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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View: October 4 - 10, 1999

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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 - 7,000 words, depending.  (Older columns here.) For more on what this place is about, please go to the VIEW PAGE.

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Monday October 4, 1999

Flurry of stuff last night. Lots of new mail proving that Fry's is evil (which began with a diatribe in view). I wouldn't go quite that far, but if you buy much there you need to keep a pile of paperwork where you can find it to get your warranties honored. Unlike Circuit City where they keep track of all that for you.

This is column week, and there is also an Intellectual Capital column due by tomorrow. I think that one will be on the information revolution, but we'll see what inspires me...

Courtesy of John Rice there are new Maildex and Viewdex pages, and a new SEARCH TIPS page that explains in some detail how to use the new search engine here.

 

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Tuesday, October 5, 1999

Regarding the missing box and Fry's, I got this advice:

Jerry

A> purchase a identical CPU

B> Remove new CPU and replace with broken CPU

C> Return the broken CPU in the new BOX for a refund

D> Don't go back

Michael A. Boyle mboyle@toltbbs.com

Which in fact I had already thought of. But I don't need two relatively slow Pentium II CPU's, and it isn't that much money compared to the time all this would take. Mostly I have learned a lesson.

For those who have the "advice" that one should never get anything that has been opened, sure, but if that's all they have, and the whole point of being out there is to get something for a deadline, there's no way to follow that advice, which is, after all, something fairly obvious. And with something like a CPU chip, in general it either works or it doesn't, and if is going to fail it will fail in a few hours or days, not after several weeks which this one did. I had kept that stupid box and the paper work since June when I bought the thing, and indeed, it worked right up to the day I turned the system off, and it wouldn't turn back on. In fact, I then put a Pentium III into that slot, it worked, for one last try put the older defective Pentium II in; that worked! But when I shut it down, I got the same thing: no video, nothing. It was just dead. I have the suspicion that if I put in it again it would work until the next time it was turned off. (Turning it off and leaving it off long enough to get completely cool didn't do the job; I had tried that before.)

Anyway none of this is worth the time it's costing, so I'll just eat the dead Pentium II 400 (which isn't a lot of chip to begin with) and only use Fry's when they have a big blowout sale on something I want. No point in demonizing the place. They know, I know, and they know I know that their clerks know less about their products than I do. I expect that. I don't go there for advice. I do think they ought to rethink their warranty policy: they know I bought that chip there, they know I buy (bought) a lot of stuff there because it was convenient, and they know they can return that chip to Intel for a refund. If they have set their policies -- the first line clerk at the returns counter purported to go check with a supervisor, and I presume she did something other than go smoke a cigarette in back -- this way, that is their business. One knows they have to keep expenses down to keep their prices low -- although Bob Thompson tells me that for the CPU chips involved here they are about $20 over the market prices he sees -- and they have to cut corners.

It's convenient to be able to find nearly everything in one place no more than fifteen minutes from my house. I went there often enough that if I did get defective parts the trip out to replace it not only didn't take long, but I was probably going there anyway. In marketing terms they have made an expensive cost-reduction move. Ah. Well. Enough on the subject. I'll still deal with them, but not routinely.

In the course of doing a new column for Intellectual Capital, I have formatted the last one on Waco and posted it on this site. Before you send angry mail pro or con, read it all, and note what it asks for. And why.

And this morning's Wall Street Journal has an article on electronics in airplanes. We had recent discussions here, last week and this week...

Sir,

the discussion here was timely, it seems. Today's (Tuesday) WSJ has an article debunking the theory that cell phones shouldn't be used on airlines. They opine that the real reason is the profit on the on-board phones, of which they receive apparently 30%. I haven't seen the article, but it was mentioned on CNN Financial hour this morning at 0600 Eastern Time.

We do blaze trails here, don't we?

Bryan Broyles

And indeed we do. The Journal sys, as I suspected, that there is no evidence that using cell phones when the plane is on the ground can do any harm to the airplane although it has an economic effect on revenues -- those skytalk calls are about five times as expensive as a cell phone call -- and precious little evidence that using laptops anywhere in flight including on takeoff and landing has any safety effect either. The conservative view is that prohibiting their use in the early part of the flight does no harm, is minimum inconvenience to passengers, and prevent the heavy things from being missiles if there is a crash. I'll go for that.

Have a look at

http://www.windowsnt-advantage.com/adv-1999-09/adv-09-portable-pov.html

but of course you've seen the story here already...

