new hardware in place for this site

After much angst and not-quite-enough preparation, I successfully moved this website and weblog to a different machine this afternoon. Kind of a complicated business since I’m using this machine for network address translation and such as well. I did a lot of file copying and config munging to make sure everything was in place for a seamless transfer, but missed one crucial detail: I made sure the web content and all was in place and that apache was all configured as it should be. But I neglected to build the options for NAT into the kernel. D’oh.

<sigh>
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a compromise on who gets their likeness on the dime

CNN.com – Dime debate pits Reagan against FDR – Dec. 5, 2003

Congressional Republicans are pushing a bill to honor former President Reagan by putting his profile on the dime.

Here’s a way out of this that everyone should agree on: put Reagan’s likeness on the 1000 dollar bill. That way, the only people who are likely to see it are those who benefited financially from his regime, and the rest of us can continue to honor a president who actually worked for everyone.

Credit for the idea to my young wife (though the blame for the astringent phrasing is all mine).

To her credit, Nancy Reagan is against this, and perhaps her husband’s lapdogs will take the hint and do something constructive with their time.
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the image that inspired a storybook?

Boing Boing: A Directory of Wonderful Things

This link, featuring “number three in a series of object-eating trees” is strikingly similar to the image on the last page of this book by the inimitable Berkeley Breathed. Since “Red Ranger Came Calling” is a holiday-themed tale, it might be a good time to re-read it.

(Since the tree is identified as being on Vashon Island, where Breathed’s book is set, this would seem to close the loop.)

WMDs found, but not where anyone expected

CBS 11: CBS 11 Investigates Poison Gas Plot

Investigators have seized at least 100 other bombs, bomb components, machine guns, 500,000 rounds of ammunition and chemical agents. But the government also found some chilling personal documents indicating that unknown co-conspirators may still be free to carry out what appeared to be an advanced plot. And, authorities familiar with the case say more potentially deadly cyanide bombs may be in circulation.

Well, no wonder no WMDs have been found in Iraq: they’ve been looking in the wrong place.

Seen @ MetaFilter

maybe there’s a reason I don’t get the political discourse

Orcinus

One of the important things I learned as a cops-and-courts reporter lo these many years ago was something about crime victims: That they often make themselves vulnerable to violent crimes because they are not prepared to deal with people who are sociopathic, or who exhibit antisocial or narcissistic personality disorders, or in some cases outright psychoses. That they project their own normalcy onto these other people — they really cannot believe that someone else would act in a way substantially different from their own decent, sane base of operations.

In a way, I think this is a large part of what is happening to our national body politic: People in key positions of media and conservative ideological prominence (Coulter, Limbaugh, even Bill O’Reilly) exhibit multiple symptoms of being pathological sociopaths, either antisocial or narcissistic, or a combination of both. And not only their fellow participants in the conservative movement, but mainstream centrists and even liberals are unable to figure out that there is something seriously wrong with these people because they are projecting their own normalcy onto them. They cannot perceive because they cannot believe — that, above all, these people are not operating within a framework guided by the boundaries of basic decency that restrain most of us.

They are political muggers out of control — and as their rhetoric encourages both the figurative and physical elimination of liberals, they become ever more likely to actually tread into regions of real violence.

Lifted wholesale from Rebecca’s Pocket.

strong stuff, but worth reading. I found the radio program a few days ago on liberal talk radio so frustrating: it shouldn’t be a race to the bottom. Should it?

On a related note, my wife gave up on reading Al Franken’s book on the right: it was making her too angry to see what they were getting away with. Liberal media, my foot . . .

want a job? ask me about it before you apply

Job Listing

The (heavily revised) listing to fill my old job was just posted this week . . . .

Primary responsibilities. The person in this position will work independently to manage the programs and projects that fulfill the goals of the Shidler Center.

1. Manage finances and seek new funding sources
2. Oversee administration
3. Direct Shidler Center outreach programs to members of the legal and business communities and academic communities
4. Work with student editors of electronic journal
5. Manage Relations with Shidler Center Advisory Board; annual Gala
6. Manage relations with students and faculty
7. Oversee Shidler Center marketing and public relations

I’m omitted the detail for each numbered item, but I’m struck by how much “managing”, “overseeing” and “directing” there is. I wonder who will actually do all the *work* that needs to be managed, overseen, and directed? Who is going to do the rewriting of letters that no one could be bothered to run through spell-check or even read for clarity? Who is going to read through all the email and write up meeting agendas for weekly staff meetings that no one will adhere to anyway? Who is going to try repeatedly and unsuccessfully to get the administration of this center off of yellow legal pads to something that pays lip service to “law, commerce and technology?” And the description of the position as one where someone will “work independently” is laughable: the successful candidate will be interrupted and harried at every turn by two academics who are unsuited for anything else.

It’s interesting that the very idea of reclassifying/re-defining the position as professional staff or improving the compensation was well nigh impossible not too long ago . . . .

Bah, good luck and good riddance.
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Apple hardware innards, illustrated

APPLE MANUALS

I have lucky enough to come across a slot loading CD burner for an iMac — something my iMac lacks — but installing it promises to be a challenge. The iMac is not known for its user-serviceable nature . . . . I’m sure I could get it open but it might not look showroom-new when I got it back together.

But a quick Google search turned up this fantastic and comprehensive resource of “take apart” guides. The one for my particular iMac is 400+ pages and chock full o’ pictures and detailed instructions. I feel my anxiety melting away . . . .

A great way to get a look at the inside of the Xserve or other desirable hardware . . . . .

the Soviets, er, Russians are coming

DEAN: Iran is a more complex problem because the problem support as clearly verifiable as it is in North Korea. Also, we have less-fewer levers much the key, I believe, to Iran is pressure through the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union is supplying much of the equipment that Iran, I believe, most likely is using to set itself along the path of developing nuclear weapons. We need to use that leverage with the Soviet Union and it may require us to buying the equipment the Soviet Union was ultimately going to sell to Iran to prevent Iran from them developing nuclear weapons. That is also a country that must not be allowed to develop nuclear weapons much the key to all this is foresight. Let’s act now so we don’t have to have a confrontation which may result in force, which would be very disastrous in the case of North Korea and might be disastrous in the case of Iran.

If it was a momentary goof, I’d be OK with this, but three occurences in a single answer, when he referred to the former Soviet Union previously, is too much.

From MetaFilter . . .

building tcltk from source didn’t go so well

[/Developer/Sources/TclTk/tcl/unix]# make TCL_LIBRARY="/System/Library/Tcl/${Version}"
tclsh ./../tools/genStubs.tcl ./../generic \
./../generic/tcl.decls ./../generic/tclInt.decls
make: tclsh: Command not found
make: *** [../generic/tclStubInit.c] Error 127

I’m not sure how the process can invoke tclsh with any hope of it working, since that’s what we’re building.

Perhaps I can just pull this off an OS X 10.1 upgrade CD . . . . .

inside the iPod

The Guts of a New Machine

Inside the iPod are bits and pieces made by a mix of companies but kept shrouded by Apple beneath a veil of nondisclosure agreements.

I read a similar article a few months back that I thought I had referenced here. Steve Jobs’ inflammatory quotes are always worth reading . . . .

<UPDATE> This is the article I read before on how the iPod came together.