Out here, it's not so much a matter of north and south as it is of up and down. We still don't have snow on the ground down here, but it is getting closer, as this shows.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Need a friend? Build one....
Here's a project for the do-it-yourself enthusiast with $60,000 and the skills required. Build yourself a girlfriend. She speaks two languages, slaps you if you get too forceful, and she won't run away because she can't walk. This might be something Charlie Sheen should have.
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Another discovery....
Here's where to find this When you go there, please watch the video which explains what it does, and how you can use it.
Who uses which operating system?
Here's the breakdown from http://marketshare.hitslink.com/ on the various operating systems and the percentage of its users as of today.
Friday, December 25, 2009
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Whatever happened to....
Christmas cards.... they're a vanishing item. Or I should say, they are being transformed into the electronic variety, as shown above. This is a 'snipping' from an animated greeting that I received the other day from friends.
I've only received two actual old-fashioned cards so far this year. One from friends in the building, and another from a distant cousin, who perhaps isn't as computer-oriented as some of the rest of us.
I think the electronic variety are just fine. It saves on trees, trips to the post office, and stamps. And it's easier to send a reply, too. I wish everybody did it.
Enjoy the Christmas season, everyone...
I've only received two actual old-fashioned cards so far this year. One from friends in the building, and another from a distant cousin, who perhaps isn't as computer-oriented as some of the rest of us.
I think the electronic variety are just fine. It saves on trees, trips to the post office, and stamps. And it's easier to send a reply, too. I wish everybody did it.
Enjoy the Christmas season, everyone...
Monday, December 21, 2009
More this and that....
Today is Winter Solstice, the shortest day and longest night in the northern hemisphere. The good news being that tomorrow, the days start getting longer again. And I don't think I'll get into a long rant about connections between Christmas and Winter Solstice. Do your own homework on all that, please.
Are you as sick of all this Tiger Woods bullshit as I am? In a national paper today, there's a bit comparing him to Tony Soprano. Let's face it, this kid's not a serial killer, he's a serial copulator - big difference. And he can't be too bright, or he wouldn't risk throwing away a career like his on dial-a-dates.
Are you as sick of all this Tiger Woods bullshit as I am? In a national paper today, there's a bit comparing him to Tony Soprano. Let's face it, this kid's not a serial killer, he's a serial copulator - big difference. And he can't be too bright, or he wouldn't risk throwing away a career like his on dial-a-dates.
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Friday, December 18, 2009
Those climate talks in Copenhagen
Just as we suspected, it came down to all talk and no action, because nobody wants to settle for less of anything, even if it means as much as this does.
Here's a good piece about it in today's Globe and Mail, by Norman Spector, who has been around the halls of government and the media for a long time.
If people are angry now about this lack of action, wait until they are told that the real problem is that there's simply too many of us making too much pollution. In my lifetime alone, the world's population has tripled from a little over two billion in 1932 to over 6.8 billion now. No matter what we believe about science, religion, human rights, or anything else, we simply can't keep on endlessly increasing the numbers of people the world must support. It's simply not possible, and we ought to be thinking about that now, before it becomes a much more severe problem.
Here's a good piece about it in today's Globe and Mail, by Norman Spector, who has been around the halls of government and the media for a long time.
If people are angry now about this lack of action, wait until they are told that the real problem is that there's simply too many of us making too much pollution. In my lifetime alone, the world's population has tripled from a little over two billion in 1932 to over 6.8 billion now. No matter what we believe about science, religion, human rights, or anything else, we simply can't keep on endlessly increasing the numbers of people the world must support. It's simply not possible, and we ought to be thinking about that now, before it becomes a much more severe problem.
'Tis the season to....
To enjoy all the seasonal nonsense typical of this time of year. I do enjoy some of the reruns of seasonal movies, which are a nice change from all those blow-'em-ups and shoot- 'em-ups we're constantly bombarded with the rest of the time. But I wonder about some of the other silliness that seems to be repeated every year.
How about that ad on TV telling us to bring our dog down to someplace or other for a picture with Santa? Does your dog believe in Santa? Or would it rather do something on his leg? And how about those Chia Pets we never see any other time of year? Does your cat really need one that grows 'cat grass'? And what exactly is 'cat grass'? Any relation to catnip?
And what's the story on all those high-priced chocolates we never see any other times of the year? Are they made fresh each new season, or are they stuck in a warehouse from one Christmas to the next, until some fool buys them? Do you ever wonder about these things?
And what about electronic greeting cards? About 95% of my generation don't know the difference between a megabyte and a horsefly bite. They're computer illiterates in other words, and most of them don't own a computer. If they do, then they can barely peck out misspelled emails on them, or remember to update their security programs often enough to avoid catching some of the highly-sophisticated malware that's out there these days. And speaking of that, I continue to recommend Alwil's Avast anti-virus and ThreatFire from the folks at PC Tools.
We're told that some businesses do 40% of their annual business during the Christmas season, and that probably explains how their owners can spend some of the new year enjoying a tropical vacation. This leads me to the conclusion that Christmas was invented by a storekeeper somewhere, in collusion with the local bishop so they could increase their fortunes at the expense of the impressionable unwashed masses.
How about that ad on TV telling us to bring our dog down to someplace or other for a picture with Santa? Does your dog believe in Santa? Or would it rather do something on his leg? And how about those Chia Pets we never see any other time of year? Does your cat really need one that grows 'cat grass'? And what exactly is 'cat grass'? Any relation to catnip?
And what's the story on all those high-priced chocolates we never see any other times of the year? Are they made fresh each new season, or are they stuck in a warehouse from one Christmas to the next, until some fool buys them? Do you ever wonder about these things?
And what about electronic greeting cards? About 95% of my generation don't know the difference between a megabyte and a horsefly bite. They're computer illiterates in other words, and most of them don't own a computer. If they do, then they can barely peck out misspelled emails on them, or remember to update their security programs often enough to avoid catching some of the highly-sophisticated malware that's out there these days. And speaking of that, I continue to recommend Alwil's Avast anti-virus and ThreatFire from the folks at PC Tools.
We're told that some businesses do 40% of their annual business during the Christmas season, and that probably explains how their owners can spend some of the new year enjoying a tropical vacation. This leads me to the conclusion that Christmas was invented by a storekeeper somewhere, in collusion with the local bishop so they could increase their fortunes at the expense of the impressionable unwashed masses.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Did I get the Ancient Egyptian game working?
