March 29, 2005

End of Life

Thinking about all the fooforah over Terry Schiavo, and I just can't imagine what her parents and their supporters are thinking.

In the case where there's no one home, they're squandering a huge amount of resources that could be used to actually help someone who's still around.

In the case where there is someone there, I can't think of a worse torture than being locked in a body with no way to interact with anyone or anything. I would go stark raving mad within a month. It would be like being buried alive. Anyone who kept me alive under those circumstances is my enemy, not my friend.

No matter how you cut it, it's doing no one any favors except the self delusional, the ones who love publicity and the politicians grandstanding over it. And if their constituents have any sense, it'll be their last grandstand...

Posted by abatie at 01:46 AM | Comments (0)

Burr's Mom

A good friend's mom lost her battle with emphysema tonight. I've known him, and her, for, wow, almost 30 years now. She was a great lady, always smiling and interested in the world. Traveling to Alaska not even that long ago. No use at all for intolerance and bigotry. The world is a lesser place now...
Posted by abatie at 12:48 AM | Comments (0)

March 16, 2005

Special Rights?

I was thinking about gay marriage this morning, with the small victory in California yesterday, and realized that the anti-gay crowd has lost one of its most often used criticisms of gay rights laws: that it's "special rights". What's more of a special right than saying "we can get married and you can't, nyah nyah nyah!"?
Posted by abatie at 08:57 AM | Comments (0)

March 11, 2005

Superstitions, Karma and The Price You Pay

I'm not superstitious. Really, I'm not. But this week has been one to try your faith in the rational.

Saturday, I had a great time visiting the M&LK Railroad with Marc. And I've been paying for it ever since. More than paid: I think the Karma Police owe me!

It started Sunday: upgrading the mail server at sawnet (converting from qmail to postfix, because spamcop decided that qmail was "bad" and blacklisting sawnet as a result). It was a disaster. OK, I don't know postfix as well as I thought I did. I'd planned on doing this upgrade on another system where I could have gotten it working and tested first, but with spamcop blacklisting us, we had to get something in place ASAP.

Oh, and my Windoze box died miserably Sunday too, but at least I'd already move to the Mac for my main desktop...

I did get it mostly working Monday morning, though it was horribly backlogged, and then at Peak, we had a DOS attack on a customer. Simple, have our network guy put in a block on our router to stop the bad traffic. He's doing that, pasting in the new rules, when right in the middle of the paste, the system he's doing it from loses a hard disk and crashes. It's mirrored, but apparently it's crap for raid hardware (like the rest of that system). The result is our main router left in a semi-functional state. I get the management system back up, while others get the router working again.

Then we find that it took out our dialup access servers. It had done the last time it crashed, a month and a half ago, and we never did figure out why, but this time, rebooting the switch they're connected to didn't fix it as it had before. Finally figured out that a subtle ordering of config statements was causing the problem for some weird reason. So, we get that back up.

Then, on Tuesday, we get complaints of network slowness, and eventually track that down to a switch that connects us to one of our major WAN circuits had a hardware failure.

I spend all night Tuesday clearing the backlog at sawnet and tuning the system, fixing some remaining problems.

Wednesday, things are starting to resume some normalcy as we start to rearrange things to mitigate future problems when the same things happen...

And then Thursday, one of the mail servers reboots and it takes a while to find out that the software on it is old and buggy and it doesn't come back up automatically. I reconfigured it so it should now (though it still needs tested).

Oh, and I discovered today that it looks like the user shell server has been hacked.

In other words, The Week From Hell.

Posted by abatie at 07:33 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

March 10, 2005

Peace and diversity

I was thinking about the Shiites, Syria and Lebanon, and solidifying something that's been taking shape in my mind for quite some time now: most of the current squabbles going on are because one group of people is bound and determined to force another group of people to live the way the first group wants them to, and all they want is to be left alone. Although I really don't don't buy into segregation --- I think we're all better off exposed to each other's cultures and viewpoints, if a majority isn't willing to allow a minority to live how they choose, then that minority has the right to segregate and do so. And until there's a mechanism in place to allow that, there will not be peace on this planet. Or anywhere else such conditions exist. Libertarians are making a few limited attempts at doing something like that, but they're too independent to work together and it's going nowhere. I don't know how to arrange such a thing, but I do know that it's going to be a requirement for peace.
Posted by abatie at 09:48 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Meadows & Lake Kathleen Railroad

Last week, I got a trouble report about a website we host at Peak: The Meadows & Lake Kathleen Railroad. The trouble turned out to be a non-issue, but while checking it out, I had to view the site, and thought "Wow! Way Cool!". An ex-railroader is building his own little mini railroad in his own private valley between Eugene and Florence. I emailed him and asked about visiting, and he said "sure!" and emailed me directions. The extended entry is the trip report...

