2004-12-31

Cool SF artist site

Just found the web site of an interesting science fiction and fantasy artist, Stefan Martiniere. Never heard of him before, despite having a long-time interest in SF/F artists such as Michael Whelan, and it turns out I have been seeing his work a lot. He's worked on books, animation, films (such as the recent I, Robot and The Fifth Element, theme parks and rides, and more. Busy fellow, according to his résumé

2004-12-30

Feeling overstressed? I resemble this remark

If you feel overstressed, overworked, and wonder why the wonders of modern technology haven't made the world a utopia, you're not alone.

Technology is good....but can be used badly.

Examples are everywhere (and no, i don't just mean Mac vs Windows ;-)

2004-12-29

One big reason why I use MacOS and PalmOS

An article in the BBC points out today one big reason why I prefer Macintosh computers and PalmOS PDAs to Windows PCs and WindowsMobile/PocketPC PDAs:

The number of viruses. Which doubled in 2004, and exceed 100,000.

"The last 12 months have seen a dramatic growth in almost every security threat that plague Windows PCs.

The count of known viruses broke the 100,000 barrier and the number of new viruses grew by more than 50%. "

The current virus tally for the MacOS? Zero (OS X, that is. OS 9 and before had a few wimpy-ass virii that never did much.) Sure, the Mac has only a few % of the market (installed base is far larger though) but with 4 million new Macs sold every year, and older ones kept running and passed on to friends and family instead of being pitched like most Wintel PCs seem to be, there's a LOT f Macs out there (50 million maybe, I'd estimate) and that's GOT to be a big enough target for the virii writers. THere have been proof of concept works and virii for the Mac...but it's still next to impossible for them to spread, due to the inherent security of the OS compared to Windows....which has always been and still is a sieve, despite Microsoft's so-called best efforts.

And the success of the iPod is encouraging more switchers than Apple's "Switch" ads ever did. Not to mention constant, repeated press coverage of such switchers and articles by PC pundits who've tried the Mac...and liked it, some even staying switched or at least going cross-platform (often with a Mac-laptop, widely knows as among the best along with the IBM Thinkpads)

Here's to a kick-ass 2005, Apple. (Palm, you'd better start doing some ass-kicking yourself...or just rename yourself to "Treo"...or Microsoft's going to do to you what they did to Apple in the 80's and 90's.)

2004-12-08

John Young retires

Just read that astronaut John Young is retiring from NASA. The amazing thing is that he's been an astronaut as long as I have been alive (he joined in 1962), and flew six missions in four different spacecraft (the article in the link doesn't explicitly state it, but from the fact that he flew two Gemini missions (including the first), two Apollo missions, and two shuttle missions (including the first), I make that the Gemini, Apollo, LEM, and Shuttle. He's 74 this year.

Hats off to such a pioneer spirit. Would that the world, the USA, and NASA had many, many more like him.

I'm not a big reader of biographies, but if he has written one I'd like to. I'll have to check out the Biography channel to see if they do a bio program of him. They should.

UPDATE: Here's the NASA biography of John W. Young.

2004-11-02

Maybe there really WERE Hobbits!

Interesting story about the discovery of a group of hobbit-sized hominids down in the South Pacific (ironically the The Lord Of The Rings movies were filmed in New Zealand, also in the South Pascific).

And apparently (Komodo) dragons and oliphaunts (although dwarf ones) were present too.

2004-10-07

When someone tells you it's impossible...ignore them and do it!

A group of high school students with a shoestring budget have made a totally self-sustaining hydrogen powered car (truck, actually). It uses sunlight and water to produce it's own fuel. It's a bit ungainly, but it works. Hey, they weren't concentrating on pretty, they were concentrating on functional. All the "experts" figured it'd take 20 years.

Looks to me like all it needs now is a little polish and miniaturization. We can dang sure do that (and if we can't, the Japanese or the Taiwanese can). Heck, the PDA in my pocket is so far in advance of the first room-size digital computers it's not funny. (Say, does that make PDAs "bonsai computers". You know what bonsai trees are; trees that are miniaturized and trained and shaped to be tiny versions of real trees many hundreds of times larger.)

Anyway...If I were the oil industry, or the Arabs, I'd be quaking in my boots right now. Sell your oil stocks now!

I've always thought that with the research I saw on solar cells that are much more flexible and conformable (almost like plastic) that you could use it as some or all of the car body (hell, make the sunroof be a solar cell!). Your car sits outside 8-10 hours a day at least....use that time to crack water into hydrogen and oxygen. Use the solar cell to power a condenser to get pure water out of the air, and a compressor to store the hydrogen. It doesn't have to TOTALLY fill your car yet....we have to let the oil industry down easy, so let them switch to selling hydrogen. Oh, and use a bit of that electricity to put a blasted low power fan in your car to exhaust the hot air that builds up, so that you don't have to fry in the summer when you get in your car to to go lunch. And perhaps use the heat/cool differential to condense water. There are electrical devices that COOL (Pilzer effect or something like that). What happens with cool surfaces in an otherwise hot humid environment (like Iowa in summer?) Condensation! Water (and nice clean water too). And the rest of the year? Shovel some of that good old Iowa snow into a hopper and let the sun melt it. Make hay (or hydrogen) while the sun shines. Hell, design the car right and you could have the snow melt into channels to fill up your water tank for cracking. Take a look at the neat little heating elements on your rear window sometime. Get the idea? Put those on your roof, trunk, whatever, and let them drain into the water tank.