Yes, I did. Here's how it looks during a game. The two opposing teams, green and blue, are moving in a reversed-'S' pattern trying to be first with all pieces off the board. The squares in the lower right with symbols are safe squares, where you can't be bumped from, except for the one with the water symbol (three wavy lines) four squares from the end. This game was probably a very early form of cribbage, and it was very popular about 4,000 years ago. It's still fun to play even now.
About having control of files in Windows 7
If you're like most of us, then having to use a password to sign into your own computer, where you're the Administrator and perhaps the only user, can be a pain. But unfortunately it seems to be a necessary pain, unless you want problems with being denied access to files when you want to delete them, for example.
Even with logging in using a password, you still may have problems sometimes because of the security features in user accounts. If you find that's true, then there's a little registry hack that you can download and apply which lets you "take ownership" of your file when you use the right-click menu to show that entry on it and click it.
Here's where to find it.
Even with logging in using a password, you still may have problems sometimes because of the security features in user accounts. If you find that's true, then there's a little registry hack that you can download and apply which lets you "take ownership" of your file when you use the right-click menu to show that entry on it and click it.
Here's where to find it.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
This little game from Ancient Egypt....
Uses Adobe's Shockwave Player, but Adobe hasn't made one that works properly for this since back about version 9 or 10, several years back. Every time I re-install the O/S for any reason, and I've been doing that a lot this past year, while testing Windows 7, I can't get my little game working again until I go looking for an archived version of Shockwave, from about version 8 or 9 - because all the more modern versions have missing bits called Xtras, which Adobe in all its genius took out of the former full versions, and put into separate files, and only include a few they think you might want, but never seem to need. The ones you need, like the decompressor one are always missing for some reason. So today's Question Everything is "Why the hell can't Adobe get all their little bits in the same goddamned file like they used to before they forgot how?" Do I have to tell them everything?
Our blizzard fizzled out....
And I'm not complaining, you understand. Here's the neighbours' lights last night.
It's beginning to look like I was right about the climate talks in Copenhagen. They'd rather fight than eat, it seems. It won't matter a damn who is to blame if we all go down the drain from lack of action. But saying 'no' to the status quo isn't going to be easy.
I was surprised to learn that the Windows 7 Starter version is being installed on netbooks all over the world. Why am I surprised? Because, people with netbooks were installing the Ultimate version of Windows 7 Beta on them last spring, and running it OK. Microsoft themselves have said that they designed Windows 7 so that it can run well on the widest possible variety of hardware. So there's really no excuse for a stripped-down version like Starter to be installed on your average netbook with enough poop to run better stuff on it. I got onto that because a friend in the U.K. bought a netbook with that Starter version on it and found he can't change the wallpaper, and there's no Personalization, no Themes or Aero transparency, and you can't enjoy streaming audio or video in it. He's a graphics oriented kind of guy, and was very disappointed to discover how limited it was. Me too.
Here's where to find a program that can change that wallpaper on a Starter version of Windows 7, and it uses a separate process which doesn't depend on the Microsoft system for its success.
It's beginning to look like I was right about the climate talks in Copenhagen. They'd rather fight than eat, it seems. It won't matter a damn who is to blame if we all go down the drain from lack of action. But saying 'no' to the status quo isn't going to be easy.
I was surprised to learn that the Windows 7 Starter version is being installed on netbooks all over the world. Why am I surprised? Because, people with netbooks were installing the Ultimate version of Windows 7 Beta on them last spring, and running it OK. Microsoft themselves have said that they designed Windows 7 so that it can run well on the widest possible variety of hardware. So there's really no excuse for a stripped-down version like Starter to be installed on your average netbook with enough poop to run better stuff on it. I got onto that because a friend in the U.K. bought a netbook with that Starter version on it and found he can't change the wallpaper, and there's no Personalization, no Themes or Aero transparency, and you can't enjoy streaming audio or video in it. He's a graphics oriented kind of guy, and was very disappointed to discover how limited it was. Me too.
Here's where to find a program that can change that wallpaper on a Starter version of Windows 7, and it uses a separate process which doesn't depend on the Microsoft system for its success.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Live Better Electrically....The Nissan Leaf
This is the Nissan Leaf, being advertised as the first mass-produced all-electric 'real car' to come to market.
It's supposed to preview in B.C. here this coming year, and will also do so in Washington state, across the border. So what do we think of it?
For starters, it looks nice. Much nicer than my 1932 Chevrolet, the first used car I ever had. But as someone pointed out in comments elsewhere yesterday, this is Canada, where it gets really cold in the winters, and unlike our internal-combustion engines, this battery pack powered cutie won't naturally be developing a lot of wasted heat we can direct into the passenger compartment for needed warmth on cold days, and to defrost or defog the windows prior to take-off. If it uses an electric heater, the battery will discharge much faster. So what to do? Add a propane heater? The whole concept of this vehicle is to get away from fossil fuels, so I'm wondering how it will be heated, and what that will do to its range on a full charge of the batteries. Is this really a 'real car' or just a glorified golf cart with extended range, for thirty big ones or so? Time will tell...
Other concerns that come to mind:-
Our colder weather in winter reduces the power available from batteries. There's also the problem of providing electrical outlets for recharging in places like the 1,200-car garage underneath this six-tower high-rise condo complex here. At present, there's only an occasional outlet in the garages, for building maintenance purposes, and none of those would likely be suitable for vehicle recharging. I can see where this recharging will pose a problem that will require some major changes. Perhaps, in the future, your parking space will include a convenient recharge outlet, but until then, it's going to be a problem. And not the least of that will be where to find that needed electricity.
It's supposed to preview in B.C. here this coming year, and will also do so in Washington state, across the border. So what do we think of it?
For starters, it looks nice. Much nicer than my 1932 Chevrolet, the first used car I ever had. But as someone pointed out in comments elsewhere yesterday, this is Canada, where it gets really cold in the winters, and unlike our internal-combustion engines, this battery pack powered cutie won't naturally be developing a lot of wasted heat we can direct into the passenger compartment for needed warmth on cold days, and to defrost or defog the windows prior to take-off. If it uses an electric heater, the battery will discharge much faster. So what to do? Add a propane heater? The whole concept of this vehicle is to get away from fossil fuels, so I'm wondering how it will be heated, and what that will do to its range on a full charge of the batteries. Is this really a 'real car' or just a glorified golf cart with extended range, for thirty big ones or so? Time will tell...
