Original ExistDifferently.com Weblog of David, a Christian Network and Systems Manager, with topics ranging from Apologetics to Worldview, and some crypto, open source, programming, opinion, and daily life thrown in between.

Tue, 2005-03-29 (Mar 29)

Top of windmill…chinese restaurant…Holland

Filed under: Flickr,General,Photography — David @ 00:41



Top of windmill outside of chinese restaurant in Holland – P6060010

Originally uploaded by ExistDifferently.

This isn’t my coolest picture by any means, but it did kind’ve strike me as nice when I ran across it when looking through my Flickr stuff. So you get to see it here. I’ll probably start posting more Flickr stuff here, since I can post to my blog right from within the Flickr site from any image. I can only include that image specifically, but I can compose my post and everything and wham, bam, thank you ma’am…posted! Now to weed out my more creative pics over the next few weeks or so, to keep my blog up and running :-)

Trees and “tucked” setting sun closeup

Filed under: Flickr,General,Photography — David @ 00:27



Trees and "tucked" setting sun closeup – DSCF1329

Originally uploaded by ExistDifferently.

This picture is one of my favs from the trip I took with my small group to a cabin an hour away from the city in February. Lots good nature pictures from the trip, some of which I’ve made public on Flickr, but this has to be right up near the top of my favorites! It would probably look even better given some tweaking in an editing program.

Words, Words, and Few for You!

Talking is cool. Both online and in person. For me, when I get enough talking one-on-one, apparently I can’t come up with anything worthwhile to post to the general public here (and by “general public” I mean, the two or three people that read this regularly and anyone else that stumbles through from Google or something :-)

Not that that’s a bad thing. Unless you want to read more stuff here. But hey, it’s my blog, so you’ll just have to live. I do respond to comments occasionally, especially from commenters that aren’t, um, regulars :-) Or I would, if there were more than three such comments on the whole site. And one of those is from someone I know in person.

Of course, if I posted more interesting stuff here that was actually worth commenting on, I suppose I might then expect more comments. Catch-22 really. Or maybe the most important things I have to say right now aren’t meant for you to hear. Or you. Or you. Safe bet: if you don’t know if it’s you or not, it’s not you :-) On the other hand, if you do know what I’m talking about, feel free to ignore what I’m talking about, it doesn’t apply to you :-)

Do I get a prize? You know, for least content in three paragraphs? I should at least get runner-up for this one :-) What do you know, I did want to talk. Just not about anything you’re probably interested in, here at least :-) If you’re feeling left out, give it time (sure for this post to sink in or something (like it ever will…ha! Like the blonde that died in the shower when the shampoo bottle said “lather, rinse, repeat” ;-), but what I mean is come back later and perhaps eventually I’ll be able to post something more interesting in such a public forum :-)

Um…”Mozilla Firefox 1.0.2″:http://www.getfirefox.com/ is out. It’s cool. Get it. Um…[looks at multitude of tabs open for something interesting to post]…I found a site called “LinkedIn”:https://www.linkedin.com/ the other day that I hadn’t seen before. Interesting stuff, but I haven’t signed up yet. Still, the tab remains open since I’m curious about it :-)

Also, “Magix music products”:http://site.magix.net/index.php?id=471&no_cache=1 are good stuff…try the demos sometime. Music Studio 2005 is really good and at less than $100 is very powerful, the main limitation I run into is not being able to edit the audio while recording at the same time, which you can do in their premiere “Samplitude”:http://site.magix.net/index.php?id=15648&type=2 product (although it’s $1,000 more expensive :-)

If you have an extra $79 laying around (and who doesn’t?), “Amazon Prime”:http://www.amazon.com/gp/subs/primeclub/signup/main.html/002-2086300-3510456 is a nice program to get into if you like Amazon.com and want to get fast, free shipping (or faster, cheaper shipping). Details are right there on the site, I think you can read it without me :-) Free two-day shipping on over 1 million items, overnight for $3.99, for a year. Yep, I told you anyway! Get over it!