Hell, with a little good ol American ingenuity, we could even make an engine that works on either gas or ethanol or hydrogen. Don't tell me it can't be done. You're wrong. As someone will prove presently, if you're silly enough to say ANYTHING can't be done.

Ain't science wunnerful?

Necessity is the mother of invention, and people are starting to ANTICIPATE necessity now. Hot damn, the world's not entirely going down the crapper (despite Bush and Cheney Inc.'s attempts) now is it?

I wonder if the GOP (Greed Oil Power) will change their acronym to GHP?

Dang, maybe those rumors of a car that ran on water WERE true.

Now maybe that space drive (the Dean Drive) that was rumored, or those anti-grav devices that you hear about from time to time will turn out to be true, too. Or cold fusion? (Hot fusion sure isn't going anywhere...fa$t!)

Oh well, if they aren't, true, I'm sure we'll invent them presently.

And private companies like Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites are making private spaceplanes and winning the $10million X-Prize, and Bigelow is working private space stations and funding a $50 Million prize for the first private orbital craft (the next step for Mr. Rutan, I hope.....he's certainly someone who can get the job done right and without gorging at the public trough, too). And Johns Hopkins Univeristy appears to be creating the first private deep space probe, with a mission to Pluto, Charon and the Kuiper Belt. And about time too...NASA seems to have lost the Right Stuff. (Even more so this week, as "Gordo" Cooper passed away...on the same day that Spaceship One won the X-Prize no less. I think Gordo's spirit might be looking after SpaceShip One!)

Ad astra per aspera! Illegitimi non carborundum!

2004-07-12

My, Robot?

Lots of what appear to be practical developments in consumer robotics these days. And now, I'm not talking about the Sony Aibo robotic cat and dog, or the Honda Asimo (named for robotic-fiction writer Isaac Asimov, one of whose famous works was the (apparently very loose) basic for the current Will Smith flick "I,Robot".

These are robotic lawnmowers and floor sweepers. Things more in line with what Robert Heinlein's character Dan Davis came up with in "The Door into Summer".



And on the not-quite-"practical"-but-a-hell-of-a-lot-of-fun front, check out the movie of this Korean humanoid kit robot. It dances, it does karate, it does calisthenics. Nifty.

Personally, I'm kind of fond of the toy R2-D2 robot from Hasbro I've got that can respond to voice command, etc. (Especially the "easter eggs" it has - if you have one, tell it to "follow me"!)

2004-06-16

The X-Prize starts to pay off

As noted on Slashdot, it looks like the folks competing for the X-Prize to develop private, commerical space travel and launch vehicles are starting to have an effect. Now someone's starting to take the NASA project for inflatable space stations (which were surprisingly safe and cheap...even better than metal ones, as I recall) and apply it to low-cost space stations.

Reminds me of the novel Waldo, by Robert Heinlein, where the eponymous character lived in his own space station due to suffering from myasthenia gravis.

Of course, we'll have to have some standards on docking, etc. Affordable ones. I know the US and Russians have some standards on this (at least I hope so, otherwise how could the Soyuz and Progress capsules and the Shuttle all dock at the International Space Station? I think work on this started with the Apollo-Soyuz mission in the 1970's).

And we'll need some autonavigation/autodocking. 'Taint easy to dock with a big balloon in space! The Russians use autonav/autodock on their unmanned Progress resupply capsule to ISS and to their old Mir station (and perhaps older Salyuts?) So sounds like a way for the cash-strapped Russian economy to make some coin.

We may get the government pork barrel off the back of the space industry/program sooner than we think.

2004-06-15

Why does Star Trek matter so much to some people?

Don't understand what we geeks see in Star Trek? Read this.

Because it, more than anything else I can think of (including the Bible), speaks to children and people of all ages about hope for the future. I've heard people (including an ex-President who died recently) say that without religion, there are no morals, etc.

To that I say - bull. I'm not a religious person, never have been. Oh, I attended Sunday School when I was small. But since then, not so much.

Although for some sad individuals, Star Trek (or the Bible, the Koran, or whatever) is the be-all and end-all and answer to every question (usually for folks incapable or afraid to use their minds and think), the rest of us see it as fiction, have fun with it, and recognize that it, too, speaks to us of important truths....without being nearly as divisive as religions have been in past centuries and millenium. Because it speaks to the FUTURE instead of the past, maybe.

Oh, the geeks "war" about whether Star Trek (or which particular Star Trek series), or Babylon 5 or Stargate or Farscape or whatever is the BETTER series, me I just enjoy 'em all. Farscape and Stargate don't get overly preachy about any sort of message (although they do show good moral tone). B5 and Star Treks are more overt about it. But these are wars of words. Of thought. Of Ideas and Ideals. Religion is examined by Stargate and B5 and Star Trek too, at times. Respectfully, but without bias. (I love the bit in a B5 episode where all the ambassadors of the various races are showing each other their religious or spiritual convictions.....the final scene is when the representative of Earth startrs to tell about ours...by introducing representatives of ALL the Earth religions he could find. The were all lined up in a row. It was a LONG line.)

Live long and prosper, y'all.

They Paved Paradise and Put In A Parking Lot, indeed

NASA and NOAA have determined that the amount of concrete-paved surface (and I assume this means asphalt and such too) in the USA is approximately the size of the state of Ohio.

That's more than the amount of wetlands in the USA. And still growing by 10,000 miles of road and one million new homes a year. And that's not counting other countries, either.