Other concerns that come to mind:-
Our colder weather in winter reduces the power available from batteries. There's also the problem of providing electrical outlets for recharging in places like the 1,200-car garage underneath this six-tower high-rise condo complex here. At present, there's only an occasional outlet in the garages, for building maintenance purposes, and none of those would likely be suitable for vehicle recharging. I can see where this recharging will pose a problem that will require some major changes. Perhaps, in the future, your parking space will include a convenient recharge outlet, but until then, it's going to be a problem. And not the least of that will be where to find that needed electricity.
Monday, December 14, 2009
Thoughts on the climate change fiasco...
Let me start with my favourite search engine, Google. Today they have a new item on their main page linking to articles and videos about climate change. All well and good - but in the promo video, it shows how a fossil-fueled thermal power plant magically melts into the ground, to be replaced by a group of wind-power generators. Can't happen, Folks.
As an illustration, it effectively gets the idea across, but in the real world, we can't replace what's known in the business as 'base load' or 24/7 supplies with part-time supplementary ones like wind power. Just as a brief review, your power system consists of two kinds of supplies: the 24/7 always-needed base-load providers, and the part-time only as needed peaking supplies used during periods of maximum demand, such as during the evening supper hour. We can't replace the always-needed supplies with part-time or unreliable sources like those wind generators. And right here let me add that the energy produced by a wind generator costs many times more to develop and use than the energy we get from a large hydro-electric station, for example. So we have to be practical about all this.
There's also been a lot of talk about hydrogen, and the so far mythical 'hydrogen highway'. The information I've seen so far indicates that with present technology, we are using more energy producing the hydrogen than we can recover by using it in fuel cells or other power producing devices. So don't hold your breath until we're all whizzing down the freeway in our hydrogen-powered vehicles.
The car of the near future is probably going to be electric, at least in part, and it will be using Lithium-ion batteries. The same kind we use in our rechargeable cameras, but bigger. Problem solved? Not quite - the experts say we've only got about a 10-year reserve of Lithium available for making those batteries. So those are going to be expensive and not too plentiful I would guess. Back to the drawing boards, Folks.
So far, the global warming problem has been compounded by misinformation and the hot air expended talking about it, mostly to avoid actually having to do something, because it all boils down to making certain sacrifices, and hardly anybody wants to settle for less of anything we're enjoying now. That's our first challenge - getting used to that idea. We can't have everything, because we're rapidly running out of somewhere to put it, and the resources to keep it going.
As an illustration, it effectively gets the idea across, but in the real world, we can't replace what's known in the business as 'base load' or 24/7 supplies with part-time supplementary ones like wind power. Just as a brief review, your power system consists of two kinds of supplies: the 24/7 always-needed base-load providers, and the part-time only as needed peaking supplies used during periods of maximum demand, such as during the evening supper hour. We can't replace the always-needed supplies with part-time or unreliable sources like those wind generators. And right here let me add that the energy produced by a wind generator costs many times more to develop and use than the energy we get from a large hydro-electric station, for example. So we have to be practical about all this.
There's also been a lot of talk about hydrogen, and the so far mythical 'hydrogen highway'. The information I've seen so far indicates that with present technology, we are using more energy producing the hydrogen than we can recover by using it in fuel cells or other power producing devices. So don't hold your breath until we're all whizzing down the freeway in our hydrogen-powered vehicles.
The car of the near future is probably going to be electric, at least in part, and it will be using Lithium-ion batteries. The same kind we use in our rechargeable cameras, but bigger. Problem solved? Not quite - the experts say we've only got about a 10-year reserve of Lithium available for making those batteries. So those are going to be expensive and not too plentiful I would guess. Back to the drawing boards, Folks.
So far, the global warming problem has been compounded by misinformation and the hot air expended talking about it, mostly to avoid actually having to do something, because it all boils down to making certain sacrifices, and hardly anybody wants to settle for less of anything we're enjoying now. That's our first challenge - getting used to that idea. We can't have everything, because we're rapidly running out of somewhere to put it, and the resources to keep it going.
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Create your own Theme for Windows 7....
This is an example of a homemade theme in Windows 7, made up of a series of pictures of clouds that I took last summer. One thing to remember about making themes for your monitor's background is that you probably don't want them too distracting, so something like these clouds works out quite well. But do your own thing, and have fun with it.
While changing to the regular Windows 7 from the RC
As mentioned briefly elsewhere, if you've installed the Home Premium from its DVD, and then you wanted to add a new theme, and went to Username\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\ looking for Themes, and it wasn't there, don't panic. Just create a new folder in the 'Windows' one named 'Themes', and copy yours into it. When you go back to the Desktop and click on 'Personalize', you'll find them there.
And if you're a Firefox user, and you want the latest version off the website, there are now two little boxes or buttons on there for downloads - so be careful. One's for the British English version, and the other (below it) in the U.S. English version. Windows 7 likes the U.S. version better. I accidently got the British version the first time, by clicking on the wrong button, and it wouldn't respond to my efforts to set my home page. It kept going back to the Welcome to Firefox thing. So when all else fails, read the directions.
And if you're a Firefox user, and you want the latest version off the website, there are now two little boxes or buttons on there for downloads - so be careful. One's for the British English version, and the other (below it) in the U.S. English version. Windows 7 likes the U.S. version better. I accidently got the British version the first time, by clicking on the wrong button, and it wouldn't respond to my efforts to set my home page. It kept going back to the Welcome to Firefox thing. So when all else fails, read the directions.
Friday, December 11, 2009
A little more about upgrading your Windows....
As you may have read somewhere in a Microsoft site, if you install new Windows over an older version, then during the upgrading process, your previous Windows files usually get saved in the new installation as a folder called 'Windows.old'. The purpose of that weird extension '.old' is so that those files won't get used in the present installation, and we're told that we can't actually use what's in them.
Not exactly, Folks - what they mean is that whatever's in there can't actively interact with the stuff you upgraded to in the newer setup. But if there's something in there that you want to keep, you can. For example, after I got the new Windows 7 Home Premium up and running, I went looking for the Themes folder normally found at (your username) \AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\Themes\ for the monitor's backgrounds displays. Guess what? It wasn't there! I had to create the Themes folder there. So then I went looking for the old Themes folder inside those Windows.old files, because I had some nice themes that I'd made up from my own pictures. I found them, and decided to move all that into the new Themes folder in this new setup. A simple drag-and-drop did it. So now my old Themes are back and working again. So don't throw out your Windows.old folder until you're sure there's nothing in it that you might want to keep using.
