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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 186 January 7 - 13, 2002

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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 page is about, please go to the VIEW PAGE. If you have never read the explanatory material on that page, please do so.

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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.  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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Monday  January 7, 2002

THIS IS DEADLINE DAY. 

 

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Tuesday, January 8, 2002

The column is done but there's another deadline. I'm getting too old for this...

Roland points out the Outlook Virus Of The Hour

http://vil.nai.com/vil/virusSummary.asp?virus_k=99294 

You could argue that anyone who opens an email attachment file named

NUDEPIC.JPG.EXE

might be thought to have had fair warning, even if it came from a purported friend. Anyway, don't do it.

 

I have a ton of mail responding to "Escape from Redmond" and more on the physiological value of water. I'll certainly do a report page on the latter, and I may open a new Linux page for the former. Now I am going to go walk the dog.

 

And now a Shockwave Virus. Roland reports:

Trend Micro are incorrect - it has been spotted in the wild:

http://www.antivirus.com/vinfo/virusencyclo
/default5.asp?VName=SWF_LFM.926&VSect=T

 

 

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Wednesday, January 9, 2002

One column off. Now one more deadline and I'm back on my feet. And Roberta is back from her week trip to Seattle, so there's a little more order in Chaos Manor...

I have put up the Mandrake and other LINUX story, font de-uglification, and mail and comments on the "Escape from Redmond" sequence in the BYTE column. I'll add to that page from time to time. You can find it HERE. In the course of that page I have put this comment:

When I get a .doc from a Linux user, even when this was a document I wrote and which was read into the Linux system, then a few notes made, and the document sent back to me, it takes me about 5 minutes to get it back to the point where I can read it. The ' have become little boxes, or don't will look like don'    t and the " marks will be goofy. I can do search and replace operations to restore it to readability, but it is never easy.

And that is from really sophisticated users.

My point being that until that sort of incompatibility with WORD is fixed, there is going to be a real problem with using Linux in a production environment.

Dr. Pournelle: This is probably old news to you, but have you checked it out yourself yet, or has anyone else with a lot of computer knowhow?

http://www.lindows.com/ 

Tom Brosz

I know nothing whatever about this...

 

 

 

 

 

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Thursday, January 10, 2002

 

Argh

 

 

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Friday, January 11, 2002

We have no heat in the back of the house. Yesterday started well enough, with Niven coming over. We went up the hill, without the dog for the first time in years. I doubt he'll ever get up there again; the old chap is 16 and that's very old for a Husky. I don't suppose we'll have him a lot longer, but as long as he seems to be enjoying life we'll take care of him.

The workmen came to change our ancient floor furnaces from pilot lights to electronic ignition, a system we have in the front part of the house. Many hours later, late at night, they pronounced one of them hopeless (and I'll have to find a new furnace that fits down there, under the house, UGH). The other was supposed to be done, but the ignition system isn't working. They're supposed to be here today to get that working, and meanwhile there's no heat in the kitchen. Since it is sunny and about 78 outside that's no tragedy, but it's annoying. I'd expected them to be here to rewire the kitchen furnace by now. And discuss a new one for the back...

Roland says the Outlook worm de jour is

http://www.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/js.gigger.a@mm.html 

As usual, if you don't open odd attachments nothing is likely to happen to you; and be sure to update your Norton anti-virus. Incidentally, WinProxy updates itself every few hours while it's running.

And Ford is restructuring, probably by exporting more jobs. I am sure that is great for the world economy. 

I'm for a certain degree of free trade, but I also think it reasonable to have a modicum of concern for local people. The worst possible policy is to make it easy for overseas workers to compete while having welfare policies that drive domestic wages higher and higher. That bubble can last l0nger than you think it should, but it eats at the very soul of the nation. Once the work ethic is gone from a significant segment of the population it it extremely difficult to get it back, and usually takes very harsh measures.

Unrestricted laissez faire capitalism maximizes goods produced and wealth generated, but there are prices, and it may not be wise (let along moral) to make maximizing wealth the only goal of a nation. As I have said before, my economic philosophy comes from Roepke rather than von Mises. Someone needs to speak for the Grand Canyon. There are public as well as private goods. And now I am rambling.


FrontPage sometimes does odd things. Today it decided that my entire web site needed replacing when I decided to "publish". Since there can't be more than a dozen folders that I have changed, this makes no sense at all. I'll let it do its thing tonight late when I don't need the system any more. 

And of course the heating people aren't here. So the day is shot as I wait for them to show up. I can't go anywhere and it's hard to do serious work when you expect to be interrupted.

This is not my week.


It seems to be generally assumed that that anthrax mailings were from some 'right wing' individual. That tells us not much about the first cases, which were in Florida. See

Look at this map:

http://www.miami.com/herald/special/news/anthrax/anthrax/anthraxmap.htm 

to see what I mean. They happened awfully fast, too fast I think to be a reaction to 911 but at about the right time to have been a part of that attack. As to why that news headquarters, I have no idea, but it's as bewildering assuming one culprit as another.