Wow. That's a lot of green plants lost. I wonder if they have information about the rate of growth.....because I'd kinda like to know how long it it going to be before the Earth looks like Coruscant from Star Wars, or Trantor from Isaac Asimov'e Foundation novels.

This brought to mind a new cover of Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi", I've recently been listening too, by Counting Crows and Vanessa Carlton. This is the song everyone probably remembers as "They Paved Paradise And Put In A Parking Lot"
Hey, the hippies and environmentalists warned us. We just haven't been listening...

2004-06-03

The truth hurts, doesn't it?

Here's a good article about the problems Microsoft faces in continuing "business as usual" and why they may not continue to succeed

Mac fans have been pointing this out for years. Interesting to see that viewpoint in someone who worked for MS for a decade, and recently got so frustrated with Windows that he gave up and switched to a Mac (and has been living happily ever after).

The truth is out there!
The truth will set you free!

2004-04-26

What goes around comes around

Well, the bean-counters and MBA-drones were quick to jump all over outsourcing USA programmer's jobs to India.

But like all (ahem) "good things", it can't last.

Just hope that people are willing to come back to fill the jobs you can no longer fill so cheaply in India.....and don't be surprised if you end up paying more when they do.

That'll teach 'em.

2004-04-19

Standard, standards, who's got the standards

God knows I love new tech and new gadgets. But sometimes I wonder if things move too damn fast. Now they've developed PAPER DVD's and other new larger-capacity DVD formats.

Besides the above, I read today they're already looking to replace the DVD....and the DVD is supposedly going to replace the CD. It's moving towards replacing it for CD-R uses on computers.

Hell, I haven't finished replacing all my LP's and VHS tapes with DVD yet. Cut it out, guys!

Thanks heavens they are making DVD drives that are able to read and write the old formats. Oh yeah.....there's a ton of different DVD formats out there (DVD-ROM, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW and these new things.)

Unix and Linux have this problem too. There's eleventy-one different flavors of Unix and even of Linux. Hell, there's a half dozen Linuxii for the MACINTOSH for crissakes....And Mac OS X is a BSD Unix variant. I wonder if this hurts or help Unix/Linux. I'm betting it hurts.

COOL new tech makes for much more efficient motors and quieter fans

A Japanese inventor has come up with a new idea to make electric motors 80% more efficient. This will also help fans run more quietly and use less power.

Dandy!

Novel cell phone service helps you figger out what song that is on the radio!

John C. Dvorak posited in one of his columns a while back that killing Napster (the free version) was the worst thing the music industry ever did, because it killed the major way to sample new music. You can't do it on the radio anymore, because they play songs for 20 minutes and don't tell you who the heck played that song you liked. (I've never understood this.....you'd think they'd be doing MORE commercial breaks these days, not less. It's all about advertising after all...)

Well, AT&T has solved this problem with a new cell phone service.

Reminds me of a widget I saw some years back that you could buy and push a button on to "bookmark" music you were listening to at a particular time and then use it with your computer later to find out what the song was. Never heard about it again (not surprised, are you?)

So I dunno if this AT&T service will go anywhere either. I only sort of agree with Dvorak, too. After all, even though Napster has gone commercial, there's always KaZaa, Gneutella, OpenNap, Usenet newsgroups, etc, etc. But then, I've long since stopped paying attention to Mr. Duh Whore Hack. Him and Dennis Miller used to be great....but they've gone down the tubes the last few years.

First steps towards Replicators?

Hmmm....what with nanontech and such things as these small logic blocks, are we on the way to making "Replicator" robots, ala the TV show Stargate SG-1?

Anyone got the Asgard's address?

My next job may be in the auto industry....

Looks like cars are becoming so hight tech, computerized, and hard to repair that they are looking for people with IT and electronics backgrounds to diagnose and fix 'em

I've never been one to work on my own car.....but hmmmmmmmm....

Methinks it's time to rethink the auto industry AND the computer industry....

2004-04-06

Oh my freaking god....JOHN CARTER OF MARS is being made into a movie

Man, I gotta read "SciFiWire" more often.

Someone is actually making a movie of one of the classic SF novels of all time, "A Princess of Mars"!

We may have the makings of a franchise here. On par with The Lord of the Rings, too.

"A Princess of Mars" is the first of 14 "John Carter of Mars" novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs (you know, the guy who also crreated Tarzan, Pellucidar, etc.) Not to be confused with that other thrice-named British author, Arthur Conan Doyle (Sherlock Holmes), or the quadruply-named John Ronald Reuel Tolkien...

I've actually got a 1910 edition of this novel in excellent shape. Looks like it was a Christmas gift from "Horace" to someone back then, too. I've read several of these books, but haven't finished the whole series. Gotta do that soon. (If you've never read it, I've got to tell you the style is NOT like current literature. It's rather breathless.....but oddly it's actually PERFECT for a modern Hollywood action/sci-fi movie. What goes around comes around, I guess.)

And my favorite artist, Michael Whelan, did the book covers for a reprint series a few years back. I've bought a number of his book covers for my walls.

And once they're done with the John Carter books, they could make a movie of one of my favorite Robert Heinlein books, "The Number of The Beast", whose main characters are (intentionally) named "Zebediah JOHN CARTER" and "Deety (short for DEJAH THORIS) BURROUGHS". This could be a franchise on par with Riverworld and John Carter of Mars, too. Either this book and it's related followups, or the whole Heinlein Future History or Lazarus Long cycles.

