Gradually degenerating into ignorance and complacency.

Saturday, September 30, 2006

Kids know better

Despite the FDA approving the consumption of spinach again, many kids claim worry that it may not be safe. The fact that they don't like it either in no way influences their opinion, surely. Thanks to some indepth research and rumor-finding, some youths have found that broccoli, green beans, lima beans, asparagus, and squash have also been "tainted" with unknown toxins. Concurrent rumors are that cooties and yuckies are both to blame in this newest produce scare.

Good news, they're being caught

Goshen teacher charged with sexual misconduct with student
Associated Press

An elementary school teacher faces a felony charge of sexual misconduct with a minor for what authorities say was a relationship with a high school student.

Mel Trowbridge, 44, a fifth-grade teacher at Goshen's Waterford Elementary School, was accused of having sex with a teenage girl several times over the past year, said Detective Kelly Todd of the Elkhart County Police Department.

"In terms of the time frame, we're looking at from July of 2005 through August of 2006," Todd said.

Trowbridge, who was arrested Thursday, was being held Friday at the Elkhart County Jail under $100,000 bond. The charge against him carries a possible sentence of two years to eight years in prison.

Bruce Stahly, superintendent of the school district about 25 miles east of South Bend, said the Trowbridge's contacts with the 15-year-old girl were believed to have occurred away from school.

Stahly said Trowbridge has taught at the elementary school for several years and has been an assistant coach in track and basketball at Goshen High School.

Trowbridge has been suspended with pay and no longer has access to school buildings, he said.

.....
I posted before my luck in timing that I am not suspect because I'm male, for I no longer teach. This year will be a big shakedown and I'm glad that I'm not there to answer questions that I shouldn't have to answer, merely because I'm male.

Okay, here the US is in the wrong. I say let him stay there.

U.S. prison head freed in Afghanistan
JASON STRAZIUSO
Associated Press

An American convicted of running a private prison in Afghanistan as part of a freelance hunt for terrorists left the country late Saturday following his release from an Afghan jail, officials said.

Court documents filed Friday in Washington, D.C., show that U.S. officials planned to help Brent Bennett secure a passport and a ticket out of the country, and an Associated Press reporter saw a man identified as Bennett board a plane for Dubai late Saturday.

Bennett, former U.S. soldier Jonathan "Jack" Idema, and Edward Carabello were arrested in July 2004 and convicted of running a private prison in Kabul after Afghan security forces raided a house and discovered eight Afghan men who said they had been abused.

Abdul Qayum, the commander of the Pul-i-charki prison where Bennett had been jailed, said the American was in good spirits when he left the prison on Saturday.

An Afghan airport official showed an AP reporter a copy of the passport of the man boarding the plane in the name of Brent L. Bennett. The official asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Idema, who is serving a five-year sentence at the prison, also told the AP that Bennett was being flown out of the country on Saturday.

No U.S. officials in Afghanistan would comment on Bennett's case, and an American lawyer filing paperwork on his behalf said he didn't know if Bennett was free or in U.S. custody. When Bennett boarded the plane he was not wearing any restraints.

"We don't know if he was forcibly put on the plane or not because they probably knew people would be watching," lawyer John Tiffany said by phone from the United States. "I'm hoping that there were no constraints."

Edward P. Birsner, the consul at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, said in Friday's court filing that the "Embassy has no intentions of taking Mr. Bennett into custody."

A spokesman for the embassy declined to comment on the case Saturday.

Bennett had been sentenced to three years in prison. Carabello, who said he was a video journalist, was released in April.

8th dominoe

My folks got a call today about a friend who died after surgery. Not only was he a friend, but even bringing it closer to them was that he got a blod clot and died after having the same surgery that my mother had. She had both knees replaced and is generally considered a relatively simple and common surgery. Whether it was freakish or that her doctors loaded her with lots of blood thinners or simply that God needed her to live ... it brings it closer (click) another domino closer.

In the last five years, other dominoes have fallen in line, drawing closer. It hurts losing a loved one, but since the folks are older, ultimately there is a fear of the unknown -- what happens when you die. What happens to the soul of the person? What happens to everyone still around (spouse)? There is reason to fear, but nothing to do about it.

Paul, I met you twice and you seemed like a nice guy. God rest!

Friday, September 29, 2006

This should be the new requirement

Smoke? Well then, use this, and only this.

Who supports terrorism?








America does is the simplest way: oil-wasting vehicles haulling only one person or few persons. Waste, waste, waste and the terrorist organizations love it! When you don't care, you support terrorism. Buy drugs, support terrorism. If you think I'm wrong, research what Afghanistan exports -- drugs and weapons. How would Iraq ever be able to support terrorism ... ah, yes ... oil. Which country consumes the most oil of any nation ... hmm... the US. Slow terrorism, stop buying fuel-inefficient vehicles. If they aren't bought, new ones won't be built and America will have models that actually get better gas mileage.

Govenor of California -- Arnold, why own Humvees? A state with energy and pollution problems and the govenor demonstrates great waste. To all of America, set an example ... don't feed, cloth and house terrorists -- stop being wasteful. Dump the SUVs. Dubai has built an artificial island found the wonders of oil sales.

Last sampling of news today

One could dwell on any part of this, but more telling is the none-too secret depth to which extemists will carry out revenge against enemies. I would like to believe that their enemies are only the standing armies in the Arab regions, but that isn't so. If non-Iraqis were to pull out of Iraq+ now, then they would find "old" enemies to smite -- likely Israel. I don't ever see an end to their seeking Isreal's removal from the planet. The underscored theme here, "revenge" will really is questionable when they would be satisfied. How about saying a number, eh? Give a death toll for a ballpark. I think if more likely that the number would be "all non-Muslims"

+ I was not a supporter of the war, but pragmatically, there is no good, safe way to mass pull out of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Finding them was easy

Foley, as chairman of the Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus, contacted a 16 year old male. There are questions as to the content and focus of the conversation, but the "page" reported his choice to end the emailing as he was upset with them. I'm sure we're going to hear more about this little thing pretty soon. Sad that he didn't keep up with his (first link) agenda to keep Children safe, even from their parents.

