Ah, been a pain in the ass couple of days around here. First, I’m getting really tired of this friggin’ Mac laptop losing the wireless connection constantly. It just drops for no reason, and then I have to turn the radio off and back on again (and there’s no hardware switch on the damn thing, either – I guess they figure that’d just be asking for a rush on the “geniuses” when throngs of average macsters couldn’t figure out why for they’re wireless don’t work no more, or maybe at the rate their hardware fails, they figure it’d just be one more thing to break). It drops a few times a session when I’m not even moving around with, which is pretty annoying, but when I try roaming from one access point to another (say, from downstairs to upstairs or outside), and the stupid thing will drop constantly. Needless to say, none of my other wireless (Windows, Linux, Android, etc) stuff has a problem. I tried some updates (there’s another thing that bugs me; I thought Windows was a pain in the ass with the updates, but the Mac ones seem more frequent, and, damn they’re HUGE). That frickin’ update icon jumping up and down bugs me, too. Look, I don’t want anything to do with iTunes, OK? So, don’t keep telling me there’s an update for it!
Then yesterday, as many of you may have heard, McAfee (which I’ve never really liked) released a DAT file (an update) for their virus scanner which identified a harmless (and somewhat necessary) Windows file as a virus, quarantining and (in some cases) deleting the file. In networked enterprise environments, this had the effect of causing Windows XP SP3 machines to reboot constantly and/or disable certain capabilities (like copy and paste, the toolbar, some properties pages, etc.). This is quite a hassle when you work in a networked enterprise environment that uses McAfee. It didn’t really affect me all that much, as I was able to kill my computer in time, and didn’t allow McAfee to delete the file. A quick power down/up, and I was good to go. For about 2,500 of our 6,000 computers, though, things weren’t quite as good, and IT people had to go and touch a lot of them. Bummer for them.
And of course, this morning, no DB connection for this website. A couple weeks ago, the web host decided to enforce new password rules which required me to change my server passwords. Not the database ones, though. Not until some time last night or this morning, that is when, without warning, everything went to hell. Took me a while to figure out what the deal was, but now we’re back up and running.
So, OK world. Whattya got for me next?
Dicky hearts
RickyMarky.Jesus, Crist. You and Dick ought to try and iron this out by doing a little duck huntin’ or something.
Is it just me, or do you suddenly start hearing Barry White in your head when you look at this photo, too?
Come here, baby. Closer….
I worry when I wake up and don’t see my morning p-jolt.
There was a spate of conspiratorialism on another blog that has eventually driven some of the old villagers off to start a new one of their own. Now, I like a good yarn or two, still think Spector was wrong about the Magic Bullet (Go, Sestak!), and am certain that there have been some underhanded things perpetrated throughout all of history. However, I don’t think it is entirely constructive and realistic to be consumed by that and let it shape all of your thought and deed. It is wasteful of time present and future.
And then, there’s Apple. To me, everything about Apple reeks conspiracy and planned obsolescence. Hell, they’ve even beaten the Beatles a few times and yet I bet %age-wise more Beatle fans own Apples instead of PCs than regular folks. I think their products have a built-in expiration function for the not so true believers and users who don’t or can’t run off to buy their latest and their greatest products that we just mustn’t do without. I don’t remember how old your laptop is but I know it wasn’t born yesterday. I also know that the new iPad has had some wifi issues so maybe they have infected the other products via those infernal/eternal updates, or they needed to steal the wifi from old products for the new ones, or…
😡 :rant1: :tap: :fu:
We’re #18 in the Daily Beast’s America’s 40 Most Stoned Cities. With a mere 9% of tokers and no NORML chapter, we have a lot of potential to move up the list.
One of the Rubio TV ads shows an angle of that shot where it looks like Obama is leaning in to plant one on Crist. Don’t ask, don’t tell, indeed.
I’m a little annoyed that Crist pulled his TV ads this week. The plan was for he and Rubio to continue beating each other up through the primary in late August. Maybe Crist is coming up with new ads celebrating Rubio’s little credit-card spree.
Kendrick Meek is looking more senatorial every day. Once the primary is over and he starts running ads, I like his chances.
Gail Collins at her best:
The United States Senate. Feel the love.
“… You have been great.â€
“… I am grateful, very grateful, for your friendship.â€
“… I want everyone to know how deeply committed you are to reform.â€
“… I also wanted to thank you for your hard work.â€
This was Wednesday at the Senate Agriculture Committee, which was considering the regulation of derivatives. These are extremely complicated financial instruments, and they are under the control of the agriculture committee because, really, when you get right down to it, everything is a crop.
“Members of this committee check their partisan politics at the door,†boasted the chairwoman, Blanche Lincoln, a Democrat of Arkansas. Then, in between compliments, the members approved Lincoln’s bill on derivatives in a series of party-line votes.
Except for Charles Grassley, a Republican of Iowa, who sided with Lincoln. Truly, this was a day for the record books. Somebody finally got a Republican to vote for something.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/22/opinion/22collins.html?ref=todayspaper
Can Travis survive the open sea? We’ll see. He struck a deal with Poseidon and is now a deckhand (possibly) for the summer.
Travis: :pirate:
I’ve actually repaired computers by removing McAfee and/or norton. They both suck ass.