Pinch me, I must be dreaming - FARSCAPE returns!

Good heavens....I must be dreaming. The SciFi channel, who killed off one of the best and most innovative science fiction shows, Farscape, a few months back because they apparently couldn't have all the control they wanted, is actually bringing it back, at least as a miniseries.

THANK YOU, SCI FI.

And they picked up the excellent re-make of the campy old TV series Battlestar Galactica....and have kept Stargate going and are making a sequel series, Stargate Atlantis. And just picked up Andromeda. They had Earth: Final Conflict for a while too....but it mysteriously vanished. That series was ok for a while, but kind went downhill fast. Watchable, but not excellent.

Oh, and they tried to keep Babylon 5 going (but didn't have the guts to keep Legend of the Rangers going despite bad ratings due to the world's most horrible example of scheduling ever seen....opposite a major sporting event on another channel.)

How amazing that virtually everything ELSE they beyond the above mentioned items and the occasional movie or miniseries such as the two Dune ones show is utter trash! Some of it is HORRIBLY BAD (and I'm talking about new/exclusively-made-for-SciFi stuff, not ancient old stuff that's just campy/dated.) Even Spielberg's "Taken" minseries was pretty bad (not to mention about twice as long as it needed to be.)

Amazing....especially from the channel that actually had the gus to make a movie/miniseries out of Phillip José Farmer's RIVERWORLD (which would make an excellent TV series. I think their Riverworld was a pilot for a series, but not sure.)

I think the SciFi channel staff must be collectively bipolar or schizo or something. Such extremes of trash and treasure give ME mood swings just thinking about it!

I guess this is an example of Sturgeon's Law in action: "90% of everything is crud."

2004-04-05

Freaky number coinky-dinks

I was checking my cell phone timers today (I couldn't remember if I'd reset the resettable one last month when the billing cycle changed). Sure enough, I hadn't (gotta set up a reminder in my PDA to do that). The freaky thing was that all three timers started with "43". The last incremental (per-call) timer was 43:16. The Resettable (monthly total) timer was 432, and the Cumulative (lifetime) total was 4332. If the incremental timer was 43:2x, I'd have gotten worried....too many coincidences. (Actually, I'd have been worried about a bug in the cell phone software.....) And when was the last call I made on my cell phone? On Saturday, 4/3. AHHHHH!!!!!

Two other cell phone thoughts:


  • The first cell phone call was made 31 years ago yesterday (1973).


  • Here's a great joke, from the "Blue Collar Comedy Tour" DVD I watched last night, from comedian Jeff Foxworthy: "If your father's cell number doesn't have anything to do with his telephone number....you might be a redneck." Great comedy "concert", by the way. They only other two comedy shows that've had me laughing so hard I cried are Bill Cosby's "Himself" and anything by Robin Williams. Recommended (any of 'em).


The anniversary of another odd numerical coincidence is coming up, too. Next Tuesday, April 13th, is the 34th anniversary of the problem on the Apollo 13 moon flight. (Can't recall if that's the day it was launched or the day the actual problem occurred. Perhaps the same day, but I don't think so...I think they were more than a day along in the mission.) At least the problems wasn't on a FRIDAY the 13th (4/13/1970 was a Monday). Triskadekaphobes would've had a field day. As I recall, the launch time for the mission was 1:13 pm. Another 13! And of course, NASA uses 24-hour military time, and 1:13pm is "13:13". ANOTHER 13. Spooky. not sure if the seconds weren't :13 too. Hope not, that'd be too freaky for words.

Can you believe it's been 30+ years since we've walked on the moon? The last man walked on the moon on Dec. 14, 1972. 32 frickin' years ago.

Like Jerry Pournelle has said: I figured we'd go to the moon in my lifetime. I just didn't figure we'd go there then STOP.

Can you imagine where we'd be if NASA hadn't screwed the pooch for the last 30 years of manned spaceflight (pork, pork, pork!)

Oh well, at least JPL and a few other places are doing interesting things. Pity that all the really interesting (to non-science type) missions are being done by robotic probes.

Man, I hope the X-Prize is successful....and the winners and some of their competitors are commercially successful thereafter, because the space program is too important to leave to the government (pork, pork, pork).

Of course, they guv'mint is about the only one who seems to be able/willing to pay for it. Unless the X-Prize does for the space program what similar prizes did for aviation (can you say Charles Lindbergh?)

Hey, at NASA's $15 billion a year budget (a paltry figure for all NASA does)....maybe we should get Microsoft interested. They've got several years worth of NASA's budget in CASH lying around. So does Apple, for that matter. You can be darn sure that EITHER of 'em would be making a profit. They're about the only ones in the computer industry who ARE making profits these days.

Man, if we could get Microsoft to fund a Mars mission, I'd never say a bad word about 'em again. I'd buy a PC. (There's a nifty Gateway model that's a "media center" PC too....and beleagured Gateway could sure use the help right now....)

Better yet...maybe NASA needs to stop giving away all it's research and charge license fees instead. Our investment in NASA R&D pays us back many-fold each year in new technologies that "spin off" from NASA....commercial companies make beaucoup bucks from NASA R&D without paying a cent to the government to use it. No one remembers that, of course....they just piss and moan about all this money spent on "Buck Rogers and a buncha moon rocks". That ALWAYS comes up in the Letters to the Editors or other Opinion page articles in the newspapers each time NASA has a controversy or problem. Short sighted fools.

