From the “only in Russia” department…
Apparently, it is quite commonplace for passengers on Russian flights to be intoxicated. It’s less common for the flight crew to be drunk, but apparently it happens anyway…
From the “only in Russia” department…
Apparently, it is quite commonplace for passengers on Russian flights to be intoxicated. It’s less common for the flight crew to be drunk, but apparently it happens anyway…
My MythTV system is now mostly complete. My Biostar motherboard had a defective TV out, so it was sent in and now the TV out is working. I’ll post a more complete update in the next few days. In short, Biostar = bad, Albatron = good.
Also, had a fun adventure stringing some cat5 cable to the part of our house where our TV is. After sawing through the floor to get to the previously-inaccessible crawlspace, we found, among other things, a working wire stripper, pipes connected to nothing, and lots and lots of spider webs.
And my latest book project is just about complete. I’ll have some news there too in a day or two.
To many Americans, it seems that patriotism is the flag-waving unquestioning devotion to the United States and its armed forces. July 4th and Memorial Day bring out these sentiments everywhere, and we are constantly reminded to be patriotic, support our troops, to pledge allegiance to our government above all else, and remember those in the armed forces that died for our freedom.
Many “patriotic” people get mad at those that point out that the United States has never, in its entire history, lived up to those words in the pledge: “with liberty and justice for all.” In fact, when the pledge was written in 1892, slavery was not yet a distant memory. Segregation and racial discrimination were still the norm. White juries, especially in the south, sentenced black men to death on the flimsiest of evidence, while exonorating white lynchers that were clearly guilty. It’s considered “unpatriotic” or “against America” to mention these things, especially around July 4.
Continue reading Redefining Patriotism
Take a look at Resonance: Pot Lucks for Bush — it’s a little scary what he’s trying to do. Apparently many conservative churches are nonplussed, and have traditionally asked people to “vote their values” without naming specific candidates or parties. I’m fine with that, but it always seems odd to me when churches endorse a particular candidate or party, regardless of whether the church is conservative or liberal.
One year ago, I noted the Quovix experiment to find candidates for a job by blogging. That experiment didn’t work out.
This year, they tried it again. This time Quovix CEO Marty Morrow reports Blogging beats Monster.com for job posting. He lists some benefits, which center around greater interaction and ability to learn about what makes potential employees tick (and the ability to learn what makes potential employers tick).
Meanwhile, Dan is going the other way: he’s blogging to find employment.
Maybe someone should write something to match up the Martys and the Dans… but then we already have monster.com, right?
Does the whole thing stop working if “everybody” starts doing it, because then you have all the riff-raff too? Or does that just make it better, because the social network is larger?
There’s a lot to be worried about in this study about sexual misconduct in our K-12 education system.
Apparently, 10% (or 4.5 million) students face anything from inappropriate jokes to forced sex.
What’s more surprising are the reactions:
The article does make a good point at the end, too, about the unknown truthfulness of allegations. “Teachers increasingly fear making even the most innocent gestures, like hugging a child having a bad day.” Let’s fix the real problems, not non-problems like hugs.
Here are some hints that I have gleaned so far:
DVD stuff:
And some MythTV-related sites:
I can really appreciate this after having struggled last weekend to make a hard drive fit into a spot too small for it: Requiem for a Motherboard.
Moore, and Fahrenheit 9/11 distributor Lions Gate Films, both have no problem if people pirate the film. Check out the article: Moore: pirate my film, no problem.
Last week, I posted a list of hardware that I’m buying for my MythTV. Most if it has arrived and I can make some comments about it now.
First, the Chenbro case is really bad. One of the hard drive bays is inaccessible due to being placed over the motherboard (!) and the other one requires the drive to be mounted upside-down. The 5.25″ bays are also poor, not letting one drive in all four screws (one of them only permits two, and right above each other at that, anchoring only 1 of 4 possible anchor points.)
The Biostar board is nice, but here’s the rub: while it features TV out and S/PDIF out pins on the motherboard, the board doesn’t ship with the connectors necessary to make it work! They charge $12 and $15, respecitvely, for the requires connectors, so this thing is not yet working with a TV.
The Samsung hard drive is great and it is indeed quiet as claimed. I’d heartily reccommend it.
And the Athlon XP 2200+ CPU is, of course, also a very nice one.
The Hauppauge card hasn’t arrive yet; I’m using a very old WinTV card until it does. More on that when it gets here.