Ran into an interesting site while searching for something (I don’t remember what, a how-to on something) the other day. It’s a computer help site called “Bleeping Computer”:http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/. I get a kick out of the name and wish I’d gotten to that domain…like I need more than the 30+ I have :-)

If you’re looking to buy something computer related, first check out “eCost”:http://www.ecost.com/ because they have a lot of good deals. LCDs and camera memory cards are some of their best and most often discounted items. But they have lots of stuff. Also, for general, daily updated deals (lots of Dell deals that link directly to Dell, sometimes with coupon codes, but plenty of non-Dell, and some non-computer related, like “Overstock.com”:http://www.overstock.com selling down comforters and bedsheets really cheap) are awesome over at “GotApex”:http://www.gotapex.com/. I watch that site several days out of the week to spot good stuff. Not that I buy that often, or I’d be much poorer than I am (although they’re one of the reasons I’m as poor as I am already :-)

For example, GotApex is listing right now that Amazon.com has a “Canon PowerShot SD110 Digital Elph 3 megapixel 2X zoom”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0001G6U9I/ref%3Dnosim/gotapex/002-2086300-3510456 camera for just $159! If I had the spare cash I’d jump on it, the Elphs are awesome because they’re so darn tiny while still be high quality. And usually high priced. But I don’t :-)

And, my last item for this post is “my Flickr page”:http://www.flickr.com/photos/existdifferently/ which, if you’re not on my friends or family list, still has a lot of pictures that I spent all night last Friday night (until 8am Saturday morning) tagging with metadata and making public. I have over 3,200 images uploaded to Flickr, and am nowhere near getting them all sorted (probably never will be) but I like the ones I have available now :-)

Goodnight!

Update: I do find it somewhat ironic how long this post ended up being, and how much info I included, given the title. So much for intent! :-) But aren’t you glad I got around to some actually useful information after all that stuff at the top?

Mon, 2005-03-28 (Mar 28)

To sleep, or not to sleep?

Filed under: Personal — David @ 02:00

Yep. You didn’t guess it! To sleep :-) This time…

[possibly shortest post ever, even with this postscript!]

Fri, 2005-03-25 (Mar 25)

My Kind of Alarm!

Filed under: Blog,General,In The News,Personal — David @ 17:48

I should probably look into “this alarm clock”:http://coffeetalking.blogspot.com/2005/03/are-you-alarm-hitter.html at some point. That, or move my alarm clock across the room. But I tried that before, and got so ticked off about having to get out of bed to turn it off that I just moved it closer :-) This one actually moves so it is next to your bed the first time, and if it moves to a random part of the room so you have to look for it, it could be helpful. Of course now I just sleep through my current clock (well, I did today, but I actually woke up to it a few times this week!), so it might not help much :-)

Update: Original article with pictures (it’s ugly at the moment!): “right here”:http://bicillin.media.mit.edu/clocky/

Tue, 2005-03-22 (Mar 22)

Microsoft’s Vacuums

Filed under: Blog,Funny,General,In The News — David @ 14:25

While browsing, I stumbled upon (geez, will that cliche ever go away? :-) a funny quote I haven’t seen before, at this “article on usenet posting”:http://www.caliburn.nl/topposting.html. Specifically:

“The day Microsoft makes something that doesn’t suck is probably the day they start making vacuum cleaners.” — Ernst Jan Plugge

Not to say I buy that hook, line and sinker about Microsoft, but they certain do have their moments :-) But, I do work with a lot of their products and, when configured and used properly, they do actually work sometimes, and sometimes (gasp) better than the alternatives! But, that doesn’t make the quote above any less humourous!

Kill Your Baby?

Filed under: Blog,Funny,General,In The News — David @ 12:49

That’s right. Fox 59, your friendly local Indy news station, recommends you at least subject your kid to danger if you don’t buy a brand new crib! While searching for something else (Did you know some people have taken pictures of “every Starbucks in the city”:http://www.starbuckseverywhere.net/Indianapolis.htm and posted them online? This one “next to my bank”:http://home.flash.net/~ral1/starbucks/bigimages/DSCN8511.htm (they’re connected inside! You can smell the coffee while you make a deposit, I suppose so you can then use your debit card to spend your deposit on the spot :-) has a sign out front that I hope isn’t keeping people away!), an “archive from April 2004”:http://fox59.trb.com/news/local/morningnews/wxin-am-fyi-april.story says, in part (emphasis mine):

Tuesday, April 13
CRIB SAFETY PRECAUTION
A crib can cost more than $3,000. But a hefty price tag doesn’t always mean more safety for your baby. Consumer Reports tested more than a dozen cribs to find out which ones are the best. Prices ranged from $100 to $500. Experts say simpler designs are safer. “Fancy decorations can catch a child’s clothing at the neck and that’s a potential strangulation hazard”, says Consumer Reports Sandra Gordon. The Delta Luv Jenny Lind model #4650-1 is easy to assemble and at only $110 its a Consumer Reports best buy. If you decide to use an older crib instead of buying a new one, make sure it was made before 1999. Experts say cribs made before that are not as safe.