Especially sad was that nobody came

Depression Day Oct. 5

Indiana University-Purdue University will mark Depression Awareness Day on Oct. 5 with a free community event 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. in the Walb Student Union. Display booths, educational handouts and individualized screenings with a mental-health professional will be available. Presentations at noon and 6:30 p.m. are scheduled, and from noon to 1 p.m. a video and discussion in Room 222 Walb Student Unionwill address depression on college campuses.

♦From noon to 1 p.m. Oct. 3, IUPU will host “What Happy Faces are Hiding: Talking About Depression” in the Student Union Ballroom. The free event, open to the community, will offer a personal story that frames mental-health issues in real-life language and examples.

Jerk fails suicide test

Try as he might, this rude, caustic athlete couldn't even kill himself correctly. I guess being knocked around on the field impaired his vision, or maybe it was the drugs, either way -- he's alive. I'm sure the number of people he has agrieved are not relieved with his resilience in the face of this "attempt". His publicist found him. How uncanny that a person vying to get a better reputation for this punk now has a pity card to play out, making him vulnerable regardless of his history of being a snotty jerk or any other deragatory comment that might be reasonably made.

Munchies, Munchies are the best

especially when you're caught trying to fix something, in a place you don't own (Dominoes), at a time that it isn't open, and when you are supposed to have access (ex-employee). In the end, the wonder plant didn't do wonders for this high and mighty couple working their way up the judicial system in great form. I think this is the time to step in and either -- take a lung from each or make sure they don't produce; and I'm not referring to marijuanna.

Thursday, September 28, 2006

From Polly Klaas Foundation (maybe be common)



September 2006


About Polly Klaas® Foundation

Have you seen any of these missing children?



Tell a Friend


Tell a Friend

Dear,

This month we bring you:

  • "To Catch a Predator" Comes to Polly Klaas' Hometown.
    • Take Action: Tell Your Friends About This Important Show.
  • Learning from "To Catch a Predator."
    • Take Action: Order Your Free Internet Safety Kit Today.
    • Take Action: Order Your Free Child Safety Kit Today.
      __________________________________

"TO CATCH A PREDATOR" COMES TO POLLY KLAAS' HOMETOWN

During August, the controversial NBC Dateline show “To Catch a Predator” came to Petaluma and worked with the Petaluma Police Department to conduct a hidden camera investigation on Internet predators.


Order Your Free Internet Safety Kit Today, click here.
______________

Order Your Free Child Safety Kit Today, click here.

Dateline came to Petaluma because this is Polly Klaas’ home town. Her abduction and the massive community-wide search that followed in the fall of 1993 captivated the nation. That community response caused Petaluma Police Department to set up this sting to tell Internet predators, “Not our kids, not our town.”

The investigation lasted 3 days, with 29 men arrested.

We urge you to consider watching this often disturbing show,

  • To learn ways predators use the Internet.
  • To gain perspective on this problem that scares every parent.

The two-part hidden camera investigation will broadcast this Friday, Sept. 29, 9 PM and next Friday, Oct. 6, 9 PM.

TAKE ACTION: Tell your friends about this important show. Tell a Friend

__________________________________

LEARNING FROM "TO CATCH A PREDATOR"

“What I am convinced Dateline has done for the first time, is illustrate that these predators don’t look like snakes, or worms, or whatever creatures run for cover when rocks are turned over.

“These are often normal, average, next door neighbors. Respected members of society. Teachers, doctors, clergymen. That’s what I think has triggered it all. And this is why I truly believe the Dateline series has made us pay much more attention to the problem.”
(Allan Maraynes, Dateline Senior producer, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14927950/, Sept 20, 2006).

This is why the Polly Klaas® Foundation stresses that you and your children pay attention to adult behavior, rather than whether or not the person is known to you or your child.

  • Teach children that there are rules that adults have to follow. If any adult breaks a rule, children must yell, “No,” run to a safe place, and tell their parents or a trusted adult.
    • Adults should not ask kids for help.
    • Adults should not offer anything to a kid.
    • Adults should not ask kids to keep secrets.
    • No one should touch a kid’s private parts (parts covered by a swimsuit).
  • Help young people avoid online predators. Good parenting is more important than Internet savvy. You can make a real difference
    • Learn enough to understand the risks.
    • Be willing to discuss the risks with your children.
    • Be sure your children know that when they come to you with Internet problems, they can trust you not to ban their use of the Internet.

It’s like teaching kids to drive. You don’t just hand them the keys and turn them loose. You teach them the safety rules and sit beside them while they practice. And you probably have rules about where they can go, who they can see and how late they can stay out with their friends, right up until they graduate from high school.

It's no different on the virtual highway. Kids still need their parents' guidance.

__________________________________

__________________________________

Join us in keeping children safe

Click here

______________________________________________________________

About Polly Klaas® Foundation
The Polly Klaas® Foundation
helps find missing children, prevents children from going missing in the first place, and promotes laws like Amber Alert that help keep children safe.

Privacy Policy
Our promise to you: We won't sell, loan or share your name or personal information with anyone.


© 2006 Polly Klaas® Foundation, P.O. Box 800, Petaluma, CA 94953
E-mail: info@pollyklaas.org ~ Phone: (707) 769-1334 ~ 24 hour hotline: (800) 587-4357

Click here to sign up for Polly Klaas® Foundation e-news.


Visit the web address below to tell your friends about this.
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I name thee, death

A tattoo on a prisoner's forehead naming his vicitim. Personally, as long as it leads to his death -- I'm okay with it. I wouldn't, however, be surrprised if he had done it himself hoping to be permanently removed from general population. I don't buy it and think that if you did the crime, you should do the time -- or death. Dear Indiana prisoners, I dare you to kill him.

Now that ought to do it!

Baghdad turns to Los Angles for model

Bodies dumped in several locations, slain, executed. Now ... how would they ever read about how to do that? I got it! They had the L.A. Times in Farsi, right? The gangland killings are, well, amatuerish in contrast to LA gangs, but those responsible promise to better research how the gangs operate and slaughter their enemies despite police observing and known anti-gang and racist tenedencies toward minorities in profiling and sadistic aprehension. An off-handed comment was made that, "the next time will be so much more professional, you'd think that this was to become little LA".