You know what I say? "No bucks, no Buck Rogers".

2004-04-03

Apple turns 28. (But who cares, everyone knows Apple is going out of business, right?)

Apple (you know, that company everyone says is going out of business soon) turned 28 this week.

I've been hearing that Apple can't last for almost as long as I've owned a Mac. And I've owned a Mac since they came out in 1984 (got mine of February 29, 1984 in fact. Still have it too, and it still works.) It's gotten so ridiculous, a web site has been set up to track all the ludicrous "Apple Death Knell" stories. Fun (and funny) reading.

When I was moving to my current abode about 2.5 years back, I was going through a bunch of old Byte Magazines and flipped through an article about the 512k Mac upgrade....and even then (the article was from 1984 or maybe 85) they were running the old line that "Apple must do x, y and z or they won't survive."

Man, I'm getting tired of this. Talk about your "broken record" (sorry, I'm dating myself with that reference....I should have said "talk about your scratched CD")

Twenty eight years later (and incidentally, 20 for the Mac...this is the Mac's 20th birthday year) Apple and the Mac are still here, still selling millions of units a year.

Apple's not going to die anytime soon, Apple and Mac bashers. Deal with it! (And be thankful, because computing life would be a much more boring place without Apple and it's innovations.)

More on the sad state of "journalism" these days...

More thoughts on the matter I discussed in a recent post. Apparently I'm not the only one who feels this way.

More reasons why you should fear Microsoft

Microsoft has taken over your college textbooks

Why Microsoft doesn't need to worry about complying with the DOJ's ruling or the recent EU $600 Million fine from the EU.

TANJ!

2004-03-29

And you thought computer manuals were bad...

I just purchased a new watch because the 20+ year old Seiko LCD watch I'd been using was having trouble with it's buttons.

Of course, it then occured to me to find a watch repair place (yes, they still have them) and get that watch and another old watch I inherited from my father fixed. Actually, it was getting dad's old watch fixed that gave me the idea to try to fix the other one. I was referred to the watch repair guy by K's Merchandise when I went there to try to get a band....because they didn't sell one that would work. The watch guy just ended up fixing the pin though (apparently K's doesn't have the pins either.) Charged me a whopping $1 for the pin and time.

But let me tell you, the manual for the old Seiko is 10 times better (even if translated from the Japanese) than the manual for this NEW watch made by Elgin of Illinois. Not to mention larger.....you need a magnifying glass for the Elgin manual!

This Elgin watch cost (I think) more than then Seiko or it's contemporaries would and is from a US company (Elgin of Illinois, purchased at Sears on sale for $79 from it's normal $250 price). It's one of those fancy "chronographs" with all the graduated dials around the rim and it's got an LCD insert for showing a second time or date, timer, stopwatch, etc (part of the reason I got it, as my old Seiko had that and I used it. A lot.)

The Seiko watch booklet is about the size of a pocket notepad (or a curent PDA) and pretty clear and straightforward. Lots of pictures too. You could probably figure out how to use the watch from the pics even if it wasn't translated.

The Elgin watch came with booklet designed for several TOTALLY DIFFERENT types of watches (apparently the company only prints ONE booklet for ALL it's men's watches!) and the section for my watch was terse and unclear to the point of unbelievability.

Even worse, the booklet is about the size of a packet of stamps you buy from the machine at the post office. It fits in my wallet right next to it. Anyone much older than me would truly need a magnifying glass to read it.

And I've discovered several "features" of the watch that don't seem to be documented or explained. The fourth button only seems to have one vague undocumented use, for example, yet seems to have others that aren't documented.

The instructions for using the rings around the watch face (for doing math and conversions, in somewhat of a rotary slide rule fashion) are both far too terse and (from what I can tell) WRONG in some cases. Hell, I've used slide rules before so I have some idea what they are trying to do, but the instructions are useless (I used slide rules briefly when I was taking algebra in high school, pocket calculators had just started to become widely available and the course still discussed using slide rules. I still have a couple of slide rules that belonged to my dad.)

I gotta tell you man....before you buy a watch, have them let you take a look at the manual. I'll grant you I only paid $79 for this watch instead of the usual $250 Sears charges....I strongly doubt I'd have paid $250 for a watch. $79 was a stretch but it was the closest I'd found to my old Seiko. But if I HAD paid $250 for this watch, I'd probably drive to Elgin's HQ in Illinois and toss it through their front window. I'm about ready to now. (I may actually check out Sear's return policy.)

It seems to be a fine watch, otherwise, but the manual is frankly insulting! And in many ways, even with the main hands, three subsidiary dials, and 3 LCD panels, it is LESS capable than my 20+ year old Seiko!

I feel a letter to the manufacturer coming on.

And of couse, now my old Seiko watch works fine after the watch repairman cleaned it. He was a breath of fresh air too....real service in this day and age is hard to find and he provided quick, friendly, inexpensive and polite service. [If you're in or near Des Moines Iowa, and need a watch fixed, go to John's Watch Repair in McNeal Shopping Center at Merle Hay Road and Urbandale Avenue.]

Sears on the other had I had to practically force information out of about the watch, since they were out of it when I went to buy it and weren't sure if they would get more, etc. I was figuring they wouldn't since $79 for a $250 watch looked like a close-out to me...but apparently not! Either they're taking a loss on this watch, or their mark-up is normally obscene. If they made ANY profit on that $79 sale, then their normal $250 price is even more absolutely offensive.

