Month: February 2023

  • Walk the walk

    A few weeks ago I signed up for this virtual adventure / exercise thing called “Conqueror Virtual Challenges”, and then walked the length of Hadrian’s Wall on Northern England in a bit over three weeks…

    Hadrian’s Wall is 90 miles. I averaged 3.75 miles a day even with all of the bad weather and work stuff, and got this cool medal for the effort.

    Over all it was a lot of fun to clock my walks and read about the cool places along the wall. Maybe I’ll do another one come Spring.

    Listening to "Damier Club" by Morgan Willis
  • And a few years later…

    I don’t normally keep my old Windows machines because, well, they’re just old Windows machines. There’s nothing really special about most old Windows machines as they tend to be either as cheap as possible, or life support for some video card that cost as much as the rest of the system…

    But there is one more that I’ve held on to since I purchased it in February of 2007…

    This is a Dell XPS M1710, and while I purchased it for work as a development machine, it mostly did duty as my World of Warcraft LAN party rig for a couple of years.

    This was pretty spendy – around $3000 if I recall; it was the top-end configuration with a 2Ghz Core2Duo CPU, a gig of RAM, a Geforce Go 7950 GTX, a 17-inch 1920×1200 display, and Windows Vista Ultimate.

    By the time it was retired in 2017 it was maxed out on RAM (4 gigs), had a 7200 RPM 500G HD in it, and Windows 7 ultimate… And had a dead battery…

    One of the reasons I used this machine at work for a decade was the number of ports; it’s loaded with pretty much every port you can imagine… 6 USB2, Dual PCMCIA card, SD card, Firewire, VGA, DVI, gigabit ethernet, modem, A/B/G Wifi… And all of these are without dongles! The ports are all useful in various ways to an IT professional, so I continued to use the machine for work whenever Windows was needed for a long time.

    These days it still gets pulled out on occasion when I need Windows 7 for something, like turning some old ISO into a bootable USB or opening some old archive. But otherwise it’s just another conversation piece from a bygone computing era.

    Listening to "College Dreams" by Marvel83'
  • Y2K Laptops

    Not all of my interesting antique computers are Apples; I have a few other things that I used back in the day, usually for work, that are pretty interesting…

    For instance, back in the late 90’s “The Internet” wasn’t just a communications medium – it was also an aesthetic!

    The Compaq Presario 1400 (14XL345)

    Check out the groovy “4 way Internet Scroll Button” under the touch pad, and right under the display is the “Internet Zone” with dedicated buttons for ‘instant internet access’, ‘instant email’, and ‘retail central’ – an “Instant connection to your favorite computer store and a variety of popular retail sites at the touch of a button”.

    Oh, and MP3s were still a big deal, so this has a dedicated MP3 player that works even if the laptop is off. And it actually sounds pretty good for a y2k laptop…

    I picked this up in July of 2000 for something like $2000 at CompUSA because I needed a Windows PC to develop the DirectX stuff I was working on, but I was living on a fifty foot yacht and space was a premium. The big reason I bought this laptop, other than it was ‘rad’ looking, is it had a DVD drive, a Trident “CyberBlade” AGP video card, and USB 2.0 (!) in it – all of which were useful for the digital video stuff I was working on.

    This came with a Pentium III at 650mhz, a 13.3″ TFT display (that still looks pretty good), 64 megs of PC100 RAM, a 6 gig IDE HD, a 56k Modem / Ethernet card, and Windows ME (Millennium Edition).

    As you can see by the photo, I added a 256M SODIMM to it, which is the most it’ll take (the video uses 8 megs of system ram, which is why the ram count looks weird), and it got an upgrade to a 20G HD some time in the past.

    The only real issue this laptop has is the battery crapped out about a decade ago. And while I can get a replacement for about $50, it’s just not been that big of a deal for what amounts to a conversation piece.

    Listening to "The Comeback Kid" by The Midnight
  • SELF=YEAR(NOW())-1969

    Well, it’s happened again; as of this morning I’m 54.

    It’s interesting to me to be one year away from the Seniors Menu at IHOP… Me, a “Senior Citizen“. LOL

    The perception of time really does accelerate as you get older. When I was in my 20’s the years felt like decades, but now five years ago may as well have been yesterday. Everything is conceptually compressed into a much shorter impression of time than it really was, because there’s so much of it blurring together behind me.

    For example, there is very little difference for me between memories of dialing into CSNET (the proto-Internet) in 1985 and dialing into EOTD (a local BBS) in 1993 – both could have happened on either side of a weekend. I mean, it seems like a year or two ago I was setting up my first web server on a PowerMac 8100/100 using WebSTAR – but that was 1995.

    I think that’s why I picked up the journaling hobby back in the early 2000s; it’s partly to keep everything organized, separate, and unique from everything else packed into my head, and therefore referenceable, but also to have some sense of permanence beyond my span of days…

    At least until the web hosting stops getting paid for I suppose.

    Aurora, the Empress I played in Secondlife, was nutty about archiving her memories because while she was effectively immortal, her memory was finite and she would eventually forget her past – and the only immortality she could offer anyone who impacted her life was simply to remember them…

    I think a bit of that character affectation is a reflection of my own desires. When I shuffle off this mortal coil, my entire existence goes with me – save for what people remember of me. So I write things down to try and aid that process a bit.

