News comes today that the N&O cut 78 positions today.
I’m going to miss my daily newspaper when it’s gone.
News comes today that the N&O cut 78 positions today.
I’m going to miss my daily newspaper when it’s gone.
This is just shocking, I tell you. Shocking! Who would’ve thought it?
Bone tests on teenage Chinese athletes have shown that thousands had faked their age, often in order to keep competing in junior events.
A study in the southern province of Guangdong found one in five had lied, with some discovered to be seven years older than their registered age.
On another note, maybe I need to have a “China” category on MT.Net.
Yesterday’s space shuttle launch finally motivated me to dust off my DVB-S card and set up satellite reception in our new home. I’d put it off for almost a year, thinking the tree cover in our back yard was too extensive to find a good shot at the sky. It turns out I discovered a very nice spot right on our back deck, so Travis and I spent a little time building a temporary stand for a dish, aiming it, and threading the cable back into our network closet. After a few duh moments where I shook off the cobwebs covering my knowledge of DVB-S, I got reception of the NASA channel – only three hours after the shuttle launched! Better late than never.
Even so, I wasn’t able to get Myth to pull down video for some reason. The dvb-utils applications can tune (and capture) the streams just fine, but Myth just shows a blank screen – even though it can tune the channel and see a signal from the transponder. I don’t know what else I can tinker with to get Myth working with it but I’ll keep hacking at it.
The total lack of sunshine this weekend has made things look darker than they usually do, but I swear this non-stop rain is doing more than that. I swear I can practically see the leaves popping out on the trees and bushes. I think last week’s warm spell coupled with this rain is waking nature from its long winter slumber.
Our Netflix movie lats night was Double Indemnity, the 1944 film noir classic starring Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwick, and Edward G. Robinson.
Wow, what a brainy, clever movie. Sixty-five years after it was made, it still stands up. Well, aside from watching the main character stop at a drive-in for a bottle of beer, and the mention that a mansion with a commanding view of Los Angeles costs almost $30,000.
The ACC Tournament started today and practically the whole office was consumed with watching it. Someone sent out a link to an Internet stream of it but I didn’t bother clicking on it, thinking it would be one of those horrible, unwatchable “buffering … buffering…” experiences
Then a co-worker announced he had it going in his cube. I walked over to see the game on TV clear as day.
“Where’s the antenna?” I asked him.
“There’s no antenna,” he replied. “That’s from the Internet stream.
Whoa! I couldn’t believe my eyes. It seemed pixel-perfect.
It turns out the streaming was done by a company called Swarmcast, using a swarm-type technology that predates BitTorrent. Unlike BitTorrent, Swarmcast allows viewers to watch their shows instantly rather than having to wait for the whole download. It was an impressive demonstration that had me marveling the rest of the afternoon.
Interestingly, Swarmcast began life as an open-source application, and Boing Boing’s Cory Doctorow was onboard in its early existence. Neither one applies today, however. I scoured the Internets today in search of Swarmcast’s once-GPLed code but could find no trace of it.
I’m now looking at the apps mentioned in Wikipedia’s Peercasting page to see what other tools might offer the same experience. This “swarm streaming” stuff has me hooked!
It’s funny. We’re in the midst of a recession, unemployment in the state has reached 9.7%, and I don’t have a permanent job, and yet still I found myself daydreaming of the Good Life today. It wasn’t something out of reach, but actually something waiting for me. Maybe a glimpse into the future.
In spite of the uncertainty around me, I’ve got a pretty good life now. I have to say I’m happy with myself, my family life, and the things I’m doing. Could things be better? Sure, but I’m not one to look past the wonderful things I have now.
Remember when I said it would be interesting to see if the Chinese Navy was grown up? Looks like they’re still playing games.
Update: Picture removed until I can figure out how to get WP to resize it properly. Sigh.
Carowinds. To a 16-year-old it was the ideal job: I spent a few hours a day serving guests and in exchange I could ride in my offtime all the roller coasters I could stomach. So what if I had to wear a silly-looking uniform, got paid the minimum wage of $3.35 an hour, and had to fill out an income tax return on that measly amount for both North Carolina and South Carolina because the park straddled the state lines, it sounded like a good deal to me!
The year was 1985: the Eighties were in full swing. We had lived in Charlotte for two years. Mom pointed out an ad in the paper for a Carowinds job fair and my brother and I interviewed. He got hired to work in a restaurant and I got hired as a photographer putting people’s pictures in magazine covers. We carpooled the long way out to Carowinds.
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Tonight I wrote the first of many posts about the places I’ve worked. I’ve worked so many dadgum places that this guarantees I’ll never run out of things to blog about!
I’ll start it off talking about my job at Carowinds – the first job I ever had.