Rejoining The Band (Sort Of)

Today is the day I rejoin my former employer. Well, for all practical purposes, anyway. I’m contracting there through the end of the year. I’m there with a growing crew of former employees, all working as contractors to bring the company and product back to life. My responsibilities include nearly everything under the sun, but with a focus of support and sales engineering. Should be fun.

There is lots to do, though so much still exists that it will be undoubtedly easier to get things running smoothly again. Its not like starting from scratch.

in Uncategorized | 94 Words | Comment

Talk To Me, Asterisk

After working on other things for a while, I finally got around to figuring out how to write custom Asterisk scripts. It turns out I wasn’t reading the environment variables before launching into my perl script. As soon as I added a simple loop to pipe it to /dev/null, the script started talking as it should.

Another half hour or so and I’ll have Asterisk reading me the weather stats from my weather station. Another hour and I’ll have it telling me if an accident is blocking my commute. Now the power of computer telephony integration is mine. Bwahahahahahaha!
Continue reading

in Uncategorized | 100 Words | Comment

Stern Gets Sirius

Howard Stern has the much-anticipated jump to satellite radio. I don’t agree with a lot of what Howard says or does, but I do believe he has a right to do it. On the radio, no less.

This might be what it takes for me to get a satellite radio subscription. Give ’em hell, Howard!

On a related note, he and his staff earn $80 million dollars? Good god.

A World Without Wires, Or At Least A Neighborhood

I’ve been reading and rereading the latest Cringley column, describing a Canadian Linux user who has hooked up his whole neighborhood using 802.11 and Linux. He has become his neighborhood’s cable TV company, phone company, and Internet company, all legally and using Linux. Fascinating stuff!

I would love to replicate it here, if possible. I’ve got the know-how in Linux, wireless, and voice-over-IP. I’ve got a neighborhood of 500+ homes. I suppose all I’m really lacking now is time. If I built things one piece at a time, I could get it up and running.

I think I’ll start with my immediate neighbors, many of whom are computer geeks such as myself. I’ll let y’all know how the project progresses.

Courting Trouble

The mail brings news that I’ve been tapped for jury duty. Unfortunately, the day I report (Oct. 25th) is two days before our second child is born.

Seeing how I’ve not that the chance before, I would like to serve on a jury. It’s federal court, so it might be an interesting case. But the timing just couldn’t be worse.
Continue reading

in Uncategorized | 113 Words | Comment

Watch What You Feed Your Head

Occasionally, I’ll wander by a late-evening TV show that just happens to be on in the house. Usually it’s a crime drama of some sort, with violence (implicit, of not shown) and other twisted behavior being depicted. I wind up having to leave the room because the world on the screen greatly disturbs me. A viewer could watch that and easily begin believing that’s the world they live in. Murderers and sickos on every streetcorner. Don’t go out unless you’re packing heat.

A study was just released which confirms my suspicions. The Ohio State study showed that crime dramas increase viewers fear of crime, with viewers often ranking it the top issue in the country. It seems that somewhere in their minds, the viewers forgot that what they were watching was fiction.

Television is a powerful medium. It speaks to many corners of your mind at once. While your logical side might be repeating “this is only a drama,” your emotional side is screaming “head for the hills!”

Part of the problem arises from television’s dual role in providing news and entertainment. It’s gotten too difficult to tell them apart. Crimes may get mentioned in newscasts, but rarely are they depicted, as they are in dramas. Which are you more likely to remember, what someone told you, or what you saw “for your own eyes?” Movies don’t have this problem because no one gets their news from the theatre anymore (unless they’re watching a Michael Moore movie, God help them).

But Michael Moore did have one thing right, at least in his movie Bowling for Columbine. He asked “why does America have all this violence?” He highlighted to all the guns, which raised the hackles of gun rights advocates, but then deflated this argument by showing how calm, peaceful Canada is more armed than we are.

So its not the guns. Its the fear. Tell someone that murders and rapes and robberies could happen to her and eventually she’ll start believing it. It doesn’t matter that the odds are incredibly small. Your beliefs color your world. A safe world will appear dangerous if you believe it to be.

The next time you sit down to watch a crime drama, ask yourself: is this the kind of world I live in?

SpaceShipOne Completes X-Prize Requirements

History was made this morning as SpaceShipOne unofficially completed the requirements of the X Prize today, becoming the first private spacecraft to go to space twice within two weeks. Pilot (er, Astronaut) Brian Binnie took the spacecraft up to an altitude of 368,000 feet (112 km) and enjoyed the dazzling view of Earth from space for a few minutes before gliding his way down to the Mojave airport.

Truly amazing to watch. Space travel for the masses is on its way.

Cranking Through Another Day

I spent most of today working on the attic flooring project. Got materials, cut a few boards, but not much to show for today.

Had a fun walk and time in the park with my family. That was the highlight of my day. This afternoon, we got invited over to our neighbors house for a cookout. Hallie and I went over while Kelly took a break. It was great meeting our neighbors. Seems this neighborhood is coming together, after all.

On my way to a very last minute trip to Lowes, I walked in the almost-locked door just as my former boss at a former job was walking out of it. Though I was angry for a long time at his “letting me go,” I was actually friendly to him, being the first to put my hand out to shake.

Afterward, it really surprised me how easily I’d put the whole thing behind me. At the start of the weekend, I removed that job from my resume. At the end of the weekend, I discovered I’ve removed it from my emotional resume, too.

Busy Day

In the last 24 hours, Kelly and I have:

Cooked a nice hamburger dinner.
Emptied two bookcases.
Moved one bookcase downstairs and one upstairs.
Placed close to a dozen boxes of books on our new shelves.
Moved those boxes to the garage.
Slept late.
Cooked a big breakfast.
Filled an empty bookcase with lots of pictures!
Set up the bassinet in our sitting room.
Installed the infant car seat in the car.
Danced with Hallie to Bob Dylan’s “Mr. Tamborine Man.”
Moved the sprinklers around the yard.
Unsuccessfully attempted to fix our leaky hose spool.
Burned three CDROMs of Fedora Core 2.
Wired up a new telephone line to our office.
Took out all the recycling.
Watched the N.C. State game.
Went shopping for holiday decorations.
Decorated the front porch for Halloween.
Cleaned a grease spot out of the carpet.
Vacuumed the house.
Cleaned the cat box.
Assembled a portable USB drive.
Crawled from one end of the attic to the other to fix ventilation.
Mapped out trusses to support flooring in the attic.

I’m sure I’m leaving something significant out, but that is a decent recap. Not a bad 24 hours, eh? Tomorrow, I finish the attic flooring job, upgrade Maestro, my server, and take a swing at some weekend work for a client.

It’s been fun getting these things checked off our list. Still got a bunch more to do before The Kid arrives.