They did finally get more in and call me, I'll grant you, and were good after that about adjusting the band and stuff....although I had to go back and ask them to adjust the band; they didn't ask ME up front. Maybe it was because it was on sale...but so what. It was THEIR sale. I didn't make 'em sell it cheaper. Maybe I should have paid $15 for that 2 year extended warranty.....nah. A 2 years warranty is a waste. I had my last watch for TWENTY (and apparently I'll have it a while longer yet.) Maybe I pissed 'em off by not purchasing the warranty on an on-sale watch.

But in another example of the difference between the Sears workers and the watch repair guy....I took my Dad's watch back in when I went to pick up the repaired Seiko. because I'd neglected to check and see if Dad's watch actually fit me (I just assumed it would since many of the other wearables I inherited from him do.)

Of course, the watch didn't fit, so I asked the watch repair guy about a new band for it.

But instead of just selling me a band...he CHECKED TO SEE IF IT COULD BE ADJUSTED. Something I should have thought to do (since I had to adjust the clasp of the new Elgin watch myself after Sears was done anyway. They didn't offer to do that either.). I felt like a dope for not thinking of this myself, since I'd just done it on another watch a week before.

But lo and behold, he just adjusted the clasp (I thought I had thin wrists, but Dad's were apparently thinner!) and he did so in two seconds and it fit fine. For free! Granted I'd just paid him $25 to clean the watch and add a screw for the battery holder in the watch and a pin for Dad's watchband as well...but still, he did the professional thing and merely adjusted the band instead of selling me a new band as he could quite easily have done since I was obviously prepared to buy a new one! Professionalism in action. Refreshing!

I just wish I had more watches for the watch repair fellow to repair. He at least deserves my business.

You can bet I'll remember this, however, in years to come, as both an objectl lesson and as a source of watch repair should I need it again. I'll even go out of my way to get bands and batteries from him if possible. Such professionalism deserves rewards, respect...and repeat business.

More evidence for life on Mars

Cool! Some evidence has just been announced that pretty much seems to clinch the possibility of at least microbial life on Mars.

No LGM's, though.


2004-03-28

Computer history galore!

The GUIdebook graphical user interface gallery web site has a great history and comparison of all the major GUIs from the past 20+ years.

They also have a collection of great GUI-related articles from Byte magazine from my formative computer days, including one of my all-time favorites about designing the Xerox STAR user interface, as well as older and new GUIs. Man, sure wish I could still get Byte on the newstands. I'm still pissed that McGraw-Hill stopped publishing it. (And I work for a McGraw-Hill division!) Byte is still around on the web, thank heavens....but it's just not the same as the old paper version (which is a funny statement coming from me, considering how much I love the web and digital books and mags.) I've still got about 15-20 years of BYTE mags in my garage. I was starting to cherry-pick them for good articles and pitch them when I bought my house....but I just couldn't bring myself to throw them out.

Speaking of cool computing history web sites, Andy Hertzfeld, one of the original Mac designers (I got to meet him once and thank him for the Mac) has put together a good site about the history of the Mac (he has other non-Mac plans for it as well, but it starts off right!)

2004-03-27

Newtendo -- a nintendo emulator available for Newton!

According to Pen Computing Magazine (whose publishers and editors, such as David MacNeill, have always had a soft spot in their hearts for the Newton and still often mention it), developer has created a Nintendo emulator for the Newton!

They also note that "...Amazingly, there are an estimated 20,000 active Newton users, with a small number of talented developers keeping things interesting, a very active discussion list, and at least one nicely done blog. Reading these makes me want to charge up my "old" MessagePad 2100 and re-enter this delightful world."

Some web links for you:

Speaking of PalmAddicts


My recent contribution got published on the PalmAddicts blog today. Typos and all...

Wires? We don't need no steenkin' wires!

I hate cables. They get tangled up and are a mess and an eyesore.

I've been finding "retractable" cables lately and buying them: Ethernet and phone cables so far. And on the PalmAddicts blog, I just found retractable ear buds. Have to get these for my iPod.

Sure wish that Bluetooth wireless (cable-reducing) tech was catching on here in the USA. It's hot in Europe; the newer Sony Clie's such as the TH-55 and the NX80 (which I just bought) ship with Bluetooth in Europe, but NOT HERE in the USA because it's not popular here. How dumb is that? How the hell can something catch on if you can't BUY it? Sony's marketdroids need a swift 2x4 upside the noggin! Yes some Sony and Palm models do have BlueTooth, but darn few (especially Sony ones). Hey Sony and Palm....TIME TO SHIP BLUETOOTH WITH ALL YOUR PDAs or at least your mid and high-end ones. No cables is a darn handy thing for PDAs.

Verizon (my cell phone provider) with about 36 million customers doesn't think that a few of their cell customers might want a bluetooth phones either...they don't sell any. Argh!

And Apple of course added built-in Bluetooth to the PowerBook models they shipped 2 months after I bought my latest 'Book. Sigh.

2004-03-26

The Moon is not enough! Ad Astra Per Aspera!

Amen, Brother Buzz!

Every since "President" Bush announced his new "space initiative" I've been worried that it'll have the effect of killing the space program instead of revitalizing it.

And the press isn't helping, by (as I mentioned previously) getting their facts wrong

But Bushie's program seems to be to me just more election year posturing. Bushie's daddy has a Space Exploration Initiative too. That went nowhere. Bushie's program is worse. Poorly articulated, underfunded, and poorly executed. It's boomeranging on him. While I'm glad that Bushie's looking bad instead of good....I'm sad that it's slopping over onto the space program.

