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.

Fri, 2005-01-07 (Jan 07)

Brain Hurts Along with Eyes

Filed under: Blog,Funny,General,Tech (General) — David @ 04:03

Ouch. My brain hurts. So do my eyes. Can’t focus. Must. Sleep. Why? Clock. Look. [snoring…]

Grrr…I just read “librarygal’s”:http://www.livejournal.com/users/librarygal/ most “recent blog entry”:http://www.livejournal.com/users/librarygal/150845.html and of course she challenged me to another one of those detested quizzes that I told myself I’d just do one of and never tough again! This time:


I am nerdier than 87% of all people. Are you nerdier? Click here to find out!

They go into more detail:

12% scored higher,
1% scored the same, and
87% scored lower.

What does this mean? Your nerdiness is:

High-Level Nerd. You are definitely MIT material, apply now!!!.

So MIT, that’s here in town, right? Since I’m planning on going to college locally…somewhere…

Oh and I would be remiss if I didn’t point out that librarygal’s post’s subject was, “another nerd quiz for david_itman”, but the last post was a geek post, not a nerd post. The distinction is “well defined”:http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&c2coff=1&q=geek+vs+nerd&btnG=Search, if not ignored often. And maybe “not that well”:http://forum.defcon.org/archive/index.php/t-1069.html defined. Well-discussed, then. Or, opinionated. Or, I’m-tired-so-I’m-going-to-bed. -inated.

Update: If I had to pick I’d go with geek over nerd, personally, especially based on “this”:http://web.vee.net/stuff/geek-vs-nerd.html which is admittedly one of many opinions. Hard to tell if the above quiz was more for one or the other though. I’m going to have to say it meant geek and not nerd, though (probably since I scored so high or something…). Now really to bed (4:10 now).

Update again: Maybe I’ll switch back based on this article, “The Socio-Psychological Distinction of Nerds vs. Geeks”:http://www.earthsea.com/metrogamers/nerd-gee.htm. Blah. It’s 04:12:45 hundred hours as I click save on this now.

Wed, 2005-01-05 (Jan 05)

Stupid Chain Letters

Filed under: Blog,General,Spam,Tech (General) — David @ 03:13

Well a friend of mine posted an “interesting post”:http://www.livejournal.com/users/fearless4jesus/18676.html about internet chain letters. And instead of taking up a huge comment on her blog, perhaps I should inform all of my readers of the extent of my genius (whatever extent being able to search Google gives me…apparently a lot considering how few people can do this… :-) Says she, in part:

“There are tons of e-mail hoaxes out there and they stay there because people don’t know how to recognize them, and they tug at the heart, or use core issues to move people. They don’t hurt anything I guess, but I am tired of them.

“I got an email today that I was pretty positive was made up. It said something about James Dobsin starting this e-mail petition to protect Christian broadcasting. My first thought was, how in the world could an e-mail petition really work? My second thought was, I’ve seen this before.

Fortunately most people that send junk like this don’t have my email address :-) But I’m well aware of the problem, as I work with a lot of people who have no clue. There’s not really an excuse these days, as you can Google search just about anything to find out if there are reliable sources that will vouch for something. It’s time-consuming for me to email everyone I get one of these from (like I said not many, but it still takes time!) to inform them (without insulting them) about the fact that they’re passing on stupid unreliable stuff.

I did a quick Google search just now (how’s that for proof-of–genius-concept? :-) and found some really informative links on the subject:

* “CIAC(Computer Incident Advisory Capability) Hoaxbusters”:http://hoaxbusters.ciac.org/
(this is a US government-run website…not that you can trust the government about everything, but I do agree with their stance on email hoaxes and chains :-) They tell you how to recognize a hoax and what to do with them.
* “How Chain Letters Really Work”:http://home.flash.net/~bob001/chainletter.htm
This is a great explanation of how those famous “send $5 to everyone on the list below and do a mailing” schemes make a lot of money in donations…but just for the originator! Enlightening if you’re not already aware.
* “The Paradox: Why I hate spam (and email chain letters and pyramid schemes and virus warnings and…)”:http://paradox.homeip.net/~janra/writing/spam.html
Good info…especially the parts about Bandwidth and Cost. It shows how it’s _not_ collectively harmless to send everyone in your address book the same thing and have everyone else repeat the same. It costs money on the Internet, along with commercial spam, and slows things down. By sending stuff like this, _you_ may be helping the internet get slower!
* “Chain Prayers”:http://www.truthminers.com/truth/chain_mail.htm
Quite interesting, and a site I hadn’t seen until now. Specifically debunking Christian Prayer Chain Letters, it give three example quotes from such letters and then provides a six-point analysis of why it’s garbage:

