Contents

THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

February 22 - 28, 1999

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THIS is the CURRENT View.

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This is a day book. It's not all that well edited. I try to keep this up daily, but sometimes I can't. I'll keep trying. See also the monthly COMPUTING AT CHAOS MANOR column, 4,000 words.

Day-by-day...
Monday -- Tuesday -- Wednesday -- Thursday -- Friday -- Saturday -- Sunday

 

Previous Weeks of The View: For an index of previous pages of view, see VIEWDEX.
See also the New Order page, which tries to make order of chaos. These will be useful.
For the rest, see What is this place? for some details on where you have got to.

Boiler Plate:

If you want to PAY FOR THIS there are problems, but I keep the latest HERE. I'm trying. MY THANKS to all of you who sent money. I'm making up a the mailing list. There are enough that it's a chore, which is not something to complain about. Some of you went to a lot of trouble to send money from overseas. Thank you! There are also some new payment methods. I am preparing a special (electronic) mailing to all those who paid: there will be a couple of these. I am also toying with the notion of a subscriber section of the page. LET ME KNOW your thoughts.
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If you subscribed:

atom.gif (1053 bytes) CLICK HERE for a Special Request.

If you didn't and haven't, why not?

If this seems a lot about paying think of it as the Subscription Drive Nag. You'll see more.

For the BYTE story, click here.

The LINUX pages are organized as the log, my queries, and your responses and advice parts one, twothree, and four. There's four pages because I try to keep download times well under a minute. There are new updates to four.

Highlights this week:

 

 

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This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

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Monday, February 22, 1999

THE MAIL PROBLEM IS OVER. Darnell found the solution about 2 minutes after I sent out a mailing to the subscribers mentioning it. If you're a subscriber and did not get that mailing, send me email: mention when you subscribed and HOW.

With luck I get some writing done this week. I'm also due to go up to NASA Ames to be part of a science fair program. The science education and promotion part of NASA's activities is extremely important, and much of it is done well. Rocket science requires that young people start early to learn the fundamentals of mathematics and science, and by early I mean grade school. It's getting late by middle school, and it's very rare for someone to decide to become a scientist in high school and then carry that intention to a successful conclusion. Not impossible, but it is difficult.

I confess I am weary of the INTERNET. This morning nothing was happening at all. I logged off. I shut down the system and started over. I logged on to Earthlink.net and tried ping. Nothing. Outlook takes a whle to be certain it can't connect to mail servers, and that wastes time waiting for it to try. I was certain that something was terribly wrong with MY system. Then I logged off again and on through Darnell's binmedia, and everythng worked. Apparently Earthlink was dead, not for long, but just long enough. Or dead here. Or who knows? I am more and more convinced that the Internet is a vast conspiracy to determine just how many grown people can be made to watch computer screens on which absolutely nothing is happening.

And Eric reports a fascinating factoid:

This is remarkably specific. It sounds like Win9x systems are being putto use where NT would be more appropriate, presuming Win32 as a necessity.

Computer Hangs After 49.7 Days (Q216641)

http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q216/6/41.asp

 

Wasting time with things that make you feel stupid:

Earthlink has an interesting feature. If you are connected to them and the connection is dropped --something that happens more frequently than I like -- while you are connected to the mail server, the mail server locks the box. At that point it takes some variable amount of time, from a couple of minutes to maybe ten minutes, before it resets. During that time it will demand your password when you try to connect again -- but it will NOT ACCEPT IT.

Thus if your mail program is set to request mail, it can trigger this, which starts the timing clock all over again. You can be locked out forever. Now if you then shut down your system because you think it was you that caused the problem, you may take long enough doing that to let Earthlik fix things. May. Meanwhile, about 1 out of 5 pings gets through; the traffic is that congested. They must be at the edge.

I have wasted hours I didn't have finding this out. One of those hours was on the telephone waiting to talk to a human being; what I got was a radio program of some kind telling me all kinds of things about DNS numbers. On, and On, and On, eternally. I am really unhappy with little computers and communications, and email, and the Internet just now…

Then there's all the mail security stuff. Necessary I suppose, but maddening, and if Earthlink is acting up, then you can't SEND MAIL THROUGH Earthlink from another connection. It now seems to have stabilized, but it sure took a while...

