Fox News had this little gem regarding VP Joe Biden.
The headline and teaser text imply that the Vice-President is stupid for refering to the “number” of a web site.
Web sites really are numbers behind the scenes. www.foxnews.com reports several differnt numeric IP addresses (64.209.118.32 and 209.2.148.104 for example). The dotted notation also actually translates to a 32-bit number … but virtually no one actually uses them. The Domain Name System (DNS) translates strings like recovery.gov to the appropriate number for actually moving the traffic to the web site.
To be fair to Fox News, the article behind the headline and teaser does mention that web sites do actually have numeric addresses.
Last night one of the more interesting software development sites, stackoverflow.com, had a problem with a user spamming hundreds of bogus questions into the site.
Fox News is a never-ending source of entertainment. Take today’s leading story (02-19-2009 at 11:45 Pacific) that the wire taps from the Elliot Spitzer call-girl scandal were ordered to be released by a judge.
Did Fox News really mean that “Taps” should be played? I don’t think anyone deserving of “Taps” has died. Rather, they probably just were over zealous in abbreviating the word “wiretaps.”
Recently I’ve been battling with my Vista system refusing to go to sleep when it wasn’t being used. When Vista was fist installed it would sleep just fine, but after some unknown period of time and some sequence of events it would stop. This system has been installed four times … the factory original install, two wipe-and-rebuild cycles due to my error in installing older programs that weren’t Vista-compatible, and one time due to failed hardware.
One of the symptoms of the problem was that the system would start to sleep and then immediately wake back up. When it did this it often would cause problems with USB devices (like the all-important keyboard). The system would no longer recognize the USB devices and would have to be power-cycled as a simple reboot would not bring back the affected USB devices.
Finding good information on what was causing the problem was difficult. There’s lots of information online. But it is all hard to determine if really applied to the situation. In the last round of searching that I did I discovered that Vista ships with a command-line program, powercfg, that, amoung it’s other capabilities is the capacity to report the event that caused the last “wake” to take place. Opening a command propmpt and running the powercfg -lastwake command reveals the device that caused the event.
I always run an administrative user, so I haven’t checked whether or not this program requires administrative privileges. (I know, it’s bad to run as an administrative user all the time. Such is my life.)
Running the command revealed that the NIC was causing the computer to wake from sleep. That seems strange as I didn’t tell Vista to wake due to NIC activity. I hadn’t installed any programs that would (or should) have changed that. There are no new devices on the network that would have probed the Vista system causing it to wake.
The standard power management configuration application (Control Panel -> Power Options), oddly enough, does NOT have any setting related to allowing activity on the NIC to wake the system.
I had to actually bring up the properties dialog for the NIC and disable it there.
Switch to the Power Mangement tab an uncheck the “Allow this device to wake the computer option.”
Once done, this solved my problem. Hopefully, this will help someone solve a similar problem more quickly.
I’ve been away from this project for a bit while battling a pinched nerve in my neck. It caused pain in my shoulder which makes working on projects like this difficult. The project could also aggravate the problem as well.
The ninth step is now complete. This step built the corners of the center of the building building.
The step took about two hours and 30 minutes to complete.
This step also led to the completion of the building’s walls.
I’m now able to setup the entire base of the Taj Mahal.
When you see all of these pieces assembled you do really begin to get a sense of just how large the structure is in LEGOs. All that remains now is to complete the roof and place the dome.
This post is more of “collecting” yet another example of a “free” and “helpful” browser toolbar that could be installed than a rant. I think that point was fairly clear the last time.
The interesting thing about this one is that Sun is offering to install the MSN toolbar. The last time I posted on this subject Sun was installing the Google toolbar. What gives? Why the change of heart Sun?
There have been too many entries on “comment spam” to continue reciting them all each time I add a new posting.
This one was just too funny. I mean, seriously, do they really expect that a blog that moderates comments is going to let something like this slide?
The image above is just a sampling of the comment. This comment had hundreds of lines listing certain name brand erectile dysfunction medications. The hope is that the robot or zombie that is spreading this garbage runs into a blog that automatically accepts all comments.
The eighth step is now complete. This step built the main sides of the center building.
This step took about 5 hours to complete. Four sections were completed at the same time. But, I was also moving slowly as I was distracted by the movie my wife was watching (The Muppet Movie) and later by dumb cheesey movie that was on SciFi (The Immortal Voyage of Captain Drake).
The last part of this step also resulted in the first “disaster” in assembling this model. The dark grey grill and tile work that surrounds the face of the alcove uses SNOT (studs not on top) construction. It is a very tight fit to get that assembly in place. On one I pressed too hard and blew the side of the backing structure off. Fortunately it was very easy to loosen things up a bit, get the blown out pieces back in place, and put the grill and tile work in place.
Darcie decided that she’d had enough of the ’98 Plymouth Neon. It was old, it leaked water into the inside, and had recently blown an engine (the replacement worked fine, though). So, we went shopping …
While she would have liked to get another Toyota Prius (mine is in the background) or a new truck to replace our aging Dodge Dakota QuadCab at the same time as the Neon, she decided that something with smaller than a truck, with better gasa mileage than a truck, and a smaller monthly payment would be a better idea. The Yaris fits that bill nicely.