Not exactly, Folks - what they mean is that whatever's in there can't actively interact with the stuff you upgraded to in the newer setup. But if there's something in there that you want to keep, you can. For example, after I got the new Windows 7 Home Premium up and running, I went looking for the Themes folder normally found at (your username) \AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\Themes\ for the monitor's backgrounds displays. Guess what? It wasn't there! I had to create the Themes folder there. So then I went looking for the old Themes folder inside those Windows.old files, because I had some nice themes that I'd made up from my own pictures. I found them, and decided to move all that into the new Themes folder in this new setup. A simple drag-and-drop did it. So now my old Themes are back and working again. So don't throw out your Windows.old folder until you're sure there's nothing in it that you might want to keep using.
PhotoStudio 6 - I got a deal...
I quickly got tired of being nagged by the previous version about it not being compatible, so I had a look on their website for the latest version 6.0 and it regularly is $80 or so, but me being a former customer, and this being Christmas, I qualified for the Upgrade version and the Christmas 30% discount off that, so I got the new one with an extended download add-on, all for $26.98 US - so I guess I can't complain too loudly. This new one does have a couple of added features, one I like is the automatic de-noiser, which will remove a lot but not all of the artifacts and clumps from older JPEGs. It also smooths out pictures like the one shown, from my Pentax X70, which in low light conditions shows a lot of static. So my $27 was probably well spent. And they do make good stuff, plus they also offer a few freebies and trial programs if you're interested. Here's where to find them.
Here it is, all fancied up....
I even made an icon out of the Win-7 DVD box for the Programs folder...and IcoFX still works fine in the retail version, if you want to make your own icons like I've done.
Installing Windows 7 Home Premium over Windows 7 Ultimate RC
They don't give you a lot of "heads up" on how this gets done until you find yourself into it, and then you literally learn by doing. In the post below, I mentioned that I read that the setup for the retail versions won't let you upgrade over the Ultimate RC by default. They should have added "or any other way - you have to do a clean install", meaning you have to save all your files beforehand, and then install the retail version over your (better) RC copy and then re-install all your files and programs and whatever. And I was right - it's a pain in the ass, and all because somebody in Redmond got paranoid about us putting one over on them if it was any other way.
Something else you should be prepared for while you're carefully saving your documents and your third-party programs and whatever.... Your documents will go back into the new setup just fine, but some of your programs that worked fine in the Ultimate RC of Win 7 may not survive copying to and from a DVD to make the transfer. You may find some will pop up a message saying it didn't install correctly, and you should contact your mother, or the program's makers, or anybody but Microsoft, the guys who engineered this goddamned problem. And for what it's worth, my favourite photo-editing program after moving told me that it doesn't work in this version of Windows. I said, "Bullshit! It works fine in the Ultimate RC, so why shouldn't it work in a version with less to it?" And I'm right - it tries to tell me it doesn't want to, but when I click on the box that says "Run anyway" it works fine. This is just a gimmick, because this program just brought out a new upgrade with more features and a higher price tag, and they're trying to bamboozle users of the old version into spending another $80 for the newer one. So they're telling you it won't work in the Home Premium version of an O/S in which it works fine in the Ultimate version. They must think we aren't going to find out for ourselves. I've got some news for those guys - Windows 7 can and does run a whole hell of a lot of programs that we couldn't run on Vasta Vista, and it even runs some that date back to the beginnings of XP. If it's NT-based, and runs on an NTFS disk, it can probably run on Windows 7. Why? Because they intended it to.
So if you're upgrading from the Windows 7 RC to the retail version, be prepared to do the clean install, or as Microsoft calls it, the Custom install, rather than the Upgrade. I even hacked the setup file like that expert suggested, so it wouldn't refuse the upgrade option, and it still wouldn't do it. So the expert's hack on the installing source file doesn't work. I've been hours replacing everything on here, by way of proving all that. So you can't always believe everything you read from the so-called experts. But I will say this for it - once it gets started on the installing, it moves right along. The part that takes the time is putting back your own files and pet programs afterward.
Something else you should be prepared for while you're carefully saving your documents and your third-party programs and whatever.... Your documents will go back into the new setup just fine, but some of your programs that worked fine in the Ultimate RC of Win 7 may not survive copying to and from a DVD to make the transfer. You may find some will pop up a message saying it didn't install correctly, and you should contact your mother, or the program's makers, or anybody but Microsoft, the guys who engineered this goddamned problem. And for what it's worth, my favourite photo-editing program after moving told me that it doesn't work in this version of Windows. I said, "Bullshit! It works fine in the Ultimate RC, so why shouldn't it work in a version with less to it?" And I'm right - it tries to tell me it doesn't want to, but when I click on the box that says "Run anyway" it works fine. This is just a gimmick, because this program just brought out a new upgrade with more features and a higher price tag, and they're trying to bamboozle users of the old version into spending another $80 for the newer one. So they're telling you it won't work in the Home Premium version of an O/S in which it works fine in the Ultimate version. They must think we aren't going to find out for ourselves. I've got some news for those guys - Windows 7 can and does run a whole hell of a lot of programs that we couldn't run on Vasta Vista, and it even runs some that date back to the beginnings of XP. If it's NT-based, and runs on an NTFS disk, it can probably run on Windows 7. Why? Because they intended it to.
So if you're upgrading from the Windows 7 RC to the retail version, be prepared to do the clean install, or as Microsoft calls it, the Custom install, rather than the Upgrade. I even hacked the setup file like that expert suggested, so it wouldn't refuse the upgrade option, and it still wouldn't do it. So the expert's hack on the installing source file doesn't work. I've been hours replacing everything on here, by way of proving all that. So you can't always believe everything you read from the so-called experts. But I will say this for it - once it gets started on the installing, it moves right along. The part that takes the time is putting back your own files and pet programs afterward.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Doing more reading about Windows 7...
I made a disappointing discovery today, while reading a popular blog about Windows written by a guy with his nose inside Microsoft's inner sanctum. Apparently, I can't simply do an ordinary upgrade from the RC version of Windows 7 to the retail version I bought recently. I have to go through a whole process of copying that DVD onto the PC, then editing a certain file to trick it into thinking it isn't doing what I'm about to make it do, and then do it.
Am I worried? Not at all - I've installed and re-installed this so often already I'm getting good at it now, and if all else fails, I can always do the clean install bit and then re-install all the programs and files - which is a real pain in the ass, I must say. I had hoped that after months of testing this thing, they'd make it easier for us to install the final version, but I was wrong. It's too bad I can't simply keep the test version, but that will be de-activated by Microsoft in a few months. Meanwhile, I have to get ready to make the change, whether I want to or not, I guess.
