Category Archives: News

By the numbers

I dug up this old document and got a good laugh out of it tonight. It’s an insurance document from my computer equipment rider with my insurance company. The date was 3/21/1997

COMPUTER HARDWARE

Packard Bell Pentium PC (P-150) – Value: $5000
32 Meg RAM
8X CD-ROM
Tape Backup
Networking hardware
SVGA Video Card
Sound Blaster Sound Card
Hard Disk 1: 1.35 Gigabytes
Hard Disk 2: 1.6 Gigabytes
28.8 Fax/Modem
Yamaha YST-M10 Stereo Speaker System
Yamaha YST-MSW10 Subwoofer
Gravis Grip Programmable Controller System

Home-Built Pentium (P-133) – Value: $1500
24 Meg RAM
2X CD-ROM
Networking hardware
Expanded SVGA Video Card w/4-meg Video memory
Sound Blaster 16 Sound Card
Hard Disk 1: 1.6 gigabytes
Hard Disk 2: 1.2 gigabytes
14.4 Fax/Modem
Gravis Grip Programmable Controllers

Packard Bell PB9815 Laser Printer – Value: $800

Epson Stylus Color Inkjet Printer – Value: $500

Casio QV-30 Digital Camera System – Value: $800

COMPUTER SOFTWARE

MAJOR SOFTWARE PACKAGES

CorelDraw 3,4,5,6, and 7 Suites: $1000
Microsoft Office Suite: $400
Photoshop: $500
Visual Basic Professional: $200

220 additional CD-ROMs containing Games, Applications and Utilities
Approximate value: $35 each – Value: $7700

200+ Floppy Disks containing applications, utilities, and stored
personal data – Value: $500

Total value of all items: $18,900

AOL still sucks

In case there’s some of you haven’t noticed yet…AOL STILL SUCKS. Now I’m getting a message from them when I post to my blog, which sends a message to all users in my mailing list. The AOL addresses all seem to get rejected now, and I get this from AOL:

A message that you sent could not be delivered to one or more of its
recipients. This is a permanent error. The following address(es) failed:

username1removed@aol.com
SMTP error from remote mailer after initial connection:
host mailin-02.mx.aol.com [64.12.137.121]: 554-(RLY:B1) The information presently available to AOL indicates this
554-server is generating high volumes of member complaints from AOL’s
554-member base. Based on AOL’s Unsolicited Bulk E-mail policy at
554-http://www.aol.com/info/bulkemail.html AOL may not accept further
554-e-mail transactions from this server or domain. For more information,
554 please visit http://postmaster.info.aol.com.

username2removed@aol.com
SMTP error from remote mailer after initial connection:
host mailin-02.mx.aol.com [64.12.137.121]: 554-(RLY:B1) The information presently available to AOL indicates this
554-server is generating high volumes of member complaints from AOL’s
554-member base. Based on AOL’s Unsolicited Bulk E-mail policy at
554-http://www.aol.com/info/bulkemail.html AOL may not accept further
554-e-mail transactions from this server or domain. For more information,
554 please visit http://postmaster.info.aol.com.

This really ticks me off that AOL can just block whatever mail it wants based on when a few users bitch to them about spam. Tell them to get a SPAM FILTER for goodness sake! Geez! Or don’t those work with AOL?? I talked to all of the AOL users in question, and absolutely NONE of them complained to AOL about spam coming from my server. (I removed their addresses from the pasted message above to maintain their privacy). This is really rediculous!! HOW CAN AN ISP BLOCK LEGITIMATE E-MAIL YOU WANT (OR NEED) TO RECEIVE ON IT’S OWN!?! How many other hundreds of thousands of VALID e-mails are they rejecting to supposedly support their complaining customers?? Well, THIS aught to get them MORE users complaining even MORE! Way to go, AOL!

One more interesting thing too–The link to AOL’s Unsolicited Bulk E-Mail Policy doesn’t even work for me! It redirects itself to AOL’s home page. So I am unable to even get more information from them. Another “atta boy” for AOL. Wake up, people. Get a REAL ISP and regain control of your e-mail. Big Brother should not be controlling what you receive and don’t recieve!! AOL is for those not mature enough to manage their own e-mail. In other words, AOL IS FOR KIDS.

