Author: Karel Kerezman

  • The rewards of vanity searching.

    Remember the d’Artagnan incident? Almost a year ago it was, and this morning I was reminded of it by the following email:

    Just ran a search of the web and found this!
    Glad I could affect your life Dartagnian!

    Happy New Year!

    Jim

    That’s right, James P. Connolly was checking the web for instances of his own name. Hey, nothing wrong with that; we’ve all done it at least once. Full marks to the guy for taking a moment to type out a quick bit of something.

    Just for that, here’s a link to his website. Because, hey, I’m all about the positive rewards of cheerful politeness.
    James P. Connolly

  • Making Like Legolas On The Snow

    I looked outside this morning. Yep, still white. I turned on the news. Yep, still cold, still crappy bus service (though that’s no fault of Tri-Met!), and the thaw’s not due until almost quitting time.

    For grins and chuckles I took my camera outside. What surprised me wasn’t how white everything looked, but how well I was able to stand on top of the snow. I felt a bit like Legolas in FotR. Can you say, “solid layer of ice atop five inches of snow”? I knew you could.

    By the way, pictures are forthcoming. I just have to wait for my camera battery to recharge. I knew I forgot something important yesterday… and where the hell is my spare? Argh.

    UPDATE: Spare battery found. Here are some new pictures. More to come, probably…

  • All Your Rovers Are Belong To Us

    My friend Ben and I have been exchanging emails about the Mars Expedition Rovers and other fun Martian exploration topics (who’d have thunk that Pathfinder would be right about where NASA left it, considering the severity of Martian windstorms?), and the topic of remote software programming came up. See, a fair chunk of the software for the new rovers’ missions will be uploaded (and was there ever a more apt use of that term?) after they land. This fact prompted speculation on the sorts of things one could program the rovers to do, or say.

    And from there we quickly found ourselves asking, “So what geek from what country is going to hack the Mars Rover first?” For instance, I thought, someone might prompt a rover to transmit:

    ALL YOUR MARS BASE ARE BELONG TO US — SOMEONE SET US UP THE MARS

    Ben, being a far cleverer sort, supplied the following suggestions:

    DUBYA: WHERE IS MY EARTH-SHATTERING KABOOM? — MARVIN

    WE HAVE ELVIS. LEAVE TWELVE MILLION IN UNMARKED BULLION IN A VALISE AT GROOM LAKE.

    I CAN SEE YOUR HOUSE FROM HERE.

    GREETINGS TO THE PUNY HUMANS. WELCOME TO A NEW AGE OF INTERPLANETARY WAR.

    DESTROY ALL YODELING COWBOY MUSIC WITHIN 24 HOURS OR FACE METEORITIC DESTRUCTION.

    JPL: WE ARE INSTALLING LINUX ON THIS THING. GET OVER IT.

    404 ERROR: FILE NOT FOUND.

    JPL: IS ‘RAM DISK’ AN INSTALLATION PROCEDURE?

    LOOK, MA, NO HANDS!

    WE ARE SUING THE ORSON WELLES ESTATE FOR DEFAMATION AND SLANDER.

    WHAT STUPID MONKEY CANCELLED ‘FUTURAMA’? WE WANT AMY WONG DELIVERED UNTO US.

    THIS DEVICE HAS PERFORMED AN ILLEGAL OPERATION AND MUST BE SHUT DOWN.

    WOULD YOU LIKE TO PLAY A GAME? CHECKERS? CHESS? GLOBAL THERMONUCLEAR WAR?

    WE DEMAND THE HEAD OF HEYWOOD FLOYD

    MARS HAS HYDRATED AND OXYGENATED ROCKS. SEND POT SEEDS.

    DID YOU KNOW THIS THING CAN DO WHEELIES?

    ALIEN BABE CAM 24 HOURS A DAY — YOU CAN SEE EVERY PSEUDOPOD!

    HAVE FOUND ALIEN EGGS AND ACQUIRED PARASITIC FACEHUGGER. PLEASE SEND RESCUE TEAM.

    THIS DEVICE WAS 0WN3D BY A 13-YEAR-OLD IN NEBRASKA WITH A LINUX P-90, A PACKET RADIO TRANSMITTER, 400 FEET OF ALUMINUM FOIL, HIS MOTHER’S SATELLITE DISH, AND A MUTILATED SPEAK AND SPELL. EAT MY SHORTS NASA.

    As George Carlin once said, “These are the thoughts that kept me out of the really good schools.” Heh.

    Yes, we’re geeks. But we’re damned clever and amusing geeks, if we do say so ourselves…

  • Snow Day, January 2004

    I woke up this morning with the alarm. Then I looked outside, and became alarmed.

    “Well then,” I said to myself, “What do the weather people have to say?”

    Several minutes of websurfing later:

    “What? To travel is to put one’s life at risk? Hmm.”

    I was still considering it when I looked outside just in time to see a huge gust of wind sweeping the fine, frozen powdery snow off the rooftops and swirling it about. “Ah,” I then said, not caring who might be listening, “I don’t think I want to spend upwards of an hour commuting in that, waiting for buses and then hiking the rest of the way to work.”

    Instead, I stayed home to drink cocoa and take more pictures…

  • Past, Present, Future – Round Forty-six

    PAST: Share with us one good and one bad thing about this past year.

    PRESENT: Which direction are you headed as the new year begins?

    FUTURE: What will you have accomplished by this time next year?

    You’ll notice I didn’t ask for a list of resolutions. That would be hypocritical… I haven’t made resolutions in years.

    Six more weeks and it’s all over, folks. The PPF, that is. Thanks for playing, as always!

  • Goodbye, 2003, and good riddance.

    The year wasn’t all bad, but it wasn’t that good either. I’m more than ready for 2004 to begin.

    I was going to get more introspective and detailed, here, but I just can’t seem to work up the enthusiasm required. Suffice to say that much has changed this year, and I’m still trying to settle into the new scheme of things.

    Here’s hoping you and yours have a splendid new year, friends.