    Not that I figure I have much to worry about just yet; 60 is the new 40 after all. 🙂

    Listening to "Chasing Yesterday" by FM-84
  • Old Data

    Today I finished going through all of the posts I imported from LiveJournal and fixed up all of the media. I also removed all of the duplicate media that got imported as well…

    It turns out LJ makes several sizes of attached media just like WordPress does, but unlike WordPress LJ didn’t dynamically craft the HTML for the target display back in the old days. So old posts on LJ had links in the HTML to all of the media sizes, which meant my scraper dutifully pulled all of the sizes and stuck them in WordPress’ media directory.

    An easy fix really, it just took some time to clean up. And while I was at it I sequentially redid all of the old posts in WordPress’ block format versus raw imported code.

    I’m still missing a lot of my personal ancient history from when I shut down my Google account due to the Gawker screw up in 2010…

    I set up my gmail account in late 2004, and as people tend to do I wound up doing everything through various Google services – and this eventually included all of my photos and whatnot. Now, while I did back up everything that was in Google at the time, that DVD backup was promptly lost in the move that happened six months later…

    In an ironic twist of fate, much of that backup also existed in my DropBox at the time, but DropBox wants me to change the password and will only send the link to my gmail account I had at the time… And being as Google simply won’t reactivate or reissue my old email address, that old data is just beyond my grasp.

    Sometimes technology is stupid.

    I’ve tried a couple of times to convince DropBox that I really am that guy. I mean, I have the same email ‘name’ at mac.com, which existed for several years before gmail existed – and I even own a domain with that name that traces back to the mid 90’s… I can even point out the various cameras used to take the photos that are in that DropBox! But, nope – the robot cares not for my pleas.

    Oh well, such is life here in the future.

    Listening to "We Never Got to Say Goodbye" by New Arcades
  • mRNA

    Scott Adams over on Twitter has been engaging with his detractors over his pro-mRNA stance. And while it’s mostly disingenuous trolling on his part, which is fine – it’s the Internet after all, he does bring up an interesting thought experiment:

    “How did you ‘know’ the COVID vaccine was good / bad?”

    It’s not a secret that I opted out of the mRNA treatment; I’m in a position where I couldn’t really be threatened into compliance so I consciously became part of the control group just to see what happened.

    So, how did I come to this decision? It’s a really good question and forces some introspection.

    First off, I’m not an ‘anti-vaxxer’ by any stretch of the imagination. I get my general vaccines, like Tetanus, from my doctor whenever it’s time. I get the current round of flu shots every other year (I skip a year to reduce my reliance). And I’ve routinely gotten the kitchen sink set whenever I travel out of the country…

    I’m also not a media consumer. I don’t watch TV in general or the news specifically, so I’m forced to go find out and form my own opinions when important things crop up… This takes time, but it also prevents knee-jerk reactions on my part – and I’ve not really encountered anything that can’t be examined for a while before taking action.

    So, what made the mRNA different?

    Well, it was new technology – and I’m kinda into new technology – so I started to read up on it as I tend to do. And early on there were a lot of papers on the research leading up to the COVID version that didn’t have the best results, mostly because corona viruses in general are hard to pin down due to their propensity to mutate. And while that wasn’t a red flag in and of itself, it did get added to the dataset.

    I’ve also been in various tech fields for nearly forty years now, and I have a pretty good grasp of how long it takes to go from ‘good idea’ to ‘safe and effective’, which tends to be exacerbated by how much of a fire drill the whole process is… In my opinion there were a lot of shortcuts being taken in the name of an emergency, which is the exact time you shouldn’t take shortcuts. And because of the emergency nature of the thing and a similar understanding of dangerous shortcuts by everyone involved, the EUA absolved everyone involved of any responsibility.

    This was a pretty big red flag for me, but I was still undecided.

    What really formed my opinion was the unprecedented coercion to get the shot… It raised a simple question; “If they have to force / bribe / guilt-trip people to take it, what am I missing?” – which redoubled my research.

    I’m in my 50’s, so I’ve been around the block a few times – and I’ve never seen a state or federal government offer money to get a shot. I’ve also never seen people get fired for not getting a shot… And the harder the mRNA was pushed, the less I trusted the whole process.

    Then came the logic problems; apparently if I didn’t get the mRNA shot I was putting people who did at risk – which is pretty much exactly how vaccines don’t work… And then mRNA efficacy went from Biden telling everyone that they’d not get sick if they got the shot to needing a booster, to needing a second booster, to needing boosters every year.

    And then the folks who got the mRNA vaccine started to get sick – so they redefined vaccination…

    So, to answer Scott’s question, my determination of good / bad wasn’t really an instant decision gate – it was more of a process that involved a lot of reading and asking questions mixed with some pattern recognition.

    I currently figure my desire to methodically come up with my own opinions on things versus leaping to televised conclusions may have been a really good thing this time around. It makes up for all the times I missed a good stock market move because I spent too much time thinking about it. 🙂

    Listening to "Images of You" by FM Attack