 

 

 

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Saturday, January 12, 2002

Cleaning up. I have heat in the kitchen. The back room is another story, but at least there's heat in the back part of the house.

 

 

 

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Sunday, January 13, 2002

With luck I'll get all the cleanup work done and get on with fiction.

I am mildly irritated by Windows 2000 which doesn't seem to have a timer you can set so that it doesn't poll every possible local net connection the first time it tries to do "My  Computer." Or maybe it does, and I don't know about it. It's an annoyance not a fatal defect but it's very annoying to sit and wait for something to happen. Almost like being on the Internet.

And if you select one of those mapped drives to eliminate it because the computer no longer exists, you can go have lunch... In fact it is very difficult to delete a mapping for a non-existent computer. I can't imagine why they do that. (But see below for command line remedy.)

But the Internet is worse by far today. Every page takes about five tries to access it. Amazon has so many popup and silly ads that it is about as easy to go down to the village bookstore as it is to try to buy a book with all the retries. I have found the book after five retries. But five more don't get me to the page where I can BUY it. This is insanity.

So I  give up. That's one sale Amazon won't get because I will forget I wanted it. Why are things like this? Is it the backbone overloaded? Servers at Amazon? On a Sunday morning? Or ghosts in the machine? Whatever it is, a system that continually frustrates its users isn't going to stimulate a new upsurge in the economy. 

Of course the telephone is no better. You'll spend hours before you talk to a human being. I can't order a book that way either. Welcome to the modern world of commerce, where you got down to the book store and order a book they don't have on the shelves. At least our local Book Star has courteous clerks.

I doubt this is anything wrong at Amazon. I can't send spam reports either. When I go to the server room I see that the system is attempting to send the spam cop report, but nothing it happening. Then there will be a furious blinking of the satellite modem lights, then nothing again: the modem lights are steady and unblinking, nothing going out or coming in. Then they start again.  Something is stopping DirecPC from getting stuff to and from the Internet proper. The connectivity meter says the satellite connection is fine. 

When things are working they work fast and well, but it's all very bursty now. For a minute it cleared up, now it's back to nothing happening. Is this something technology will fix? More backbone? Or is it just a new fact of life, that we will waste a lot of our time staring at screens on which nothing is happening?

Of course it has to do with temperament. At my age I pretty well have to use the "one less darned thing to worry about" strategy: finish one task before starting another. Multi-processing is no longer a useful way to do things (I am not sure it ever was, but I used to be able to do it anyway). But if the Internet prevents me from doing what I set out to do, I'm stuck. And the problem is predictability. If I think something will take about a minute, and the Internet and Windows end me up having to take ten minutes, I've lost time, and I may not have tried to do that particular task at all. But it's a very random thing when the Internet works and when it doesn't so you don't have any way to allocate resources. Not sure there is much to DO about all this.

There is a lot of mail which I will get to in a few hours. Work first. I just hope the Internet clears up. It seems to be working again, but for how long I don't know. One feels so helpless...

Nope. Slowed to a crawl again. Even changing directories in the ftp manager takes half a minute. Sigh. This is nearly intolerable. If I can get anything up I will, but I don't hold out much hope this morning. I can't tell where the problem is. I wish I could just stop worrying about it. And now I can't connect to ANYTHING. Now it's back. But it never lasts long enough to send up the mail files. I get a few seconds of high speed connectivity then dead. Is it the satellite or something else?

I switched to the NetWinder and USR 56K modem (which connects at about 40K). The difference was dramatic: it works a bit slower than usual, but otherwise just fine. So what is happening is there is some net congestion, but mostly the latency of the satellite is worse than usual, and everything is timing out. Sigh.

Now let's see how Amazon works. Huh. Cannot find page. But we got past that one and I have ordered the book, with only one retry. But apparently the net is just slow and choked up today. At least for me...


And of course I knew there was a command line way to do this but I couldn't remember it, nor find anything that told me how. I confess I don't look as thoroughly as I used to because someone will probably tell me, and sooner rather than later. Thanks to subscriber Carl Leubsdorf:

Don’t know if you already know this, but to quickly see mapped drives (without waiting), try

net use

at a dos prompt. To delete (“drop”) a mapped drive, say, “Z:”, quickly, use

net use z: /d

To get all this VERY quickly, press WindowsKey+R, type “cmd”, hit enter. (This is my most-used shortcut; I’ve mapped my extra mouse button to it.)

Cheers and Regards,

Carl

Carl Leubsdorf, Jr.

carl@carlthewebmaster.com

Thanks Again. And the net is working again at least at 40K on a dialup. I am afraid to try the satellite again...

And Roberta is back from a grandmother visit. Fortunately I got shed of the dancing girls...

The King of the Geats, with Penquins

And do drop in to have a look at http://www.beowulf.org/ where you can find out a lot about the potential of Linux and GNU...

 

 

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