
My name is
David Robins:
Christian, lead developer (resume), writer, photographer, runner,
libertarian (voluntaryist),
and student.
This is also my son David Geoffrey Robins' site.
Catching wild pigs
Political ·Friday November 28, 2008 @ 05:05 EST (link)
A chemistry professor in a large college had some exchange students in the class. One day while the class was in the lab the Professor noticed one young man (exchange student) who kept rubbing his back, and stretching as if his back hurt.
The professor asked the young man what was the matter. The student told him he had a bullet lodged in his back. He had been shot while fighting communists in his native country who were trying to overthrow his country's government and install a new communist government.
In the midst of his story he looked at the professor and asked a strange question. He asked, "Do you know how to catch wild pigs?"
The professor thought it was a joke and asked for the punchline. The young man said this was no joke. "You catch wild pigs by finding a suitable place in the woods and putting corn on the ground. The pigs find it and begin to come everyday to eat the free corn. When they are used to coming every day, you put a fence down one side of the place where they are used to coming. When they get used to the fence, they begin to eat the corn again and you put up another side of the fence. They get used to that and start to eat again. You continue until you have all four sides of the fence up with a gate in The last side. The pigs, who are used to the free corn, start to come through the gate to eat, you slam the gate on them and catch the whole herd.
"Suddenly the wild pigs have lost their freedom. They run around and around inside the fence, but they are caught. Soon they go back to eating the free corn. They are so used to it that they have forgotten how to forage in the woods for themselves, so they accept their captivity."
Thankful that the turkey turned out well
News ·Thursday November 27, 2008 @ 22:14 EST (link)
Cooked Thanksgiving dinner: turkey and the works. Not as hard as we thought. Ended up doing the stuffing on the stove, since most (online) sources advised it (bought some Mrs. Cubbison's, added fresh celery, and peanuts; turned out very well). The turkey we thawed out about a day and a half before; the removables were in a bag, which made them easy to take out; we used an aluminum throwaway roasting pan, and put it in for I believe five hours, occasionally basting it with an oil, water, and herb mixture, and covering it with a foil tent at the end. No problem cutting it with my electric knife, either. Everything (as well as the turkey and stuffing, we had Brussels sprouts, (boiled) potatoes, corn, and cranberry sauce for the turkey) was delicious!
Technical trading and charts
News, Guns, Trading ·Thursday November 27, 2008 @ 20:34 EST (link)
20081106: Went shooting at Wade's with Philip P. from work @ 1800; I paid the lane fee, he let me shoot his AR-15 modified to shoot .22LR. I'd never shot a .22 before; recoil was negligible; it was a lot of fun. Definitely plan to get an AR-15.
20081107: I've been steadily absorbing information about trading (skimmed the For Dummies book below; didn't learn anything new, but it is what it is). Good series on reading candlestick charts from StockCharts.com's ChartSchool.
Technical trading is trading based on market data (price and volume and derived indicators, such as moving averages); oppose fundamental trading (which uses company financial statements and news), although that's not to say that both can't be used together. Technicals appear to lend themselves well to automation.
20081110: Ordered a Rock River Arms AR-15 (Elite CAR A4, with lightweight chrome-lined barrel). The place I got it from (in NH) is so backed up that I won't get it until February 2009, sadly, but I got a decent deal (also, no tax). Still debating whether I should order a second one; their value will go up immensely when that socialist Obama and his bleeping Democrats violate the 2nd Amendment and pass an assault weapons ban. Molon labe!
20081110: Read more about candlestick charts during class; it was interesting, but each presenter managed to say in an hour and a half (their half of the three hour class) what could have been said in fifteen minutes.
20081118: Sears guys came to fix our dryer, which died last week. Turns out it's a stuck button (not our fault), which they couldn't even temporarily unstick, so they're ordering a part and a repairman will be coming back December 2 (sooner if the part arrives and we call and get an earlier appointment). Fortunately, and very surprisingly, we're covered under some warranty we bought.
20081124: Presentation day in Accessibility class. Presentations had to be short (we had 16+ people in three hours, meaning about 10 minutes per person, with maybe one or two questions; the TA managed time and showed time left). I felt my presentation went well (and someone told me they liked it in the CSE lounge before next class), although I was somewhat nervous. The class was somewhat interesting because of the range of topics. Afterward, for the rest of our grade, we have to comment (on the class discussion forum) on at least two final reports (final reports were also due today), e.g. ask a question or explore an avenue.
