Rob Eberhardt

cleverness ensues

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 Sunday, April 22, 2007

"People should be ashamed when they are passed on the right"

I'm not a bumper-sticker person.  I really have never had one, and probably never will.  I guess my soapbox-ish feelings have never overcome my greater aversion to more visual pollution.  ...Except when it comes to driving considerately.  If I saw one, I'm sure I would buy and apply a bumper sticker along these lines:


keep right (except to pass)

Driving considerately depends on awareness.  If you're oblivious to what's going on around you, yes "mental auto-pilot" might keep you personally safe (somewhat), but it interferes with the effective flow of traffic. 

This "driving oblivion" is essentially a form of laziness.  People should be ashamed when they are passed on the right, and should feel the need to apologize somehow, perhaps by flashing their lights in acknowledgement of the inconvenience they may have just caused the passer.  But of course they'd have to notice that too... 

A similar symptom of driving oblivion is failure to indicate: just drift on over to wherever you feel like being, with no consideration for other drivers.

I guess flow and being considerate are big with me these days.

A not particularly-related frustration, but one which also breaks flow, is traffic waves.  I think I mentioned once that I'd meant to write about it as a form of compression wave, but fortunately someone beat me to it.  Traffic waves are actually not a symptom of laziness, but rather one of greediness -- never allowing enough space in front of you that someone else might be able to cut in line.  In the process, your foot ends up back-and-forth between pedals, magnifying the compression waves and actually slowing the flow.  (Imagine a sink drain that burps, back with the air, forth with the water).

(Normally I'd apologize for venting, soapboxing, etc.  But lookee there at my name up top!  Speaking freely is a blog's "why".)

4/22/2007 10:51 PM Eastern Daylight Time  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [4]  | 

 Friday, March 02, 2007

I've bugged the Microsoft Scripting Guys to make a feed for their great daily Q&A.  "Coming soon" was the most I ever heard (and over a year ago)...

I don't know what the holdup is, but it doesn't matter to me now.  Thanks to etc., I just found Yoktu.com Feedmaker.  A moment later, I had the feed I want.  Sweet!

One note: Feedmaker has a Word Filter option.  Unfortunately it doesn't do positive filters, so "?" hides all the links I want, instead of the generic ones I don't.  No big deal (I'll choke doen the extras), but hey Yoktu, how about a googlish syntax like "+?" for specifying what to include?

3/2/2007 8:18 PM Eastern Standard Time  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

 Saturday, February 17, 2007

It's been a long time since I've done one of these, but here's another top 10 randomized entries from my collection:

  • Byrds - Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is A Season)
  • Kool and the Gang - 16 Spirit Of The Boogie
  • King's X - Pretend
  • The Commodores - Still
  • Spock's Beard - 4 O' Clock
  • Lit - Miserable
  • Journey - Any Way You Want It
  • Van Halen II - D.O.A.
  • They Might Be Giants - Clap Your Hands
  • Mike Helm - Meet My New Friend

(Granted, I cheated when I removed the Mr. Belvedere theme song, but can you blame me?)


2/17/2007 4:40 PM Eastern Standard Time  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

 Saturday, February 03, 2007

A comment I just posted at http://datamining.typepad.com/data_mining/attensa/ :

I've been using intraVnews for several years, liking Outlook's sorting power to manage info, but I'm not at one machine long enough lately to keep current. So I went shopping for an online reader, and found your post and the RSS Reader Survey.

Based on those, I tried (or at least looked at) Bloglines, Rojo, NetNewsWire and Great News. I mostly didn't like the UIs (too weak or clunky compared to Outlook), and most just didn't work on my Windows Mobile phone' Pocket IE.

I ended up using Google Reader instead -- sure it's not as powerful as intraVnews/Outlook (no search folders, no deactivating feeds), but I don't think I need that power since the "reading flow" is so smooth (aka "UX", or User Experience in Microsoft's new lingo). I don't Need to filter out the "junk" since it's easy to just ignore it.

Granted, it's only been 2 weeks, but I've been successfully keeping up on 296 feeds pretty easily.

I should mention I was actually looking for an Outlook/online combo.  Apparently Newsgator and Attensa both do this, but Newsgator ain't free (and I'm a tightwad), and I couldn't find Attensa's supposed free service...  I've tried the Outlook addins for both in the past, tho, and they're fine (since it's Outlook).

Hm, should I post my 296 feed OPML?  ..or I guess Google Reader has a sharing feature -- maybe that's something to try out.

2/3/2007 6:19 PM Eastern Standard Time  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

 Thursday, January 04, 2007

Busy?  Oh yeah.

1/4/2007 7:43 PM Eastern Standard Time  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 

 Friday, December 22, 2006

For those in a similar tight place...

Alright, I shouldn't have experimented with the BIOS settings so flippantly, but all my other current hardware either has an internal "reset" jumper, or it automatically detects problems and resets itself, so I assumed I was safe...

Well imagine my surprise that powering on gave me an utterly blank screen, and no combination of keys would fix it.  Opening the case showed no reset mechanism either.  And Sager's website showed no support options except an RMA form...

Fortunately I found (elsewhere) an email address for support: websupport@sagernotebook.com.  I emailed and got a response within 24 hours asking for a serial number.  Knowing it was out of warranty (and expecting a "sorry about your luck" response), I gritted my teeth & answered.

Glory be, 12 hours later I received these instructions from Daniel on how to reset the BIOS to factory settings:

Bob,

If you feel comfortable, Try this, 1st unplug all the power remove the AC Adapter and the Battery. And open the bottom cover(see attachment picture) and unplug the Cmos-Battery’s wire(red&black crop by Green Color) for like 15sec. Then reconnect it back the wire then everything ACA and the Big Battery. See that will help.

*** We don't hold any responsibility ***

Daniel
Sager computer
18005 Cortney Ct
City of Industry, CA 91748
Tel# 1-800-741-2219 626 964 4849
Fax# 626-964-2381

Despite Bob-ifying me, it made enough sense that I was booting normally in 5 minutes (and mostly time for the tiny screws).

It's good info, Sager just needs to share it more easily.  I wrote back to thank Daniel, and suggested they put this kind of info in a public knowledgebase.

12/22/2006 4:41 PM Eastern Standard Time  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  |