Relevant

To speak of certain government and establishment institutions as “the system” is to speak correctly. … They are sustained by structural relationships even when they have lost all other meaning and purpose. People arrive at a factory and perform a totally meaningless task from eight to five without question because the structure demands that it be that way. There’s no villain, no “mean guy” who wants them to live meaningless lives, it’s just that the structure, the system demands it and no one is willing to take on the formidable task of changing the structure just because it is meaningless.

But to tear down a factory or to revolt against a government or to avoid repair of a motorcycle because it is a system is to attack effects rather than causes; and as long as the attack is upon effects only, no change is possible. The true system, the real system, is our present construction of systematic thought itself, rationality itself, and if a factory is torn down but the rationality which produced it is left standing, then that rationality will simply produce another factory. If a revolution destroys a systematic government, but the systematic patterns of thought that produced that government are left intact, then those patterns will repeat themselves in the succeeding government. There’s so much talk about the system. And so little understanding.”

– Robert M Pirsiq. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Leave a comment

Interesting SR-71 Facts

From 2011 April issue of AOPA Pilot magazine:

  1. What was the code name for the secret program that evolved into the SR-71 Blackbird?
    • The project known as “Arch Angel” created the A-1 through A-12 aircraft that preceded the Blackbird.
  2. Why do SR-71s have white main-gear tires?
    • The tires are coated with aluminum oxide to reflect heat so that the tires don’ t explode in the wheel wells during high-speed flight.
  3. The SR-71 windshields are made from four-inch think pieces of this exotic material to withstand in-flight temperatures of 450 degrees Fahrenheit.
    • Quartz
  4. More than 90 percent of the SR-71 is made from titanium, an exotic material that, ironically, could only be procured under false pretenses from this country that was frequently overflown by the spy planes.
    • Russia

More info and some great photos at wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_SR-71_Blackbird.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Comments Off on Interesting SR-71 Facts

Think About the Puppets

Watch: Puppet Suicide
It’s not funny. It’s an epidemic.

…congrats to Peter Gilroy at Chapman University for winning the 2011 National College Comedy Funny Film Competition.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Leave a comment

Weekly Random: #37

Heavier

Lighter

Technical

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #37

Weekly Random: #36

Interesting

Serious

Funny and/or Sad

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #36

Weekly Random: #35

Random Quote

“I sold [MicroSolutions] after 7 years and made enough money to take time off and have a whole lot of fun. Back then I can remember vividly people telling me how lucky I was to sell my business at the right time.

Then when I took that money and started trading technology stocks that were in the areas that MicroSolutions focused on, I remember vividly being told how lucky I was to have expertise in such a hot area, as technology stocks started to trade up.

Of course, no one wanted to comment on how lucky I was to spend time reading software manuals, or Cisco Router manuals, or sitting in my house testing and comparing new technologies, but that’s a topic for another blog post.”

Mark Cuban

Links

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #35

Weekly Random: #34

Visual

Randomly Random

Technical

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #34

Weekly Random: #33

Very Cool

Runaway Reality

Misc

Semi-Technical

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #33

Weekly Random: #32

Interesting

Worth Reading

Misc

Technical

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #32

Weekly Random: #31

Cool

Boring, but Interesting

Misc

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #31

Weekly Random: #30

Interesting

Technical

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #30

Goodbye to an Old Friend

I took kt004 to the electronics recycling plant over the weekend.  This was a high-end laptop bought while working at IconMedialab in St. Louis. It built the Wear-Dated RFID kiosk, held Prada docs, weathered a few electric shorts due to bad soldering on my part, etc.  It was still working fine, though running Linux these days.

There are  zero scratches on the LCD due to my use of the original packing material every time the lid was closed. (This was before the laptop manufacturers got wise and started putting rubber stoppers to prevent keyboards from rubbing screen.)

I just didn’t need it any more, nor did I know anyone else that could use it.

I get attached to my hardware. I suppose it won’t be missed, but it was definitely part of my history.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Comments Off on Goodbye to an Old Friend

Weekly Random: #29

Visuals

Not Required Reading

Tech

Posted in Random | Leave a comment

Design Idea #206

Jill thought it wasn’t serious enough.

Posted in Miscellaneous, Random | Comments Off on Design Idea #206

Weekly Random: #28

Econ

Okay

Technical

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #28

Nokia and Microsoft

http://blogs.forum.nokia.com/blog/nokia-developer-news/2011/02/11/letter-to-developers

wow. What a storm this has kicked up in the developer community.

I’m kind-of frustrated as well and I don’t even have any skin in the game.  On the mobile side, this play makes a lot of sense for both companies (and especially benefits Microsoft).  But from a native desktop application point-of-view, Nokia is also strongly insinuating that the Qt Framework is going to have a slow death.  I’d like to see that fully confirmed before going off like a lot of people are, but if so, that framework is/was simply one of the best pragmatic options for native GUI development across the main desktops OSes.  If it dies, now what… WPF/.NET, Cocoa/ObjC, GTK/C++, AIR/ActionScript, Swing/Java, SWT/Java?  All of those have significant limitations.

I feel for the developers that spent time and money developing on Qt Mobile for Nokia’s Ovi store.

Posted in Technical | Leave a comment

Weekly Random: #27

Excellent

Maybe Interesting

Politics, Humanity, and Such

Miscellaneous

Posted in Random | Leave a comment

Weekly Random: #26

Interesting

Only if you have the Time

Technical & Business

Posted in Random | Comments Off on Weekly Random: #26

Weekly Random: #25

Fascinating

Technical

Interesting. Maybe.

Posted in Random | Leave a comment

Regarding Facebook

Technical

Advertising

Posted in Miscellaneous, Technical | Leave a comment