Am I worried? Not at all - I've installed and re-installed this so often already I'm getting good at it now, and if all else fails, I can always do the clean install bit and then re-install all the programs and files - which is a real pain in the ass, I must say. I had hoped that after months of testing this thing, they'd make it easier for us to install the final version, but I was wrong. It's too bad I can't simply keep the test version, but that will be de-activated by Microsoft in a few months. Meanwhile, I have to get ready to make the change, whether I want to or not, I guess.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Another useful program...
This is a great program that will show you a complete profile of everything on your computer including version numbers, license numbers, updates, and security status. And it also shows you the key codes for your Windows.
And don't forget to check MajorGeeks periodically for the latest in new programs or updates to older ones, and what's hot and what's not. These guys have all that, and they usually test the stuff before they list it, so we know if it works.
And don't forget to check MajorGeeks periodically for the latest in new programs or updates to older ones, and what's hot and what's not. These guys have all that, and they usually test the stuff before they list it, so we know if it works.
More of this and that....
The paper today says that maybe half of the H1N1 vaccine our province received may go to waste. And that's not our fault. They took too long getting it ready, and then they made it available only at special clinics in strange locations, instead of at our regular medical clinics and doctors' offices. By the time the vaccine arrived, half of us had already had the flu and recovered without help.
The paper also says that Tiger's sponsors are not using his ads. Could that possibly have anything to do with him being 7 or 8 over par in the mating game? For a guy that's so good with balls, it's too bad he isn't better at counting. And with a trophy wife like he has (or had) who should need to fool around?
And while the climate talks go on, and the fingers get pointed, they're obviously talking about everything but the real cause of it all. And that goes back to the first guy who said "Go forth and multiply!" - not perhaps realizing that we'd keep it up until there's nowhere left to stand. If planes and trains and buses and boats all have capacity limits, then shouldn't Spaceship Earth have one too? Experts have calculated that a sustainable population for it would be about half what we have now. But nobody's talking about that. It's too hot a subject for discussion. But logically, if we need to reduce pollution, then we need to reduce what's causing it, and the enemy is us.
The paper also says that Tiger's sponsors are not using his ads. Could that possibly have anything to do with him being 7 or 8 over par in the mating game? For a guy that's so good with balls, it's too bad he isn't better at counting. And with a trophy wife like he has (or had) who should need to fool around?
And while the climate talks go on, and the fingers get pointed, they're obviously talking about everything but the real cause of it all. And that goes back to the first guy who said "Go forth and multiply!" - not perhaps realizing that we'd keep it up until there's nowhere left to stand. If planes and trains and buses and boats all have capacity limits, then shouldn't Spaceship Earth have one too? Experts have calculated that a sustainable population for it would be about half what we have now. But nobody's talking about that. It's too hot a subject for discussion. But logically, if we need to reduce pollution, then we need to reduce what's causing it, and the enemy is us.
Monday, December 7, 2009
Sunset over Vancouver Island
This shows the various features a bit clearer than some I've taken of it.
And just a reminder - if you haven't checked for an update of your graphics card driver lately, maybe you should. There have been recent updates to support Windows 7 with both ATI Radeon and Nvidia graphics cards. One of my PCs uses an AMD/ATI Radeon card, and the other uses an Nvidia card, so that's how I know...and of those two, I like the ATI Radeon best.
And just a reminder - if you haven't checked for an update of your graphics card driver lately, maybe you should. There have been recent updates to support Windows 7 with both ATI Radeon and Nvidia graphics cards. One of my PCs uses an AMD/ATI Radeon card, and the other uses an Nvidia card, so that's how I know...and of those two, I like the ATI Radeon best.
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Saturday, December 5, 2009
That 'trojan' problem a couple of days ago....
I've just received an email from Avast about that, and it was a false positive, not malware. They corrected the problem on their next automatic update, and apologized for any inconvenience. Everything is now back to normal again. And it was good of them to let me know.
A moon shot...
This is what a small digital camera with a good long zoom can do, and the camera used is a Pentax X70.
I had an interesting time last evening. Tried to delete a program whose trial period had expired, and which had quit working. It didn't want to leave, and when it did, something went terribly wrong, and suddenly I had no icons nor thumbnails anywhere, and in my photo files, there were just empty frames where there should have been small images.
I tried everything - removed and renewed the IconCache.db, reinstalled the graphics card driver, used System Restore several times, but none of that fixed everything. Adding to the problem, for a while it seemed like the computer couldn't recognize its DVD Drive. But I finally got that solved by using Task Manager's File menu, New Task (Run) to get the Windows install DVD started, and then going through the whole process of re-installing the operating system. And while we're on that subject, yes, you can do an Upgrade install over an already-installed Windows 7 RC, instead of having to replace all your programs & files. That was the one good thing about all that last night.
While I was doing all that, I also cleaned out a few things from the system. For example, I replaced the Avast 4.8 Home Edition which had those 25 bad files locked up in its vault with a fresh copy that has an empty vault, and also got rid of a couple of other things that I wasn't really using much. So it wasn't entirely a wasted evening, but almost.
I had an interesting time last evening. Tried to delete a program whose trial period had expired, and which had quit working. It didn't want to leave, and when it did, something went terribly wrong, and suddenly I had no icons nor thumbnails anywhere, and in my photo files, there were just empty frames where there should have been small images.
I tried everything - removed and renewed the IconCache.db, reinstalled the graphics card driver, used System Restore several times, but none of that fixed everything. Adding to the problem, for a while it seemed like the computer couldn't recognize its DVD Drive. But I finally got that solved by using Task Manager's File menu, New Task (Run) to get the Windows install DVD started, and then going through the whole process of re-installing the operating system. And while we're on that subject, yes, you can do an Upgrade install over an already-installed Windows 7 RC, instead of having to replace all your programs & files. That was the one good thing about all that last night.
While I was doing all that, I also cleaned out a few things from the system. For example, I replaced the Avast 4.8 Home Edition which had those 25 bad files locked up in its vault with a fresh copy that has an empty vault, and also got rid of a couple of other things that I wasn't really using much. So it wasn't entirely a wasted evening, but almost.
Friday, December 4, 2009
If you use Firefox.....
Then you should get this add-on for it. Why? Because: there's a new kind of cookie called an LSO which normally remains hidden on your machine, and never expires, and it allows its sender to track your information without you knowing it is there. Your normal cleaning process for regular cookies will not remove these LSO ones. So you need this little add-on to root them out and get rid of them, or give you the option of keeping certain ones if you want to do that.