At least the two Mars Rovers are bringing in fascinating news and pics. Maybe that'll cause the public to forget that they ever read anything about Bushie's New Improved Space Program...

We've gotta revitalize the space program.....right now the human race has all it's eggs in one basket. We've got to go to the stars. Too bad it looks like it's gonna take forever to get moving.

2004-03-25

What are the facts?

More and more recently I've come to the conclusion that being a "journalist" in this day and age means you're simply a shill for Big Business.

I chuckle every time I hear the term "liberal bias" used by a G.O.P. shill (GOP=Greed Oil Power). Considering that the power of the press (and airwaves) is controlled by huge corporations these days, you can tell they're either self-deluded or (more likely) lying through their teeth. There's no such thing. Conservative bias is what we've got.

Remember, the press and the TV companies are there to sell papers and advertising. The heck with publishing "the facts". It's about headlines and sales and volume...not truth and information and quality.

I started feeling this way a long time ago when I read reviews and comparisons of products produced by a company I worked for. The reviews were almost ALWAY slap-dash, containing many outright errors. They often weren't complete as well. And when the product was compared to others, I found that the comparisons were faulty as well. Little or no fact checking was done.

I've seen the same thing about other issues that I know something about. So I can only conclude that everything written by a journalist is B.S. Probably because they are in such a hurry to get the facts out. Years ago I wrote a monthly column and product reviews for a nationally published computer magazine. Review and article deadlines were so short (and the editors so incompetent) and pay levels so ludicrous that it simply was impossible to do a good job. Plus I had editors who would "edit" facts out of my articles and make me look like an idiot.

So don't believe what you read in the paper or see on T.V. Instead, as Robert A. Heinlein said: "What are the facts? Again and again and again -- what are the FACTS? Shun wishful tinking, ignore divine revelation, forget "what the stars foretell," avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history" -- what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your single clue. Get the facts."

Don't make the mistake in believing that because you heard it on the news or read it in the paper or on the 'Net that it's true or complete (just ask Pierre Sallinger!)

Here's a couple of items I've run across recently that bear on this issue:

Ex-Watergate writer laments 'idiot culture'

Why the media says the space plan costs a trillion dollars

Thank goodness for the Web and Google and such search engines. At least we can much more quickly seek out "the facts". Just never believe you have them all!

Keep an open mind out there!

Who needs a mouse?

Lots of nifty new developments on alternate user input methods lately:


Thought control!

A good overview of speech control and generation in Mac OS X

Subvocal speech input -- now muttering under your breath at your computer can actually accomplish something!

Will Sony make any more Clié NX series units now that there's the UX-50 and TH-55?

I've been wondering if there will be any more units in the NX series now that there's the UX-50 with a keyboard and the TH-55 (basically an NX without the clamshell and CF card slot). It seems to me that this is not likely, and that's too bad. Why do I care? Why should you?

I prefer units with a collapsible graffiti area since they first showed up on the HandEra 330, for e-book reading and other things (and since there are now many ways to write on the screen without even opening the graffiti area, such as TealScript) who really needs the input area?

I also prefer units with CF card slots (although I might settle for an SD card slot...but I'd rather not.) The CF card slot is the most flexible (you can get CF adapters for most of the other card formats too). Not to mention CF support the largest memory sizes and are generally cheapest and maybe fastest. Multiple card slots are even nicer. The PocketPCs win a point there; most have a CF and SD slot, last I checked. Or at least one or the other.

The above reasons are why I bought the HandEra 330 to replace my Newton MessagePad (which had two PCMCIA slots and no need of a Graffiti area, I should note), and then the Sony NX70 and the NX80. The HandEra 330 supported CF and SD/MMC cards, and the NXs support CF and (yech) Memory Stick. But I note the UX-50 and the TH-55 are back to only having a Memory Stick.

If there are no further NX models....then I may have bought my last Sony. I really like the NX series. Aside from the collapsible Graffiti area and CF and MS slots, the keyboard is nice, though I don't use it that much (a bit too small for my fingers) - I could live without it. The built in still/video camera and audio recorder is great, the MP3 player, the Infrared remote...except for not having a cell phone built it, the NX's are the all-around do everything (well, I'd like built-in WiFi and BlueTooth too but at least I can add 'em).

But I'd take a TH-55 with a CF (or SD) and Mem Stick slot if there was no NX. Basically just take the NX80, remove the keyboard....and I'd buy it. Or take the TH-55 and add a CF slot in place of the SD or camera. Done deal!

Alas...I have a bad feeling that I've seen my last Sony. It all hinges on the memory slot. Sony finally (grudgingly and partially) supported memory in the CF slot (after other vendors wrote drivers for CF memory first!) If Sony doesn't make another NX, I sure hope that Palm produces a replacement. The latest Tungsten is pretty darn close; just add a camera and maybe another memory slot. The Garmin unit is close too.

We're all gonna glow in the dark

As if the computer "mod" geeks haven't neon-lit enough of their computers already, now you can get glowing USB powered mouse pads!

Gee, and I could I add the glowing Griffin PowerMate USB multimedia knob, and the glowing XtremeMac UFO iMac hub/base.....if I had an iMac....and of course all the optical mice these days glow in the dark.....and so do PowerBook keyboards now, as well as the logo on the back of the PowerBook screen.

