A distributed non-computing effort

July 16th, 2007

Identify galaxies by type.

Buy 2, get 1 free

July 11th, 2007

Breakfast this morning

Medical science advances once again

July 9th, 2007

Stem cell research that provides results up-front.

Arrogant SOBs

July 7th, 2007

Jane Galt has been having trouble with Sony VAIO customer service. I’ll admit that they make some interesting products, but I’ve been staying away from purchasing any of them since they hacked their customers’ computers.

My own customer support nightmare involved a sound card/CD drive combo that I purchased as an add-in to my desktop PC, back when it was a Windows 3.1 486/33 box. One morning, the CD drive spontaneously ejected the tray. Putting the tray back into the tracks would cause it to retract fully, then to be spit out again. It was obviously a hardware problem, most likely a limit switch or photosensor.

By that time, however, I’d installed a beta version of Windows 95 on the thing. Every time I called, I was told that I had to wipe my hard drive and reinstall Windows 3.1 before they would help me. It was obvious that they had a script, and weren’t allowed to deviate from it. Finally, I disconnected the hard drive, installed their driver software on a floppy, and booted from it. After going through the front-line support person and script, I got to a supervisor and explained the situation. He said, “We can work with that.” I thought, “Finally!” His next words, though were that I needed to reattach my hard drive and put Windows 3.1 on it, because they not only didn’t support Windows 95, but had no plans to support it.

I’d had it with them by then, and asked to whom I’d send a complaint. He said that I’d have to send it to him. I couldn’t believe that nobody else got to see complaints about him, and told him so before I hung up. I then looked up the company’s info in Dunn & Bradstreet, and sent a letter addressed to the company’s president, explaining the situation, and my shock that complaints about support personnel would be handled by those same people.

The letter was returned – moved, forwarding order expired.

I bought a different CD drive, and stayed with Windows 95. I kept the returned letter for several years, for various reasons. I may still have it, tucked away in a box somewhere, but I’m not certain.

Bash!

July 7th, 2007

Tonight is the next Rocky Mountain Blogger’s Bash. I’ll be there (barring something unforeseen in the next few hours), as will my daughter. She has to leave early, though, because she’s involved with a local Rocky Horror production.

Celebrating the Dean

July 7th, 2007

Today marks the centennial of Robert Heinlein‘s birth. To mark the occasion, there is a convention in Kansas City this weekend. I’m sorry I’m missing it, but I’m seldom able to attend out-of-town conventions these days.

He’s one of my favorite SF authors, and, though I never met him, we have something in common – besides being graduates of the U. S. Naval Academy (although he predated me by a number of years), we both fenced for Navy. In Starship Troopers, one of the characters shares the last name of Andre Deladrier, who was my coach at Navy.

In his office in the fencing loft, Coach Deladrier kept a rusty antique rapier, which he once told me had belonged to his incarnation in an earlier life. I can’t say I believe in reincarnation, but I think I’d like to know about my earlier lives, if there were any. If there is reincarnation, though, I’m not certain my future incarnations would care to know about this life.

Another essay for the Fourth

July 4th, 2007

This is from 2003, and I’m sorry I had forgotten about it. It’s Bill Whittle’s Trinity. Don’t miss part 2, either.

More on Anthropogenic Global Warming

July 4th, 2007

I linked a few days ago to Coyote’s post on the reliability of warming data. Since then, he has released version 1.0 of his Skeptical Layman’s Guide to Anthropogenic Global Warming. I’ve barely started it, but, based on his earlier posts on the subject, I expect that it will be pretty good.

For the Fourth

July 4th, 2007

Kim du Toit has an essay on the meaning of the 4th of July, from the perspective of someone who was born American, just not in America.

The essay by Peter Schramm that he links to makes the point that we aren’t passing on the background, the scaffolding, if you will, that was used to build this country. When I was growing up, we had required courses called Civics and Social Studies and American History that passed this knowledge on (or, at least, made the attempt – you know how students are). We don’t seem to have those courses anymore, and there appears to be active hostility to the idea that America is, or even can be, a force for good in the world.

We now neglect teaching American history, replacing it with world history or multicultural studies. There’s nothing wrong with those, but they shouldn’t replace the teaching of our own history and culture. If you don’t value it, and teach your children that it is something of value, then they’ll have less desire to preserve it.

I understand the point of view Mr. du Toit and Mr. Schramm hold, although perhaps not with the same immediacy. I think any experience of living in a foreign country, or even visiting, if you keep your eyes open, will provide perspective on life in America.

In my case, although I am an American citizen from birth, I was born in England, which led to my having to deal with some less-than-usual paperwork in high school. Because of the location of my birth, and the fact that my mother was British, the US considered that I had dual citizenship with Great Britain. Since I had an American father and an English mother, Great Britain said I was 100% American. Had my father been British and my mother American, though, they’d have gone along with the dual citizenship idea. In any case, I applied to the Air Force and Naval Academies when I was in high school, and the dual citizenship thing came up. As a result, I ended up having to swear out an oath renouncing allegiance to any foreign powers before I could be accepted. So, I’ve got non-passport documentation to prove that I’m an American citizen. I presume that naturalized citizens have something similar, although I’ve never bothered to check.

In any case, I’ve lived in other countries, and I’ve visited yet others. Although there are beautiful places around the world, several of which I’d love to spend extended periods visiting, this country is still the only place I really want to live in.

And, for the science-fiction-obsessed …

July 1st, 2007

Continuing with the theme, here we have a spreadsheet of important science fiction. My numbers, based on my recollection, are:

50% of the Hugo winners,
32% of the Hugo nominees,
37% of the Nebula winners,
40% of the Locus award winners,
58% of the anthologies, and,
34.5% of the works listed.

I think my actual numbers would be higher, although not by much. Anything with a familiar-sounding title that I wasn’t certain of, I left off the list. I do note that most of my reading is in the earlier works; there’s little I’ve read that came out since about 1999.