Hewlett Packard in Print

Sadly, it's not for grand reviews, but rather legal problems. Good news for the company is that many people will use HP printers to print off important sections ... like the news of their spying. Gee! I wonder if that will affect their company at all? They didn't hurt customers, so ... as far as customers go, they were shielded from the whole mess.

Chumpanzee

Late, I know, Bill went ape on a FOX News question. While inexcusable, I can see the thought process ... "Prelude to 9/11" had Clinton painted in a bad way. Some of the would-be scenes were edited or omitted, but in the end, Clinton looked inept and not jumping on chances when he could have to stop terrorists and maybe bin Laden. He succeeded in pressuring the producers to edit it -- so he thinks he wins. A poor loser with a temper matched only with his ego (remember the Presidential scandals and his reactions) pulled a Jerry Springer guest with a simple question.

I think, already on the defensive from the movie and other disagreeing with him, the question smacked (in his mind) of "why didn't you do something about him". Overburdened with assaults to his ego -- Clinton lets go of repressed agression to a question unworthy of anger. I would say that democrats talking on the FOX News channel are met with as much contempt as their countparts on CNN. I would therefore note to future guests on either netwrok, that if you aren't with them -- 95%, you are then against them. Be prepared.

Any guest that I have seen try to talk, are instantly interrupted and other speak over them rudely, denying that they have a voice or opinion whatsoever. Suffice to say, that either you go there to take the abuse, hoping to make a half point or a point while being lambasted or you are a fool thinking that you'll get a fair run. Neither or no network allows a real discussion without interruptions.

Clinton ... you pulled a Clinton

HDD Units (posted after sent by Jim)

Happy 50th, hard drive. But will you make it to 60?

Threatening HDD, flash memory will soon be available in 64GB capacities -- with larger devices coming

September 26, 2006 (Computerworld) -- After 50 years, the useful life of the hard disk drive (HDD) is increasingly being threatened by SDRAM and flash-based semiconductor solid state disk (SSD) storage. For example, Samsung Electronics Company Ltd. has announced plans to release a 64GB solid state disk drive in a 2.5-in. form factor with an IDE/ATA or Serial ATA interface. And current 32GB flash memory is selling for $1,800 or less. So the questions are, Is SSD ready to surpass HDD in capacity and price? And, Has the HDD reached the physical limits or can the technology be pushed further?

Over its 50-year life span, the HDD has evolved from a 5MB storage device with 50 24-in. disk platters about the size of a household refrigerator to a 1-in. 8GB device found in Apple iPod and other MP3 players. Physically larger than the 1-in. HDDs found in consumer MP3 players and cell phones, 7,200-rpm, 3.5-in. HDDs have capacities of 750GB priced in the $400-to-$500 range with even larger 1TB HDDs just around the corner. For a good HDD synopsis and history, check out the recent Computerworld piece "From Elvis' hips to spinning disk: 50 years of innovation."
 

A screen shot of the Windows Vista Beta 2 desktop

Figure 1 Relative HDD trends and directions
(Click image to see larger view)

To remain viable as a storage technology, HDDs must continue to improve on price, reliability, durability, power consumption, footprint, capacity and performance (see Figure 1). Perpendicular recording technology that is replacing longitudinal recording on HDD combined with other enhancements should extend the useful life of the HDD for about another 14 to 15 years. Researchers like Mark Kryder, chief technology officer of Seagate Technology, estimate that perpendicular recording combined with other technology enhancements should enable the HDD to evolve out to around 2020.

At some point before then, a major technology shift or revolution will be required unless a significant breakthrough in physics and material composition among others can extend the HDD even further. What this means is that since it takes about five years for a technology to be fully integrated into an ecosystem like the storage industry, to be available around 2020 would need to understand what the replacement technology will be sometime around 2015 or so. While 2015 is less than nine years away, that still leaves plenty of time before you will need to unplug your existing storage systems.

Storage technologies or disk systems traditionally have been replaced on three-to-five-year cycles that should enable users to deploy several more iterations and generations of HDD-based storage before some new technology is defined and developed and products are ready for mission-critical deployment. We should start seeing signs of a new major technology shift in about nine to 10 years. However, between now and then, assume that we will continue to see many smaller (on a relative scale) technology improvements and evolutionary enhancements appear.

Perpendicular recording (Figure 2) is currently being deployed by major HDD manufactures across their product lines. Using perpendicular recording, more data can be stored in the same form factor (higher density), enabling reduction in number of platters required while increasing capacity, compared to longitudinal recording. There are more improvements in the works for the disk drive, including, better reliability, less power consumption, smaller footprints, continued drop in price per GB and, of course, increased capacity.

Longitudinal and perpendicular recording Source
Figure 2: Longitudinal and perpendicular recording Source: www.seagate.com

A challenge to building larger-capacity and smaller HDDs is the barrier known as super paramagnetic phenomenon. Super paramagnetism occurs when the magnetic particles on an HDD platter become so small that the magnetic energy holding the particles in place representing a bit can be influenced by thermal energy, resulting in lack of data integrity. The traditional approach for recording bits of data on a HDD using longitudinal recording was heading for the super paramagnetic brick wall limiting future HDD growth without having to increase the physical size of a disk drive.

To delay the effects of the super paramagnetic barrier for several years, perpendicular recording is being adopted by major HDD manufactures. For example, in mid-September 2006, Seagate demonstrated a record ariel density of 421G/bit per square inch that should result in future disk drives of 40GB or more for 1-in. and 275GB for 1.8-in. consumer electronics products.

At 421G/bit per square inch, future 2.5-in. HDD (6.25 square inch per platter surface) about two to three years away for notebooks and new generation of enterprise-class 2.5-in. disks should have capacities pof about 500GB. For 3.5-in. HDD manufacturers like Hitachi estimate that we should be seeing 2TB HDD around 2009 or 2010 with 1TB 3.5-in. HDD just around the corner. Smaller consumer HDD improvements for 1.8-in. HDD should have capacities of around 200GB in a couple of years. To put this into perspective, an Apple iPod or other MP3 player could for example have more storage than a typical currently shipping laptop or desktop computer.

To enable the HDD to get out to the 2020 timeframe, perpendicular recording will need to be combined with other types of technology including smaller form factor drives. For example new technology being worked on in R&D labs include heat-assisted magnetic recording nick named (HAMR) or thermal assisted recording (TAR) or bit pattern media are seen as possible technology to be combined with others to continue the HDD evolution until around 2020.

