This also neatly explains societal pressure to marry. By marrying someone, you increase your healthcare costs and thereby become less competitive in the workplace. Of course other people want you to marry! It helps them get a job instead of you!
Last Saturday, part II (Don & Marti)
May. 16th, 2010 10:23 am
So we showered and put on clean clothes and headed to Annapolis to see
Don Dixon
and
Marti Jones
at
Rams Head On Stage.
Granted, we'd
seen them last month
in Philly at the Tin Angel
along with their friend and co-conspirator
Kelley Ryan
but we love seeing them live.
We keyed the route into the GPS, which informed us there was a 11 minute delay on the route.
It was a fair way out, so we decided to see it it cleared and headed out.
Sure enough, after a little while, it had become an 8 minute delay.
But sure enough, we got to stopped traffic on the beltway,
and the GPS announced it had just jumped to 16 minutes. We told it to find a way around,
and it routed us down 187, over a bit, and back up, through some fairly pretty scenery.
We popped back out on the beltway right where the emergency vehicles were,
and resumed our journey in very light traffic.
These delays got us into Annapolis without much time for dinner.
We found the parking garage we had used last time,
but it was surrounded by construction so we had to squeeze around to use sidewalks that
were officially closed, and then do some more squeezing through a little garden to escape at all.
This put us well off the beaten path, and it took us yet more time to wend our way back to West Street.
By now, timing was really tight, but we were both hungry and wanted a real meal (there's food at Rams Head,
but not really what we were looking for).
I vetoed the tavern, so we stuck our noses in a Mexican place that was hopping.
There were a bunch of people waiting for tables, so that wasn't an option.
Fortunately, there was a Thai place nearby
(Pad Thai) that didn't look too busy,
so we went in there. They offered a Rama chicken dish with steamed broccoli and carrots
with spicy peanut sauce that sounded good to me, so I ordered that.
Our food came right out, and it was really good, too.
The (fairly cute) waiter said it was his favourite dish.
We had gotten notification that the concert was at 7PM, not 8PM as originally,
but it was apparent that the people at the next table (who had showed up after us) hadn't,
and they were scurrying!
We walked across the street to the concert and got situated.
We had bought our tickets the day they went on sale,
but they had sold fast, so we were a little back and off to the side
(I had thought we were way in the back, but was happy this wasn't the case).
The set list was similar to the one at Tin Angel (without Kelley, whose
absence Marti was bemoaning, those two really have fun together),
but they had to keep it short, as there was another show later (which
is probably why the show got bumped up to 7). They said they were trying
to do a cut from every album they'd released, but there are enough of those
that it's not really practical! They ended up up with a rousing rendition of
Praying Mantis, a fun song with a great bass line.
We stuck around afterward to say hi, and both Don and Marti recognized
fizzygeek, which was nice. Don seems interested in tee shirts,
and remarked on one guy's Folksmen shirt, another couple who had Don & Marti
shirts that were probably 20 years old, but still looked new. He liked my Josie and the Pussycats shirt
(I had worn it, hoping he'd play Who Let The Cat Out Of The Bag),
and was most intrigued with Andrea's
Tofu? Horse? Refrigerator?
shirt. We told him we'd send him a link.
Then we headed back homeward. It took a little searching to figure out a way back to the
garage (once we got there, we realized we could have just walked half a block down an alley
if we'd known about it) but it was a nice night, so that was no problem.
Andrea was unhappy with the prospect of driving back around the beltway at night,
so I pointed out we could just stay on route 50 and go right through DC instead.
This didn't thrill her either, but we eventually decided to give it a go.
The GPS kept wanting us to take I-395, but I ignored that and just headed west,
then south to Constitution, whereupon it got the idea. At that point, I knew the way
home anyway, so it didn't matter.
We got home pretty tired, but really glad we had gone.
Jobs steps in it, again (iPhone vs Flash)
May. 14th, 2010 08:34 am
Adobe's Flash products are 100% proprietary. They are only available from Adobe, and Adobe has sole authority as to their future enhancement, pricing, etc. While Adobe's Flash products are widely available, this does not mean they are open, since they are controlled entirely by Adobe and available only from Adobe. By almost any definition, Flash is a closed system.