Books finished: Investing Online For Dummies, Dragon Wing, Financial Freedom Through Electronic Day Trading, Liberalism is a Mental Disorder, Frankenstein.DVDs finished: Pleasantville.
A sickening development: socialism in our time
News, Political ·Wednesday November 5, 2008 @ 12:33 EST (link)
20081104: All hail the Soviet States of America (SSA), and their glorious leader, that one!
20081105: Home sick.
Books finished: An Inconvenient Book.
Random stuff leading up to the election
News, Bad Drivers, Political, Guns, Trading ·Monday November 3, 2008 @ 16:08 EST (link)
20081010: Mowed lawn.
20081012: Went shooting at SVRC (EMP).
20081013: Accessibility class at UWa.; my project will be mathematics for blind users.
20081015: DVDSpot(.com) is no more. This is sad because my automated DVD scanning system used data from DVDSpot. There are no good potential replacements, except perhaps Mike's Movie Mayhem (which has less data and DVDs) and possibly the new DVD Crate, whenever it's up.
20081016: Voted (absentee). There are two choices, bad and horrible.
20081017: Computers went down (desktop mail machine and server); both are fine, looked like the UPS died; it smelled funny and was emitting a continual beep, even after being reset. APC's reference page has a link to the manual; verdict of a long beep with a green light is a low battery. Amazon has a replacement ("APC RBC2") for $30 with free shipping
20081018: Talking to people on bulletpointreview.com about a DVDSpot replacement. Some of them managed to grab a site-scrape which can be processed to recreate the database.
20081020: Started doing some trading this week, just MSFT, using Fidelity. In retrospect (writing this later), I was fortunate to get out with my shirt (I had no live feeds, and no understanding of either technicals or even fundamentals), but I actually ended up up a good bit for a few hours of work.
20081023: Bad drivers: WA 986 LJR, green Nissan Quest van; twit (cut me off), at about 1008.
20081027: Class was boring (socialist "activist" guest lecturer talking about disability law). New ABC battery for APC Back-UPS 500 arrived; connected it and it set the UPC on fire. Oh well, at least it didn't burn anything else.
20081028: Learned about interactivebrokers.com (IB); nice site, $10/month (waived for $30+ in commissions) for trading data, and it has a (multi-language) data feed/trading API.
20081030: Made IB-provided Windows C++ client build in Linux; had to tweak it some, but it works. The IB demo account has some limitations which I'd thought were problems with my conversion, but weren't; the paper trading account has some issues too, according to the IB forums (their own and the TWSAPI Yahoo group); there's also a wiki (which isn't updatable, which rather defeats the purpose).
20081031: Went shooting at Wade's (.40 S&W, 50 rounds, and with my Glock 34). Handled an AR-15 at the store (first time).
20081102: Why Obama is Wrong For Our Country.
20081103: Doing some reading online about trading, and specifically day trading. Really like Trader Mike: the concept of "R" to measure risk/gain and position sizing (which he in turn got from Van Tharp), the details about his setup, and his Trading 101 series. A fundamental point that helped: the money used to buy equities isn't what's being risked: the risk is the maximum that can be lost (i.e. shares x (buy price - stop loss)); good trades have good reward-to-risk profiles.
Highly recommend Laura Ingraham's books Shut up & Sing and Power to the People (links below). I've also started reading Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series again (12 books so far, all very long).
Books finished: Shut Up & Sing, The Eye of the World, Power To the People, The Enemy Within, The Great Hunt.DVDs finished: Zodiac, Liar Liar, That '70s Show: Season Six, Ultraviolet, Final Destination: Thrill-ogy.
More than just a piece of paper
Political ·Friday October 3, 2008 @ 19:08 EDT (link)
It only stands to reason that where there's sacrifice, there's someone collecting the sacrificial offerings. Where there's service, there is someone being served. The man who speaks to you of sacrifice is speaking of slaves and masters, and intends to be the master.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
—Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution
Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime where of the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
—Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
It should be illegal, or at least unconscionable, to elect anyone but a libertarian to any position of authority in these United States, from President, senate, and house, on down. Any time when these representatives decide to take the people's money and redistribute it, to use it for any means not either paying for the workings of (minimal) government or constitutionally mandated uses (e.g. defense, which doesn't include wars in Iraq or Afghanistan), or for something that every single individual contributing has agreed voluntarily, they violate the Constitution, and such behavior should merit a recall.