It's a *long* way to almost-florence ;-)

I emailed Ray Robinson last week, and then talked to him on the phone Friday and he emailed me a map. Marc and I headed down this afternoon. Partway there, Marc said "let's put the intersection of roads where he is on the map into the nav system". So we did. I think we were around Junction City at the time. The first amazing part was that it actually had his roads in it, which I guess shouldn't be too surprising given my experience out back of Mary's Peak. Then it said we still had an hour and a half to go. Ouch. OK, whatever. Partway there, it says "turn right ahead". Marc says "I think it meant back there at that dirt road." "No, it's up ahead" Then it goes into "you missed the turn, recalculate directions" mode and tells me to turn around. It really did mean that dirt road. We go back and head up it a little ways and it's looking like a power line access road, at least there are HV towers above and clear cuts around. Since it's 3ish already, while it would be fun to follow it and see where it takes us, we decide to go back to the highway, go a ways and then tell it to find a new way, which it then does quite nicely and we get there around 4:30 or so. I was remembering the goat trail it had tried to take me on out behind Mary's Peak...

Photos from visit to M&LK Railroad

They had a work party going on, as he'd told me, but we were welcome to walk the track and ask questions. We weren't expecting to get a ride, but it was at the end of the day, and they were just finishing up --- they're working on a "teardrop" that will let the train turn around instead of having to run backwards. Anyway, Ray said they would be taking the diesel/hydraulic out and we'd be welcome to take a ride, so we jumped at the chance.

The property is 41 acres in a valley surrounded by national forest on 3 sides --- they see elk almost daily, have seen mountain lions 5 times, otters and beaver in "Lake Kathleen" and had a couple elk doing battle for about 45 minutes in front of them once. Pretty much paradise ;-)

Just as we were leaving, he gave me a loaner VHS tape of a segment Oregon Field Guide did on his setup last summer, which I just got done recording on DVD and making some copies to send back with the tape. It says he was a brakeman/conductor for 17 years with Southern Pacific if I remember right. Now he's a landscaper --- he learned concrete sculpting working on the Oregon Coast Aquarium construction and now does that and landscaping to pay for the building of the railroad, along with contributions --- while we where there, a guy drove up with a new multi-switch assembly he'd just got done building for the setup. The rail though, he said was $134 a piece now --- I'd say about 10' or so. They've got 4000' laid down now, and when finished will be 6000'. As he says on the video, "there's a lot of european vacations here" ;-)

On the way back we were getting pretty hungry, as we'd waited on lunch until after as we knew if we took the time for it before, we'd be too late to see anything when we got there. So it's 7-7:30 now. Marc says Mazzi's in Eugene would be a good place to go, so I put that in the nav system and it says an hour and a half! Oh well.

Following its instructions back, after a short ways, it says "turn left ahead". That turns out to be Nelson Mt Rd, and looks an awful lot like it's heading up into the hills that it had tried to send us on to on the way down, so we pass it, then stop and zoom out the map, as we'd done before. It said there was only about 10 miles of it, and it cut a large loop out through Mapleton off, so I figure well, what the heck, maybe it's actually right. It started off ok, paved even, then turned to gravel after a while, and somewhat low end gravel a bit after that, but then didn't get any worse. After about 30-45 minutes, lo! we came out right where I thought we would (Walker Creek Rd, where it had tried to have me go before). I think it actually saved 15-30 minutes... I have to wonder if the nav systems in their regular cars try to route them over roads like that though... The 640x480 version of photo #1510 has been photoshopped so you can see the road (it was dark --- just headlights lighting). Color artifacts aside, it actually looks a little better than it was.

Anyhow, we got to "Mazzi's" and found instead "A Taste of India", which the nav system also had in it, both with the same address. Indian sounded good, and I have to say, the tandoori chicken was mediocre, but I had the best papadom and samosas I've ever had there. I forgot to try the gulab jamon, as I only ate half the chicken as it was, and it was 9:30 and we wanted to get back. Though Marc decided he was in an ice cream mood, so we found a baskin robbins nearby and *then* headed back, arriving home around 11pm. I thought that was probably a bit late to swing by Gary's ;-)

So, that's the tale of the day's adventure...

Oh, one more thing: they're basically having an open house the last weekend of June, and he'll be running the *live steam* engine pretty much constantly then --- apparently quite a few people show up for this once-a-year doins. It's invitation only, but if you send him email expressing interest, that's about all it takes to get one...

M&LK Railroad

Posted by abatie at 09:24 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

March 03, 2005

Netflix/signonsandiego.com

I used to like these guys and even rent from them, until they got greedy and went to a subscription model: pay us $20/mo whether you watch anything or not! Bzzzt. No cigar. And no more money from me. That was just a business decision that didn't match my needs, not really a big deal. It works great for a friend of mine who does rent a lot and more power to him. Until now. I visit a newspaper site (signonsandiego.com), and was confronted with yet another of the "popunder" ads that are specifically designed to work even if you've specifically configured your browser to disallow such things. It's annoying enough to have them in the first place, but to do their best to force them upon you, well, that earns them a place in the Scumbags of the Day list.
Posted by abatie at 01:33 AM | Comments (0)

It's Really Not That Hard

I really don't see what all the fooforah is over the 10 Commandments, it's really quite simple: just setup a public area where any legitimate religious group (yeah, that'll be a fun one to define, but a simple definition would be any group with IRS church status) can put up a display. The government or any one working in or holding office is not allowed to put up anything religious, but the religious groups can as long as they're all treated equally. An atheistic group should be able to put up a display too, and no one would be allowed to attack or put down anyone else, only displays that represent and/or explain their beliefs.

Posted by abatie at 01:24 AM | Comments (0)