A possible threat to the HDD in I/O-intensive and time-sensitive applications, rugged and harsh environments, and portable devices including notebook computers is SDRAM or flash SSD. The primary advantages of SSD is that there are no moving parts, so seek times are dramatically decreased to improve performance and power consumption compared to a traditional HDD. SSD in the form of SDRAM (RAM) has been around for several decades as a high-performance storage solution for I/O and transaction intensive applications. SSD has been limited in capacity due to high cost of RAM compared to HDD storage, but similar to the HDD, SSD capacities continue to increase while prices decline. Today there are two primary types of SSD technologies one being RAM similar to what you would find in a typical server or cache in a storage device that requires power to preserve contents of memory and the other being NAND based flash.

Flash, also known as a disk on module (DOM), is most commonly found in portable media players and USB flash drives. Unlike SDRAM, it does not require power to preserve memory contents eliminating the need for battery and alternate power sources. While flash memory may not be as fast as high-speed RAM, it has an advantage in that it is available in large capacities at relative lower prices with improvements in both occurring on an annual basis. Vendors, including Samsung, are deploying flash-based SSDs with ATA and Serial ATA interfaces in 2.5-in. form factors for use in harsh environments and notebook computers to support faster boot and restore times while drawing less power than HDDs.

SSDs are available or soon to be available in capacities up to 64GB with larger devices on the drawing board. For example an IDE/ATA or SATA 32GB NAND based flash drive sells for about $1,800 (or less) with prices continuing to decline. By comparison a 3.5-inch SATA 7,200RPM 750GB HDD sells for about $400-500 USD. High capacity (multiple gigabyte ) SDRAM based SSD devices are also available from vendors including Texas Memory Systems.

There is a caveat with NAND flash based technologies in that they are not optimum for continuous reuse and re-cycling compared to RAM and HDDs. This has led to the development of hybrid disk drives that combine a HDD with large amount of flash and RAM to enable the HDD to spin down and I/Os resolved from RAM and flash until the HDD is needed. For example the Seagate Momentus PSD (power saving device) that combines a traditional 2.5-in., 5,400-rpm 160GB notebook HDD, 256MB of flash and 8MB of RAM cache. Another example of a hybrid HDD is the Samsung flashon (Figure-3).

Figure-3: Samsung Hybrid HDD (flashon)
Figure 3:
Samsung hybrid HDD (flashon)
Source: www.samsung.com

As the industry has seen in the past, combinations of different technologies can be expected to appear in storage systems and servers to help address data storage and I/O performance needs. For example some vendors may incorporate multiple gigabytes of flash as an embedded SSD on server motherboards to complement existing HDDs. Storage vendors may incorporate larger amounts of SDRAM and flash as tiered cache in front of larger quantities of high capacity 2.5-in. and 3.5-in. enterprise and desktop drives for tiered storage.

Some general trends include:

·                                 Continued decline in pricing while capacities increase for HDD and SSD technologies

·                                 Larger capacities, smaller footprints, less power consumption, better performance

·                                 Better reliability and durability with higher MBTF (some disks have 5+ year warranties)

·                                 Hybrid technologies combing HDD, SDRAM and flash as an integrated device

What happens around 2020 is still not clear, and there is plenty of time for new technologies to evolve -- some perhaps even revolutionary. There could be new breakthroughs in material compositions and recoding techniques to further extend HDD usefulness while semiconductor capacities increase and prices continue to decrease. Perhaps holographic storage that we have heard about for the past 10 years or so may finally be ready and economically viable for production sometime in the next 10-20 years. It's fairly safe to say that the death of the HDD after 50 years is still greatly exaggerated, so keep an eye on emerging data storage technologies to support storing larger amounts of data in more locations for longer periods of time.

 

HDD

RAM/SDRAM

NAN FLASH

Benefits

Reliable proven technology with good economics, capacity along with diverse packaging options

Low power requirement, higher performance for server boot times and improve OLTP and other I/O intensive applications

Improved cost vs. RAM, good performance and no need for battery to preserve data when is power lost

Caveats

More power, sensitive to shock, vibration and less performance compared to SSD

Expensive vs. HDD and flash. Battery needed to preserve data during loss of power

Similar to SDRAM along with limited reuse cycles compared to SDRAM and HDD technologies

Use for

Price-sensitive applications that require large amounts of storage with good performance

I/O and time-sensitive applications including OLTP or where power consumption and durability are concerns

Portable storage and media players, consumer products, tiered cache, appearing in hybrid HDD-based devices

 

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

book plug

I haven't read all of it, but I've finished one-third, as it's a quick read. A Dose of Sanity by Sydney Walker III, MD (1996) is written by a psychiatrist noting the non-scientific approach too many psychiatrists have for what they-call-medicine. So far, my favorite quote is, "... very little is undiagnosable, but much is not being diagnosed". This is a general theme to the book, noting also misdiagnoses and the theory of labelling that the psychological profession loves to do.

I would recommend this book for whomever find the topic and theme of interest.

I thought you were supposed to play dead!

There are a few suburban opposums around, but I have yet to capture one digitally. I saw one last night, but it was not obliging for photography, instead, looked at me with reflective eyes in the night and slowly walked away. I have never really seen one run, only lumber and walk with an alligator-like gait; swagger with hips in action or somewhat gracefully like a chameleon trying to imitate wind on leaves, feigning non-existence.

I'll be good and thankful when I can catch up to one and it fall over, stinking dead -- their skin exuding mucous smelling of rot, cleverly disuading predators from consuming them. Yes ... I'll take one faking death, but real dead ones, stink really foul. I know, last year I helped a neighbor move one with a bloated stomch that we both feared would rupture and explode a mixture of gasses and smells that would make your own fecal matter more appetizing.

Alas, should I ever want photos of the dead, I could drive to a local county park fixed on a growing-heavier traffic road, lined on either side with the dead that didn't make it to the other side, alive. I understand that one naturalist who works at the park, actually uses the dead fauna for count and species to know what kind of critters and some (extrapolated) population densities of species. There are few dead deer on that strip, but several raccoons die every week. They must have a healthy population to sustain such population losses.