I've had this on one computer for a while, but not on my other one until yesterday. As an example of what this does, before I installed it on the other machine, I did a cookie search and removal of the normal cookies, removing them all. After I installed BetterPrivacy on it, it discovered and removed 18 more items that couldn't be found by normal means. So if you are concerned about being spied on by things you don't even know are on there, then you should have this. https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/6623
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Another short story about a computer...
But first, here's a look at our local billionaire's seasonal light display, taken with the Pentax X70 at maximum optical zoom. It came out quite well, I think.
Now for the computer tale:
Yesterday, I found an update to an older program I've had for years which promises to find and remove trojans. While getting that all done, I used it to scan the machine, and it found a file it said was a trojan, but it couldn't clean it because it couldn't open it. Wonderful. It had also picked on a file which happens to have been a normal part of Windows ever since back in the XP days, years ago. So I was more than a bit curious about what was really going on.
I have Avast 4.8 Home as my regular anti-virus so I set that for a thorough scan of the drive, and it found an entirely different trojan, which kept jumping from one file to another in six different programs, until finally trapped and locked up in the virus vault. During all that, it had replicated itself 25 times, and trashed parts of those six programs, which then had to be deleted. But the good news is that Avast 4.8 Home Edition did get it locked up eventually, and another thorough scan showed no problems. So if you want a security program that really works, get Avast.
And here's that same scene in the daylight, just for comparison.
Yesterday, I found an update to an older program I've had for years which promises to find and remove trojans. While getting that all done, I used it to scan the machine, and it found a file it said was a trojan, but it couldn't clean it because it couldn't open it. Wonderful. It had also picked on a file which happens to have been a normal part of Windows ever since back in the XP days, years ago. So I was more than a bit curious about what was really going on.
I have Avast 4.8 Home as my regular anti-virus so I set that for a thorough scan of the drive, and it found an entirely different trojan, which kept jumping from one file to another in six different programs, until finally trapped and locked up in the virus vault. During all that, it had replicated itself 25 times, and trashed parts of those six programs, which then had to be deleted. But the good news is that Avast 4.8 Home Edition did get it locked up eventually, and another thorough scan showed no problems. So if you want a security program that really works, get Avast.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Frosty morning....
This is why we don't have camels around here - they're too hard to winterize!
Speaking of winterizing, I took in the car for that $70 special at the dealer's the other day and all it cost me was $134.58. That beats the hell out of the $1400 or so it cost last year.
Speaking of winterizing, I took in the car for that $70 special at the dealer's the other day and all it cost me was $134.58. That beats the hell out of the $1400 or so it cost last year.
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Just a note...
This now works with Windows 7, and still finds things that others miss. If you'd like to try it you can find it here.
Monday, November 30, 2009
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Even at the end of November....
...there are still a few leaves on the trees, and that still seems unusual to me, even after all these years around here.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
The news - or who has more fun than people?
Sometimes, reading the news leads to learning something new, like the wind-catchers used in the hot and dry areas of the Middle East, (thanks to Wikipedia) and sometimes, it leads to wondering if most people have all their 'marbles', like while reading Rex Murphy's column in the Globe and Mail today.
Rex goes on and on about how Al Gore visited Toronto and from the relative safety of its distance from Alberta, took the opportunity to tell us that our tar sands projects will result in the end of civilization as we knew it. Meanwhile, elsewhere, Sir Paul McCartney is still complaining that there will be dire consequences from all the world's farting cows.
Both of these pampered modern-day princes are masters at avoiding the real issues while promoting their own latest pet causes. Those tar sands, or oil sands, or whatever you choose to call them are a small fraction of the fallout produced by bigger nations with even dirtier economies than ours, and neither of these high-profile attention-grabbers are saying a word about all those expensive explosives being set off constantly somewhere around the globe, while people in various places are attempting to re-arrange national boundaries, or negotiate changes to someone's political systems or alter their belief structures along with changing the shapes of their dwellings.
Meanwhile, getting back to those farting cows, there's only about 1.53 billion of them sharing the planet with about 6.8 billion farting people. So today's Question Everything is: "Do 4.4 people create more pollution than one farting cow?"
Tiger Woods:-
For the latest, have a look at http://www.tmz.com/
Rex goes on and on about how Al Gore visited Toronto and from the relative safety of its distance from Alberta, took the opportunity to tell us that our tar sands projects will result in the end of civilization as we knew it. Meanwhile, elsewhere, Sir Paul McCartney is still complaining that there will be dire consequences from all the world's farting cows.
Both of these pampered modern-day princes are masters at avoiding the real issues while promoting their own latest pet causes. Those tar sands, or oil sands, or whatever you choose to call them are a small fraction of the fallout produced by bigger nations with even dirtier economies than ours, and neither of these high-profile attention-grabbers are saying a word about all those expensive explosives being set off constantly somewhere around the globe, while people in various places are attempting to re-arrange national boundaries, or negotiate changes to someone's political systems or alter their belief structures along with changing the shapes of their dwellings.
Meanwhile, getting back to those farting cows, there's only about 1.53 billion of them sharing the planet with about 6.8 billion farting people. So today's Question Everything is: "Do 4.4 people create more pollution than one farting cow?"
Tiger Woods:-
For the latest, have a look at http://www.tmz.com/
Friday, November 27, 2009
'Question Everything'.....
What was going on at Tiger Woods' place at about 2:30 AM when he decided to leave, and lost control of his vehicle, and hit a fire hydrant and a tree? Did he have those facial lacerations beforehand, or were those a result of the accident? How do you injure your face while backing up in a Cadillac SUV anyway? There's probably more to this story yet...
Meanwhile, back in Dubai, how does a city state with about one million local residents, not all of whom are citizens, get itself into somewhere between sixty and eighty billions in debt? And what's it got that's so exciting, besides lots of sand, ocean, and heat? Are they not aware of the global warming problem, or do they just not give a damn?
Meanwhile, back in Dubai, how does a city state with about one million local residents, not all of whom are citizens, get itself into somewhere between sixty and eighty billions in debt? And what's it got that's so exciting, besides lots of sand, ocean, and heat? Are they not aware of the global warming problem, or do they just not give a damn?
Thursday, November 26, 2009
The old guy looks at the news...
'Bye-bye, Dubai!'