Note the emphasis here. He's referring to the products (software) that Adobe offers, not the actual definition and format of Flash data.
But perhaps I'm misinterpreting. Let's see what he thinks an open system is:
Though the operating system for the iPhone, iPod and iPad is proprietary, we strongly believe that all standards pertaining to the web should be open. Rather than use Flash, Apple has adopted HTML5, CSS and JavaScript – all open standards.
Did you catch the change in scope here? He's gone from complaining about a closed "system" to trumpeting open "standards". Two different animals. Most folks know I'm rabidly against closed, proprietary protocols, file formats, and the like. But, Flash isn't one of these! The Flash specification is open and documented. People and companies are free to implement their own Flash interpreters (and even generators, which are the payware parts).
It's almost as if Apple is attempting to conflate their iPad with "the web", a rather untenable position, as far as I'm concerned. I can understand why they'd want people to think that anything that doesn't work on an iPhone isn't really "the intarwebs", but if they persist in this sort of chicanery, Android is going to continue to eat their mobile market for lunch.
Apple, I can understand not wanting to support Flash, for whatever reason. And if you don't want to admit the real reason in public, that's fine with me (we all reserve the right to air our guesses, however). I know you'd take a drubbing if you publicly announced "we're not saying why" or if you did cop to an unpopular reason. But I'm calling you on this specious claim. It's nonsense, and I'm disappointed and vaguely insulted that you'd stoop to this kind of contradictory handwaving in a feeble attempt to avoid the real issue (whatever it is).
Yard cleanup
May. 13th, 2010 06:17 pm
I went and picked it up on May 4. It turned out to be two notices, one that I had to remove all "trash and rubbish" from my ENTIRE lot (their emphasis) by May 3. The other was that the grass had to be mowed. As
fizzygeek and I had mowed the lawn the previous weekend, I didn't worry about that one. But "trash and rubbish" is a dangerously vague concept. Would my neon signs be considered trash? How about the 3m satellite dish? In any case, I wouldn't be able to comply by the stated date, as I hadn't received the notice by then. The town's habit of using registered/certified mail for their nastygrams gave me some useful legal ammunition here2.
I decided not to worry about it until the weekend. I was aware that there was some genuine trash and rubbish about the place, as neighbors had used my yard as a dump for an old folding chair and a tarp, among other things. I also figured my old oil tank probably qualified. It occurred to me that since other people were dumping their junk in my yard, I could simply heave everything over into adjoining yards, but I would be the obvious culprit, especially to whatever louses bothered to report me instead of just asking me to clean up the yard.
When I got there on Saturday, I discovered that the lawn had been re-mowed. Apparently my mowing hadn't been sufficient. I figure the town will bill me for this, on the strength that if you get cited, you have to mow your entire property, not just the grass. I could contest this, both on the grounds that I hadn't been given sufficient notice, and that the hired mowers didn't mow the entire property either (making it a judgement call instead of a hard rule, the sort of thing a high-powered lawyer would have a field day with). But since I'm trying to sell the property, the better part of valor here is not to make waves, so I'm just going to suck it up and pay it.
The first thing I tackled was the trash others had left in the yard. The tarp was no problem. The folding chair was a large tubular metal affair that wouldn't fit in even my large wheeled trash can. I brought over a pipe cutter, figuring I'd quickly dice it into bite-sized pieces. However, it wasn't the flimsy thing I expected. It was heavy, and took some time and effort to cut the tubing, even with the nice pipe cutter. A Sawzall would have been a more appropriate tool. So I just cut it into two flat sections, and leaned the bigger one on the trash can.
The big heavy neon signs, I simply rolled into the shed and leaned them on the walls.
Then for the satellite dish. I'd picked up an air wrench and an impact wrench from Sears4 and the small air compressor was still at the house. I tore into the dish with those, a set of box-end wrenches, and a ratchet set. It was coming apart nicely when
fizzygeek showed up to help, and the two of us made short work of the rest of it. I had offered it on both freecycle and the local ham radio mailing list, but there were no takers, so the pile of curved tubing and assorted gimcrackery is likely destined to become some sort of bizarre art project now.