One more bit on Dirty Jobs

I haven't seen each and every one, but I have seen a few. A few, chosen, jobs were not very dirty but okay to watch. A, less than really dirty job was crayfish (insert any other term for them) fisherman or really ... gatherer wasn't especially dirty, but mildly funny. The flatboat pilot was about as simple of a man as I've seen. He hard spoke a word, though I wouldn't write him off as dumb. He joke spoke simply and remotely. Simple folk live in the bayous of the Gulf states, simple folk. The crayfish gatherer here used shad, but said only that it's a fish, knowing little else about them because it wasn't important to him. Comedy through conversation.

He spent time with department of natural resources, who are responsible for determining when "shrimping season" opens yearly. The slop in it all was okay, but absent was the concentration of the collection. It wasn't the main focus, but I would have been intrigued by closely examining the haul from bottom-feeders. At its face, the bulk were small fish, too large to escape the hauling process of dragnets. I did see, unaware until that time, that rays (cousins to sharks and kites) have tongues.

Healthy Entertainment

I make no point to knock myself out watching any program, since there are so few that are worth anything, but ... there are a few that can be edutainment. Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe, as his "trained" friend said is his favorite show. It isn't completely slapstick or standup humor credits to credits, but worth watching.

I saw last night, his "Casino Food Recycler" episode. He was in Vegas and got Turtle's (a real behind-the-scenes stagehand) job of fowl cleaning. The show was okay, until he met up with Bill, the "recycler" when this simple Nevada pig farmer with ramshackle, piece-it-together-yourself equipment had Mike there to "help" him. What wasn't clear was if Bill, the farmer, had any other person helping him. The daily job -- DAILY, was gruelling and too much for one. Bill, not young, but wily showed Mike the ropes.

It had to be -- the nastiest, grossest, funniest job, I have ever seen. I think they chose to film during Fall/Winter, becuase the Summer heat would make the pig slop far too ripe. Without giving much away, as the episdoe bears watching, Mike was deep in all mixed buffet waste from the casinos in Vegas. Each day, truckloads (tons) arrive for sorting ... I can say nothing more than the grossness is well superceeded by the hilarity of the entire thing.

I nearly cried about the milk. In fact, I think, needing a laugh terribly, I think I did cry or let loose my bladder. Funny, funny, dirty jobs.

Thanks Discovery!

New technology could nip DVD format war in the bud

September 26, 2006 from Reuters
 
Movie studios save money and consumers don't have to worry about buying the "right" player
The format war around next generation DVDs may be over before it has begun, thanks to a breakthrough from a British media technology company.

Britain-based New Medium Enterprises (NME) said today it had solved a technical production problem that makes it possible to produce a cheap multiple-layer DVD disk containing one film in different, competing formats.

"Current technologies to create multiple layer disks mostly don't work. We've created a technology for mass production of multiple layers that does not suffer from the well known problem of low yields," said NME Chief Technology Officer Eugene Levich.

A low yield means that many DVDs coming off the manufacturing lines are not working and have to be discarded.

The production costs of a multi-layer DVD using the new NME technology are estimated to be around 9 cents, compared with the 6 cents for a standard single-layer play-back DVD, according to Dutch company ODMS, one of the world's leading makers of production lines for optical disks.

This 50% cost increase compares favorably with the current generation of multi-layer recordable DVD disks which cost 3 to 5 times as much to produce than a single layer disk, due to low yields.

The technological breakthrough comes one week after three employees at movie studio Warner Bros. filed a patent for the application of multiple formats on a single DVD disc.

"There's no collision between Warner and us. They patent the application, we are patenting the technology. These are complementary patents. I'm glad it's happened. Warner opened our eyes, because it shows they really want to do this and create multi-format, multi-layer disks," Levich said.

Time Warner is the world's largest media company and owns Warner Bros. Former Warner Home Video President James Cardwell joined NME as a board member last month.

Nipped in the Bud?

Multiple format DVD disks can solve the emerging war between the two new high capacity DVD formats: Blu-Ray, which is backed by Sony Corp., and Toshiba-supported HD-DVD.

High capacity DVD disks are needed to store high definition movies on a single disk. Movies stored in high definition provide five to six times more picture detail than standard definition which is used in normal DVDs.

Hollywood studios have been choosing sides in the DVD format war, each supporting one of the two formats. Some have said they will produce films in both, in addition to the standard DVD format.

By putting the same film on a single disk in the two competing formats, movie studios can save money and consumers do not have to worry if they are buying the right disk for their player.

The technological breakthrough by NME was confirmed by ODMS.

"I can confirm this. We were very skeptical when NME approached us. We have experience with producing dual layer recordable DVD discs and the yield is below 50%. But their technology gives a much higher yield and also brings other cost savings," said ODMS Chief Executive Jadranko Dovic.

ODMS said it will have the first prototype production line using NME's technology running by early 2007.

NME said it had also created new technology for the machines which have to read and write the disk, which is another bottleneck with multi-layer disks. The current generation of DVD players can read up to two layers.

NME has created DVD disks with up to 10 different layers that were still readable. It has created its own player, but it is willing to license the technology to mainstream consumer electronics companies, Levich said.

Movies on a DVD are stored at different depths depending on the technology. Blu-ray discs store information only 0.1 millimetre from the surface while HD-DVD discs store it at 0.6 millimeters. Movies longer than two hours would need to be stored on two layers of the same format very close to each other.

 

little bird

A little bird, flipped by the driver behind me, let me know today that perhaps, just maybe ... I was in the wrong.

prose and cons

Restless, yet ... sober, I'm typing still. My heart and mind are not still and are not right. My awful prose of drinking and attempts at death are just that ... typing. I'm sure, analytically I call pull out many fine points and use experience and history to Fruedian-pull out meaning in relations to my ego and superego battling like Ramos and Rommulus, knowing one survives, the other killed by the survivor. I think, yawning now, I'll finish with a more recent doctor who my say that my shoes were too tight.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

In a cup; death

and I drank it greedily. It promised murder, contracted by the drinker to the drinker. It promised me. Damnit, it promised me. Liar! Angerily, I slapped the cup to the ground and it shattered. My dreams of quick smiting were shattered still. I bent down to pick up the pieces of my dream -- my wish. Oh, fainting, but just almost. I was weak, fell on my knees then side. I reached out my hand to the shards, slip. My hand pussed a little blood. I tongue lolled out and my head hit the ground. My breath now in short pants. Oh, for one last bit, the drop I see slipping around on the floor. My arm numbs and only my eyes and fingers move. Gasp, gasp, gasp ... I'm breathing less now.

