October 09, 2005
Answer
Yesterday, Dawn surprised me by saying that this print was me.

Posted by: Ted at 08:02 PM | Comments (9) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Oddses and Endses
It's all in the details.
With all the rain we've been having the past two days (measured in inches), our basement is flooding a little bit. So I've been doing the towels on the floor, spin and dry, sop up the excess from the carpet with the cleaner, etc. That's the hassle part of it. The benefit side is that the creeks around us are all full to bursting, and when I went to let the dogs out this morning, you can hear the water rushing in the background. Very nice. The Carnival of the Recipes is up over at the Glittering Eye. There are the usual collection of outstanding dishes for every taste, contributed by people from all over the world. Go check it out. Last week I was in the back upstairs bedroom (3rd floor of our townhouse), painting near the window, when I was startled by a flash just outside the glass. I witnessed a magnificent little aerial battle as a large blackbird was chased off by one of our local hawks. They were like two nimble fighter jets, wings extended, banking and darting as the blackbird tried to shake the hawk from his tail. The hawk was close enough that, had he wanted, he could have snatched a tail feather from the blackbird with his talons. They fell two stories and, at the last second the blackbird broke hard left, over the back fence and out of the area. The hawk leveled out and glided across the back meadow to the wood, where he perched in a tall tree and stayed for a while, as if surveying for further intruders. When I got home last night I checked on the hockey scores and noted that Brian's St. Louis Blues were in the process of whooping on my beloved Sharks. This morning I inteded to go find a Blues logo to post here, in accordance withPosted by: Ted at 08:05 AM | Comments (10) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 08, 2005
New Player in the Hockey Whoopass Jamboree
Everyone welcome Brandon to the Jamboree.
He's selected the Los Angeles Kings. By the way, Brandon, my Sharks logo is 204x193. I just wanted to make sure you make plenty of room for it, since you'll be displaying it often this season. The players:Machelle and David: Detroit Red Wings
Frinklin: Vancouver Canucks
Brian J: St. Louis Blues
Tom: Philadelphia Flyers
Derek: Colorado Avalanche
Gir: Calgary Flames
Grand Moff Trojan: Colorado Avalanche
Tilesey: Toronto Maple Leafs
Cal Tech Girl: Carolina Hurricanes
Victor: Washington Capitals
Michele: New York Rangers
Brandon: Los Angeles Kings
Yours Truly: San Jose Sharks
Posted by: Ted at 06:50 AM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 07, 2005
Triviacity
Last Wednesday, October 5th, was the 40th birthday of Mario Lemieux and Patrick Roy.
Posted by: Ted at 11:44 AM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Launch Report
All right, this is way late, but since I use Rocket Jones as my online flight log, you get to read it or skip it.
This launch was one of our monthly club launches, sponsored by NOVAAR. Held at Great Meadow Equestrian Center on 9/11/2005, the weather was beautiful and the wind ranged from near calm to quite brisk. The biggest problem was that it was blowing diagonally across the field, directly towards the biggest patch of woods bordering the field. I pulled a shift as Launch Controller, and also made several flights of my own. 1. Angel - D12-5 - This ring-fin hadn't flown for a couple of years, but she made an excellent comeback flight. 2. Snitch - D12-0 / C6-0 - I chad-staged this plastic flying saucer from Estes. Great flight, and it always gets a lot of attention with the big motor hanging out from underneath. 3. Pacifyer - D12-5 - Arrow-straight boost and good recovery for my flying blood-dripping battleaxe. 4. YJ-218 - C6-7x2 - Perfect ignition of both engines. Great flight. 5. Phoenix - H180 White Lightning, medium delay - Loud and smokey, and after the motor burnout you could hear her fins whistling as she coasted to apogee. She suffered the only damage of the day, when she landed on one lower fin and the body tube partially delaminated. Easy fix, and the fin is still rock solid. 6. Barenaked Lady - F24-7 - This flight was just plain stupid. I put a big honkin' motor in a large but very lightweight rocket. She screamed off the pad, arced ever so slightly into the wind, and landed less than 50 yards away. Only on low-wind days. Sweet! 7. Odin's Spear - B6-6 - Another excellent flight from Vertical Force's first kit offering. Rich was kind enough to give me one of the new kits in the package for helping to test the prototype. It's numbered too. Cool! So that was it for my flights. Another excellent rocket flying day that are far too far apart.Posted by: Ted at 04:58 AM | Comments (7) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 06, 2005
PDA Software Review - CalliGrapher
Over at Mozongo they've posted my latest review. This time it's an excellent handwriting recognition application. Plenty of screen captures accompany my usual wit and wisdom *ahem*, so head on over and check it out.