Did they really mean that? Well, probably not as much as Wal-Mart meant that interesting price, uh, “reduction” I mentioned a while ago :-)

I never want my blog accused of sensationalizing trivia, so don’t accuse me. Whether I do it or not. Okay? ;-) (If you need to accuse me of something, you could point out my overuse of smileys :-p Or…how about my (usually (sometimes) nested) use of parentheses? I mean, you’ve got a nice example of both right here! Can! You! Spot! Another! Problem!? Not so much in this post (other than the last five sentence fragments), but overall my exclamation point useage patter tends to trend toward the upward side of the curve :-) And that’s even after I try to curb my enthusiasm! (Hey, that’s almost the name of a show on HBO! I don’t get that channel so I’ve just heard the name.)

Wed, 2005-03-16 (Mar 16)

Life Is Good

Filed under: Blog,Books,Christianity,General,Personal — David @ 00:53

Yep, life is good. Bears repeating. My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers is a good book. So is Secrets of the Secret Place by Bob Sorge. I’m not even going to give you links to them, because you can find them at Amazon yourself just fine. Actually, it’s becuase I’ve got better things than to find the links to them right now. And I’m feeling lazy. But I’d appreciate you buying them through a search using this box if you wouldn’t mind:

Amazon Logo

Search Now:

Give’s me a tiny kickback and costs you nothing but searching from this page (or using the links to Amazon for other books in my older posts). Thanks.

Anyway, just started those books. Gotta move slowly in them, quite a bit of info.

Still no pics of new car up, but that’s due to, well, the whole lazy thing. Plus a lot going on now. I don’t really feel like spending the time to type out those things that I don’t mind saying publicly, and, well, the other things wouldn’t end up here anyway :-) Librarygal mentioned that’s why she uses Friends mode to post more sensitive, not-quite-public posts, in Live Journal. Blah. Blasted features community sites implement that I don’t feel like adding or upgrading or developing my own community on my server directly at the moment. So I’ll live without it I guess. Public only. When I have time.

But, remember, life is good! Which it is. There will never be a time when it couldn’t be better here on earth, and there are those things that I’d rather were different at the moment. But they are looking up compared to, for example, a month ago (not that I remember what was going on a month ago…), just in general.

Maturing is good. Maturity is only a state we think we’ve reached when we don’t realize we’re still on the journey. The never-ending process of maturing, however, basically means growing and learning (in my opinion…no dictionary was harmed or consulted in the defining of the term): from circumstances, thoughts, feelings, experiences, friends, books, chats, talks, conversation, movies, literature, family, God. And making yourself better by experiencing these things. “But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.” says 2 Peter 3:18, KJV. That’s how we mature.

Don’t fret or worry. Instead of worrying, pray. Let petitions and praises shape your worries into prayers, letting God know your concerns. Before you know it, a sense of God’s wholeness, everything coming together for good, will come and settle you down. It’s wonderful what happens when Christ displaces worry at the center of your life.

Summing it all up, friends, I’d say you’ll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious–the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse. Put into practice what you learned from me, what you heard and saw and realized. Do that, and God, who makes everything work together, will work you into his most excellent harmonies.
— Philippians 4:6-9 (The Message)

Good advice in all the translations/paraphrases, but I liked The Message at the moment, it’s different than the usual wording, giving it a fresh perspective. Stop reading. Start doing :-)

Tue, 2005-03-08 (Mar 08)

Communication Styles

Filed under: Blog,General,Personal — David @ 00:55

“Thinking Faster”:http://workingsmarter.typepad.com/, a blog I follow semi-regularly (it’s in my newsreader, I don’t read it as often as I should but I read over the homepage worth of posts and they’re all excellent at the moment! Stuff to get you thinking, can’t say whether I agree with it all but food for thought is normally good), has an interesting post called “Tools of the Trade“:http://workingsmarter.typepad.com/my_weblog/2005/02/tools_of_the_tr.html that mentions two people he knew, one that exclusively used email for communication, the other the phone.

I found it interesting, because I’m much more comfortable with email than a phone conversation. I dislike the phone and voicemail for most purposes; I’ll use it if I have to but I may procrastinate making a call, and I dislike voicemail. I always transcribe the pertinent details into a blank text document on the computer (sometimes on a piece of paper), delete the voicemail, and either reply by take care of a request, send a reply — by email — or add an Outlook Task entry for the item with the transcribed details as the body so I don’t forget and I have the phone number. Rarely do I actually return the call with another call, at least, if I can help it. Sometimes you can’t avoid it, or it will work better to just make the call.