And I've got two freebie pens recently that light up. One even rotates among multiple colors (like the USB mousepad). And hell, even my Swiss Army Knife has a light on it (handy, actually.) I also just got a promotional freebie at work...a keychain fob with a compass and LED flashlight on it (I guess in case I get lost walking between the parking lot and the door to the office building...)

Everything's glowing! What is this... the X-Files? At least they don't all glow green.... (why do bad/scary things always glow green? The X-Files? The X-Box? The Borg? Minas Morgul in the Lord Of The Rings movie?) If good aliens ever do come to Earth, their ship better not glow green....we'll blow 'em up first and ask questions later!

This shows how stupid the current Administration is

Bush supports offshoring high-tech

Yes...let's send all the jobs to a country that won't even let people from other countries move there unless they bring $$$$$ to start a new business (Cringley had a good column on this on the PBS web site) and which is restrictive in other ways as well. Meanwhile, we let in all kinds people from outside the country in vast quantities, and many of them make a bunch of money or get a bunch of education, then leave and compete with us unfairly....like India is doing. This is why the U.S.A. is the best country in the world.....but it just may be that, as the saying goes: "Nice guys finish last."

Funny, but I thought the President's job was to HELP our people and our country. Instead, he's done NOTHING but hurt our people and our country since he entered office. [now the FBI will probably thing I'm a commie or something. Ironic, isn't it?]

Good job, Mr. Bush. Send all the good jobs that bring wealth to our country and buying power to the customers of your big business cronies....meanwhile I'll have to take a "manufacturing" job at McDonalds. (Did you hear? The job loss is getting so bad that, instead of actually working to fix things....the Bushies want to re-classify burger-flipping as "manufacturing" so it'll look like we're gaining in "good" jobs.)

Thanks for nothing, Bush baby. Let's vote these brainless, clueless, fascist morons out of office in November, before they totally bankrupt the country financially, economically and morally.

Other good music

Vince Benedetti Meets Diana Krall: Heartdrops [ran across this at the same time I got the Diana Krall CD sampler and the Stacey Kent CD's]

Moya Brennan: Two Horizons [Moya is also known as Maire, evidently pronounced the same in Gaelic. She's also known as the lead singer for the group Clannad, and is Enya's big sister. You've heard Moya's voice in the movies Patriot Games and The Last of the Mohicans]

Pat Benatar: Go. [been a long time since I bought a new Pat CD. I still like her Blues one, True Love, best, but evidently most folks didn't. Got a new release of her "Best Shots" greatest hits CD at the same time too...and this one had a DVD of music videos in it. In fact, this seems to be a trend. I keep running across CD releases with DVD's included or available. The new "Bangles" CD. Sheryl Crow, The Dixie Chicks, Alanis Morrissette, and on and on.]

Mandalay: Solace. [Nicola Hitchcock's got a very unusual voice!]

Joss Stone: The Soul Sessions

Norah Jones: Feels Like Home [evidently this is selling HUGE. Hope that Norah actually makes some money from it....but the way the record industry and RIAA's creative accounting practices work, I'm sure that this will never turn a profit. Bastids!]

Some other recent goodies:
- Melissa Etheridge: Lucky
- Harry Connick Jr: Only You
- The Ultimate Diva Collection (from Verve Records). Ran across this playing in the local Calypso 987 store. Love that store. A visual feast. And an auditory one too, in this case.
- Sissel: My Heart
"The Shipping News" motion picture soundtrack. Good movie too. (Of course, I like anything with Julianne Moore in it. Knockout redhead!)

[I gotta get myself an Amazon affiliation so I can post links to these and make $$$$. Well, maybe $$. Or $.]

Stacey Kent - Up and coming new singer


I just ran across Stacey Kent in the local Border's Books and Music store this week. I've been buying a lot of jazz recently....guess I was in need of a change. I'm currently waiting on the latest Diana Krall CD, due out next month, and in fact I was in Borders to pick up the 2-songs for $2 CD Sampler from Diana's CD. I was browsing the racks in Borders and tried out one of Stacey's albums. Great stuff. She does more than just jazz, too.

Amazon.com has a free MP3 of one of Stacey's works available.

2004-03-24

E-Paper hits the big time -- Sony ships a product using it!

Just when you thought e-book readers were dead...here comes the Sony Librie e-book reader. It's the first consumer device I've seen that uses Electronic Paper technology. 170 pixels per inch, and no power except when CHANGING the display. Woohoo!

Here's Sony's Librie site, too [in Japanese] and a Librie discussion thread on ClieSource [thanks for the heads-up on this ClieSource!.

While e-books on my old Newton MessagePad PDAs were pretty good due to the large screen, e-books didn't hit their stride until the various e-book readers for the Palm and PocketPC platform were released and e-book stores became available. My last four PDAs (HandEra 330, HP Jornada 540, Sony Clie NX70V and NX80V) were chosen in large part because their screen allowed the input area to be hidden so you could use the full screen for reading e-books. I rarely read paper books any longer. I also picked up a RCA REB-1100 e-book reader on the cheap from an Office supply place. Larger, but feels good in the hand and the battery life and backlight last for ages between charges (lots more room for batteries in the REB-1100 versus the NX80V).

Rock on Sony! When does it ship in the US of A?

UPDATE: The BBC Website, excellent as usual, has some good details (although the weight, number of batts and # of texts in on board memory seem different from what I've read elsewhere.)