Archive for October, 2008

Team Fortress 2

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

I haven’t played TF2 in a long while, but here are a couple audio files that I have mentioned before, just so y’all knows what I’ms talking about:

Heavy – We Must Push Little Cart!

Soldier – Fire, Fire, Fire!

Yes, the heavy sounds quite Russian. Enjoy…

Zune!

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Quite a funny clip from a TV show. Has to do with Microsoft’s Zune MP3 player. Take a look.

Very very

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

 

lol

Another one of those interesting sites. Lol. Have fun!

http://pencilsforsale.info/

speechless

Friday, October 24th, 2008

I come across all sorts of things on the internet – I’m sure you do too – and so many of them just leave me speechless. I was using Stumbleupon and came across this. What leaves me speechless is that someone is smart enough to do that, and that someone smart enough to do that would actually take the time to make something that seems so pointless. Is the idea to clear the board? Or is the idea to show that it is impossible to clear the board? I don’t know, but I’m not going to devote enough time to find out.

You might have missed

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

If you didn’t take church history, you might have missed this tidbit:

George Fox (1624-91)… started his search for spiritual truth in 1643 when he was challenged by two Puritans to a drinking bout in which the one who stopped first would have to pay the bill. In disgust he left the church…

Hmmm…

a cheery little wrap up

Saturday, October 11th, 2008

"The World Bank Group’s computer network — one of the largest repositories of sensitive data about the economies of every nation — has been raided repeatedly by outsiders for more than a year, FOX News has learned. It is still not known how much information was stolen. But sources inside the bank confirm that servers in the institution’s highly-restricted treasury unit were deeply penetrated with spy software last April. Invaders also had full access to the rest of the bank’s network for nearly a month in June and July. In total, at least six major intrusions — two of them using the same group of IP addresses originating from China — have been detected at the World Bank since the summer of 2007, with the most recent breach occurring just last month. In a frantic midnight e-mail to colleagues, the bank’s senior technology manager referred to the situation as an ‘unprecedented crisis.’ In fact, it may be the worst security breach ever at a global financial institution. And it has left bank officials scrambling to try to understand the nature of the year-long cyber-assault, while also trying to keep the news from leaking to the public."

"If you’re going to market your expertise by inviting 1,200 IT professionals to a seminar about securing data and protecting personal information, it’s probably a good idea to protect the personal information of those you invite. On Tuesday, Verizon forgot that advice and blasted each of the 1,200 email addresses to everyone on the list … and they did it 17 times."

"Our wonderful government here in the UK has decided we’re not being surveilled enough, and agreed to spend £12 billion on a programme to monitor every Briton’s phone calls, e-mails, and internet usage. According to various sources, upwards of £1 billion has already been spent on the uber-database. Rationale? Terrorism, of course (no prizes for guessing). Needless to say, not everyone is as happy as Larry over this: Michael Parker pointed out how us Brits are being ’stalked.’ I’m just looking forward to when the data gets lost."

"Seems like nobody can keep their data under wraps these days. On the heels of the World Bank piece about massive penetrations of their servers, the British Ministry of Defense has lost a hard drive with the personal details of 100,000 serving personnel in the British armed forces, and perhaps another 600,000 applicants. This comes on the heels of the MoD losing 658 of its laptops over the past four years and 26 flash drives holding confidential information. Apparently the MoD outsources this stuff to EDS, which is under fire for not being able to confirm that the data was or was not encrypted."

These all seem to go quite well with the quote of the day at the bottom of the slashdot page:

While you recently had your problems on the run, they’ve regrouped and are making another attack.

Microsoft, we love thee

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Ok, what an absolute joke. There has to be a reason for this, I’m just not sure what it is.

Window Search 4.0. You can download it for XP, it’s standard in Vista. It looked pretty neat, and finding files in XP can take forever, so I gave it a shot. First, I couldn’t figure out why it wasn’t indexing anything. Then it took like an hour (or more) to index My Documents. Ok, it was 40,000+ files… and now it doesn’t take forever to search, it only takes half of forever. It might be because it was indexing file contents, not just file names. Indexing contents does indeed take a while.

So, I found Locate32. I thought, well, that’s nice, but I have Search 4.0. But, when I tried to get Search 4.0 to Index my whole Data partition instead of just the My Documents folder, for some reason, my indexed files went from 40,000 to 0 (zero) instead of 53,000. Hmmm. Time to try something else?

Thus, I uninstalled Search 4.0, download and install Locate32, and the index of the whole Data partition took about 2 seconds. Wow. Way too fast. Again, it probably didn’t index the file contents like Search 4.0 probably did, even though I didn’t want Search 4.0 to index the file contents and I didn’t look long enough as to how to turn this "feature" off. Anyway, the Locate32 search is fast too. I like it.

Thanks, Microsoft! Another fine product released by the boys from Redmond.

coolness. . . (?)

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

From Slashdot:

"Formation of an ocean is a rare event, one no scientist has ever witnessed. Yet this geophysical nativity is unfolding today in one of the hottest and most inhospitable corners of the globe. Africa is splitting apart at the seams. From the southern tip of the Red Sea southward through Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, and Mozambique, the continent is coming unstitched along a zone called the East African Rift."

Wow. Sounds really neat. I was quite interested… until I read on:

This stretching of the earth’s crust has been going on for 20 million years, and within another 10 million the Red Sea will have broken through to create a new sea.

Ok. I was thinking more like this will be on tomorrow nights news. Go ahead. Call me short-sighted. Call me cold, calloused, indifferent. But I really have a hard time caring what happens ten million years from now. What a farce. Oh, and if you notice, paragraph one talks about the birth of an ocean; paragraph two says a new sea will be created. Slight discrepancy. Slashdot editors aren’t known for their brightness.

remember

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

As I was standing outside the auditorium today, waiting to go in, I remembered something from middle school, I believe. It had to do with waiting for the right time to enter a room, that’s why I remembered it.

Shawn McKinney was playing the piano for something during chapel. Maybe it was a special, or maybe it was just the regular singing, I can’t remember. No, actually, I think it was a violin special, because he left the room (band room) to put it away then came back in. I believe Brit and Cat were singing a special when he came back in and sat down. Well, Shawn must have put his Bible next to me, because I knew he was sitting next to me, and either during Shawn’s special or maybe even before chapel, I switched his good metal chair for one that was broken… oops! Like I said, he came back in during a special, and well, I think he stole the show… kaboom! Down he went!