Third: This is not a good witness. Sometimes God gives us one time opportunities to share with another person. Most of the time He gives us ongoing relationships THROUGH which we share the love and mercy of Christ by both our daily lives and our speech. Relationship building is important because then people can see God working within us, freeing us from sin. Messages like these can have the opposite effect on an unbeliever. It makes us seem foolish for believing that forwarding an email will prove our love for God.

I’ll let you read the other five reasons for yourself.
* “Chain Letters (and Anti-Chain Letters)”:http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~watrous/chain-letters.html
At first the information is similar to that provided by the above sites. However, there are some really good links down the page a bit, including a link to some “anti-chain letters” (“this one’s good”:http://www.perry.com/bizarre/antichn.html) and a very large section of “chain mail humor”. There’s some very funny stuff there, for example the ‘”Citation Chain Letter“:http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~watrous/citation-chain-letter.html’ (“Dear Fellow Scientist: This letter has been around the world at least seven times. It has been to many major conferences. Now it has come to you…“) and the “‘Why ask Why Chain Letter“:http://bears.ece.ucsb.edu/personnel/astornet/humor/humor7.html’, which asks such things as:

** “Have you ever imagined a world with no hypothetical situations?
** “If a cow laughed, would milk come out her nose?
** “Why do they put Braille dots on the keypad of the drive-up ATM?
** “If you’re in a vehicle going the speed of light, what happens when you turn on the headlights?
** “Why do they put Braille dots on the keypad of the drive-up ATM?
** “Why do noses run and feet smell?
** and, “Why is it that when you’re driving and looking for an address, you turn down the volume on the radio?

Don’t worry, I didn’t repeat all of them :-) It’s especially nice since it says at the bottom that it originated in The Netherlands. I like stuff that mentions The Netherlands since it’s the only country I’ve ever been to outside the U.S. :-) There are even more good humor pages at that site, but you probably want to skip the one titled, “With sex all things are possible”. Yes, I realize many of you will read that one just becuase I said not to. If you don’t mind some explicit (but not pornographic) adult topics, it does have a bit of hilarity to be found, but probably isn’t worth the read anyway. Yet there are still those of you who will want to decide for themselves I bet. Curiosity killed the cat, but that saying hasn’t stopped anyone’s curiosity yet that I know of…you’ll have to find the link yourself at least. There’s one more hilarious piece I just read, called ‘”The Gullibility Virus Warning“:http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~watrous/gullibility-virus.html’. In part:

Internet users are urged to examine themselves for symptoms of the virus, which include the following:

The willingness to believe improbable stories without thinking. The urge to forward multiple copies of such stories to others. A lack of desire to take three minutes to check to see if a story is true.

T. C. is an example of someone recently infected. He told one reporter, “I read on the Net that the major ingredient in almost all shampoos makes your hair fall out, so I’ve stopped using shampoo.” When told about the Gullibility Virus, T. C. said he would stop reading email, so that he would not become infected.

Of course, forward that one to your friends at your own risk. It’s not my fault if it makes you friendless!

I won’t even discuss virus hoaxes here, I need to get to bed and they deserve a post twice this size of their own (whether I’ll ever write the post…who knows?). Basically, check “Google”:http://www.google.com and your favorite reputable antivirus vendor’s website before passing on any virus warning you receive in email.