Posted by: Ted at 05:34 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Third Annual Inter-Munuvian Hockey Whoopass Jamboree Roster (updated)
(This will be bumped to the top once in a while as updates happen)
It's perfectly ok for more than one person to select a team, so just because someone else has declared for your favorite doesn't mean you can't play. The players: Machelle and David: Detroit Red WingsFrinklin: Vancouver Canucks
Brian J: St. Louis Blues
Tom: Philadelphia Flyers
Derek: Colorado Avalanche
Gir: Calgary Flames
Grand Moff Trojan: Colorado Avalanche
Tilesey: Toronto Maple Leafs
Cal Tech Girl: Carolina Hurricanes
Victor: Washington Capitals
Michele: New York Rangers
Yours Truly: San Jose Sharks
The rules: 1. If you have a favorite hockey team, place their logo somewhere on your front page. Let me know.
2. Every time your team plays someone else's team in the Jamboree, the loser must place the winner's logo (and a link) on their front page for 24 hours.
3. You don't have to actually be a Munuvian to play.
4. Trash talkin' is encouraged.
Posted by: Ted at 12:14 PM | Comments (8) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Hockey is back!!!
Quick notes and thoughts:
Last night, every player in the NHL wore a special patch on their sweaters. After the first period, they all changed and the game-worn jerserys will be auctioned off at NHL.com to raise money for hurricane relief. Alexander Ovechkin is scary-good.His first NHL check was so fierce it dislodged a support beam. He refused to let his team lose, twice answering with goals less than 90 seconds after the opponents took the lead. And when his face appeared on the large scoreboard, he stuck out his tongue and flashed a charismatic smile.The Halpern-Zubrus-Ovechkin line is clicking, with Zubrus picking up the Capitals third goal and an assist, and center Halpern dishing up three assists. My favorite "duh" moment was when one announcer asked the other if he noticed that the team didn't seem as sharp or as quick as normal and what could be the reason. His answer? "They haven't played in fifteen months!" Here's your sign.
Posted by: Ted at 11:49 AM | Comments (6) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Paging Al Unser III
Rocket racing. Real rockets, real pilots.
A private group of rocketeers has banded together to create the Rocket Racing League with aims at blurring the line between competitive racing and human spaceflight. Their vision: A fleet of at least 10 stock rocket planes flown by crack pilots through a three-dimensional track 5,000 feet above the Earth.
"Imagine not one, but 10 of these fire-breathing dragons flying around a race course." -- Peter Diamandis
One of these visionaries is Peter Diamandis, who also founded the $10 million Ansari X Prize suborbital competition for private piloted spacecraft.The liquid oxygen/kerosene fuel mix is expected to have a burn time of about four minutes, which would force pilots to repeatedly shut down their engines and glide, then restart as needed to surpass opponents, explained Searfoss, who will demonstrate the method during the upcoming prototype demonstration. Because of their fuel type, X-Racers should also generate a 20-foot flame easily visible from the ground, which will be vital for spectators, Diamandis said.These people aren't crazy, they're looking to foster greater interest among the population for civilian spaceflight. Better duck, NASCAR. Thanks to Chris Hall at Spacecraft for the pointer. He's got some interesting background tie-in information too.
Posted by: Ted at 05:41 AM | Comments (7) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
I like cookies. I like history.
So you know I love this site full of the history of cookies!
Thanks to James at Starfighter's Model Blog for the pointer.Posted by: Ted at 05:04 AM | Comments (7) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Over the top
Used to be, there were a lucky few who got to write blurbs for trashy paperbacks:
No man could satisfy her. Four men tried to tame this wildcat who knew no end to the daisy-chain game of sin savagery... until she met a woman as explosive as herself. Together they stormed into an arena of perverted pleasures that knew no parallel except in hell. -- I Want You, by Lester LakeNowadays, I think they hang out in AOL chat.
Posted by: Ted at 04:14 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 05, 2005
Question
Look at this picture (reasonably safe for work). The ladies pictured are topless, but the body paint is good enough to hide that fact except under close and careful examination.