 

 

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Wednesday, October 6, 1999

Can anyone get much from Techweb and RealAudio? It may be wonderful for t1 users, but for us technopeasants on a modem line it's merely a good way to waste time. You can't tell what's wrong. Only that it says "connecting" but nothing happens. Then once in a while you get something. It's usually not what you expected. This is not ready for prime time.

http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-10/06/182l-100699-idx.html

may not be the proper URL, but digging around on the Washington Post site got me a search engine, and "Waco" got the article in question, whose headline is that an expert concludes that the FBI did in fact fire weapons during the final assault and burning.  There's more, and it's not definitive, but it's disturbing all the same. Until the Congress does its job and finds out everything there is to know, including why evidence was hidden and destroyed, the ugly suspicions are not going away: and how can the truth be worse than what is suspected? Surely it is better to know?

 

 

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Thursday, October 7, 1999

Paul Chisholm points to an interesting Salon article on getting cheap copies of Office 2000, and caused me to reminisce about some early times. And I am finishing off my column. 

There's a new Intellectual Capital column up.

I hate the Internet. I am sure it is a vast conspiracy to see how many grown people they can get to stare at computer screens on which absolutely nothing of interest is happening. It certainly seems so this morning. I was told of a bad link; it took ten minutes to verify the correct one then get connected by ftp to upload this page to fix it. That's insane. I don't know if it's the net or Pair.com's server; probably Earthlink, but how can you tell? Well, I disconnected from Earthlink Sherman Oaks, and connected through Burbank, and at least I can now log on to the PAIR site, so I suspect it was my network "service". I sure will be glad when I can get DSL. Or cable modem. Or a reliable carrier pigeon.

There's an exchange of letters about my Intellectual Capital column over in mail.

We have an essay report from Joshua M. K. Masur <jmkm@ispchannel.com>  on Software Licensing and Copyright Law that is a bit long for Mail, and also of a longer term value; I have filed it as a "debate" for want of a better way of organizing it. It is well worth your time.

 

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Friday, October 8, 1999

Long letter and answer on jobs and education over in mail.

Column is slightly past due. Slight touch of something. Must get it done today.

I hate Outlook. At one point it was checking spelling as I wrote replies. Something got turned off and it doesn't any more. I can't figure out what to do without making WORD the reply editor. I don't want to open things in WORD if I can help it due to the macro virus problems. FrontPage is doing the on the fly spelling checking which I like; but Outlook isn't doing that any longer. I don't know why. 

I know that at one time Outlook was checking spelling as I wrote replies. Now it isn't. I don't recall changing any of the settings, but things flow around, with tool bars in odd places. Nothing seems to stay still. I have GOT to get this system more stable, and the obvious solution is to rip Office 2000 out by the ROOTS, except that it won't go away without a lot of external work, and Outlook 98 has problems reading in stuff from Outlook 2000.

My advice remains: DO NOT ADOPT OFFICE 2000. It is not ready for prime time, and it has too few paths back to where you used to be. Stay with Office 97 and FrontPage 98 for a while. Or use Works. Or use some other office suite entirely.


The arguments around my Intellectual Capital column continue over in mail, and they're very good. I suspect I will pull all that together onto a single "debates" page one of these days. 

 

 

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Saturday, October 9, 1999

My column is late, but at last I have things worth writing about. I had hoped to get the new Rebel Linux communications server installed, but that will probably have to wait for a different column. I have the box, and it's interesting. You control it from another machine through TCP/IP networking links; it doesn't have or need its own monitor and keyboard and mouse. There's a serial port for attaching a router or modem; in our case I hope to put in the ISDN router, so that we can dial up through that all over the network. We'll see. Mr. Dobbins has volunteered to help get it set up.

 

 

 

 

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Sunday, October 10, 1999

Column is done. Now to catch up on things. New Release Candidate edition of Windows 2000 is here. I am told that it's a good improvement over the beta edition I am using, and moreover, that it can be installed without scrubbing off the one I have. I like that...

I had never seen anything like it; fortunately for my sanity, Mr. Dobbins hasn't either.

For reasons that will be clear in the October column I had to replace the motherboard in Squirrel, a Pentium II 450. I did so. Now the machine is named "Seattle" and there is no trace of Squirrel to be found. But Squirrel lives on in Network Neighborhood, and cannot be eradicated. The machine no longer exists, although his hard drive lives on in Seattle; but Squirrel will not die.

I have removed the Ethernet Card from Squirrel, removed all traces of ALL network software, powered down, brought up the machine with no network card. But as soon as I put a network card back in Network Neighborhood sees Squirrel on all the machines. Of course you can't access it. But it's there.

The next step is to remove the network card and reinstall Windows 98 on Seattle.

The moral of this story, other than "I do all these silly things so you won't have to..." is don't try to save time: if you are starting up new machine, scrub it down and start over, or start with a new hard drive...

Continued tomorow.

 

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