Sat, 2005-01-01 (Jan 01)

Blog Website Tweaked

Filed under: Blog,General,Tech (General),Web Development — David @ 08:14

Well, instead of writing a post about how great the New Year’s Eve parties I went to were (they were great), since 2:30 am (when I got home) I’ve been hacking away at this website, getting some plugins added, upgraded, and some manual tweaks set up. I won’t bore you with too many details, but indulge me for a minute as I’m rather proud and it was fun.

First thing I did was add a couple of behind-the-scenes plugins, and I also upgraded the “Post Teaser”:http://turnipspatch.com/projects/post-teaser/ plugin that I enabled the other day, from version 1 to version 2, and I tweaked some settings. Then I wrote some added functionality that I’ll probably submit back to the author! Basically the (wow that was some cat screech I just heard outside the window!) new version fixes some bugs and stuff, and is more efficient.

The settings I changed had to do with how the “number of words, approx. reading time, link to post” text read, and also how many words (approximately) to have each post show before cutting it off and sending it to the post page to finish. I think I ended up setting it at 400 words, which seems to show a lot of posts in their entirety and the others it gives a nice, long preview of. Keep in mind that 400 words is a “suggestion” and not a cutoff point, it actually auto-cuts off after a full paragraph, never in mid-sentence, it just chooses the paragraph closest to leaving 400 words in the main preview.

Then I saw that some posts had a “more” link already manually hard-coded (such as the “‘isn’t it time someone saved you?'”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2004/12/25/isnt-it-time-someone-saved-you/ post, but you can’t tell what I mean except by viewing it in the “December Archives”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2004/12/, 4th post down), and it was kind’ve weird to have it say “okay that’s the whole post with x words” right below where it said “click for more”! So I grabbed the “PHP”:http://www.php.org/ source code for that plugin, figured out how it worked (I’ve never worked with the “WordPress(WordPress Blog Software)”:http://www.wordpress.org/ “Plugin(WordPress Plugins Information Wiki)”:http://wiki.wordpress.org/?pagename=Plugin%2FAPI “API(Application Programming Interface)”:http://wiki.wordpress.org/?pagename=Plugin%2FAPI before), and modified it to show a third possibility where a post already has a “more” link manually added by the author. In that case it just shows a summary of the “intro word count and reading time” with a link to the more page and a reminder that there’s more to read. It was a simple little hack, but I really like it considering that I don’t know much PHP (“Perl(Practical Extraction and Report Language)”:http://www.perl.org/ is my language all the way. Go Perl!) and I wasn’t familiar with the plugin or the API previously.

Then, I happened upon a little hack that I set up so that when you view a post on it’s own page, it has “next post”, “home”, and “last post” links, complete with titles, showing up at the top. I wanted to do that originally, because before he switched to WordPress I saw “Robert”:http://robert.accettura.com/ doing it (I think MoveableType does it automatically). But I couldn’t figure out how, and now I did. And I like it, so it’s staying. Try it out.

Then my challenge was to set up a “Live Preview”:http://www.chrisjdavis.org/index.php/2004/03/15/live-preview-for-comments/ plugin I’d seen the other day that let commenters actually see a preview of the post as they were typing it, keystroke-by-keystroke. I saw this in action on the plugin’s demo site, and it rocks! Go ahead and try it out on a post…I did find a small bug in that if you use the “blockquote” HTML tag, Internet Explorer stops showing the preview at that point. Stupid IE. But “Firefox”:http://www.getfirefox.com/ does just fine with it and looks great. Everything else seems to work in IE all right though.

Happy New Year!

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

Um, read the title ;-)

Tue, 2004-12-28 (Dec 28)

“Human” Dog Food?

Filed under: Blog,General — David @ 07:57

We have a box of treats for our dog. It’s labeled “Peanut Butter Flavored.” Why the heck do dogs care if it’s peanut butter flavored? Pet food is apparently sold to mostly stupid humans that think their pets really want some “fancy” human-food flavored delicacy. And to smart humans who don’t have any other options because pretty much all pet food is sold “to humans”, branding-wise. Personally, I’m guessing the dog (and cats, for that matter), would prefer some nice, raw, or even cooked, meat, with bones (for the dog at least). But how many stupid humans are going to grab a box of “raw animal flesh” over “Peanut Butter Treats”? But they have no problem buying a whole chicken or an uncooked ham, or steaks, and doing their own cooking and feeding it to themselves. Then Fido might get a tiny taste of leftovers. Finally.

