahoo.
No, admittedly, I normally use Google. Why? I dunno, because it is habit I suppose. I used to use Yahoo...heck, everyone used to use Yahoo. It was the premier search engine. Lycos and Alta Vista were...meh....ok, but really didn't hold a candle to Yahoo. What I like primarily about Yahoo back in the day, was their simple interface. They had a white page, with regular old HTML hyperlinks, a regular old HTML text box in which to type your search, and a regular old HTML button you'd use to submit the form.
But they veered away from that. they started adding color, and images, and videos,and advertising. Ok, I don't mind the adverts really. Hey, I am an unabashed capitalist. My belief is, 'If someone, somewhere, isn't making money on this, it should just not be done'. That is, of course, rather simplified....suffice it to say that I don't have any problem with people making money...LOTS of money. But, I digress....
Then, along came Google. I noticed, shortly after Google was launched, that Yahoo's search had a tag line "powered by Google' under their search box. Well, thought I, why am I using Yahoo, and not just going straight to the source? So I started using Google. I like it. It was back to the simple, white page, limited graphics, fast loading web search. They way it should be in my opinion.
The, last year, Microsoft's Live Search is launched. It's ok. It is a search engine, and now-a-days, they are pretty much all the same. I've used it (heh, my own sites come up higher on it than on Google, so I should be happy about that). I've used it, but not used it all that much. Though, it does integrate well with the Microsoft Desktop Search (integrated into Vista, and available for download for XP) which is a great way to find stuff on your machine (much, much better than that stupid dog search thing).
Ok, ok,....I'm getting to a point here...I promise. The thing is, since Microsoft's failed attempt at purchasing Yahoo (the number 2 search engine - in case you didn't know), I'm certain they've been trying to figure out ways to increase the use of Live Search. And now they found something. Microsoft Live Search SearchPerks. SearchPerks is a deal where you earn 'ticket' for each search you perform using Windows Live Search (up to 25 a day). You have to download a toolbar add-on, and have to be using Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6 or better browser (sadly, Firefox - my default browser - won't work with it). At the end of the SearchPerks promotion (April 15, 2009), you can redeem your tickets for prizes ranging from cookbooks to video games to music downloads to frequent flyer miles. You can even donate your tickets to charity if you want.
Really, not a bad deal at all, to do 25 searches a day, earn the max number of points, and get some free swag. You can find out more at the SearchPerks website.
(oh...and uh...sorry about the crappy pun in the title...I couldn't help myself).