Trying to build your way to Heaven one floor at a time has its downside. They've stretched their credit too far, and now are asking for a delay in repayments on 60-some billions in debt. Even when you're sitting on a serious amount of the world's oil, the fly-now-pay-later plan doesn't work unless you keep up the payments on it. So much for indoor ski-hills in the sweltering sands, and palm-shaped islands in the sea, surrounded by nothing but miles and miles of sand and seawater.
Canada's Prime Minister plays tourist:
Our PM heads off on visits to foreign locations for photo-ops with local leaders, partly to avoid the uproar at home over the frying ass of one of our diplomats who made claims that turning over prisoners to the Afghans led to the torturing of many innocent farmers. Would those farmers be poppy farmers, I wonder? And as someone else has wondered, if those guys can raise bumper crops of poppies, why can't they raise crops of edible veggies with which to feed their starving kin? Am I being too practical here?
Al-Jazeera gets the OK from our CRTC for its English service broadcasts:
Today's Question Everything is: "Is this a sneaky way to get our Arab immigrants to learn more English?" If it is, I'm all in favour. Salaam, neighbours.
Trying to build your way to Heaven one floor at a time has its downside. They've stretched their credit too far, and now are asking for a delay in repayments on 60-some billions in debt. Even when you're sitting on a serious amount of the world's oil, the fly-now-pay-later plan doesn't work unless you keep up the payments on it. So much for indoor ski-hills in the sweltering sands, and palm-shaped islands in the sea, surrounded by nothing but miles and miles of sand and seawater.
Canada's Prime Minister plays tourist:
Our PM heads off on visits to foreign locations for photo-ops with local leaders, partly to avoid the uproar at home over the frying ass of one of our diplomats who made claims that turning over prisoners to the Afghans led to the torturing of many innocent farmers. Would those farmers be poppy farmers, I wonder? And as someone else has wondered, if those guys can raise bumper crops of poppies, why can't they raise crops of edible veggies with which to feed their starving kin? Am I being too practical here?
Al-Jazeera gets the OK from our CRTC for its English service broadcasts:
Today's Question Everything is: "Is this a sneaky way to get our Arab immigrants to learn more English?" If it is, I'm all in favour. Salaam, neighbours.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Today, we can't see the hills....
It's another of those typical monsoon-season days - clouds down on the deck, and rainy and dull. It's a good day to take the car in for its regular lube and pre-winter check-up.
While there, waiting for a shuttle ride back home, a lady came in for service and among other things, mentioned that her battery had recently died, and needed a boost to get her going. Being the buttinsky that I am, I said, "Excuse me, but is most of your driving just short little trips?" She said, "Yes, it is." I said, "I have the same problem - and it's because we're taking more out of the battery getting started than the driving puts back while we're running. So to help avoid that, we need to go for a longer drive once a week or so, to get the battery fully recharged again."
On the way home in the shuttle, we were talking more about that, and the driver pointed out that all new vehicles equipped with internal computers will have about 20 milliamps of constant drain on the battery, just keeping their monitoring systems active. So if you aren't driving the car for a while, such as if you're going away on vacation, he advises that we disconnect the battery before we go, to avoid having a dead battery when we come back.
Good advice.
While there, waiting for a shuttle ride back home, a lady came in for service and among other things, mentioned that her battery had recently died, and needed a boost to get her going. Being the buttinsky that I am, I said, "Excuse me, but is most of your driving just short little trips?" She said, "Yes, it is." I said, "I have the same problem - and it's because we're taking more out of the battery getting started than the driving puts back while we're running. So to help avoid that, we need to go for a longer drive once a week or so, to get the battery fully recharged again."
On the way home in the shuttle, we were talking more about that, and the driver pointed out that all new vehicles equipped with internal computers will have about 20 milliamps of constant drain on the battery, just keeping their monitoring systems active. So if you aren't driving the car for a while, such as if you're going away on vacation, he advises that we disconnect the battery before we go, to avoid having a dead battery when we come back.
Good advice.
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
This morning, we can see the hills...
It seems like about a week since we had a good look at the hilltops here, and this is what they look like this morning. Taken with the Canon G9 at maximum optical zoom using the doubler on top of that, and this was spliced together from three images using Canon's PhotoStitch. It came out quite well, I think.
Monday, November 23, 2009
"After Global Warming"
Reading about global warming, I decided to create an image of our north shore mountains with a much higher ocean level - the oceans won't rise this high, perhaps, but it gives us an impression of what that might look like if they did.
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Saturday, November 21, 2009
The high country today...
If these two images look like a big exclamation mark to you, it was intentional... and just to emphasize what a dull, foggy, rainy day we're having here today. This is why it's called a 'rainforest' around these parts. The forest needs the rain, and we need the forest, so it all works out very well, and it saves on sunscreen, so there's a bright side to it too.
Friday, November 20, 2009
Is this really November ?
Here it is the 20th of November, and look what I found on the outside of my screen door just now.... a huge and very-much-alive housefly. And earlier this evening, we had a thunder storm with several lightning strikes nearby. How about that?
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Images: Dust and Scratch Removal -
Thanks to my friend Eolake in the U.K., for finding this one for us. It's now out of date, but available from an archives site, and even though it comes to us from back in 2002, I'm happy to say it works fine in Windows 7. "How does it work?" you ask....
Pick an image with lots of scratches, like this one I borrowed from Eolake's website to demonstrate. On the 'Action' menu, select 'Create Mask' and use the default settings....
The program finds and highlights all the blemishes on the image. Again I used default settings, because it's my first time trying it, and then after I got this, I went back onto the "Action" menu and chose "Clean Image".....
And here's the finished cleaned-up image! Isn't this something? You can use Google to find out more, or check Eolake's blog for more information about this, including links to the downloads for Mac and Windows. For Windows, choose the most recent (2007) update on
that archives listing page.
that archives listing page.
Looking out the window...
It's a good day to be inside, looking out, I think.... except that the apartment on the other side of the wall behind my desk is being renovated, and its kitchen is against this wall. The kitchen cabinets were torn out last week, with a great deal of crashing and breaking of woodwork, and now the new cabinets are going up, requiring a concrete drill to make the holes for the anchors. When that drill comes on, even if I'm expecting it, the noise really startles me - it's very loud. These concrete buildings are like being inside a drum with someone beating on it whenever modifications are going on - and lately, that seems to be most of the time. When one gets finished, another starts. Sometimes, with all the holes it seems people have drilled into these walls, I wonder what's holding the place up....