No, I haven’t gone to bed since my last post. Yes, I’m going…did eat though. Fake crab meat with cocktail sauce, and a bowl of cereal (one right after the other, not at the same time). Yum.

Note: My family’s dog isn’t named Fido, his name is Ty. Fido just flowed out in my rant, as the “universal dog name” :-)

Bomb on a Plane

Filed under: Blog,Funny,General,Hardware,Tech (General) — David @ 06:04

Reading a “post over at Slashdot”:http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=134143&cid=11197391 and someone mentioned this:

There is a 1 in 1,000,000 chance that someone on the same plane as you has a bomb.
There is a 1 in 25,000,000,000 that two people on the same plane have a bomb.
So always take a bomb with you on the plane, then you’re pretty sure you’re safe.

I don’t know if it’s being up at 5:30 in the morning or not that makes that hilarious. Probably, but I’m pretty used to this schedule after 1.5 weeks at it. Just getting to be bedtime, now, as soon as I go find a snack. Already ate some leftover ham a few hours ago while watching TV, but I’m hungry again.

To prevent a complete waste of space: “ZipZoomFly”:http://www.zipzoomfly.com/ (one of the two best, and usually cheapest (hence, best) online stores for computer stuff, the other one being “Newegg”:http://www.newegg.com/) recently got some “Refurbished Seagate 200GB IDE”:http://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/ProductDetail.jsp?ProductCode=101560-RFB hard drives in, for only $112.50 with free 2-day shipping (their usual shipping deal). Very good price…although the “new version”:http://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/ProductDetail.jsp?ProductCode=101560 they sell for $125, which dropped from $127 a few weeks ago but was as low as $117 a month or two ago.

That particular hard drive is my favorite out of all the hard drives I’ve used personally. It’s the quietest, most reliable, and best of all has a FIVE YEAR warranty, something you can’t get anywhere else on that kind of drive. Go Seagate! I’ve got two of those drives, and a Hitachi Deskstar 200GB that I like all right (I have to RMA one of the Seagates and the Hitachi though, but their failures one right after the other within three days in the same computer less than two months after the purchase of both may or may not be the drives’ problem…I bought a new motherboard and processor just in case, and treated myself to the “3EGHz Pentium 4 with HT, an 800MHz FSB, and 1MB of L2 cache”:http://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/ProductDetail.jsp?ProductCode=80661-1 while I was at it, so I can’t complain except for the money :-) But hey, a motherboard for $74.49 (the “AOpen AX4SPE-UN”:http://www.newegg.com/app/viewProductDesc.asp?description=13-137-041&depa=0) and 3 GHz processor for $186.90 (it’s dropped by ninty cents since then at ZipZoomFly and it’s three dollars more at Newegg) isn’t a bad deal at all, especially when you have (more…)

Sat, 2004-12-25 (Dec 25)

Merry Christmas!

Filed under: Blog,Christianity,General — David @ 05:51

I know I just posted “an entry”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2004/12/25/isnt-it-time-someone-saved-you/ that took a few hours to research and compose. But everyone else is doing it, so I feel I must add the obligatory, yet heartfelt, Merry Christmas. Especially after naming my last post, Isnโ€™t it time someone saved you? and not making it about Jesus. If you haven’t read it yet, please do, but expounding upon this topic I will use part of an earlier email from a friend (Elisha) to convey what I’m too tired (at 6 am) to come up with myself:

“I wish everyone a holiday full of restoration, love, connection, peace and fulfillment. May the birth of our Lord Jesus and the promises he has made, send us soaring in our commitment and faith to/in him in the days to follow.”

“isn’t it time someone saved you?”

