• So, you may have noticed

    So, you may have noticed that yesterday’s posts didn’t show up after a while. That’s because my old hosting company went and got themselves bought.

  • It takes forever to format

    It takes forever to format a drive. Yes, I’m actually doing it. I am toasting my hard drive as I speak. My Windows desktop is getting a nice little refresh that will hopefully fix my phantom crashes and odd behaviors (I mean, other than the odd behavior built into Windows). Wish me luck. I hope I didn’t forget to backup anything important.

  • Since I talk about them

    Since I talk about them all the time, I’ve decided to post a breakdown of the machines I have at work. Here you go, in no particular order:

    • Dell Precision 220 – 733mhz P3 / 20gb HD / 256 mb RAM – Win2k

    • Dell Precision 550 – Dual Xeon 1.7ghz / Dual 36gb SCSI hd / 1gb RAM – RedHat 7.2 (this is the uber-box)

    • Apple Powermac G4 – 867mhz G4 / 60gb hd / 512mb RAM – OS X

    • Apple Powerbook G4 – 550mhz G4 / 20gb hd / 256mb RAM – OS X

    • Sun Ultra 10 – 400mhz UltraSparc / 9gb hd / 512mb RAM – Solaris 7 (which I sorely need to upgrade)

    Why do I need so many machines? I live in a strange inbetween world. I work on frontends for a ton of different products that have to work in pretty much every browser, which explains the Macs and Windows machines. I also write a lot of code for log-crunching and other weird on-going maintenance type things, which explains the uber-box and the Sun box. So, see, it all makes sense when you get down to it. That, and I love collecting hardware, especially hardware that work will pay for.

  • I feel so geekily accomplished.

    I feel so geekily accomplished. I’m installing GNOME2 on the uber-box and have already completed the schema for a new project (reporting – not exciting). What else will I be able to accomplish today? Who knows!!?? It’s not even 11! Maybe I’ll rewrite everything in Java (which I need to learn). Maybe I’ll invent a better velco. Maybe I’ll make sense of the mysteries of the universe and plot a course to the stars. Maybe I’ll get some more caffeine…

  • Jen and I watched Married

    Jen and I watched Married in America on A&E yesterday. If you haven’t heard of it, it’s a documentary by Michael Apted of 9 couples about to get married. It followed them through the final days of preparation, up to the wedding, and in a couple cases, a few days after the wedding. Now, that wouldn’t be so interesting except that they’re going to follow up with the couple every 18 months (Mr. Apted also did the amazing 7up series of films).

    It was striking how different each of the couples were, yet how familiar their problems were. Jen and I sat there saying, “They’ll make it,” and “Oh, they definitely won’t.” We ended up staying up until 1 in the morning talking about all of our married friends and how we see a lot of the problems we saw in the couples in the film in our friends. We also talked about how extremely lucky we are. We’ve been married for four and a half years (exactly 4.5 years yesterday), and while we’ve had our problems, we’ve figured them out and moved on. Some of the couples seemed to hold on to the little problems and bring them up in the interviews, which wasn’t a good sign.

    I think my favorite thing about the documentary was they didn’t choose all well-off white-toothed yuppie couples, like you see in A Wedding Story. They ran the gamut, and that was great to see. They had:

    • the lower middle class interracial couple from Long Island: who I think will make it, they just have it together

    • the Southern fratboy/sorority girl couple: who I guarantee will not make it

    • the mixed-faith Filipino Christian/New Jersey Jewish Guy: who I don’t think will make it, but I’m not betting against them

    • the yuppies: who I’m not sure about

    • the Southern African American couple: I’m not so sure about them either… he’s got mother issues, but they seem together enough to make it as long as he doesn’t wig out when he realizes it

    • The recovering alchoholics / ex-con: Surprisingly, I think they’ll make it in their own way. They hit rock bottom, and are hanging in there. I think they have a great shot at it.

    • The Latino Couple: They’re definitely not going to make it. I didn’t watch the whole thing, but he’s on a major rebound, and she’s not handling it all that well.

    • The Irish Catholic Cop / Columbian first generation American: They were the cutest couple, and after the first couple I listed, I think they have the best chance of making it. They logical and together, but you can tell they have a deep affection for each other, and their families. They’re on the same path, which I think is probably the most important part.

    • The Lesbian Couple: I feel bad, but man, this couple could not have been more of a stereotype. Let’s see, one lady has a she-mullet and is a corrections officer. The other is a P.E. teacher!! They both play softball, dress alike and are a butch as they wanna be. Do I think they’ll make it? Yeah, they remind me of my old boss in Tucson and her partner. Steady, unflappable and determined. I think they’ll have a long, uneventful, happy life together. I almost wish they would have chosen a couple that didn’t quite fit so snugly into the assumptions everyone has about lesbian couples.

    The film’s very well done and if it’s on again, I would heartily recommend it. If you’re married, it’s a great jumping off point for discussion, and I think Jen and I both saw pieces of ourselves in most of the couples (me, I feel I’m just like Toni, but that’s a whole different story).

  • I just don’t get the

    I just don’t get the world at the moment. There are days when I think I have it all figured out, and others when it just makes no sense and I feel completely clueless. Today is one of those days.

  • Don’t you think Jesus would

    Don’t you think Jesus would help out instead of standing there looking at the cows while old Farmer Jim slung hay?

  • Things I Learned In The Hall On The Way To The Bathroom

    Things I learned in the hall on the way to the bathroom:

    • Marshmallows originally came from the root of a plant called, oddly enough, the marsh mallow.
    • Instead of using marsh mallow to make them now, our modern marshmallows are made with gelatin.
    • It is very easy to make homemade marshmallows. I will, of course, try to get my hands on the recipe and post it for your mallow-making pleasure.
    • The ancient Egyptians made marshmallows, as did the Native Americans (although they usually made Fluff instead of cutting them up.
    • Homemade marshmallows are bouncier and fluffier than those stale marshmallows you buy in the store (I know, because I got to eat one).
  • The Words Are Escaping Me

    The words are escaping me today. I’ve done a lot of work without really feeling like it. I’ve talked to a lot of people without a lot of interest in the conversation. So, I’m not going to bore you with more things of no interest… be back later when I wake up.

  • I’ve been an opionated little

    I’ve been an opionated little bugger this week, haven’t I?