Bear’s going back to his den

Well, the catheterization went well and no arterial blockage was found. The ole Bear is going to be released from captivity this evening and he’ll be free to run (albeit somewhat slower) in the wild once again. Read the photo caption for a little bit more information.

Bear in the woods

Bear was taken to the hospital yesterday with chest pains. It appears he may have a blockage. They’re going to do a catheterization today to determine the problem. He’s been doing so great with his weight loss and diet changes and we are so proud of him! And now this happens. You just don’t know, do you?

Well, we’re praying for him, and hope everything works out fine. Things like this sure scare the crap out of me though, especially after what happened to my mom. Sometimes all the doctors and equipment in the world can’t help a bit.

But our thoughts and prayers are with him right now, and I hope you’ll join with us on this.

Thy Kingdom comes

Just a reminder–Stephen King’s first television series, Kingdom Hospital, starts tomorrow, March 3rd, 2003! Please note that this is NOT a mini-series, it’s an actual television series, so there will (with any luck!) be more than just a few episodes. Remember to set your VCRs, TiVos, and DVRs! Both of mine are already set (gotta have a backup, just in case).

Organ transplants save PC’s life!

Yesterday I received my new motherboard, processor, and memory for to get the old Micron PC rebuilt.  It was an amazingly trouble-free installation! No problems at all, even though the hardest (and scariest) part was installing the fan/heatsink onto the processor–It had to be forced onto the ZIF socket clips, using a flathead screwdriver.  Any slip while applying that much pressure could have resulted in jamming the screwdriver into any of the hundreds of critical components on the motherboard or scratching the traces, which would have most-likely killed it permanently.  But as I said, all went well.  The new board was even a couple inches larger than the old one, yet it fit like a glove into the ATX case and everything seated perfectly.  Even Windows XP installed without a hitch, and found all the hardware and everything on first startup!  So it’s now a Micron Athlon XP 1800+, and I can boot to the XP desktop in 20-25 seconds!

Interesting geek trivia:  I took a few notes, and after installing the original final release of Windows XP Professional (I bought it the day it was released–on 10/25/01) and going to Windows Update for the first time, there were 31 Critical Updates found.  After installing Windows XP Service Pack 1 the number of Critical Updates left to download was 13.  I assume this means that 18 Critical Updates are included in Service Pack 1.

The Athlon XP 1800+ runs at a speed of 1.54GHz, so I’ve come a little way from the 850MHz Pentium III that the Micron had in it before.  The total cost, which included the motherboard, processor, fan/heatsink, was about $140.  That doesn’t include the extra components I added just to upgrade the system a bit–512MB SDRAM and a 120GB Hard Drive.  It appears to be running a lot faster than my 2.2GHz Pentium 4 machine right now though… Probably only because its a brand new installation of Windows though.   Time will tell.

Valentines Day

Valentines Day was very good.  Sandy and I and Kevin went out to dinner at Texas Roadhouse, a new place out on Highway 50 and I-94.  We called for reservations but they don’t take any.  All they have is a Call-Ahead list.  You call like 1/2 hr before you’re going to be there, they put you on the list, and you only have a wait of about 10 or 15 minutes before being seated.  They said they’re always very busy, so there’s no real good time to get in faster than that.  Good thing we called too, because people coming in when we got there who didn’t call ahead had a 2-hour wait!  The food was excellent! I had a BBQ Chicken & Steak Combo, and Sandy had a Combo of Steak and Ribs.  Kevin had a kids meal (naturally).  Food was excellent, service was great (I love the site-pager system–when yours flashes and vibrates, your table’s ready–Kevin didn’t want to give it back when we were seated!)