SPOILER ALERT! If you haven’t seen Spider-Man 2, and don’t want to know the ending, don’t read the “more” part of this post! Merry Christmas and go watch the movie! :-)

Okay, just finished watching a couple of movies tonight. “Elf”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0002F6BRE/davidsworldva-20?dev-t=mason-wrapper%26camp=2025%26link_code=xm2 I watched because my Mom wanted to see it, so my family watched it. It was okay. Funnier than I expected in several areas, and Bob Newhart is good in it, but not worth subjecting myself to twice. Not like I usually watch movies more than once.

“Spider-Man 2”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005JMQW/davidsworldva-20?dev-t=mason-wrapper%26camp=2025%26link_code=xm2, on the other hand, was awesome. It didn’t quite have as much action as the first, much more plot development, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. There was action, it just wasn’t in spurts quite as long as I rememember them being in the first movie. I could be remembering incorrectly.

My favorite part (and this is where the spoilers start) was (more…)

Fri, 2004-12-24 (Dec 24)

Wal-Mart’s UNrollback

Filed under: Blog,Funny,General — David @ 01:11

Wal-Mart UNrollback close-up (click for full-size)Wal-Mart UNrollback medium shot (click for full-size) Apparently Wal-Mart is UN-rolling back prices now. At the store tonight, I snapped this shot of an aisle-end display headed by the photo at the left (click for full-size version).

The original price of $2.28 each would have made the price $4.56, which is a savings (for the mathematically challenged or lazy) of $0.44 over their “rolled-back” price. Yummy.

Wal-Mart Subway In better news, the old candy shop (hmm, never saw any parents let their kids in there. I wonder why?) right inside the entrance is gone, replaced by a much more respectful Subway. Now there something I can sink my teeth into! That, or the ice cream pops my Dad and I bought tonight. Speak of which, those and the movies we rented are calling, must go. (The Bourne Supremecy and Hero are the movies, in case you’re interested. My brother wants to see Hero, which we’re watching first, even though I want to see Bourne Supremecy. Don’t worry, somehow I think I’ll survive. Next I’m going to get I, Robot, possibliy with Ballistic.)

Thu, 2004-12-23 (Dec 23)

Librarians, or, Three Posts in One Night

Filed under: Blog,General,Personal — David @ 14:01

I’ll probably go to bed soon (maybe after a snack (edit: this was around 3 to 4 am when I wrote this part)), but I found some more interesting stuff online so I’ll post that first. May be the first time I’ve posted three blog entries in one night (too lazy to check old posts to be sure), but even if I matched the number I don’t think any of them were as long as these three are.

Firefox Tabs Commented On 2004-12-23 I can’t remember how I found half this stuff, but I wouldn’t post it here if I didn’t think it was interesting, funny, or entertaining (well, not in this post at least). I have all these sites open in separate tabs in “Firefox”:http://www.spreadfirefox.com/?q=affiliates&id=13029&t=46 right now. (I also have twelve additional browser windows open from the past few days, each with several tabs at least…and this is considered “normal” for me!) The thumbnail at the left is of my current computer state as I write this, with the browser shown being the one with the tabs open that I’m writing about. Click for a bigger view (resized to 640×480 for easier viewing…I’m running 1024×768 natively, and if anyone cares to donate a 20″ LCD I’ll gladly switch to 1600×1200).

First up is sites having to do with libraries or librarians, since not only is “librarygal”:http://www.livejournal.com/users/librarygal/ the person who has made me aware of the existance of the MLS degree (although she says I’m probably more interested in the MIS area if I pursue that direction when I go to college, which is true), she’s also the only person I know for sure that consistently reads my blog.