Neither democracy nor direct voting not even the answer (you still have the problem of the majority stealing from the majority, i.e. two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for dinner): the only true direct voting is to let people opt in individually: the choice should not be "Shall we force people to pay for X?" but "Do you personally want to support X? If so, send your money here; if not, do nothing." Congress should have to persuade people to support their so-called social programs, and if they can't persuade enough individuals to give money, let those programs die.
The fourth amendment (anti-seizure) and the thirteenth (anti-slavery, specifically anti-involuntary servitude) amendments should make use of taxes for redistribution of wealth unconstitutional (despite the sixteenth amendment allowing their levying). Paying taxes to support others (no matter how legitimate or moral the cause) is seizure of goods and involuntary servitude, under threat of forcible confinement. If anyone asks you when slavery was abolished in these United States, the answer is "Not yet."
Beginning my Master's degree at the University of Washington
News, Bad Drivers, Political, Work, Guns, School ·Wednesday October 1, 2008 @ 21:20 EDT (link)
On TV today a Democrat pointed out that when Obama holds a rally 25-30,000 people show up, whereas when McCain holds one he only draws 10-15,000.
The Republican spokesman replied, "That's because McCain's supporters are at work."
—Seen on CLAMS
20080918: Microsoft company meeting. Very blah; only saved from being a total waste of time by the paper airplanes and the co-authoring demo, which wasnÂt really long enough to be worth wasting so much time.
Found a way to fix my Hauppauge PVR-150 capture card when it goes wonky (black and white video, no sound, kernel log says that it's still in "detecting" state): this message helped; the soft reset advice didn't work at all, but bouncing the audio input did: v4l2-ctl -d 1 --set-audio-input=1 then back to 0. The v4l* utilities are handy, although in this case nothing interesting showed up using v4l-info, but the kernel log (v4l2-ctl -d 1 --log-status) did show the audio detection hang.
20080919: Bad driver: blue Acura RSX, WA 359 MZF, UMass. license plate holder (massive inferiority complex because he couldnÂt get into Harvard or MIT?); cut me off (the twit was dangerously close; had to slam on the brakes) on WA-520E at 1823.
20080925: Drove into Seattle during the day to get my UWa. Husky card and parking pass ("short term night permit" for Mondays; came to $17.xx). Getting the Husky card was quick: they looked at my photo ID, took a photo right there, and gave me the card a few minutes later. I returned my U-Pass in the same room (the U-Pass is a transit pass mailed to everyone—which is evil, since if you don't return it they charge for it, but at least they provide a postage-paid envelope). They had complimentary parking outside Parking Services to get my parking pass, but I had to pay $2 to park and get my student ID ($12, then $10 refund for being 0-30 minutes).
20080927: Logged in remotely and submitted some Chart object model Office 12 SP2 bugs to triage.
20080929: First class at UWa. I arrived early: I left work at 1630 and arrived at 1700 (which is better than leaving 1730 and arriving 1830), and sat in the Allen center and logged into the CSE wireless network and then VPN'd to work for a while. Class was in EEB037 (1830-2120); typical classroom; tiered seats; power (for the laptop), but only at the ends of the rows; still, I didn't need my extension cord. First class wasn't super-interesting; it was a nice overview, but I got a lot of work done on my Scotland Yard simulation.
20080930: Read the assigned reading (handouts) for CSE P 590B (590 is a "new course" designation, so it just means it's the second such course over some period; it also isn't necessarily all that new; courses that seem fairly well established are still 590s on the PMP web site).
20081001: Went shooting after work; shot the EMP; much improvement; slow and steady wins it.
On the financial industry bailouts: I agree with
Ron Paul, and an article by Greg Zehner, found at, of all places, the the Huffington Post, which is usually deep far-left wingnut territory (after reading the comments, I see the nuts are still there, fear not). Quoting from Paul's article:
Laws passed by Congress such as the Community Reinvestment Act required banks to make loans to previously underserved segments of their communities, thus forcing banks to lend to people who normally would be rejected as bad credit risks. … The solution to the problem is to end government meddling in the market. Government intervention leads to distortions in the market, and government reacts to each distortion by enacting new laws and regulations, which create their own distortions, and so on ad infinitum.
