Happy Sunday

TimeMachine

I’m cleaning up another mess of my own making.

I was in a hurry the other day and I shutdown my computer while it was “Cleaning Up” after a backup to one of my drives.

I was a “BAD BOY”. I figured “cleaning up” was just deleting old outdated files and that by executing a shutdown and letting the computer take a full minute to do so would give the backup time to write a file that would save it’s place and I could do what I needed to do. Like go try to make some money.

I was wrong… Not only was I wrong I was very wrong. It corrupted the backup and now I’ve gotta wait for the backup to be deleted and recreated. Oh Joy!

Don’t get me wrong. I actually like Apples Time Machine.

Albeit less so in the Mountain Lion version than I did in the Snow Leopard version. 

Snow Leopard just freakin worked! never a problem in 5 solid years of operation and really what more can you ask of a backup program? I mean it did it’s job, it was quiet about it, and never once failed to get me the data I needed to restore. I always gave it a 10 out of 10.

The Mountain Lion version is far less reliable.

I find myself often correcting problems that should never have occurred. As I have today…

Not really a big deal per se but annoying.

In this particular case because I’ve lost faith in the backup routine I have the system backing up to 3 different drives. Two of the drives are network drives and the third is a little USB3 1TB pocket drive from WD. 

The really annoying thing is that if one of the backups reports an error, rather that cycling to the next drive sometimes Time Machine will simply stop backing up altogether.

This results in a situation like today when I found that the last backup had actually completed at 2:45am on Thursday.

I miss the old Time Machine but this one is what I’m dealing with so I suck it up and deal with it.

I’m hoping that the next version of OSX “Mavericks” has addressed this problem and that they’ve fixed some other issues they have with the built-in email program.

I like the built-in program better than I like Outlook. It’s a usability thing for me. Outlook is just fine but some of the things that Outlook does are really not that Mac friendly.

I gotta say, I really LIKE Gigabit ethernet. The backup claims it will be complete in approximately one hour. That’s 112.46GB of data. Damn fast, by comparison to 100MB.

I’ve got to find a nice 16port Gigabit ethernet switch and replace my 100mb switch in the wiring closet. I had the house wired with CAT6 and many of the devices on my network are Gigabit capable. They’re being throttled down by the slow switch.

Tuesday is the big day.

We’ll hear and see the new iPhones and know when to line up outside our Apple stores to purchase them! I think the President is speaking about Syria around the same time.

I’ll be watching the Apple presentation.

I’m not really interested in the Presidents justification for attacking another country. Yeah the use of sarin is wrong but it’s an internal situation between the government of Syria and the rebels against that government.

It’s none of our country’s business until the UN or one of our allies asks for our help with the situation. 

I’ve said it before. If the world wants us to become Peace Keepers fine. The world should pay for our services NOT the American Taxpayers. 

Also our Military men & women should be getting damn good salaries for our peace keeping actions. You know, living wages not salaries below the poverty line.

But I realize doing what I’m suggesting would legitimize a mercenary force. And why should the UN actually PAY for services when they can get them for free?

Off to go do some other things then I’ll catch up on the news…

It’s a nice lazy Sunday here in the mountains. Hope yours is as nice where ever you are.

I really hate the Gaspump TVs

I’ve hated them for a very long time but as they’ve become more and more ubiquitous I’ve become aware of another issue that makes me hate these technological annoyances even more.

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They’re dangerous!

Yes… That’s what I said, Dangerous

I was coming home late at night from a slightly “iffy” part of LA.

I needed gas so I pulled into a familiar brand station.

It was quiet and the audio of the damnable pumptop TVs was very low. 

I swiped my credit card, made my selection of fuel and began pumping gas.

“TODAY ON PUMPTOPTV!

IT’S 97 IN THE VALLEY AND THE RIM FIRE IS STILL BURNING CAUSING EVACUATIONS! 

YOU’VE CHOSEN THE BEST FUEL DOESN’T YOUR CAR DESERVE THE BEST WASH?”

Holy CRAP!

The damn thing scared the hell out of me. Jeeze! I’m standing right here next to the damn pump. This was louder than I have the TV in my home and I’m about 15 feet away from my home television.

Then I realized something that sent a chill down my spine.

My situational awareness was entirely compromised!

I couldn’t have heard someone running toward me.