There’s some interesting humor over at “Laughing Librarian”:http://www.laughinglibrarian.com/ where you try to guess whether certain phrases are children’s book titles or titles of porno videos (more…)

Christmas Lights Crazy

Filed under: Blog,Funny,General,In The News — David @ 02:22

Christmas Lights Seen while Caroling (click for larger view) I mentioned in my “last post”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2004/12/23/white-christmassnow-kidding/ that while Googling to make sure I spelled “Griswold” correctly (in reference to the Christmas lights we saw when out caroling last night…click the thumbnail image to see a full-sized view–gotta love (hate) the bad low-light quality of my Treo 600’s camera!) I ran into some really interesting stuff online. Well, here it is: “Alek’s Christmas Lights Webcam”:http://www.komar.org/cgi-bin/xmas_webcam

Basically, during certain evening hours, you can remotely turn this guy’s Christmas lights on and off via the web, and watch it on his webcam. This is just cool enough that I am interested in trying it, except I’m probably too lazy to spend the time (and money) setting it up. His site got “Slashdotted”:http://www.komar.org/faq/slashdot-effect/ at least once a year since 2002 it looks like, which resulted in his ISP popping a 40-amp circuit breaker in 2002, plus a stress-test of his analog on-off switches! The actual 2002 “Slashdot article”:http://slashdot.org/articles/02/12/25/0118201.shtml has some pretty funny comments to go along with it (be warned that Slashdot isn’t known for it’s ultra-tasteful comments but this post doesn’t seem to have much of the worst at first glance, and some are pretty darn funny). Slashdot user CableModemSniper, for example, said, “The only way to create a fire-hazard from half-way around the world…Light ON, light OFF, Light ON, Light OFF, Light ON, Light OFF, Light BOOM! –Sparks everywhere…”, and TheOnlyCoolTim said, “We just slashdotted CHRISTMAS. What next, do the editors engineer a DDoS on GOD HIMSELF?”.

“Alek Komarnitsky”:http://www.komar.org/ also has some links to “other sites”http://www.komar.org/xmas/faq/other_sites.html with similar crazyness, like “‘Drive Me Insane!'”http://www.drivemeinsane.com/ which appears to be down temporarily but has much more web-based control of stuff. He also has links to some of the more “‘interesting'”:http://www.komar.org/xmas/2004/cool_pictures/ pictures he has from his webcam (personally, I like his shots of “‘watching grass grow'”:http://www.komar.org/faq/watching_grass_grow/ even better :-)

Want to see the “world’s biggest interactive computer display”:http://blinkenlights.de/? Just more random webcam-coolness…time to go watch more TV!

Oh yeah…I found out about this thingy in the first place from a Google search that lead me to “this Netscape article”:http://channels.netscape.com/ns/atplay/story.jsp?floc=FF-APO-1120&idq=/ff/story/0001/20041214/1914631691.htm&sc=1120.

White Christmas…Snow Kidding!

Filed under: Blog,General,Personal — David @ 01:55

Okay, the title’s pun is lame. So sue me. If you know me, you know you’d probably go broke suing me for lame jokes. Probably how I’ve escaped lawsuits so long.

I had my sleeping schedule nearly back around where I wanted it (you know, that up during the day/sleep at night crap :-) so of course I went and messed it up again. I got up around 10 am on Monday to go to lunch with some coworkers. It was worth it, even though I I got up at 7 pm on Saturday and couldn’t go to bed all night, so I ended up getting one hour of sleep before going to Church on Sunday morning, staying there until 3:30 pm to finish some stuff up (no evening service this week for extra finish-stuff-up time), then I stayed up really late (still on only one hour of sleep) and then, as I mentioned, got up at 10 am Monday.

Well, I did get to sleep by around 1 am Monday night, slept ’till noon on Tuesday, and then went out with some friends from my small group to eat and then go caroling. It was great, we took a church van (with permission :-) and after all seven of us stuffed ourselves at TGI Fridays we caroled at a pastor’s house, a newlywed friend’s house, tried another pastor’s house (no lights on so we didn’t stop), the house of one of the newlywed couple’s parents, and a stranger’s house that we passed that was so overdecorated with lights we nicknamed it the “Griswold’s”. I just Googled to make sure I spelled “Griswold” correctly, and found something else really cool that I’ll mention in a minute. Anyway, we had a lot of fun, but I was so tired and full of food when I got home around 10 pm that I only stayed up for a couple of hours to watch some TV and read, and I went to bed before I had a chance to blog. Actually I did take enough time to make a notepad entry in my Treo 600 for me to type in later, it said, “I have eaten steak thrice in the past hours twelve by two twice.” You know, since I ate steak three times in the past 48 hours. And I was still hungry when I went to bed at 2:28 am (I timestamped my Treo entry, of course).