Ted Meimar 1930-2003

An old friend of mine, Ted, passed away last week after a long battle with cancer. I hadn’t seen him in some time, and when I last saw him in a grocery store a few months ago he didn’t seem to recognize me. Ted worked with my dad for many years at AMC (now Daimler-Chrysler) in Kenosha. My dad introduced me to him when I was very young, in my teenage years. In fact, Ted introduced me to my first computer and was a major catalyst in my eventually pursuing a career in computers.

Ted bought and sold early computers and software years before computers were a household name. When I learned of his death last week I spent a lot of time trying to recall that part of my past, and researched a lot of the historical details of the computers and software we dealt with back then. Remember, this was way before today’s PCs, when computers were in their infancy. We were into Atari computers. And due to how rare computers were, it was very difficult to find software & hardware peripherals for these computers. Ted and I joined an Atari Computer Users Group in Waukegan and attended all the meetings. It was the only place “somewhat local” where we could find to get things for our computers, so we spent a lot of time buying and trading hardware and software. Since I was just a kid, Ted bought mostly everything we wanted, and then resold the items I wanted to me over time, when I could come up with the money.

“Colleen” was her name. She was an Atari 800, built in 1979. Ted and I both had one. They hooked up to your television, so you could run it black and white or even color if you have a good TV. The processor speed was 1.79 MHz and it came standard with 8k of RAM, upgradeable to a whopping 48k. The color was amazing–16 colors with 8 shades each. For storage it used an external cassette recorder. You could upgrade to an external floppy disk drive if you could afford the several hundred dollars investment. Don’t take all of this as sarcasm. For it’s time, this really was an amazing system. The entire history of those early computers can be found here, so I won’t bother discussing them further, except to say that, for Ted and I, those were our days of discovery in computers, and we enjoyed them a great deal, and became good friends because of them. Ted was also an avid CB’er back in the day, and went by the handle “The Blue Goose.” If you’re from the Kenosha area and recall having a CB radio, perhaps you might remember him on the CB. I do. Other memories connected to this that just popped into my head are The Phantom of The Lake (another more mysterious CB’er), many Fox Hunts, “kickers” and HUGE CB antennas, “Utility Man” getting his coax cut repeatedly for using an kicker, gatherings at a place called Smokey Stovers, and huge Jerry Lewis Telethon CB’er get-togethers. I lost touch with Ted several years ago, after moving out of my father’s house, so my only memories of him were good. This is probably for the best. He’s in a better place now. And I’m hoping that where he is he has the fastest computer The Almighty can afford, and a CB that can transmit around the world and to the Heavens! He would like that.

Green Meadows / Halloween

Yesterday I helped chaperone Kevin’s Kindergarten class for a field trip to Green Meadows Farm. We had a great time, got to pet, hold and visit lots of animals, ride the ponies, took a hay ride, had lunch, and even got to pick pumpkins out of the pumpkin patch to bring home. I’ve posted a few highlight photos in my moblog and also posted the entire collection of images in our photo albums, along with all of our Halloween photos from this year. Here they are:

Green Meadows Field Trip

Halloween 2004

Still Motion

A friend of mine sent me a very disturbing illusion today. I thought I’d share it with you. It’s amazing how the mind works and what it can do when challenged. I couldn’t believe it myself, so I loaded the image into Animation Shop and yes, it is just one UNANIMATED frame! It’s a large image, but even just looking at a portion of it at a time works fine. Can this mess up your eyes??

Click here to view the illusion. If you have a popup blocker you may have to hold CTRL when clicking, or a different special key to allow the window to open.

Origin of Halloween

Does anyone know why Kenosha and a couple other surrounding towns are having trick-or-treat on October 27th?? The kids have Thursday and Friday off school next week anyway, so even if they were trying to maintain the “safety” hours of 1-4 pm it would have been fine to keep it on the 31st. Every other community seems to always have trick-or-treat on Halloween though. Kenosha’s just gotta be different I guess.