Overdosing on political correctness (and pandering for votes) led to the Community Reinvestment Act, which was a fundamental cause of the housing crash. Banks were coerced into making loans they wouldn't have made in a true free market, and they usually got to offload those loans to GSEs like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac anyway, privatizing profit and socializing risk. From the Zehner piece:
In the classic, Atlas Shrugged, [Ayn Rand] wrote about governmental powers manipulating markets in order to advance political concerns. Like the book, we do not seem to have the political will to take the correct, but painful, road to recovery. By propping up the financial system with the band-aids of trading restrictions and an explosion of the government's already untenable balance sheet, the necessary adjustments to the financial system are prevented from occurring. … What the Fed, Treasury, and SEC should have done was to let the chips fall as they may by allowing healthy financial institutions survive and the weak ones go bankrupt or be forced to merge. They should have let free markets function while protecting the innocent by raising the FDIC limit of deposit insurance from $100,000 to something significantly higher.
…
Our strength as a country, has always been to address problems head on, take the medicine no matter how distasteful, and emerge stronger than ever. Sadly, times have changed. Our government has shown that it will change the rules of the markets whenever it seems expedient. Simply put, it will curtail the free markets when it doesn't like what the free markets are saying. In the long run, this will lead to a disaster of unprecedented proportions. It would not be surprising to hear people walking the streets of New York asking "Who is John Galt?
DVDs finished: 28 Weeks Later, The 13th Warrior, Entrapment, That '70s Show: Season Five, Stargate Atlantis: The Complete First Season, Unforgiven, Coyote Ugly.
Two new takes on The Ant and the Grasshopper
Political ·Thursday September 18, 2008 @ 18:55 EDT (link)
This is a well-known parable; in the original, the ant works to store up food for the winter, but the grasshopper is idle; in winter, the ant has food and the grasshopper starves to death (the Wikipedia entry says this is cited as an example of a libertarian society, although libertarianism does not preclude voluntary charity). Here are two modern versions:
Once upon a time there was a little red hen who scratched about the barnyard until she uncovered some grains of wheat. She called her neighbors and said "If we plant this wheat, we shall have bread to eat. Who will help me plant it?"
"Not I, " said the cow.
"Not I," said the duck.
"Not I," said the pig.
"Not I," said the goose.
"Then I will," said the little red hen. And she did. The wheat grew tall and ripened into golden grain.
"Who will help me reap my wheat?" asked the little red hen.
"Not I," said the duck.
"Out of my classification," said the pig.
"I'd lose my seniority," said the cow.
"I'd lose my unemployment compensation," said the goose.
"Then I will," said the little red hen, and she did.
At last the time came to bake the bread. "Who will help me bake bread?" asked the little red hen.
"That would be overtime for me," said the cow.
"I'd lose my welfare benefits," said the duck.
"I'm a dropout and never learned how," said the pig.
"If I'm to be the only helper, that's discrimination," said the goose.
"Then I will," said the little red hen.
She baked five loaves and held them up for the neighbors to see.
They all wanted some and, in fact, demanded a share. But the little red hen said, "No, I can eat the five loaves myself."
"Excess profits," cried the cow.
"Capitalist leech," screamed the duck.
"I demand equal rights," yelled the goose.
And the pig just grunted.
And they painted "unfair" picket signs and marched round and around the little red hen shouting obscenities.
When the government agent came, he said to the little red hen, "You must not be greedy."
"But I earned the bread," said the little red hen.
"Exactly," said the agent. "That's the wonderful free enterprise system. Anyone in the barnyard can earn as much as he wants. But under our modern government regulations productive workers must divide their products with the idle."
And they lived happily ever after, including the little red hen, who smiled and clucked, "I am grateful, I am grateful." But her neighbors wondered why she never again baked any more bread.
—Seen on CLAMS;
found hereClaimed first heard it in a message from Dr. Adrian Rogers (Bellevue Baptist)
(which is down the street from where we used to live in Memphis, TN)
Comment from CLAMS:
Maybe add the grasshoppers' vote along with the single ant to take the ant's property. They claim its all fair 'cause everyone had a vote. But oops what a coincidence the grasshoppers all voted to loot the ant's property. But its all fair… 'cause it was a vote.
(Which is one example, isomorphic to the wolves and the sheep voting on what to have for dinner, that shows democracy isn't necessarily inherently fair or good; compare Churchill's dictum: "Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time" (from a House of Commons speech on November 11, 1947), probably because libertarianism still needs to be tried.)