The last piece was the oil tank. We had tried to move it before, but it's too big and heavy for us to muscle around without a lot of time, sweat, and effort. So we tried the Forearm Forklift4. Unfortunately, the tank is heavy enough that we aren't big enough to counterweight it effectively. I had earlier suggested just dragging it with the tractor, but
fizzygeek hadn't liked the idea. But faced with the reality of the hulking object and a looming deadline, she decided it was worth a try. So I tied a rope to the full and vent tubes, and looped it around the seat springs on the tractor. I fired up the tractor, and eased it forward. It moved the tank a few inches and bogged down. So I put air in the tires and tried again. This time, it worked nicely. I slowly hauled the tank over to the shed, and then we were able to walk it in. A tight fit, and the legs stick out the door, but I don't care.
After that, we went home and showered preparatory to going out, which will be the subject of another post.
1 Oops, I misspelled Purse of Evil
2 The town believes that the Post Office will certify that they delivered a letter to me on the date I signed for it. This is not the case — the Post Office will certify that they delivered an envelope, nothing more. However, this lets me substantiate that I didn't receive anything before that, so it supports my case, not theirs. Heh.
3 Buying these entailed two long trips to Sears and multiple delays, misunderstandings, purchases, returns, and assorted grumbling. I wouldn't have bothered, but I ended up with a decent pair of air tools for $40.
4 Forearm Forklift: a set of woven straps with armholes that lets you use your muscles efficiently to lift large objects. We used these previously to move the big plasma screen.
Charlaine Harris
May. 10th, 2010 11:28 am
There was a biggish crowd, pretty much filling the upstairs, but not a mob. We missed the reading, but were there for most of the Q&A. Harris is a lot of fun in person, with a quick wit and lots of personality. From the crowd response, it was clear that Quinn is a popular character. We did see the inevitable Linkin Park shirt. As there were nearly 400 people ahead of us for autographs, we didn't bother (we picked up a signed book of hers at a con a while back). We bought a few unrelated goodies and headed out.
Since we hadn't had time for dinner beforehand, we decided to head out route 50 and eat at the
Tastee Diner on the way home. Turns out it's now owned by Ginger Guevara, who has been a waitress there since 1966, and her husband Fredy. It was a little quiet, being a weeknight, but it was nice to eat there.
Philly bound!
Apr. 21st, 2010 09:35 pmWell, sort of
Apr. 19th, 2010 09:32 pmAlbum cover meme
Apr. 17th, 2010 09:04 amGo to “Wikipedia.” Hit “random” and the first article you get is the name of your band. Then go to “Random Quotations” and the last four or five words of the very last quote of the page is the title of your first album. Then, go to Flickr and click on “Explore the Last Seven Days” and the third picture, no matter what it is, will be your album cover. ( I got lucky on the picture... )
Is it just me?
Apr. 15th, 2010 10:24 pm* Why does this make me think saucy thoughts?
New terror alert status codes
Apr. 1st, 2010 08:26 pmTherefore a new system has been designed to be simple, easy to remember, and intuitive. Green for travel, red for public places, etc. Mapping by saturation, pink will indicate a low level of threat, red higher.
Goin' to Florida!
Mar. 15th, 2010 08:57 amThere, I fixed it × 2
Jan. 14th, 2010 08:47 pmAs I mentioned yesterday, I got a scanner via Freecycle. But I don't like that scanner, it blinks abominably in an attempt to annoy me into buying it expensive ink prezzies. Also, once it came up to room temperature, I realized it reeked of old tobacco smoke. Out onto the porch it went.
I got an email from Epson this morning offering me a refurb V500 for $134. I considered it, then looked on Amazon, to find I could buy a brand new one for $200 now (I don't know if this was serendipity, or Amazon's price engine realizing what I was up to and adjusting prices accordingly). Or I could get a V600 (which has optics for scanning non-flat 3D objects) for $12 more. And the "today only" free standard shipping offer was still in force. *click* Uh-oh, expected delivery March 15. Free standard shipping isn't very useful with a 2-month lead time.
