“One humanoid escapee, an android on the run…”
everyday glory No Comments »Friday
Working in a coal mine
Going down, down, down
Working in a coal mine
Whoop I wanna sit down…
Today was the last day of the work week… and the beginning of a three-day weekend. Hoo-AH! Not a bad day. Went to late coffee/breakfast with Jess, Jen, Jen’s friend Michelle, and Adrian and saw two quality skullets! It was great. If only I had taken the camera into the restaurant…
NPR/PRI Stories
The World: Historian Interview on President Bush’s Plan to Attack Iraq
The World: Arab-Americans
The World: Swaziland Children
The double-hit of famine and AIDS has put the people of Swaziland in terrible danger. Swaziland urgently needs help to avoid mass starvation. And it has the second highest AIDS rate in the world. These two problems, hunger and AIDS, combine to create a third. With AIDS killing many Swazi parents, the children are left not only hungry, but in charge. The United Nations estimates that children now run up to 10% of the households in Swaziland. Reporter Beth Schmidt visits one home in Swaziland with six kids, and no parents.
TotN-Science Friday: Sustainable Development Summit / Organ Transplantation
TotN-Science Friday: Robots / Mechanical Life
All Things Considered: International Reaction to the U.S.-Iraq Standoff
All Things Considered: California Girls (commentary)
All Things Considered: Pill Splitting
All Things Considered: NC Senate Races ::: listens to “Hey Jesse” :::
All Things Considered: 24-Hour Party People
All Things Considered: Trainspotting
Something that I thought of during the “Historian Interview” on The World: It seems to me like a Minority Report-like scenario. The President is talking about taking a pre-emptive measure against a perceived (possible) threat; this sounds like the Pre-Crime Division from Minority. Julia and I talked about this and she asked me who or what would represent the what roles if one was to extrapolate the US plan to attack into the plot of Minority Report. This is what I came up with:
- The Bush administration (as an entity) would be analogous to the Pre-Crime Division.
- Saddam Hussein would be the suspect.
- President Bush, the people of Iraq and Kuwait, and the United Nations would be the precogs. Who would be the precog that would give the ‘minority report?’ I’m not sure… but I think that as there seems to be a bit of a mutual standoff between the U.S. and Iraq, that it would be the U.N. (…but I could be mistaken).
I saw this on Slashdot last night. It started out as an article about Verizon switching their programmers from the M$ Office (and other M$ programs) to OpenOffice.
Some of the points made were quite interesting; some were just funny. VERY funny. This was one of my favorites, not so much for the post as for its response:
MS Office ‘Faster’ then StarOffice(Score:3, Insightful)
by Cy Guy on Thursday August 15, @04:56PM (#4079260)From the article: “Microsoft’s studies of the 11 most frequently used operations in Microsoft Office took on average 2.5 times less time than in StarOffice [amazon.com], he said.”
Okay let’s try to list the 11 ‘most frequently used operations’ for word processing: Cut, Copy, Paste, File Open, File Save, Print, Bold, Change Font Size, Change Font Color, Create Bullets, Create Table.
I’ll grant that Word is great for the last two, and is pretty quick at them. Plus they are functions that actually take more than a split second. But the other nine are not and can easily be done in seconds on either program. And when you then consider that MSWord Bullets and tables don’t act the way you want them to act probably at least half the time, any savings from creating them quickly is lost.
(Note: my list is based on the common sense assumption that MS didn’t include plain old typing in their list).
And here is the response:
You are obviously a neophyte user. For those of us familiar with MS Office, the 11 most common operations in MS Office are:
- making the paperclip go away;
- acknowledging that converting an RTF email with no pictures in it to plain text format will cause you to lose any pictures;
- making the paperclip go away;
- deleting the extra 432 blank columns and rows that Excel just inserted into your spreadsheet;
- making the damn paper clip go away;
- figuring out what cool effects to insert into your Powerpoint presentation;
- condemning the damn paper clip to bell&whistle hell;
- repairing your Word document after accidentally confirming that you want to update the style you just attempted to apply to some text;
- placing a square of black electricians tape over the lower right corner of your screen;
- propogating a virus to all the entries in your Outlook address book;
- taping little faces to all the paperclips in your drawer and then ripping their heads off.
Peace.