Anyway, with tomorrow being the “big day” for most kids in this area, I thought it appropriate to explain just where Halloween came from and why we do what we do on Halloween. Here goes…

The ancient Celtic festival called Samhain is considered by many to be a predecessor of our contemporary Halloween. Samhain was the New Year’s Day of the Celts and was celebrated on November 1st. It was a joyful harvest festival that marked the death of the old year and the beginning of a new one. It was also a day of the dead, a time when it was believed that the souls of those who had died during the year were allowed access to the land of the dead. It was related to the season, by Samhain the crops should be harvested and the animals brought in from the distant fields.

Many traditional beliefs and customs were associated with Samhain. Most notable was that night was the time of the wandering dead, the practice of leaving offerings of food and drink to masked and costumed revelers, and the lighting of bonfires, continued to be practiced on October 31, known as the Eve of All Saints, the Eve of All Hallows, or Hallow Even. It is the glossing of the name Hallow Even that has given us the name Hallow e’en.

Come evening, evil spirits were everywhere. Charms and spells were said to have more power on the eve of Samhain. The spirits of Samhain, once thought to be wild and powerful, were now said to be something worse: Evil. The church maintained that the gods and goddesses and other spiritual beings of traditional religions were diabolical deceptions, that the spiritual forces that people had experienced were real, but they were manifestations of the Devil, the Prince of Liars, who misled people toward the worship of false idols. Thus, the customs associated with Halloween included representations of ghosts and human skeletons–symbols of the dead–and of the devil and other malevolent, evil creatures, such as witches were said to be.

The original festival for the pagan Lord of the Dead became a festival of Christian dead. People went on expecting the arrival of ghosts on Oct. 31st. Halloween has become one of the most widely celebrated festivals on the contemporary American calendar, and it is not even officially a holiday. No day off is given for Halloween, no federal decree is proclaimed establishing it as a national holiday. People just celebrate it!

Spooky things

Kevin’s all revved up for Halloween. He’s got his Incredible Hulk costume ready, complete with talking Hulk Hands, and he can’t wait to get out there and show it off. Speaking of Halloween, you should check out our favorite collection of Halloween decorations all in one haunted yard!

That’s the kid that greets you at the door. Make any sudden noise and he dances and says “trick or treat!” or several other things. There are several other sound-activated devices throughout the yard, so it’s pretty neat and spooky.

Speaking of spooky, we watched DreamCatcher tonight… Whoa. VERY spooky. I loved it! It’s based on a Stephen King novel, one of the few I haven’t read. King originally wrote it by hand, on paper, after his horrible accident. He was unable to sit at a desk to type, so he wrote it out on paper instead while he healed. Amazing. The movie was great, so the book must be even better! I’d like to read it some time.

Live commercial

I think I saw a commercial last night. No, not on TV, on Highway 50. As I was driving home from Union Grove on the highway I came up behind one of those Mitsubishi SUVs. It was black in color (just like in the commercial) and believe it or not the flip-down tv screen was down and they were actually watching SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS!! So eerily like the commercial that it kinda freaked me out. I laughed most of the way home. If you’ve seen the commercial you know the one I’m talking about.

Close computer call

I nearly fried a computer this weekend. My homemade Athlon XP 1800 box overheated when the case fan died. This is a desktop case sitting under my main monitor. I noticed the problem when I reached for something sitting on the case. It was extremely hot to the touch, so I knew something was seriously wrong. I immediately powered down and opened it up.

It was amazing to feel just how hot things were. I touched various components–the hard drive, the inside metal frame of the case, the CD-ROM drives–all of them were so hot to the touch that they burned me. I let it cool down for awhile and then powered it up with the cover off to find the problem. Sure enough, the case fan was froze and wouldn’t budge. I picked up a new fan today and replaced it, and now it’s running very cool.

I rechecked the BIOS settings for Temperature Shutdown and found out it was disabled! Whoops! I thought I had enabled it when I originally installed the motherboard a year ago. Hmmm. Well, it’s on now, so it should shut down before it gets too hot next time. Hopefully nothing was weakened due to heat stress this time though, or I may be rebuilding this thing again real soon.

Larinda will be back

As I mentioned in a previous entry, Larinda, one of the awesome ships that visited Kenosha during our Tall Ships Festival this summer, sunk in Hurricane Juan. A fund has been set up to assist in the recovery effort. Any help you can give would be greatly appreciated. All of the details are on Larinda’s Site.