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My vision was already compromised because the station was very well lit. I couldn’t see beyond the illumination provided by the slightly flickering fluorescent bulbs, flashing TV images, and the ever changing marquee advertising coke and hotdogs inside.

Now I couldn’t hear footsteps approaching either.

Suddenly I felt very exposed. 

I’d never have seen or heard someone coming at me. Which made me a big freakin target.

I’m not being paranoid…

Any LEO will tell you to be aware of your surroundings at all times. This is especially true if you’re in a dicey part of town late at night.

Being aware of your surroundings and persons in those surroundings tends to help take the target off your back. Lots of crime is opportunistic and initiated by the perception that the victim is weak, or an easy mark.

If a perpetrator knows you’ve seen them and they’ve seen no fear in your eyes they’re somewhat less likely to pick you as their next victim.

These gaspump tvs are distractions and a menace. In this particular case the gas station was right next to an apartment building too. How the heck do those folks get a decent nights sleep?

I’ve been given one more reason to hate them, and to complain about them to the gas station owners every chance I get.

Be careful out there folks. 

Don’t inadvertently become a target.

You should probably know.

For the next few days, my hosting company is upgrading servers.

It’s means that there may be interruptions in my blogs availability.

It’s not you, your computer, your ISP or the NSA

My hosting service promises that my pages will be faster when they’re done upgrading.

OK

I’ll take the speed.

Well I Apologize…

It seems that in my cleverness I enabled a commenting system that wouldn’t work for people that were using IOS to make comments.

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Not only would it not post the comment… the system I was using wouldn’t even bother to notify me that someone had tried to make a comment.

It seems to work just fine for Chinese Rolex knockoff sites..,. Who knew?

I’ve checked, comments weren’t sitting in the SPAM folder, they weren’t in the trash folder and they weren’t just sitting in the pending folder.

Wherever your lost comments ended up… Know that they’re in a better place now.

I’m really sorry to any of you who tried to post comments only to have your hard work not show up in the comments section.

In an Ironic twist… 

A buddy of mine sent me an email telling me that he’d commented on “Do you really trust the Internet” and that the comment was MIA. 

So I Suppose this proves the point, you can’t trust the internet!

I’ve switched to a different posting system. I don’t like it as much, but it has the advantage that it works… I think.

I posted something from my iPad and got the proper notifications.

A few things about the comments section.

You can post anonymously for the time being, if this becomes a problem then I will go back to requiring names and email addresses.

All Comments are moderated. Meaning that if I think you’re way out of line I reserve the right to wish your comment into the Corn Field. Something I’ve not had to do, except to people trying to use my blog and bandwidth for free advertisement. 

Abusive comments toward me or toward other posters will not be tolerated. I’ll wish your comment into the Corn Field.

If a person becomes a specific problem, I can blacklist them. I don’t really want to do it but it’s possible. Essentially this is wishing you into the Corn Field.

One last thing, you can’t comment on a post older than 14 days. That’s a way to keep some of the snake oil sales people at bay. 

Remember, I enjoy a bit of interaction, even if you disagree with me. At least I know you’re reading and that makes any writer a happy camper.

If you’d like to send a private email you’re welcome to use the email link listed under the “Contact” heading.

Once again, I’m very sorry if I frustrated anyone…

I kept thinking it was too quiet!


“Wishing someone into the corn field” was from what TV Show? What was the actors name that did the wishing? And where did this actor show up later in their TV/Film Career?

Hey, Just because I screwed up doesn’t mean we can’t have some fun…

Do you really trust the Internet?

We’ve heard the perennial excuse “It’s Computer Error”.

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I’ve had one too many occasions where I was told something was due to a computer error where I followed on with “So you knew the computer was in error and yet you continued on with … (Whatever the screwup was)?”

Think about it, usually these kind of errors are in a single corporation…

What happens if you magnify that by hundreds of thousands of computers where all of those machines are linked together?

Far from having a “Terminator” or “SkyNet” experience, you have instead a degenerating mass of corrupted data.

One example I can think of are our three major Credit reporting agencies… They share the same data pool.

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The practical upshot of this sharing is that the three systems synchronize to the lowest common denominator. Which means if you have an erroneous black mark on your record appear on one of the services you’ll have that black mark replicated on all the other services. 