The ant works hard in the withering heat all summer long, building his house and laying up supplies for the winter.
The grasshopper thinks he's a fool and laughs and dances and plays the summer away.
Come winter, the shivering grasshopper calls a press conference and demands to know why the ant should be allowed to be warm and well fed while others are cold and starving.
CBS, NBC, and ABC show up to provide pictures of the shivering grasshopper next to a video of the ant in his comfortable home with a table filled with food.
America is stunned by the sharp contrast. How can this be, that in a country of such wealth, this poor grasshopper is allowed to suffer so?
Kermit the Frog appears on Oprah with the grasshopper, and everybody cries when they sing, "It's Not Easy Being Green".
Jesse Jackson stages a demonstration in front of the ant's house where the news stations film the group singing, "We shall overcome." Jesse then has the group kneel down to pray to God for the grasshopper's sake.
Tom Daschle and John Kerry exclaim in an interview with Peter Jennings that the ant has gotten rich off the back of the grasshopper, and both call for an immediate tax hike on the ant to make him pay his "fair share."
Finally, the EEOC drafts the "Economic Equity and Anti-Grasshopper Act," retroactive to the beginning of the summer. The ant is fined for failing to hire a proportionate number of green bugs and, having nothing left to pay his retroactive taxes, his home is confiscated by the government.
Hillary gets her old law firm to represent the grasshopper in a defamation suit against the ant, and the case is tried before a panel of federal judges that Bill appointed from a list of single-parent welfare recipients.
The ant loses the case.
The story ends as we see the grasshopper finishing up the last bits of the ant's food while the government house he is in, which just happens to be the ant's old house, crumbles around him because he doesn't maintain it.
The ant has disappeared in the snow. The grasshopper is found dead in a drug related incident and the house, now abandoned, is taken over by a gang of spiders who terrorize the once peaceful neighborhood.
Rivendell is born
News, Technical, Guns ·Wednesday September 17, 2008 @ 20:47 EDT (link)
20080912: Registered at UWa. (CSE P 590, Accessibility, with Dr. Ladner, ID 97999) and paid tuition. (Had some trouble: they didn't have the correct notation in my file for the program, so I called David Rispoli, the program advisor, and he said he'd sent a list over to someone, and told me to ask for her by name; I called later and did, but she was out; called a half hour before they closed, and things finally worked out.)
Went to Duvall "Movies in the Park"; got there a little after 1900, they showed some cartoons (and then some real estate ads from the sponsor, yawn), and the movie, National Treasure 2, started about 2000, ended 2215?, we got home shortly after, since it shows at a park just down the hill from our house.
20080913: minas-tirith (primary outward-facing server) died overnight; turned out the graphics card was causing boot failure (POST, 8 beeps, and some lights which a kind chap at Hard Drives Northwest investigated for me). He also showed me where some capacitors on the motherboard were bulging and leaking acid; we decided to buy a new machine (rivendell; old one was imladris and before that minas-tirith; the wheel of time turns, and machines come and pass…). New box has a 500 Gb HD (also bought another 500 Gb HD, SATA in a USB 2.0 enclosure, for backups), AMD 64 X2 3.0 GHz, DVD±RW; no OS, no monitor.
Visted a few places nearby including a new (to me) gun store, Estate Arms Company, across from Bellevue Square, and took a look at the Springfield Armory XD(M) in .40. Installed a minimal Gentoo on the new machine when I got home; no problem connecting up my old HD as hdb, although the bearing sounds noisy so backups definitely need to be brought up to date.
After following the Gentoo Handbook, I had to copy over various settings: networking (/etc/conf.d.net and /etc/hosts), DHCP server (/etc/dhcp/dhcp.conf), NAT (/var/lib/iptables), NTP (/etc/ntp.conf), cron (/etc/cron*), and DNS (/var/dnscachex). This gets a basic system working, but no web or mail servers, which are a bit more work to migrate.
Along the way to setting up mail, it wanted a database server, so I decided it was a good time to reinstall and restore PostgreSQL. Unfortunately, copying the data directory didn't work ("FATAL: incorrect checksum in control file"; net wisdom suggests it's a 32-bit to 64-bit issue); fortunately, I was able to use chroot to run the old PostgreSQL server and run a dump (pg_dumpall). I have weekly dumps, but wanted the latest data. Copied over and restarted MySQL, too (I still have some old databases on it).
