Archive for November, 2004

Home Improvements

Monday, November 29th, 2004

In the course of holiday-related playtime and visitation, somehow the children broke the ceramic toilet paper dispenser. (Wear gloves if you have to remove yours: the ceramic is sharp and cuts worse than paper.) So now we’re showing the house with a 12″ x 6″ hole in the wall. And Deena got the urge to paint the last of the panelling in the family room; now, instead of the room being walnut and white, it’s hollyhock and white.

Here’s a free tip for click-and-mortar merchants like K-SearsMart: show us the color swatches on-line, even if we do have to pick up the paint from the store.

WikiNews

Monday, November 29th, 2004

How long before Internet residents replace the Associated Press as the world’s largest news-gathering organization?

Thanks

Thursday, November 25th, 2004

We’re thankful for our families, and for living in a country where we can speak our minds. We are blessed.

Openings on the Town Boards, Again

Wednesday, November 24th, 2004

Carmel has openings on the town planning, cable, and zoning boards. Last time there were openings I dawdled in applying, because I thought we would have had the house sold by now. Maybe it’ll sell one of these days, and we’ll find something we like near my in-laws in Beekman. But who knows what the future holds? May as well live in the present while we’re here.

Snuggles

Wednesday, November 24th, 2004

Last night the Sisters spent the night in the same bed. They were bundled in as snug as bugs in a rug. After an initial 15 minutes of paging for water, tucking, and such things, they settled down, and talked until they fell asleep around 21:00. That was quick: only two hours.

Economic Freedom is Boring

Wednesday, November 24th, 2004

Zimran Ahmed remarks on an article in Reason, by Nick Gillespie, that, in response to Pacific Research’s Economic Freedom Index, asserts that the cost of living in New York is a bargain. The way Gillespie puts it, economic freedom is boring. Zimran, on the other hand,

I think it makes more sense to turn the causality around and say that great places to live (New York, San Francisco) can bear the cost of lousy, expensive government because they are great places to live. People will put up with a more annoying and expensive life because the side benefits are worth it. The cities aren’t fun because they have costly, lousy government, instead they have accrued costly, lousy government because their fun makes it bearable.

Flattening the Curve

Monday, November 22nd, 2004

The town of Carmel has begun a project to straighten an s-curve on Fair Street. This will involve the condemnation of some homes in order to make way for the road. The straightened road will not have the desired effect of making the road safer. The s-curve acts as a natural brake, forcing motorists to slow from 55 mph to a speed at which they can safely negotiate the turn. Straightening will cause motorists to hit the high traffic region of the road, between the Post Office and the High School, at a higher velocity, thus decreasing the relative safety of the roadway. At least one resident there is aware of this:

“This will have a bigger effect on some properties than others, and I’m afraid I’m in the bigger category,” he said of his 100-year-old home at Hill and Dale Road, where a 4-foot shoulder and sidewalk would take a large slice of his yard.

“I hope (the planners) come around and ask us first,” he said. “We could end up having more trouble with people speeding.”

To adjust for the safety decrease related to the straightening, the plan calls for installing turn lanes and stop lights, which will reduce throughput, leading to what is known in the vernacular as “traffic.”

Arrogated Powers

Thursday, November 18th, 2004

Remarks of James Madison, in the House of Representatives, 8 June 1789.

It has been objected also against a bill of rights, that, by enumerating particular exceptions to the grant of power, it would disparage those rights which were not placed in that enumeration; and it might follow by implication, that those rights which were not singled out, were intended to be assigned into the hands of the General Government, and were consequently insecure. This is one of the most plausible arguments I have ever heard urged against the admission of a bill of rights into this system; but, I conceive, that it may be guarded against. I have attempted it, as gentlemen may see by turning to the last clause of the fourth resolution.

That is,

The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

And, its obverse,

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

When will we see a politician say, “I’m sorry, that’s not within my authority.”

All Done?

Thursday, November 18th, 2004

Over the past weekend we migrated the Ameritech.net personal web pages into the consolidated environment, and made changes to the Prodigy Internet pages for same. I’m not entirely satisfied with some of the implementation details, but it works well enough. Are we done yet?

Not yet.

Before Prodigy was prodigy.net it was prodigy.com. We call this Prodigy Classic, and we still have members with URIs in that namespace. So there’s work to be done there.