My eyes are closing, opening, closing ... not really blinking. My mind is flushing away. If only .... if only death. Surely his cloak is dark, black, like my vision now. I can hear me breathing, now only thinking. I hardly know my voice. It ...
isn't ... th ---------------

In moments, life begins again and I am whole; flesh and bone and I breath in the air. I painfully sit up and see the shattered cup. The drop of liquid -- thin near-death for cleaning and droplets of my blood. My hand is still bleeding, I see it pump with my beating heart. Oh ...

It's a struggle to stand, but through tugging on objects and a desire ... I stand again. I'm dizzy as I pan around. I'm, not sure who I am, but I know this place. I see the table, the floor and a bottle. The bottle with a happy label and happier contents. I pick up the bottle and slosh the keen liquid around. I set it down, my friend and tap it lightly. "Death? Are you in there my friends?" "Yes", was the reply.

More steps, more steps across the floor ... the table. I collapse into a chair. Oh ... I hurt, l ike a man shot with a thousand arrows. I don't ever want to stand again, but I must. Push .. push ... push ... I lean against the table. The world spins and I wait for it to slow. It slows but continues to twist, turn and spin. I bang my way back to the bottle. In a rare feat of coordination, I carry with me a coffee mug. I don't know if it's empty.

Clump ... the mug finds it's way to the counter. In a sloppy move, I hit the glass by mistake and the lovely sinfuly drink spills, but none in the glass. I panic and pick up the bottle but it spins away from me. I sway and can't move fast. Flash! An idea comes ... I put the mug under the horizontal bottle. With luck, I tip it and mulled poison fills the cup.

Dear! Cup in hand, I fall onto my butt with a thud. I'm splashed, but much of it is in the cup ... mug, I no longer care about words. The world is spinning, twisting and I don't know my name.

My word is that a good drink!

When you want to do it, do it! (it's better not to read this)

I'm not really referring to not smoking, but that's a great idea to not smoke, but rather end one's life. So often, it being a selfish act anyway, persons try to get more attention that trying to commit to success. Oh, loook ... I'm going to email everyone that I just swallowed a buttload of pills (6) and will be dying shortly. Please don't try to stop me. I'll take the good time to TXT message everyone too. Now, if they want to really do it and injure no one else, then commit to it. There are many surer ways to go than to gobble pilss, only to end up with mild complications or vomit on your would-be death shroud.

There aren't any really good pills to ensure that your stomach doesn't revolt, so pills -- for most, isn't the most effective way. Taking a header off a very tall spot (6 stories, at least) generally is a good bet, when the ground is good and solid like concrete or highway. While I dismissed pills as, generally, a poor way to exit, I'm not discounting chemistry in the least bit.

For $25, you can really nastily go out burning, especially with a pool of gas (inhaling the fumes) holding onto a partially pushed llghter with doublestick tape. Upon passing out, the lighter is set and up your unconscious body goes. To burn up alive -- gruesome and most panic, trying then to put out the fire. By the time aid comes, the victim then regrets trying to live.

A far more effective chemical way would be to shelter yourself in a small area (don't leave anyone around to be killed after you or trying to save you). A hotplate with potassium cyanide (rat poison+) mixed with vaporous mineral spirits or rubbing alcohol and model glue should -- in 30 some minutes of exposure open your mind, collapse your lungs and terminate life functions. In the moments before passing, the person should have a short-lived conscious euphoria before entering subconscious nirvana then death.

+ better powdered or crushed. The particular ratio of solid to liquid may seem critical, but a good rule of thumb should be 1:2 or 1:2.6(3) solid to liquid. Because of the inert matter in the rat poison, the effectiveness isn't obvious until the chemicals are superheated into a vaporous state. Smoking directly prior to this process may inhibit the cynanide's uptake into the bloodstream through the lungs.

Wererabbit

If you like Wallace and Gromit, this falls in line with the other animated features, almost exactly. It wasn't a great movie, by any stretch and has no start to finish rewatchability, but .... due to the animation and graphics it is rewatchable nearly in its entirety. Considering the projected age level and background on Wallace and Gromit (no back story on scientific adataptations (thank goodness), I'd put it a 6.0. It might rank a bit higher, but some themes would be lost or boring to kids as a general rule.

Speaking to the self

I had a too-long conversation with my nephew today. His subject ... only subject -- himself. I listend, for rarely was I involved in the conversation -- monologuing. My only contribution was that I saved my other family from hours-long topic about him. I took the proverbial bullet this time. I spoke much to him on growing, developing ... on becoming a person, fat lot of good it did. In the end, I guess I spared my family some long, boring conversation anyway.

Rarely have a met a person so self-centric, whereas all else is lost and unimportant other than self. Sick.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Oil money matters, Thanks Jay

"Two hundred miles off the coast of New Orleans the largest oil reserve is believed to have been discovered. It could increase our reserves by 50 percent and be worth over $15 billion. This reserve could cut the price of gas by a penny!"
--Jay Leno  

And Owl (tangent story from a children's tale)

And Owl sat down to make fresh tear tea. With pot on lap Owl thought of many sad thoughts, each making him tearful and the drops rolled down his sad cheeks into the kettle. He thought of half-eaten cookies, wilted flowers, unmade popcorn. Within minutes, he kettle was half, but his tears stopped. Why, thought Owl. Why can't I cry anymore? He jostled the kettle and realized there was enough to make tea, but still -- sad as it was, Owl couldn't cry any more.

The howling cold wind beat against the windows, shutters clanking back and forth. Owl was glad to be inside. The wind growled and howled, smoke from the fireplace oven toyed with coming into the house. The once-pleasant fire now hummed and cowerd. "Go away wind", Owl chided. The wind did not obey.

