The Consultant And The Shepherd

This made the rounds at work.

A shepherd was herding his flock in a remote pasture when suddenly a brand-new BMW advanced out of a dust cloud towards him. The driver, a young man in a Brioni suit, Gucci shoes, Ray Ban sunglasses and YSL tie, leans out the window and asks the shepherd: “If I tell you exactly how many sheep you have in your flock, will you give me one?”

The shepherd looks at the man, obviously a yuppie, then looks at his peacefully grazing flock and calmly answers: “Sure, why not.” The yuppie parks his car, whips out his Dell notebook computer, connects it to his AT&T cell phone, surfs to a NASA page on the internet, where he calls up a GPS satellite navigation system to get an exact fix on his location which he then feeds to another NASA satellite that scans the area in an ultra-high-resolution photo.

Then the young man opens the digital photo in Adobe Photoshop and exports it to an image processing facility in Hamburg, Germany. Within seconds, he receives an email on his Palm Pilot that the image has been processed and the data stored. He then accesses a MS-SQL database through an ODBC connected Excel spreadsheet with hundreds of complex formulas. He uploads all of this data via an email on his Blackberry and, after a few minutes, receives a response. Finally, he prints out a full-color, 150-page report on his hi-tech, miniaturized HP LaserJet printer and turns to the shepherd and says: “You have exactly 1586 sheep.”

“That’s right. Well, I guess you can take one of my sheep” says the shepherd. He watches the young man select one of the animals and looks on amused as the young man stuffs it into the trunk of his car. Then the shepherd says to the young man: “Hey, if I can tell you exactly what your business is, will you give me back my sheep?”

The young man thinks about it for a second and then says, “Okay, why not?”

“You’re a consultant.” says the shepherd.

“Wow! That’s correct,” says the yuppie, “but how did you guess that?”

“No guessing required.” answered the shepherd. “You showed up here even though nobody called you; you want to get paid for an answer I already knew; to a question I never asked; and you don’t know crap about my business. Now give me back my dog.”

Looking Back On Blogging: 2003

I’m working on a Blog recap for 2003. As the five readers of mt.net know, it’s been a busy year with lots to cover. I’d hoped to have it ready tonight, but its taken much longer for me to assemble than I thought.

Look for it tomorrow.

Almanacs: We Put The “Al” in Al-Qaida

The FBI, that great protector of our fatherland …er, homeland, has now put out a BOLO on people carrying almanacs. No kidding.

The FBI noted that use of almanacs or maps may be innocent, “the product of legitimate recreational or commercial activities.” But it warned that when combined with suspicious behavior — such as apparent surveillance — a person with an almanac “may point to possible terrorist planning.”

I wish I was making this up. I really do. It has the look of satire to it. Something you’d read in The Onion or something. But its true.

Of course, the world is once again laughing at us, and for good reason.

Remember on Election Day the who it was who “raised” the profile of America in the world’s eyes (hint: he’s a miserable failure).

[UPDATE:] Fark has a thread on this now. Even Farkers can’t find anything funny about this.

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Crossing Paths

Two critters normally not seen around these parts were spotted here at Buckingham Palace. One was a mouse, of the dead variety, who decided to die underneath my car in the garage. The other was a black cat, seen today.

The mouse is the same critter who decided to move in with us a few weeks ago. It made its introduction in the attic above our bedroom around 11 PM at night. After that, it wandered underneath the windowsill in our den. The house cleric put out a fatwa on its life and weapons of mass destruction were then deployed. The mission appears to have been accomplished.

The cat was seen wandering through our backyard this morning. I had recently done battle with our birdseed-eating squirrels and half-expected to see a squirrel sneaking through the yard. The cat didn’t seem to want to stick around to say hello, however. It raced through a hole under the fencegate once I got close to it. A few days earlier and that cat could have feasted on fresh mouse.

Two animals normally not normally seen around here. Wonder what’s going on. Maybe the floodwaters are rising or something.

Weatherboy

I spent yesterday installing a mast I’d been meaning to mount for a TV antenna and my new weather station instruments. They now sit six feet above my house, gathering each’s respective data.