Later, during a growth spurt, Prodigy acquired Flash.net, a Texan ISP. We still maintain those namespaces in a separate environment, so there’s work there too.

But at least integrating those two environments won’t involve working around rsync’s limits.

And after that?

Coffee, Food, Rest

Sunday, November 14th, 2004

When does Starbucks open? They close too early. The coffee at 7-11 isn’t as robust.

We’re in the middle of this, one of the side-effects of which will be this enhancement for Ameritech. We play a very small part in the Big Project. Unfortunately, we ran into differences between the test and production environments, which have caused us to miss our target 0230 finish.

Stealth Marketing

Friday, November 12th, 2004

The Wall Street Journal reports today that we have a blog portal and newsreader. Who knew?

The company in September quietly launched a Weblog portal located at www.projectdu.com and known as “Project D.U.” — the initials stand for “Digital Universe.” Surfers are greeted by links to such categories as “music” and “entertainment,” which in turn lead people to about 30 Weblogs, those quirky but burgeoning Web-based diaries of commentary and opinion, also known as blogs. Project D.U. carries a reminder that it is “presented by SBC.”

Also available: an invitation to download a free Weblog reader. The technology involved essentially ships blog content to individual computer users. People who accept the reader aren’t limited to SBC’s blog choices. In fact, they can customize the reader to get any type of downloadable information they might want, says Michael Grasso, SBC’s executive director of consumer marketing.

Sounds like it’s being run a bit like the Gawker media empire, but without all the porn.

c.f. feedster, technorati

Pick Two from Any Column

Thursday, November 11th, 2004

Lest you think that electronic voting machines are the only devices subject to outside interference, the losing candidates for trustee of the Village of Brewster think someone prevented their election.

Jeffrey Rollins and John “Jack” Ciesielski lost to the incumbents by more than 100 votes each, including recently counted absentee ballots. But because the two voting machines used in the village were improperly assembled — voters were unable to select an incumbent and a challenger appearing in the same column, they are questioning whether the results would have been different. County election officials maintain that the outcome would have remained the same.

Let Nature Take Its Course

Wednesday, November 10th, 2004

Ha! The Republican Party won’t have to worry about those damned Democratic coastlines much longer.

Proof is in the Pudding

Wednesday, November 10th, 2004

To all those who voted in the Democratic primaries, and who chose John Kerry because he was “electable,” a big Bronx cheer.

You may want to re-evaluate your decision-making process.

Double-Blind Vote Counting

Tuesday, November 9th, 2004

Votes lost in Carteret County, North Carolina.

Thinking about it, there are a number of different places that need to verified.

  1. is the vote stored the same as the vote displayed?
  2. is the vote printed the same as the vote displayed?
  3. is the vote stored the same as the vote printed?
  4. do the above match the vote entered?

The voter can verify that the vote printed and displayed match the vote entered, but only a count of both the printed output and the electronically stored vote can confirm that the voter is not being misled. The paper trail is not sufficient to ensure accuracy. Without it, accuracy is impossible.

UPDATE: Bruce Schneier on the problem of voting machines.

A Small Mathematical Error, Nothing Consequential

Monday, November 8th, 2004

Remember in math class, where the teacher insisted that you show your work even though you knew the answer was correct? The problem with not having a paper trail, is that your figures are difficult to check.

Playing the Great Game

Monday, November 8th, 2004

John Robb notes the interesting little tidbit from the Asia Times that China has concluded a long-term deal with Iran for delivery of 10 million tons of LNG a year for the next 25 years.

They don’t think small, do they?

Which game are we playing?

The Only Man to go to Parliament with Honourable Intentions

Friday, November 5th, 2004

Remember, remember the Fifth of November,
gunpowder, Treason and Plot.
I know of no reason
the gunpowder Treason
should ever be forgot.

On Domestic Policy

Thursday, November 4th, 2004

In his acceptance of the Nation’s acclaim, President Bush listed some things he’d like to work on this term.

We’ll continue our economic progress. We’ll reform our outdated tax code. We’ll strengthen the Social Security for the next generation. We’ll make public schools all they can be. And we will uphold our deepest values of family and faith.

The Christian Science Monitor has some analysis on what this might entail.

We can agree on the topics under consideration, but the devil’s in the details.

One Non-Volokh

Thursday, November 4th, 2004

volokh.blogspot.com != volokh.com. The former is now inhabited by the SEO Reviewer.