I mentioned yesterday that my original scanner had shuddered through a single preview scan, then started to make unhappy noises and eventually refused to scan at all, unhappily blinking its lights at me.
fizzygeek asked "Are you going to try to fix it?" So I took it apart and looked at all the pieces. This turned out not to be necessary. Musing on it in the shower this morning, I realized that the slippage wasn't because the connection to the carriage was loose, it was because the carriage was too hard to move. Accordingly, when I got home from work tonight, I put it all back together and cleaned the guide rod. Sure enough, it was covered with old hard grease. With that removed, the scanner works again!
Then I get email from Amazon. My (now 3rd) scanner is now scheduled to arrive January 20.
| 2 | |
| Me: | 0 |
Scanner ups and downs
Jan. 13th, 2010 09:50 pmMaybe it's time to buy a new scanner.
Then I saw a offer on Freecycle for an HP all-in-one. The owner had also gotten it via Freecycle, but neither she nor the previous owner had ever gotten it to work. I figured it was worth a try. So I hauled the beast home and plugged it in. It was jammed, so I cleared the wadded paper out of it. Then it commenced to complaining that the carriage was stuck. This turned out to be due to the ink cartridge lid being wedged up in the way, so I folded that down. Then it was unhappy because it had no ink. Sure enough, HP makes their all-in-ones require ink cartridges for scanning. Ink, you see, is the real profit center. However, I was loathe to buy even shady third-party refilled ink cartridges just to use a scanner.
Then I realized I hadn't tried VueScan. I fired it up, and it cheerfully ignored the printer's protests and scanned anyway! Hamrick, you see, doesn't give a toss about HP's obnoxious money-grubbing. I originally bought this software because I had a scanner that wasn't supported any more by the manufacturer. And I've used it for many years, with a variety of old weird hardware. And it just works. While I can't recommend HP/Compaq (my next laser printer will likely be a Xerox), I can heartily recommend Hamrick.
My life as a clip show
Sep. 26th, 2009 01:31 pmBizarro eBay auction
Sep. 3rd, 2009 11:54 pmExcerpts:
large If marble canal who cover 7 covers the ball of energy.
Such as the criminal groups that Like hydrogen. Hydrogen is 25% men and women have a body containing hydrogen.
101% human spirit, ghost or analog electromagnetic wave and Plaggansakis Plagganhlns. The live trees and mountains. To maintain that the existence of the analog soul.
Fly to see a beehive and has a bitmap inside the eye can see a night-owl. Infrared and find objects that look coordinates with sequin advanced degree of range of voice and eyes.
Power body player Ceramic ตัวละคร ที่มีพลังร่างกายเป็น เซลามิก
Wait, what?
* They aren't really Doodlecakes, I just call them that, from a faux product on Zoey 101. They're really Hostess Streusel Cakes. Note that freshchocodiles.com also allows people to buy Chocodiles on line (at jacked-up prices) if they aren't available to you locally. Luckily the doodlecakes are available locally (if irregularly).
Happy Birthday and Transformers
Jul. 24th, 2009 01:40 pmWhen we spent a day with them out in Arizona, we got to take a ride in their car. As it happens, they had the Transformers score on the stereo. I had seen the movie, but it was raucous enough that I didn't really get a feel for the soundtrack. But this was the kind of lush, majestic program music I really enjoy. So a few weeks ago when putting together a CD order, I decided I wanted that.
It turns out the score was not released originally, the soundtrack CD that was released was the other music from the film. But the fans really wanted the Steve Jablonsky score, so it was released afterward. Apparently only the one pressing, and none of my usual vendors had any copies. I ended up buying one on eBay from a nice fellow in Japan. I'm glad I got it, it's great driving music, thanks!
Bizarre, but why?
Jul. 23rd, 2009 11:10 pmHowever, I noticed something weird. More than a third of the postings were in random-looking journals, consisting of great piles of links to other random-looking journals, along with some throwaway text (example here).
This must produce a fair amount of load on the LJ servers, but I can't figure out why anyone would bother creating a bunch of random journals, and then massively post links between them. Strange DoS attack? Google link-stuffing? Spammer whitening?
Should I report this to LJ?
* http://atom.services.livejournal.com/atom-stream.xml
Details on XML (and other) feeds here.