I wasted the morning fooling with this stuff. Sometimes the right thing to do is NOTHING. Shut down, go have coffee, and try again in a few hours. The Internet strikes again... but the good news is that it eventually fixes itself (from your point of view; I am sure there are lots and lots of people out there working hard to make things happen).

And more problems. First, if I rename currentview to viewxx where xx is the next consecutive number, all the internal links are preserved: but then the link from the default home page is of course no longer to currentview but to the numbered file again. Something has to be done; I need a "protected name". I suppose I can use the search and replace function, so that I can refuse the name change on the pages that shouldn't have it. I will have to think this through. Again. Anyway it ought to be fixed now but i am having a heck of a time getting my updates through.  BINMEDIA is on one of the GTE systems, the same one that

www.internetweather.com is on, and Internet Weather report is showing 100% packet losses between that system and Earthlink. How long that will keep up I don't know, but it means that to send mail I have to log on to Earthlink, but to receive mail I have to log on through binmedia or IBM net. This isn't good, and I really have to get DSL and run my mail on a Linux box HERE and be done with it... HOWEVER, see MAIL for an explanaton of at least that much. Earthlink was all messed up but that wasn't a proper report.

Well, I fixed one problem. I ought to be able to take care of this until I get DSL.

 

 

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Tuesday, February 23, 1999

Felling a bit under the weather. Niven was over, and we did manage a hike, and I will retire to write, but I'm sure rocky. The weather, though, is beautiful, clear skies and 80 degrees F.

I find that the Louisville Computer News, whatever that is, seems to have reprinted all or some of one of my commentaries. I wouldn't have known if someone hadn't decided to show what an imbecile I am by replying to them and sending me a copy. It's all over in mail.

Also in MAIL is a note explaining that the Internet Weather Report isn't accurate regarding Earthlink. I'll put up more when I know more: this is interesting.

More MAIL: a discussion of how to discuss. Is the USENET style the proper one? See the Tuesday mail, since there are several relevant.

And an FPRI REPORT on the Capture of Abdullah Ocalan

 

 

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Wednesday, February 24, 1999

I sent another mailing to the subscribers a few minutes ago. With luck this was the complete list. If you are a subscriber and did not get that mailing, send me, FROM THE ADDRESS YOU EXPECT MAIL TO BE SENT TO, a note saying just when you subscribed and that you didn't get the current mailing.

I expect to have some good news for everyone shortly.

 

 

 

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Thursday, February 25, 1999

We do have good news. I'm just putting things together now. Stay tuned.

Carol Van Ness was wonderful in Traviata last night. Of course Carol can do no wrong in my estimation to begin with: a couple of years ago I was introduced to her at a party by Louis Lebhertz, the LA bass who's become a pretty good friend. Carol said "Oh, I'm so glad to meet you. I've read all your books." And proceded to name some she'd liked. Now any soprano who can find time to read my books cannot have any faults... In any event she certainly made Violetta come alive (and then die) last night. Marta Domingo's direction was very good, and the sets were outstanding. Great production. The LA Opera has managed to become world class in a bootstrap operation that few expected to work properly. Alas, General Manager Peter Hemmings is leaving us, and he has been pretty well responsible for the achievement. Now if we can just keep it...

I find that I do not have ONE Windows machine that shuts down properly, and my W 95b system crashes every now and then without any good reason. I'm going to try reinstalling Windows 95b, and perhaps even doing it from scratch with reformatting the disk to FAT 32. Eagle One works well, but it too won't shut down properly. Even BIGSYS the Celeron doesn't always shut down properly. They work, all right, except for the 95b system that crashes sometimes. One day I'll get in there and find out what's happening.

Getting a good bit of mail on the shut down problem. Not much relevant to MY difficulties, but useful knowledge. Watch Mail.

Also in mail, a reader discovers on the telephone what I have been waiting to let CMP announce: BYTE really is coming back. Following is my reply to the letter over in Mail:

 

BYTE is coming back, as an on-line magazine. I don't know what all will be in it, but they have contracted for my column, and at a generous rate, too. We hope to be doing show awards also. They're talking to some of the other BYTE editors. I have been quite favorably impressed by the editorial people I've spoken with.

I don't have the details, although I make no doubt there will be a steady stream of them coming out if they're now giving this out on the telephone (see mail for details).

The impact on this web site will be minimal. At the moment you read the column here; in future, where you would normally find it here, you will find a link to their site. They will almost certainly have advertisements there. I won't have anything to do with those, which is what I have wanted: I don't like having to go sell ads or have someone do it for me. And needless to say, CMP assures me that I keep my traditional and total editorial independence.