Ok, Sandy’s turn. She had a sweatshirt made for herself at the same time she had my CRS shirt made. Here’s a picture. I cropped the ole lady out of the picture to give you a better look at the detail. Here comes the frying pan!!

CRS Shirt

Sandy had a new t-shirt made for me today

Don’t I look thrilled? Seriously though, I do like it. I thought it might have been about me being “Mr. Mom” when she first mentioned it, but this is better. I like it.

Coincidentally, I saw a much MORE amusing shirt today as well. It said simply: “My IQ test came back NEGATIVE.” I don’t know why, but I laugh every time I think about that one. I’d like to get a stack of those for a few people I know. Not YOU, of course…

Fall Colors

I went around town the other day looking at the fall colors and snapping photos. Here’s a few of the better ones I took.

We’re off to Happ’s Pumpkin Farm today, so I’ll be posting the photos from that shortly! This family farm is more than just a pumpkin patch. Fall fun at Happ’s includes a five-acre corn maze, spooky school bus, country carnival games and, new for 2002, the Twinkleville Train. For $4 enjoy the corn maze, a hayride, the “Ghoul Bus,” a small pumpkin, two gourds and a prize! See farm animals, themed Halloween displays and indulge in some fresh apple cider and a homemade taffy apple. Open daily, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. through November 1st. 24129 Wilmot Rd. Trevor. (One block west of Hwy. 83 on Hwy. C in Trevor.) (262) 862-6515

BLT Pizza Day

We had one of our favorites for lunch today–BLT Pizza from Gurnee Pizza! It was excellent, as usual. If you haven’t tried it before we highly recommend it. There are a few variations, and even a few here in Kenosha, but Gurnee Pizza’s got the best-tasting version we’ve ever had! And when you order, make sure you order extra bacon! Mmmmm! It’s defiintely worth leaving the state for!

We took a trip to Walmart later on in the day and they had a fire prevention display for the kids. Coloring sheets, information, stickers, and even face painting! They paint either a fire extinguisher or a smoke alarm (go figure) on the kids, either on their face or arm. Kevin chose his face with the fire extinguisher. Here he is:

KevinExtinguisher (32k image)

That’s his name in his favorite color–yellow

Ladybug Headache

I have a headache. This morning, as I sat working on the computer in my really comfy Lane Pillowsoft Executive Chair, I took a short break and leaned back in the chair. As usual, the chair bent backward, then suddenly WHAM! I was lying flat on my back–still in the chair–on the floor! The post of the chair had peeled right off at the base. I think I bumped my head on the floor, now it hurts. I’ll get over it. So much for one of Best Buy’s top-of-the-line executive chairs though! But Lane furniture is guaranteed for eons. Now all I have to do is call them, e-mail them a few photos of the broken part, and sit back (in a very uncomfortable wooden chair) and wait for the UPS guy. My headache will turn into a butt ache real soon, I’m quite sure…

To top things off today, we’re in the middle of some sort of ladybug invasion… I don’t know if it’s our white house that’s attacting them or what, but there’s hundreds of them camped out on our porches, front and back, and all over the doors and windows. I’ve been catching them in the house and throwing them out all day. Sandy came home from work and her white top even had a few on it. Getting the mail from the porch was even an exciting endeavor today. They quickly covered the inside of the screen door, so I had to knock them off into my hand one by one, then throw them back out the door in groups of 4 or 5 at a time.

Larinda Sinks!

The Tall Ship Larinda sank Sunday night in Halifax during Hurricane Juan. This is very depressing. We saw her during her visit to Kenosha at the Tall Ships Festival this year. I took several pictures and we talked briefly with Larry Mahan, her captain, who explained how he spent 30 years building the ship by hand. Captain Mahan survived the sinking and was not physically injured.

Larinda will be remembered fondly as being an awesome highlight to the Tall Ships Festival. We’re sorry to see her go. I have posted every photo I took of her during the festival in this special album.