Disregarding everything except the spirit of fun and adventure, could you do that?Posted by: Ted at 05:44 AM | Comments (7) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Quote
He's a good interview:
"Just put down 'bleep.' It's OK. Lots of things I say in the paper have bleeps in them." -- Chicago White Sox manager Ozzie GuillenHe's a good interview, with a little judicious editing.
Posted by: Ted at 04:48 AM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 04, 2005
Finally getting around to it
From John at TexasBestGrok (who's blog turned 2 the other day - yay!):
Context: Insects are specialists (drone, workers, queens, etc), where humans are generalists. The original Heinlein:A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.Items I've done are in bold, notes and explanations follow. * Change a diaper - cloth for the first child, disposable for the third, a mix for the middle kid.
* Plan an invasion - in real life a security exercise designed to steal nuclear weapons, on a gameboard for entire continents and galaxies.
* Butcher a hog - deer, pheasant and fish.
* Conn a ship - my Uncle's sailboat, which he sometimes sailed to Hawaii.
* Design a building - the largest that ever made it past the paper stage was a shed.
* Write a sonnet - I've written some pretty bad poetry, but no sonnets of any quality
* Balance accounts - enough to get by.
* Build a wall - wood, brick, and maybe stone next summer.
* Set a bone - a friend's broken finger, although I never want to have to do it again.
* Comfort the dying - I've been fortunate in my life.
* Take orders - thirteen years in the Air Force.
* Give orders - ditto.
* Cooperate
* Act alone
* Solve equations - it's not math... it's not math...
* Analyze a new problem - welcome to computer programming
* Pitch manure - and hay and ground oats (?), family with dairy farms
* Program a computer - my job.
* Cook a tasty meal - check.
* Fight efficiently - fight? yeah. won? yeah. lost? oh yeah.
* Die gallantly - more than once in a simulated fashion while doing security exercises for the Strategic Air Command. Hey, that's more than I expected!
Posted by: Ted at 05:21 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Supremely Amused
I've been enjoying the hyperventilation going on among some conservatives over President Bush's nominee for the high court. Mostly because I remember the chorus of "he's the President so he should get to choose anyone he wants to join the Supreme Court."
Guess what? He did. That ol' "be careful what you wish for" bites y'all in ass again.Posted by: Ted at 05:01 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
eBooks
All kinds of eBook related news, information and links at TeleRead.
Posted by: Ted at 05:48 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
October 03, 2005
That line keeps repeating in my head
So New Orleans Mayor Nagin has appointed a committee to oversee reconstruction. This is a different committee than the one appointed by the city council to oversee reconstruction. And then, not to be outdone, Governor Blanco has appointer her very own committee to oversee reconstruction.
More hands muddying the money trail, more people to blame when questions arise. These folks are old pros at the grand con game called corrupt government. I'm reminded of the movie Operation Petticoat. Cary Grant was the skipper of a submarine, and Tony Curtis was his "supply" officer who specialized in creative larceny to get things done. During an air raid, the supply troops headed out, saying "In confusion, there is profit." True words.Posted by: Ted at 08:45 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
It ain't the Supreme Court, but it's still an honor
I've been promoted to "crony" over at the Ministry of Minor Perfidy!
If you don't regularly read these guys, then you're not getting your minimum requirement of evil robot overlords, all things yeasty and the occasional neener-neener from a snotty Canadian.Posted by: Ted at 07:08 PM | Comments (8) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Meanwhile, in my fantasies... (updated)
Sports, that is.
Our baseball season is over. I wound up a respectable 5th out of 10 teams, and was fighting for 4th throughout the last month or so. (update: I did finish in 4th place in the final standings) Many thanks to annika for being the commish for this league, I had a blast. Congrats to Hank's Homeys for running away with the pennant. Meanwhile, over at the stadium, I inexplicably won again thanks to some truly uninspired play by my opponents roster. By all rights, he should've stomped me. I'm not loving this league, because the scoring emphasis seems to be on touchdowns, which make your wide recievers the primary weapons. Running backs and quarterbacks are a very small part of the equation that I'm seeing so far. It's still fun, but I preferred last year's setup, where total yardage and number of receptions and other stats factored in. You still have the chance to sign up for the fantasy hockey league. You don't have to obsess, peoples, it's for fun!Posted by: Ted at 05:30 AM | Comments (5) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Flower blogging
I was telling a coworker about a couple of plants I've got going on this year in our front yard and told her I'd take pictures.
(in the extended entry)Posted by: Ted at 05:06 AM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
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