Once the black mark appears it can take as many as 12 interventions on your part to have a correction remain permanent. I’ve personally had this happen and spent a year removing the same piece of bad data from each service repeatedly because the services were sharing it back & forth.

But what about other more subtle information?

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Truly, the internet has given voice to all.

It’s pretty easy to figure out when village idiots are speaking in your own village? Folks all know “That Child ain’t right” and they’ll tell you so.

But can you be so certain when the Idiot is from another village? You don’t have access to the common wisdom of the folks from that other village. How do you verify whats being said is really true?

I started thinking about this the other day when I read an article on the web that had been published under the auspices of National Geographic.

The article in question rather loosely tossed around a few terms, fossil being one of them. The writer described Carbon14 dating being done on the Chitin of insect which had been fossilized. Fossilization typically describes the replacement of biomatter with mineral compounds. 

We have discovered badly degraded dinosaur tissues in the fossilized long bones of some of the largest dinosaurs. but the mineralization process seems to work from the outside in.

Insect exoskeletons made of chitin presumably would be the first thing to be mineralized.

Without bio-matter C14 testing doesn’t work.

Which leads inevitably to the conclusion that some of the data the writer was quoting was inaccurate.

I was disappointed because I have pretty high regard for National Geographic publications. I couldn’t help thinking about my nieces and nephews arguing what they read in an article online with their Geologist Grandfather. Their Grandfather would at worst tell them they and their source was full of caca. At best he’d demand to see the article himself and after reading it conclude that the writer was too loose with the language.

Knowing their grandfather as I do, I wouldn’t be surprised to hear that he wrote National Geographic and demanded they print a properly credited and corrected article.

This morning I was involved in a discussion about the marvels of Tablet computers in our schools and the revolutionary concept of interactive textbooks.

Then I thought of the libraries.

Schools, Elementary through College used to have extensive libraries. I’ve noticed public libraries closing and wondered if the same trend was happening in education.

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It was at this point that I had a slight epiphany. 

A book, a real printed book that sat on a shelf in a library contained “facts”. Those “facts” could be referenced by citing the book, the author, the publication date, revision, chapter, page number,  paragraph, and line.Today textbooks and research materials are available online but they also exist as hardcopies. If publishing moved to an online only paradigm these materials risk becoming ephemeral.

If the “facts” changed, another book was printed that contained all the revisions. It got placed on a shelf next to the previous edition and the world spun on.

If a book exists only as a digital entity, instantly downloadable and revisable online, can you be sure of the “facts” contained in the book? What you read last week, you might be unable to reference this week due to an update.

Within the pages of this blog, with absolutely no regard to the changes in meaning or in fact the subject of a particular piece I’ve made edits to what I’d said previously. I pressed the “Publish Button” overwrote what I’d said and I never gave it a thought. 

What happens if textbooks are treated with the same cavalier attitude?

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Johnny or Jane learn today that Syrias uprising was a completely internal affair. Their textbooks say so. But tomorrow the Syrian uprising is found to be caused by an external player. Johnny or Jane, if they miss the update will be incorrect on their final exam.

This is of course an extreme example but it illustrates the point.

In a completely digital world how do we know a “fact” is a FACT? (No, I’m not suggesting that we live in “The Matrix”

It’s said time and again “History is written by the winners.” In the not too distant past, the victors had to go to great lengths to re-write history. In a digital age… all it takes is opening an editor on a computer.

This led me to a disturbing thought

In a society where everything is online… where news is unabridged, unedited, and instantly displayed, we run the risk of being a society of gossip and here-say.

Perhaps, this is why so many people are caught-up in “Reality TV shows”. These are after all nothing more than gossip raised to it’s glitziest form.

The really ironic thing for me to consider is that I never considered the possibilities before now. I played a part in moving this digital age forward and I looked upon those who were not seduced by the promise of technology with some disdain. 

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As I look at it now, perhaps those who were cautionary weren’t Luddites. Perhaps they were simply better acquainted with the lowest common denominator of human behavior.

I can’t help but draw a very loose parallel to the angst Robert Oppenheimer expressed when he understood the full nature of what he had created.

I like digital books, but I think with my favorites… I’m going to buy hard copies. Just to be sure.


FYI I just edited this entry… Mostly for the hell of it.

Have a Great Weekend!