Archive for December, 2005

The End of Summer

Friday, December 9th, 2005


Here’s the last in my “Essence of Summertime” series. This one is a little more standard than the others. Like the campfire picture, it was taken at Worlds End State Park on a beautiful, warm summer day. We were on top of the mountain about to see a pigeon racing demonstration and I thought the view of the valley was pretty. Turns out I was right.

We went out and did some Christmas shopping this evening. The crowds were certainly manageable where we were, if not nonexistant. Not a problem as far as I’m concerned. The weather is wintry, there’s a thick layer of snow on the ground, the roads are mostly clear, and everything is right with the world. Merry Christmas.

How’s my reader doing today?

Canal boat

Thursday, December 8th, 2005


The Essence of Summertime, part 3. This one’s from New Hope, Pennsylvania. I don’t remember whether my brother-in-law Scott or I took this one. Not that it matters much, though – I would like to have taken it in any case. Besides, he has a better camera than I do and a very good eye.

I think I’m starting to understand my own summertime theme here: warm, easy, lazy days. Of course, the guy driving the mules is far from lazing around, but neither is he Struggling Against the Elements. And at least he’s not running or pulling the boat himself. And we watchers were definitely taking it easy. Anyway, it’s a picturesque scene and I like it.

As promised yesterday: Adventures with Microsoft!

I needed to do some work on a project to which I am not normally assigned. I’m trying to help a couple of guys out a little. So we, being a security-conscious company, have locked down all our internal servers on a by-folder level, so that you need to be granted access to each individual folder you need on the server (they can, and do, let you into a given folder and all its subfolders, but it’s still locked pretty tight). I went through all the proper channels to get into this project’s folder, and I can now navigate through the folder structure and see all the files, but I can only open a few random files. The rest of them say I don’t have permission. I went through a few hours of having an Admin change a setting followed by me rebooting my computer. Over and over again. Nothing worked. I got on the phone with a server monkey, who basically tried the same thing again. Surprisingly, it didn’t work either. So he opened a trouble ticket with an advanced server monkey. I haven’t heard from that guy yet. So I’ve spent about 4 or 5 hours working on this project and have produced nothing because Microsoft’s highly-advanced server software won’t let me in.

In all fairness to Microsoft, we’re probably overstressing the system with our level of access control coupled with the number of people using the system. Still, it ought to work. Maybe we should consider biting the bullet and changing everybody over to Linux.

Which is what I’m pretty close to doing at home for all of our PCs. Yes, I know we have a lot of software that will only run on a PC – mostly games. However, Microsoft is in the middle of phasing out support for Windows 2000, and I’m not going to buy an upgrade, so they’re pretty much forcing my hand. I can’t run Windows without regular Microsoft security updates, and I won’t give them more money.

Linux will be fine. What do we really do on Windows anyway? We use Microsoft Money to maintain our checkbook – and we only use that because it came with something else and we finally gave up on Quicken in disgust because it had become bloatware full of “features” we didn’t want or need and its basic functions no longer worked. Unfortunately, Money is pretty much in the same boat. There’s an excellent checkbook manager in Linux that will do the job just fine.

We also use Microsoft Word. OpenOffice.org works pretty well, once you get over its short learning curve – although I have to admit I recently bought Microsoft Office for the Mac because the OpenOffice implementations for that machine are inadequate and because my company has a deal where I could get Office for twenty bucks.

We also use Windows for web browsing. Linux’s browsers are excellent; the only worry is when websites require Internet Explorer. My general answer to that one is that I just don’t look at those websites. However, a site comes along once in a while that I need to access – such as a banking site, for example. In that case, I’ve heard that there are IE emulators or plugins that might give me the functionality I need. I’ll have to do some experimentation on that one.

Printer sharing is the other big one. I’ve gotten it working for certain printers in Linux before, but I don’t think Shannon’s HP all-in-one printer has drivers out there for Linux. I don’t really know how to get around that one. However, new drivers come out all the time, so I’ll just have to watch for something that works. Maybe everything will come together to make Linux work before everything falls apart and makes Windows unusable.

Well, that was certainly long-winded. Take a deep breath. Let it go. Ommmm.

Okay, I’m fine now.

It was pretty cold out this morning – down in the lower teens. It’s still only 21, according to my computer. That’s winter weather, but there’s still another two weeks or so before winter starts. Dang global warming. We’re supposed to get a few more inches of snow tonight and tomorrow morning too.

I invite my reader to see if he can recruit somebody to read this drivel. I think we have just enough room for one more reader.

Zootrain

Wednesday, December 7th, 2005


Here’s summertime picture number two. We’re on vacation in Detroit (doesn’t everybody vacation in Detroit?). We just got off the Zoo train. No worries, no cares, no problems. Sigh. How refreshing. I don’t know why I think this particular photo screams summertime to me. It just does. Maybe it’s because of all those summertime Detroit Zoo train rides during my early years. Judging from appearances, the boys don’t necessarily agree.

By the way, cool train, no? I’d like to see the full-size version, if it exists. Which it probably never did.

Today was my brother Tony’s birthday. He’s 40? 41? Maybe 42. Something like that. I called him at home. No answer. Called his cell phone. No answer. Happy birthday, Tony.

It’s late and I have to get up early. Remind me tomorrow to mention today’s wonderful Microsoft experience. For now, though, to bed.

Summertime

Tuesday, December 6th, 2005


I was looking back at some photos from Summer 2005, and I think I boiled the essence of the summer down to four pictures. Here’s the first one. We were at Worlds End State Park, the place was beautiful, the weather was warm, we had a great time, and it was a good fire that night.

Back to reality. Last night’s snowstorm pretty much fizzled out on us. There was probably a little less than an inch on the driveway at Swampy Bottom this morning, versus the six or so we were expecting. There were a lot of disappointed kids around here this morning who found out school wasn’t being cancelled. Fortunately for them, there’s another chance this week – we’re expecting another snowstorm on Thursday night/Friday morning.

I have to say, though, that it was an absolutely beautiful day. After last night’s dusting on top of the weekend’s few inches, the sun came out this morning and turned everything brilliant white and clean-looking. On top of that, the streets all melted. Sweet. Why do I like the snow so much before Christmas but only tolerate it afterwards?

I have a great idea for this website – I want to write a Java script that will list all my readers’ first names in the rightmost column of the page. My user (or each user, eventually) would have his or her name in the column for a week or a month or a day or some reasonable amount of time. It might make it look like somebody actually reads the page! I wonder how hard it would be to create.

Summertime pictures two through four tomorrow, Thursday, and Friday.

Retrobits

Monday, December 5th, 2005

Oops. No posts for a few days. Sorry about that, Reader. I found an interesting website tonight – the Retrobits Podcast. It’s on the iTunes music store, so I subscribed. There are already 23 shows up, so it’s apparently not just a flash in the pan. I’ll post my impressions soon. I’ve been disappointed by so many great-sounding podcasts that failed to fulfill their promise that I’m reluctant to recommend this one until I listen to a couple of shows myself. So stay tuned, reader.

Added a couple of new pictures to the random display on the gardenvillesoftware.com website. One’s of some purple flowers (which almost never comes up – I can’t figure out why) in Michigan this past summer and the other is a yellow fungus from a state park. Does that one count as a flower? I would appreciate it if my reader would try reloading the gardenvillesoftware.com website a few times to see if the purple flower one comes up. Here’s what it looks like:

By the way, we’re still looking for Reader number three! Where are you?