I used to be able to avoid phone calls before I started working. When you work in a retail story, or at a desk in an office, it usually forces some phone time, and it’s been good for me. I’m much better on the phone than I used to be, but that doesn’t mean I actually like it!

Don’t get me wrong, I’m with everyone else in hating getting greeted by a computer menu when I’m trying to call tech support — or worse, a sales person! It’s not that I dislike not having to talk with a human, but it prolongs the phone time (it can take five minutes to communicate the same information a human could have taken and redirected my call with in five seconds — maybe ten), wasting my time and insulting my intelligence (yes, I typed 5……4……3……2…….1. A whole lot faster than you said it back to me, too! “Please listen carefully as our menu has changed.” Really? Since the last time I called five minutes ago and went through this whole thing before you disconnected me? If you’re putting that much effort into changing your menu that quickly, answer the phone already! Can you tell I’ve dealt with this recently? ;-)

So anyway, email me. If I’m at the computer and your email warrants a response I have the answer to right away, you’ll probably get it as fast as I can type it. If you call me, you’re probably interrupting something so I’ll have to be short and probably call you back anyway, so as not to be rude with the person I’m already with, or so I can finish up what I was in the middle of so I can focus on you. Email gives me that chance, even if you email me asking me to call you! I’m more likely to return that request (and remember to!) if it can’t just go in one ear and out the other, since email doesn’t just go away.

This post was supposed to be a paragraph or two. Yikes, it’s turning into an email! (If you’d read any of my work emails over the past year (my second year of full-time at my current job started March 3rd!), you would likely see a pattern of really long emails switching into short(er) emails that clearly in plain english state the most important information first, with ancillary info down near the bottom where apparently no one in my office other than me gets to when reading an email. I modified my style after finding this last fact out, plus a few nice notices from boss & coworkers that shorter emails may actually be read :-)

Notice I don’t feel the same constraints in blog posts. But I do need to get to bed, got a busy week this week! My to-do list grew by leaps and bounds Monday, even though I got a lot done and checked off. And most of it is “must do this week” priority! Oh well, a lot of that gets knocked into next week every week, some stuff just doesn’t seem as important any more after you haven’t done it :-) Just kidding…it’s a matter of prioritizing as usual. Can’t get it all done, but I try. I’m just juggling a few major decisions that need testing to get to a conclusion and I have hard deadlines for some by the end of this week or we’ll be locked into thousands of dollars worth of spending. Hey, no pressure! :-)

How do I handle it? I call on the smart people for help! Nothing like someone who can say “been there, done that!”

On a goodnight sidenote, this essay called “The Tyranny of Email“:http://www.w-uh.com/articles/030308-tyranny_of_email.html that kicks off the above-mentioned article, is well-written and brings up some good points. I don’t agree with a lot of them, as you may pick up after reading my entry here. Or at least, I don’t know if I could bring myself to implement most of the suggestions, even if I wanted to. Yeah, that’s more accurate :-)

Actually, the follow-up post entitled “‘Tyranny’ Revisited“:http://www.w-uh.com/articles/030316-tyranny_revisited.html is even more useful, and agreeable, to me. Just one gem of the bunch:

Whenever you are not doing something which requires concentration, by all means, run your email client, run your IM client, have notifications turned on, take ‘phone calls, the works. But when you really need to get work done, turn everything off. Isolate yourself. Okay, enough about that.

The layout of a workday, under the heading “Three Hours?”, is interesting, but I agree, purely theoretical.

And if you’re still with me, the post “I am an Iterator“:http://www.w-uh.com/posts/030315a-iterator.html at the same site is interesting to think about. I probably fit that profile on some things, for a set period of time until I lose interest. Until then, I tend to follow that pattern of redoing things to get closer to perfection, but in a very, very limited capacity. And rarely in my writing, as I hate, hate, hate editing! I can probably count on my fingers the times I’ve really gone back and edited something I’ve written for more than surface spelling errors and maybe a bit of basic grammar. Hope you can’t tell too much :-)

Sun, 2005-03-06 (Mar 06)

Rules of Thumb

Filed under: Blog,Books,Entertainment,Movies — David @ 22:35

Maybe if I try shorter posts about things I find and stuff, rather than trying to write an essay on everything, I’d get more posted. I’ve found tons of awesome stuff since my last post, but I usually am on to reading the next cool thing before I get around to posting! I’ve been so busy with life, too…I suppose that’s as good a reason as any to be absent from my blog, being the introvert I am.

Anyway, good post over at 43 Folders about an old book he found in his closet, with quotes! They’re all “Rules of Thumb“:http://www.43folders.com/2005/03/rules_of_thumb_.html and I like his favorites! I’m trying to hold myself back from reserving the books at the library, I have too many out already! I’m having to return them without reading them as people put them on hold.