20080914: Went to the gun show in the morning, picked up 1000 rounds of ammo since I'm running low (9mm, 124 grain FMJ since it was the same price as the 115 grain). Mail server and IMAP is up; web server is getting there (note: moved logs from /home/server to /var/log). And… we're back.
Broadstripe decided to have a few long outages this evening, several hours so far, with only a few minutes of actual uptime. Note to anyone finding this is a search: don't get Broadstripe; get anyone else, even Verizon. Perhaps we'll be able to switch to SpeakEasy now; it's worth checking again, anyway.
20080916: Argh, Harmony remote issues. Its crappy configuration utility only communicates with the web site at the end (the web site produces a configuration file which is uploaded to the remote), and at that point it came back with an error (something useless like "unable to display page", not something more useful and true like "although we say we support sequences of commands, we really don't, so donÂt try to use them or we'll give you random errors").
Bad drivers: 1735: WA 086 XDY, Black Hyundia SUV, WA-520; 1803: WA B718 71A, white Ford truck, NE 124th St.
20080917: Cleaned up ZX's recent checkin: it's like he completely failed to read the Word coding conventions document, plus he could know C++ better. They oughtta let me do interview screening here…. Went shooting at SVRC with Honey after I got home from work.
Books finished: The Rook.DVDs finished: Ransom, The Saint.
Luke Williams: goodbye and good luck
News, Work, School ·Friday September 12, 2008 @ 01:57 EDT (link)
20080910: Early am: trying to log in to work to submit some changes (co-authoring object model), but I'm waiting for automated test results to come back. I don't see the results in my (web-based) email, so I log in, which is a lot of fun in itself: first I have to get the highly-finnicky Microsoft IT Connection Manager to work (see previous rants 1 2 3), then I have to go to the internal tools site and run a debug script which magically fixes some machine Kerberos tickets so I can terminal serve to my machines, but that doesnÂt quite work so I have to connect to the REDMOND domain and (and reboot; see previous #3), re-run the magic debug scripts, and then remote desktop appears to work.
Remote desktop is also highly finnicky: for one of my machines, when the login prompt shows up, it grays out and tries to use the smart card, which hums for a bit and must be canceled or it fails and logs me out. Then it shows a normal password prompt, except that it ignores the first password (but if you hit enter it logs you out, so I have to type some random characters to get it to fail), and only then do I get to log in. Wow. Is Windows a heap of crap or what? Modular design and standards (open or not), people. Software architecture, do you speak it?
Anyway. I log into DROBINS5, my newest development box, and check the automated test system, but it's down for maintenance. Never fear, though: they expect it to be back at midnight. Good luck with that, since it's 0033 now, but why should I be surprised, they couldn't stick to a deadline last time either. Must be the dreaded patch Tuesday that I've heard about.
Checked in during the day; the tests passed except for some OfficeArt failures that should be unrelated to my changes (knock wood).
Luke Williams' farewell party was today; a group gathered in the kitchen for cake and a few songs from Luke, which is fitting since he's heading out into the world to make music. He was my office mate way back when I started (in 36\3157); some of us once filled his side of the office with red Microsoft logo cups1,2 while he was on vacation. After a stint in Word, he went over to WAC (Web Access Companions, online versions of popular Office programs). Luke has a blog.
1 There's no problem revealing LW is Luke Williams now since he no longer works there and time has passed; I try to keep current co-workers' full names off my site for their privacy and mine, and also to keep my site off web searches for their names.
2 The cups are now earth-friendly green, and can no longer be used in the microwave; I usually take two since they conduct heat rather than insulate, which probably negates any individual environmental savings from the switch.
Went to PMP orientation today; headed out at 1730; it went 1830-1937 (Professor Ladner talked about his new Accessibility course, and then the rest was just going over stuff that was already on the web site and we could and should have done ourselves, so it was somewhat slow going); I left the school 2145 (after talking to Dr. Rispoli some and looking around), arrived home about 2220, not bad, considering getting there just from Redmond took about 45 minutes.
20080911: Costco; bought Logitech Harmony (620) remote. Setup program is pretty crap, but it manages to work (and did find my existing remotes). It's crappy because it gratuitously (as in more than just to fetch updates) talks to a web site, which becomes a problem later. Also got an 8Gb USB stick and a(nother) 4Gb CF card, since they'd sent us a coupon (ditto for the remote; coupons work).
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