That brings us to now. Or at least, today, when I woke up around 6:30 (pm, naturally). Got an email from Chad (he sent it at 4:30) saying he was going to be at church tonight with some free time to geek out on the Macs, so I met him there at 7:30 and we worked on setting them up some more for an hour and a half. It was snowing when we got there, but there was no accumulation on the roads, just the church parking lot a bit. When we were done there was about two to three inches on everything, including the highway, and I barely hit 40 mph once on the way home! We hadn’t gotten any snow at all on the north side of town earlier, but it had caught up wish us as well, and it’s still going strong as I write this. We’re supposed to have 8″ on the north side and 15″ inches down on the south side by the time it’s done. That’s where I get my title from, four paragraphs down (although I thougt of the title before writing any of it). Definitely looks like it’ll be a white Christmas this year, after having very good weather (for the most part) so far this year, including mostly warm temperatures. Anyone have some southern beach-front property (beach-front negotiable) they care to donate? :-)

This is getting a bit long, so I’ll move that comment I mentioned about my Google finding to a new post.

Tue, 2004-12-21 (Dec 21)

Gas Leak

Filed under: Blog,General,Personal — David @ 00:49

Well, we have a nice, outdoor (thankfully) gas leak tonight. I was going to stay up and blog about something tonight, but I can’t remember what it was. Oh wait, yes I do. Later. Anyway, my Dad was letting our dog out to use the facilities (if the grass can be called that), and smelled it outside our back door, asking me for confirmation. My nose isn’t that sensitive, but I stepped outside and wowsers! We have a gas leak somewhere. Actually out front it smells about as strongly as in back, so either it’s big, it’s been going for a while (but we were out earlier this evening for dinner and didn’t smell it when we got home), or, well, I don’t know since I’m not a gas expert (well, not the kind used for heating anyway :-)

As long as it’s outdoors I’m not too worried or anything (I’ll have to survive on “Nicorette”:http://nicorette.quit.com/ for now…ha ha, I don’t smoke in case you don’t know me :-) but it does add some excitment to my vacation thus far. And, if you read this before it’s resolved (and most of you won’t…it is almost 1 am!), it gives you a reason to come back and read more. And that’s worth it. I think. Updates to come (should go without saying)…

Update:

It’s 1:09 am, gas company just left. It was a loose pipe (connecting the meter to the service line or something) that caused a leak “just big enough to make it stink” in the serviceman’s words. Good thing they carry wrenches :-)

Nice to have mostly false alarms, huh?

Oh yeah…I found the 24/7 “emergency gas leak reporting phone number”:http://www.citizensgas.com/contactus.html online in about 20 seconds…go Internet! (I could have found it faster, but I forgot the name of the gas company at first and had to ask my Dad.)

Sun, 2004-12-19 (Dec 19)

Structured Procrastination

Filed under: Blog,General — David @ 05:29

In a “post at Forever Geek”:http://forevergeek.com/geek_resources/structured_procrastination.php they’ve linked to an interesting article called “Structured Procrastination“:http://www-csli.stanford.edu/~john/procrastination.html by “John Perry”:http://www-csli.stanford.edu/~john/index.html. I think it fits me well, and is one of the things I need to work on in order to get organized in the way I wish to. Isn’t is funny to read things that describe yourself, written by people you’ve never met? We’re all human (at least that’s the assumption I’m working from :-) so at some point it’s likely someone else will not not only do something simliar to ourselves but actually write about it, too, so the fact that this happens isn’t remarkable. But it is funny.

Now that I’ve procrastinated so long that I will only have about a half-hour to sleep, it’s time to go to bed.

Sat, 2004-12-18 (Dec 18)

“Artificial Life” claim (in quotes) makes headline

The BBC News Science/Nature division has an arriticle out there called “‘Artificial life’ comes step closer”:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4104483.stm, with of course the giveaway quotes around “artificial life” meaning as usual, “no, not really, but let’s sensationalize so it can be a big headline”.