Thanks to the subscribers this site has been kept open, and assuming I continue to get enough subscriptions to justify the actual expenses of keeping this place going (as opposed to the research and editorial costs of producing the column and paying for my time, which the new BYTE is taking care of) I'll keep this experiment going. The result should be that the experience here will be unchanged for most of you, while I will have some resources to work with, including press credentials for my staff (I have never had any problems on that score, but I do worry about how many people I can accredit by myself).

Watch this space for details, but mostly watch for the new CMP/BYTE announcements.

IN response to several requests: I have ZERO influence or contact with the circulation and subscription people at CMP. I work with an editor, who himself has no contact or influence with circulation. Sorry, but there's NOTHING I can do about subscription refunds from BYTE, and in fact they owe me on one as well. If they tell me anything I'll pass it along, but for the moment I know nothing...

A new installment of Ed DeJesus on Y2K and You is now up.

Well, I have tried the REGEDIT in DOS trick described over in MAIL, and no harm seems to have been done. The system comes up all right, and everything seems to work. It's hard to tell if anything is different. However, one thing is certain: it doesn't shut down properly yet. We get to the "Please wait while the system shuts down" splash screen, and it stays there. Eventually I turn it off; and the next time it comes up it runs check disk. If you try this be prepared for it to take a while: the registry files are BIG, and DOS takes a long time to export them. Eventually the job is done, though. May have been useful; hard to tell. But alas, it did not cure the "won't shut down properly" problem.  We will see if the machine blue screens again.  Hard to tell on that, too, since I do not know what causes it and the blue screen crash is not reproducible at will; it just sometimes happens.

Aaargh.

If you really want to waste some time, try getting something off the Internet about the Lisa Myers interview and Clinton.   AltaVista is taking forever to return nothing. WWW.NBC.COM search engine returns 60 hits all about things like Jay Leno and the Homicide cast; not a single thing about that. MSNBC insists on frogging around with plugins and things and I hung up on it after a while since it never did show me ANYTHING other than "this is your first time here and we want to do things to you".

Do people actually LOOK AT THAT STUFF?  I find it hard to believe that grown people waste that much time. And ominiously, Altavista on +Lisa +Myers +Interview +Clinton is returning NOTHING as if it is being interecepted. I am sure it is not. I am sure it is merely the Internet wasting time as usual transmitting so many ads that there is no room for information. More and more I become convinced that my joke that the Internet is a conspiracy to see how many grown people can be made to stare at screens on which NOTHING is happening is no joke at all.

Anyway, I eventually went to washingtonpost.com and back to last Saturday's paper -- simple enough to do -- and read the story, which was all I wanted to do. But it wasn't easy to get to. The Post seems to have covered it well, what there is to cover, which isn't much. Given a 20 years story how could there be?

And that is it for tonight. Early airplane tomorrow.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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This week:

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Friday, 26 February 1999

Today and tomorrow I'll be off speechifying at NASA Ames and in the Bay Area. Back Saturday evening. Start without me...

 

 

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Saturday, February 27, 1999

Just back from NASA Ames. Bit tired. Some new stuff in mail, and I'll get up to speed shortly.

I'll be out in Mojave for the Rotary Rocket Rollout ( www.rotaryrocket.com  ) all day Monday,and in Seattle Thursday night/Friday, so this is going to be a fast week. Lots of stuff happening regarding BYTE. The rollout will be covered live on the web at www.rollout.org or so I am told.

And it's dinner time.

 

 

 

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This week:

Monday
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Sunday, February 28, 1999

Bob Thompson sent me a note about

http://www.junkscience.com/

which is a website that make no bones about its views. Possibly not everything listed there is pure junk science, but a lot of it is. The article on how to tell Al Gore from the Unibomber is wonderful.

I am also reminded that the alt.home page isn't well connected. This is the page that lists the various "alt" discussions pages here. I suppose I ought to get that one into other reference places. I've just put it in "What is this place?" and I'll have to think of other spots.

LATE SUNDAY NIGHT or Early Monday Morning as you choose:

I am off to Mojave for the Rotary Rocket Rollout in the morning. Back at night. Rollover on View and Mail will have to wait until I get back. Be of good cheer...

 

 

 

 

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