I also got the info into my server, Maestro, using Wx200d. I went with Wx200d because it is the least-neglected project of the three I mentioned earlier, having last been updated at the end of 2002. Then again, I suppose its possible for an application to actually be FINISHED some day. Maybe Wx200d is there. One thing I need to fix is its reliance on PostGRES. No MySQL support yet.

There is also a nice looking GTK client for Wx200d called GWK. No *ed Hat packages available for it yet, though I can remedy that.

As I was working on mounting the equipment yesterday, I saw the weather station predicting clouds for today. Since it was sunny at the time, I thought the thing needed calibrating. When I woke up today, though, it was overcast – just like the weather station indicated. Kewl.

Kick ASSP

I just upgraded the spam filter I use, ASSP to its latest version. I love ASSP because it intercepts mail before it gets to my MTA (Postfix in my case. Also works for sendmail, Exchange, etc., etc.).

Just for fun, I had it report its progress. Here are the stats:

As of Sat Dec 27 14:41:31 2003 the mail logfile shows:
32141 proxy / smtp connections
0 were dropped for attempted relays (0.0% of total).

29452 messages, 15402 were spam (52.3%) in 173 days
for 170.2 messages per day or 89.0 spams per day
2239 additions to / verifications of the whitelist (12.9 per day)
8364 were judged spam by the bayesian filter (54.3% of spam)
6978 were to spam addresses (45.3% of spam)
60 were rejected for executable attachments (0.4% of spam)
677 were sent from local clients (4.8% of nonspam)
11738 were from whitelisted addresses (83.5% of nonspam)
0 messages were passed to SPAMLOVERs
1635 were ok after a bayesian check (11.6% of nonspam)
0 addresses are on the whitelist

0 hits on the blacklist
0 resulted in spam (0.0% of Bayesian spam, 0.0% of blacklist hits)
0 resulted in non-spam (0.000% of blacklist hits)

It shows that if it weren’t for ASSP, I’d be getting 90 spam messages per day. Thanks, ASSP!

Rulez is Tiger Direct

I just got back from the Tiger Direct store on Capital Boulevard. Seems like everywhere I looked there were deals. I picked up a loaded, refurbished eMachines T2615 for $479. Normally I build my machines, but I figured I couldn’t build one for any cheaper than that.

Other deals include $20 wireless cards. I picked up a D-Link DWL-650+ (again, refurbished) for $29.99. After the $10 mail-in rebate, it becomes mine for $20. I almost spent $60 for the same thing at Blue And Yellow Box Store ™ just a week ago. The only quibble with that is that D-Link seems to be the only brand of wireless they carry. All in all, no big deal.

According to the list of Tiger Direct outlet stores, Raleigh is in rare company. The next time I need computer stuff, I’ll check them before going to Blue And Yellow Box Store ™.

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Merry Christmas

Well, Santa was good to the Turner household. Highlights include a nice bracelet for Kelly, a basketball goal for Hallie, and a weather station for yours truly. It is a WM918 from Oregon Scientific.

There’s a funny story about how the weather station arrived. Kelly ordered it for me from an online retailer and it was delivered via FedEx in time for Christmas and all was well. Not long after that, the doorbell rang again. A confused UPS man stood on the porch, delivering a FedEx package out of his Ryder truck. Kelly then opened it to find – you guessed it – another weather station! Boy, Kelly really outdid herself this year.

I’m checking into some Linux-based weather software, like WX200, WX200d, or the Star Trek-looking Wx/Net, to help archive the weather data. Before long, I’ll be boring everyone I know with arcane weather statistics! W00t!

Santa, Bring Me A New Fridge

There’s nothing mechanically wrong with our refrigerator. It’s working better than ever, actually. The only problem is that it’s too small. There’s not enough room for all the holiday photos we’ve been sent.

There isn’t an inch of room left on our freezer door, the only “Buggle-safe” place to put them. And we’re all out of magnets, too. It stands as a wonderful testament to all of the friends and family we have.

A heartfelt thanks to everyone who has become part of our lives. We are incredibly fortunate to have you all. Santa could never bring anything to equal what our friendships and family mean to us.

Here’s wishing you a wonderful holiday season. May each of your freezers be equally full!

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