"Go away wind, you're scaring me." Still the wind did not subside. Fierce was the wind, rain coming with it in sheets. Thunder strikes, lighning flashes; a scary storm indeed. The candle beside Owl flutters, shaking itself. Owl's chair was no longer comfortable. He drews the blanket up around his chin.

Bam ... bam bam bam! The door quivered at the hinges, something was attacking the door.

Bam bam bam bam bam ... creak. The door was now slightly opened.

Whoosh! The wind belched open the door, then drew it closed again. In that instant, Owl saw something that brought him fear; no, terror. He wanted to jump behind the chair. He wanted to shout, "go away", but he was too frightened.

bam bam ba -- the door opened again, something stepped in ... the candle went out. Owl screeched, for that's what owls do. Only this screech meant, "Get out! Get out now!"

Clump, clump, clump ... wet footsteps. Owl dared to peek. In the flashes of lightning and the now weak fire he saw a figure at the door. It "hmpht" then pushed close the door. The door latched closed.

Owl tried to sit still, but he was quaking so much that the chair was alive with fright. Before Owl could speak -- for he wanted to scream again, the thing; the figure spoke.

"Owl? Owl? Are you home?"

Shocked, Owl knew this voice, still he had trouble speaking. He managed a peep and a squirk, but nothing else. The figure walked wetly over to the fire which found it's courage again. The wind was even less angry now. Sizzling from the drops of water hissed from the bricks. The figure turned to the chair, clearly seeing a shaking and scared Owl.

"Owl", dismay in his voice, "why didn't you open the door? Didn't you hear me?"

"I did" murmured Owl, humbled by the figures accounting. "I just ... I", but then words escaped him.

"Why, you're shaking Owl. Are you that cold? I think it feels nice in here", Ferret cheerfully spoke.

At last Owl found some bit of luck and said something he liked, "I, uh. Hello Ferret. Nice to see you." After saying it, he felt foolish, but it soothed him enough that he stopped shaking. The small room now looked smaller with his friend there, but somehow -- it was warmer. A smile crept across his wet face. He then realized that he had been crying and his kettle was overfilled. Owl, feeling stupid again stood and shook Ferret's hand.

Ferret grabbed his hand and pulled Owl over for a hug. "You fool. What have you been doing? I see and feel your kettle. It doesn't feel hot and I don't (sniff, sniff) smell tea. Mind if I sit down?"

Breaking the hug, "Yes, yes Ferret, sit down. I'm sorry that I didn't", his shame mocking him, "open the door. You see, I wasn't ... the storm ... you, see?"

Ferret didn't, but he let it go. "Now then, what's you say he put the kettle on the fire, eh?" Ferret did just that and the gales of wind and storm struck again, but Ferret seemed deaf to it all, ignoring even the loudest crack of thunder. Owl, was not so brave and flutterred his eyes with each crack of thunder. Lightning wasn't fun for him either. He hated the whole bit of it.

In a short while of silence between the two, the kettle spoke up, whistling heat. "I'll pour", Ferret chanted as he grabbed two cups and the hot kettle. The brave fire not only heated the water, but also krinkled up higher and lit up two friends' faces. Ferret sniffled, then sneezed into the fire -- pzzzt, "sneezes sizzle, then, right", Ferret joked with Owl.

"Oh, right. Ha ha", Owl surprised with the conversation and the comical sneeze. He happily took the cup of tea from Ferret. "Hmm ... smells good. I needed this!"

"You? I traveled through all of that. I'm the one who's cold", it sounded to brash after Ferret said it, so he continued, "but it's nice being insdie. Hey, Owl. (sip) What kind of tea is this? It tastes kinda, I don't know ... sad."

"Oh, that. It's not the tea. You see, I've been crying ..." Owl told Ferret about all of the silly things that made him cry, but then found that he could think of more, far more. Things he thought now were frightfully sad. He didn't want to mention them, but he stumbled away and started listing them.

Ferret, bemused by the start was sniffling again, not because of the cold, but rather because he too, now, was sad. "My, my. Have you been carrying all that with you all this time? I mean, man! That's so much for one person."

Owl stopped. He took a breath and the tears he had while talking with Ferret were finally gone. He was out of them, totally. Though sad-tasting, Owl could now enjoy his tear tea. Ferret quickly composed himself again, no longer sniffling and swigged his tea quickly. While neither paid attention, the storm had slunk away, for it was not longer the center of attention. With spatters on the windows, it threatened to return some day.

-----------not quite done, but------------
Sadness, shared with a friend, can lessen the load and a friend can help and find you, even when not called.

Lebanese refugees I like

These don't follow Hezbollah or even know who they are. They are the companions -- pets and animals expelled due to warfare and strife. Animals don't work conventionally, but I think that America will take them!

The "comma", for those who haven't read it.

BLITZER: Let’s move on and talk a little bit about Iraq. Because this is a huge, huge issue, as you know, for the American public, a lot of concern that perhaps they are on the verge of a civil war–if not already a civil war–We see these horrible bodies showing up, tortured, mutilation. The Shia and the Sunni, the Iranians apparently having a negative role. Of course, al Qaeda in Iraq is still operating.

BUSH: Yes, you see — you see it on TV, and that’s the power of an enemy that is willing to kill innocent people. But there’s also an unbelievable will and resiliency by the Iraqi people…. Admittedly, it seems like a decade ago. I like to tell people when the final history is written on Iraq, it will look like just a comma because there is — my point is, there’s a strong will for democracy. (emphasis added)

.....
I understand the "thought" behind it was, a small pause, but that REALLY wasn't put together at all. Sadly, Arab war is much like the weather, though changing there is always weather; be it hot or cold cloudy or clear; there will always be war.

I'm afraid this is a battle you cannot win

George Bush's "comma" comment finishes a well-needed volume on things not to say while President. Co-co-author, Jim Jones Johnson, of the book, "How to Speak President Fluently" concedes that George contributed "quite a bit to the book" which only covers Gerald Ford to George W. Bush. "Actually, come to think of it ... Quayle added chapters in his own right George's recent comment just kind of added another flower on the frosting, as it were", mused Johnson. Other favorites were Clinton during the many scandals, 'denying equals lying' chapter compiled and edited by other co-author Carl Moorse.

The many authors of this book intend to venture abroad to cover other leaders in other free press nations, when they are granted access.