Right now in fact I’m listening to the first audiobook I’ve listened to in years. I figured if I can’t read in the car (while driving to work), and I don’t feel like listening to music, why not listen to a book? Especially since I haven’t had time to listen to the myriad books that I just mentioned I have out from the library :-)

So, the book I’m listening to is “The Great Train Robbery“:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060502304/davidsworldva-20/002-2086300-3510456?%5Fencoding=UTF8&camp=2025&link%5Fcode=xm2 by Michael Crichton. It’s a true story and it’s very well told, at least from the first CD (the one I finished so far) of eight. Once I’m done, I think I’ll also watch the “DVD of the movie”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0792839064/davidsworldva-20/002-2086300-3510456?%5Fencoding=UTF8&camp=2025&link%5Fcode=xm2 from the book, made in 1979 and starring Sean Connery. My friend Shawn recommended both the book and the movie, along with “Michael Crichton’s other books”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/external-search?search-type=ss&tag=davidsworldva-20&keyword=Michael%20Crichton&index=books, some of which I already have from the library. Many are also movies.

While doing some Googling about The Great Train Robbery, I found another interesting “movie by the same name, made in 1903”:http://www.filmsite.org/grea.html! It’s not my genre (silent western) but apparently it set a lot of moviemaking milestones, according to the review at the link. They also released a 100th anniversary DVD version, it’s “at Amazon”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000WN1JA/davidsworldva-20/002-2086300-3510456?%5Fencoding=UTF8&camp=2025&link%5Fcode=xm2 in case you’re more interested than I.

Haven’t gotten around to those pictures of my new car yet, but they’re coming eventually.

On a quick unrelated note, domain names ending in .us are apparently losing the ability to be registered privately through a proxy service such as the Private Registrations that “GoDaddy”:http://www.godaddy.com/ provides. GoDaddy’s owner provides a very good discussion of this “on his blog”:http://bobparsons.com/index.php?/archives/36-Domain-owners-lose-privacy.-Nine-ways-we-are-now-more-vulnerable..html. Good read.

I did mention I was trying to make these posts shorter, right? :-)

Fri, 2005-03-04 (Mar 04)

Got a New Car!

Filed under: Blog,Cars,General,Spectra — David @ 03:48

Not quite the budget for a Mazda6 yet. Apparently need some car-credit history to get a good deal on car-credit. You know, the usual. Ended up with a brand-new “2005 Kia Spectra SX”:http://www.kia.com/newspectra/index.php that’s silver (pics coming soon) and a step up from the other nicest car I’ve had, a 2000 Nissan Altima. This has good mileage, very nice body styling, and even though it’s a 4-cylinder 2.0L engine, it’s extremely peppy both at low speeds and on the highway. No mistaking it for a V6 (for sure!) but it will hold its own and outperforms my ’94 Chevy Blazer by leaps and bounds. Plus, I’ll be able to save up to $100/month if I refinance in six months to a year after making payments and building credit. If I make payments above the minimum, I won’t even be upside down for very long, and will hopefully have the Mazda6 in whatever new iteration it’s in at the time (or something better!) reasonably soon!

My Dad and I got home not long ago from the dealer…he was in Ft. Wayne (about an hour and a half to two hours away from home) because we didn’t leave there until half-past midnight! We got there around 5 pm, my Dad knows the guy that runs the dealership for Bob Rohrman, we went to dinner with him (I ate sushi for the first time! Not bad if you eat the kinds without raw fish!) and test-drove the car. I jammed my middle finger in the door when closing it after the test drive; I suppose the policy is “it breaks you (your finger), you buy it” :-)

It actually took me a long time to decide to go with it, but I got a great price and decent financing, and insurance isn’t that bad after working some details out. Dang you have to sign a lot of papers to buy a car! I think the paper-signing took 1.5 hours! Got a nice full tank of gas and even got 10 gallons of gas for my truck for free just for buying the car. Cool. Stupid stuff is $2.099 per gallon at the moment…the 12.5 gallons my new 13-gallon tank needed was $26.41, more than the $25.88 I spent the other day at $1.699/gallon to top off my Blazer, which only needed 14.882 gallons in it’s 20-gallon tank admittedly. But with the MPG(Miles Per Gallon) on the Spectra, with 24/34 city/highway miles per gallon (EPA average rating), it barely sips gas compared to the Blazer. Adding up to a Mazda6 faster! :-)

Need to hit the sack now, no work tomorrow morning but some new toys (car, networking equipment) to play with!

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