What they’re congradulating themselves for is basically taking parts of living things and putting them together. Then they add some more parts of living things, and when it does something, they think they’re the next step towards proving intelligent design over secular humanism’s creatorless evolution since they will have had to use intelligence to “create” (note the quotes) something “living”. Well, they don’t agree with me on that last part. Of course they don’t, otherwise would they be in BBC News?

They first describe what they did in layman terms, then stick a pharagraph in there that says:

Albert Libchaber, who heads the project, stresses that these bioreactors are not alive – they’re performing simple chemical reactions that can also happen in cell-free biological fluids.

So they admit they haven’t really created life, they’re just doing chemical reactions experiments. Those quotes from the headline are beginning to take on more significance.

Picking another interesting paragaph,

Two years ago, another team showed that polio viruses could assemble themselves from off-the-shelf chemical components mixed in a test-tube.

reveals that they apparently think they can ignore the “team showed” part and focus on the fact that the viruses could “assemble themselves.” If the viruses could do so much on their own, what was the team needed for? Maybe to carefully setup the experiement and observe their careful creation‘s chemical reactions take place? Granted this is more of a nitpick than strong evidence for the weakness of their thory. But it does go to show the bias of the assumptions of the position that they’re coming from.

More meaningful are the pharagraphs near the end of the article:

As these constructs become more lifelike, the rest of us will have to start rethinking the nature of life.

“This is rather philosophical,” says Dr Libchaber.

“For me, life is just like a machine – a machine with a computer program. There’s no more to it than that. But not everyone shares this point of view,” he told the BBC.

And there we have it. Apparently, as they come closer to designing things that are lifelike (they resemble, not duplicate, life), the reporter (those so-called impartial people) stipulates that this will require us all to rethink the “nature of life.” Why? Well I’m not exactly sure, but it probably has something to do with the fact that the reporter and scientist wish everyone else had their worldview and that this will somehow convince everyone else to “join the club”.

Which the statement in the next two paragraphs of the above quote by Dr Libchaber shows, of course.

Debunking this stuff is not hard but does require a lot of time and space to lay everything out. You have to lay the foundation of a correct worldview before you can successfully make arguments to those with other worldviews. I agree with Dr Libchaber that “this is rather philosophical,” and I now defer to probably the most excellent work I’ve read on this topic, a book entitled “I Don’t Have Enough Faith To Be an Atheist”:http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1581345615/davidsworldva-20?dev-t=mason-wrapper%26camp=2025%26link_code=xm2 by “Norman L. Geisler”:http://www.normgeisler.com/ and Frank Turek.

So far everything philisophically implied by the article I mention has been soundly debunked with reason and logic (using general, not special, revelation (not one Bible verse relied upon)) within the first two hundred pages. And I’m not even done with the book! It presents a “12-step guide”:http://www.impactapologetics.com/12points.asp leading from “is there absolute truth” through to the conclusion that the Bible is the Word of God. I may review this book in more depth here soon, but for now there are two really great quotes from a review of this book over at Amazon, both from reviewer Mike:

Having read quite a few Christian apologetics books, I feel I can say that this one is by far the best in scope, logic, and wit. The authors convincingly build up their case in layers, starting with well-reasoned arguments why God exists, and building in stages as to why Jesus is the way to go, once everything else is accepted.

He goes on to say that the book covers the variety of areas required in a complete defense of a worldview, specifically, “cosmology, life origins, evolution, morality, and a defense of the Bible.” His conclusion?

No honest atheist can read this book without being impressed by the quality of the theistic arguments as presented by the authors. The objections of skeptics are confronted with confidence. Did it change my mind? It may have planted a seed.

So he gave a glowing, five-star review of this book, probably stated my points better than I would have, and he doesn’t even believe it’s conclusion yet! I’d say that speaks volumes of the books readability, and the soundness of its arguments.

I think the “life” article talks about an interesting experiement. But it also promotes a worldview that I can’t possibly believe in, because, as my new favorite book says, I don’t have enough faith to be an atheist!

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