Today, the subject of removing scratches from images came up, and this points up the fact that there aren't a lot of foolproof programs available for cleaning up old images. There are some, but they usually cost quite a lot, and even then they don't do a perfect job, if their trial demo versions are any indication. And I'm not buying something that doesn't live up to its advance publicity.
Today, the subject of removing scratches from images came up, and this points up the fact that there aren't a lot of foolproof programs available for cleaning up old images. There are some, but they usually cost quite a lot, and even then they don't do a perfect job, if their trial demo versions are any indication. And I'm not buying something that doesn't live up to its advance publicity.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Autumn Leaves
In spite of the snow on the hills, we still have some leaves on the trees, reminding us of warmer days.
Winter's getting closer...
The snow-line is getting lower and lower. But the grass is still green down here in the valley, where most of us are.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
This and that....
This is the opening window of the current version of Open Office, the free and complete office program from Sun and the open source community. I really don't need a full office program these days, being retired, but I've got lots of room on the hard-drive for more stuff, and it is a very handy program to have. Among other things, it uses Java which makes it a very versatile program, and for another, it's compatible with various programs usually found in Microsoft's Office, and can open and work with those files, and convert them into the Open Document Format, which makes them more universally useful.
For example, it can open and play a slide show made by Microsoft Office PowerPoint if for some reason your Microsoft Office PowerPoint Viewer 2007 doesn't display it properly for you. Like last night - a friend sent me a very nice slide show of pictures of the moon along with the Moonlight Sonata as background music, and there were over sixty images in it. I couldn't get it to play in its native Microsoft format. I could see the first image and listen to the music, or else I could manually scroll through the images, but I couldn't get it to run automatically with both the images and the music no matter what I tried, and speaking of that, cussing didn't help. So I downloaded the latest version of OpenOffice, and watched the slide show. My friend was right - it's a lovely presentation.
For example, it can open and play a slide show made by Microsoft Office PowerPoint if for some reason your Microsoft Office PowerPoint Viewer 2007 doesn't display it properly for you. Like last night - a friend sent me a very nice slide show of pictures of the moon along with the Moonlight Sonata as background music, and there were over sixty images in it. I couldn't get it to play in its native Microsoft format. I could see the first image and listen to the music, or else I could manually scroll through the images, but I couldn't get it to run automatically with both the images and the music no matter what I tried, and speaking of that, cussing didn't help. So I downloaded the latest version of OpenOffice, and watched the slide show. My friend was right - it's a lovely presentation.
Monday, November 16, 2009
Google's News this morning...
Harper promotes trade links to India -
Why? Is he afraid child labour might disappear from the face of the earth, or that we might not have an adequate supply of hand-woven carpets in the future? Doesn't he know that we have the second-largest population of Persians behind California on this continent, and that they make some pretty good carpets themselves?
Obama meets with Chinese leaders -
We hadn't imagined he went there simply for the authentic Chinese food. He's obviously there to discuss trade, and more specifically that the Chinese are selling a lot more stuff to the U.S. (and Canada) than North Americans are selling to them. And after buying one of the new Pentax X70 digital cameras, now made by a company in China which bought out the original Pentax manufacturer Asahi Optical Company of Japan, I'd be worried about that myself if I were him, because this Chinese company is turning out a very good product. A product that is definitely competitive with anything made in North America.
Canon may not be worried yet, but I wouldn't get too smug if I were them.
World leaders at UN summit vow to aid farmers in bid to help starving -
This is another of those periodic photo-op type things where everyone attends to see and be seen, and then they all vow that they're 100 percent in favour of Motherhood or Apple Pie, or a Chicken in Every Pot, or in this case Aid to The Starving. But just don't ask these fearless leaders to put their (or our) money where their mouths are, because then they will suddenly start back-pedalling and bafflegabbing like you wouldn't believe.
And that's just the first three headlines on Google News as I wrote this. I'm still reading the rest of it...
Why? Is he afraid child labour might disappear from the face of the earth, or that we might not have an adequate supply of hand-woven carpets in the future? Doesn't he know that we have the second-largest population of Persians behind California on this continent, and that they make some pretty good carpets themselves?
Obama meets with Chinese leaders -
We hadn't imagined he went there simply for the authentic Chinese food. He's obviously there to discuss trade, and more specifically that the Chinese are selling a lot more stuff to the U.S. (and Canada) than North Americans are selling to them. And after buying one of the new Pentax X70 digital cameras, now made by a company in China which bought out the original Pentax manufacturer Asahi Optical Company of Japan, I'd be worried about that myself if I were him, because this Chinese company is turning out a very good product. A product that is definitely competitive with anything made in North America.
Canon may not be worried yet, but I wouldn't get too smug if I were them.
World leaders at UN summit vow to aid farmers in bid to help starving -
This is another of those periodic photo-op type things where everyone attends to see and be seen, and then they all vow that they're 100 percent in favour of Motherhood or Apple Pie, or a Chicken in Every Pot, or in this case Aid to The Starving. But just don't ask these fearless leaders to put their (or our) money where their mouths are, because then they will suddenly start back-pedalling and bafflegabbing like you wouldn't believe.
And that's just the first three headlines on Google News as I wrote this. I'm still reading the rest of it...
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Not much happening today...
The weather's been dull and rainy, or maybe snowy depending if you're up on the hilltops, and there's not a lot to report. I'm reading instead of writing today. What am I reading? I'm reading Margaret Wente's latest book, 'You Can't Say That in Canada!'. She's not only a prize winning columnist with The Globe and Mail newspaper, but also a very entertaining writer of books, and she spins a good readable yarn. And now, if you'll excuse me, it's back to the book...
Monday, November 16th, 2009 -
I've finished the book, and it's an enjoyable read. Margaret shares her thoughts on a variety of topics, and does it with insight and humour. It's easy to see why she has won awards for her writing. It's one of those books that seems to end too soon. The Good News is that we can still find her column in The Globe and Mail newspaper.
Monday, November 16th, 2009 -
I've finished the book, and it's an enjoyable read. Margaret shares her thoughts on a variety of topics, and does it with insight and humour. It's easy to see why she has won awards for her writing. It's one of those books that seems to end too soon. The Good News is that we can still find her column in The Globe and Mail newspaper.
Saturday, November 14, 2009
About Blogger and postings
Here is where you can find more information about how to have more than one page in your blog, and how to set it up for the number of posts on the front or main page. This won't give you your own 'almost website' but it will be close, if you follow the directions.
Another upgraded program...
This has just been upgraded by Microsoft and now works with Windows 7 as well as Vista and its original XP. It's handy for matching the contents of two separate files.
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