And he was

Joining the world of -- missing puppies and he was+ ...

Goodbye dear friend, Thunderheart. Your last months were unattractive, arthritis and little joy. Oh, but the joy you brought to others. You went camping, cooking, with girlscouts, boyscouts -- walking with others, defending them too. Your Halloween costume was never the same year to year. You put up with being used as a pillow, dress up doll ... makeup and nails painted. You got treats and handfed when a puppy and as an old man. You up and left to wander home -- walking at least 60 miles, foolish boy!

You were as much family as any, though Mom intermittantly let you have control of furniture. You barked at dogs, never acknowledging yourself as one. You let birds fly around you and ate spiders. Sweet boy, I'm sorry you died alone. You shouldn't and couldn't have lived forever, but you broke hearts when you died.

Bark in heaven ... your new home!
....
Join all your bretheren; the meek, mild, small, and the wild. I know others proceeded you, others will follow. I've never allowed much of my grief an avenue, or opened the dam. I think soon -- my buried losses shall walk (Day of the Dead) coming back and I shall mourn.

In Thunder's passing, I reminded all too well that I don't vent when I should ... for others I have not fully grieved. I think I'm about all stocked up on sorrow.

+ from Talking Heads, "And She Was" a lighthearted song when I need levity.

anime review

Princess Mononoke is a mildly violent with some especially violent, yet second-blip visuals. The overall theme of peace and harmony with nature, after the 2.25 hours of film is generally lost on the viewer. The action scenes are well placed, but the long-winded artistic scenes are too frequent. In general, I would not let a child under 11 watch this with me. I would not let a child 11-13 watch this without me. I think, while visually stunning and designed for theater viewing, older kids would not be very entertained by it. As an adult, the temp needed to be picked up also. I think, overall, I would rank it 5.3 with scene re-watchability only.

Castle in the Sky was packed with more slapstick and more humor, though lacked kindness in many respects. The comic relief and would-be sidekicks of the protagonists are pirates; a dubious choice at best. "What is Milton trying to say; that being evil is more fun?"+ The visuals are stunning with early 80s feel mixed with 90s Poke'mon antics and highflying (also Love Hina). The message of compassion is more fluid and the evil is truly evil, with evil men dying -- bloodlessly. I guess ... if a person were to let their child watch Poke'mon, this wouldn't be too far a cry from there, with the notable exception that people die in this cartoon. The sound is so-so and the tempo is better than Princess Mononoke, but still slow. Since this was the second time I watched it (first time in bits), I would say that it has limited re-watchability with an overall ranking of 6.1 (the Japanese sound and sync much better than English).

+ Animal House

You don't see us waging

the kind of war "they're" contemplating.  They let us look, they do invite us, but the death it brings does not entice us.
 

Ramadan prayers

Evening prayer will be conducted nightly at 9 p.m. at the Islamic Center of [this city], [some city block] St., during the month of Ramadan. A time of fasting, worship and discipline recognized by more than 1 billion Muslims worldwide annually, Ramadan began at sundown Friday. Muslims believe that during Ramadan, the ninth month on the lunar calendar, Allah revealed the first verses of the Quran, the holy book of Islam.

....

Gosh, let me decide if I should be offended, then riot and burn down the place.  Oh, wait ... no, I'll not do that.  Dear city Muslims, please try hard to convince the extremists to stop killing.  Eventually it will come back upon you, those who aren't the slaughterers.

What they've always been

Thank you Scott Stantis of Prickly City for pointing it out for even more people.  Political parties are a joke.  The one common goal:  money and power, notthing else matters.
 
The comic street opposes two party-minded individuals; each staunch in their party, one democrat one republican.  Here, Carmen sadly sees the true beast:  "Republicrats", a realistic term.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Originally made as racial slur (now, it's generalized)

Since the doctor said that I'm impotent, I thought I better dress impotent too.

Yes, I changed the original text to make this.

Focal point -- the future


berries
Originally uploaded by MDH, II.
One of these lives has a future, the other does not. Which one is which and which will be chosen. Perhaps both are dead ends ... hanging there or to drop down and decay. They are, though, there.

rain web


rain web
Originally uploaded by MDH, II.
Each one is a dream waiting to be realized or dried up in the heat and sun. Man, does that sound sappy! Okay, how about a spider cried it's five eyes out ... no, still bad. I got it! A man, fearful of public peeing couldn't go, then ... fountain!+

No, still not what I want. I got it ... glipses of what could have been, each its own reality. That's much better; yes.

+sprung from 40 Year-old Virgin

Muppet Matrix


Muppet Matrix
Originally uploaded by MDH, II.
Though only long enough to roughly match the trailer for Matrix, it is much better than the movie, Matrix. Beaker, evil ... say it isn't so!

Fair Trade

We, at the CIA, are bound by rules and legalities preventing us from beating the unholy heck out of you, so we're going to take a flight to see the man in the red suit.  No, I don't mean Santa Claus.
 
From MSNBC, news report from Newsweek:
The el-Masri case underscores continuing legal threats facing CIA officials overseas despite last week's deal on a bill that would authorize the agency to continue using aggressive interrogation techniques. The White House says the measure is needed to provide legal protection for CIA officials accused of violating the Geneva Conventions. But the bill may do little to protect officers involved in "extraordinary renditions"—a practice under which the agency has flown terror suspects to foreign countries where they have allegedly been harshly interrogated.
....
What's the deal?  The CIA has limits and bounds, but other countires don't have such.  So, when lawyers and "dis-United Nations" claim US abuse, what gives?  Why aren't the other nations bound by the laws ... oh, that's right -- they don't have constituions with a bill of rights.  Hey, world!  Either have bill of rights and stick by it, or shut up about the CIA.  I didn't hear too many tears about the 20 jerks in the UK taken before they were allowed to use planes in their attack.

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Upswell then the downswing

There was a surge in my spam (collected both in suspect folder and known spam). It seems that the Moon is on the other side and has thankfully pulled the flow of crapmail away. Unlike the crapmail that I used to get via US Post. I called the 888 number to be taken off the list for junk credit card offers and my mail has dropped substantially. That is great news. Now, if they would just end it, the US could more than half its paper usage. Personally, I read the news, national, international and local online -- only. No trees were killed to make paper for me to read the news.