Denver’s Most Prestigious Address (mine)

Our house was on the market (but not any longer)!

It is located in one of Denver’s most prestigious neighborhoods — Cherry Creek North. (If you know Denver you just went oooooh :D )

  • Minutes from the Cherry Creek Shopping District — and we popped the top two years ago … from 900 square feet to 3,500 square feet.
  • Rare (for this neighborhood) 3-car garage.
  • Hardwood floor throughout the first floor.
  • Stucco exterior.
  • 3 +2 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths.
  • Fully finished basement.
  • Very large rooms, including a vaulted great room (combination formal living room and formal dining room).
  • Marble kitchen counters.
  • Wrought iron fence.
  • Two furnaces (and two air conditioners)
  • Two water heaters — you’ll never run out of hot water.
  • Approximately 700 square feet of porch/patio/veranda:
    • Veranda on the south side of the house.
    • Large front porch
    • Wraparound patio off the master bedroom
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Go Figure

As noted elsewhere, our house is for sale.

Someone stole the real estate sign, you know, the one that lists our realtor’s name and phone number. It’s worthless to anyone but our realtor.

What’s up with that?

Our realtor says that it was probably another realtor trying to reduce competition. To me, it means I won’t be using any realtor whose sign I do see in my neighborhood — ever.

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Read, but not Reviewed — Yet!

The list for the last couple of weeks. I’ll be expanding each one into a separate post.

  • Dune The Battle of Corrin Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson
  • Chainfire, Terry Goodkind
  • What If?, Robert Cowley
  • Hostile Takeover, Susan Schwartz
  • Mindscan, Robert J. Sawyer
  • Eleanor and Franklin Joseph P. Lash
  • Whipping Star, The Dosadi Experiment, The Santaroga Barrier, Soul Catcher Frank Herbert
  • Winter Moon Mercedes Lackey, Tanith Lee, CE Murphy
  • Alexander The Ambiguity of Greatness Guy MacLean Rogers
  • Eragon
  • The Life of the World to Come Kage Baker
  • Anne Perry mysteries and Come, Armageddon
  • The Road to Reality and The Emperor’s New Mind Roger Penrose
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Unix Guru

I have been supporting Unix servers for more than 20 years. When I started, they weren’t even called “servers.”

The first Unix system I worked on was Unix System III running on an Altos 68000 — that was in 1983.

The entire set of man (manual) pages fit into a single, admittedly large, 3-ring binder. We had one megabyte of RAM and a 20 MB hard drive. Compared to the personal computers available at that time, the Altos was at least an order of magnitude more powerful.

The system was a dedicated turn-key billing system which my employer had purchased. I was a billing clerk in the office. We paid a support contract up front for two years that included system administration. This was supposed to be minimal since all anyone was supposed to do was turn it on. When you logged in you got the billing system menus written in DACL.

One day, the Altos had a problem that seemed to be a hardware problem, so I called the vendor. I got The Tone, and a voice saying, “the number you have reached is no longer in service …” Their office was close to ours so I stopped there at lunch; we had 20,000 statements to print! The office was empty. They were gone.

That day, I became a Unix System Administrator :D

Since then I’ve supported many, many flavors of Unix. A roughly chronological order goes like so:

  • Altos 68000, Unix System III. The bourne shell and DACL (Diable Application Compiler Language).
  • SCO Xenix, then SCO Unix, back when “SCO” meant the “Santa Cruz Operation” rather than the current SCO crew.
  • Hewlett-Packard ‘apollo’ workstations, then 715′s, 725′s, and their ilk.
  • RedHat Linux (starting with 4.2).
  • Hewlett-Packard servers. HP-UX 10.20, 11.0, 11.11 (11i). From K-class up to and including Superdome and everything in between.
  • All of Sun’s hardware and Solaris up to 2.9. Solaris 10 hasn’t been installed in the datacenter enough to speak of.
  • The environment I work in now is big IBM and AIX, so now I’m learning that too, though I’m nowhere near as expert in AIX as I am in HP-UX or Solaris.

Why am I telling you this, Dear Reader?

First, NixMe is one of my categories see the category post.

Second, this particular post, assuming some of its readers are kindred *nix spirits, is intended to be a repository for questions about *nix. If I can answer, I will. If I can’t I’ll tell you why.

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Wolf Captured

Wolf Captured at Amazon by Jane Lindskold.

I seem to have picked up a series in the middle. Oh well.

It picks up just as an earlier story ends. This is the fourth installment.

When I come across the earlier books in the series I will definitely read them. In fact, I’ll be seeking them out someday. One of my pet peeves about serials is that when the nth installment is being hawked the nth – 1 installment isn’t in stock where the nth installment was purchased. It’s on my list the next time I’m in Barnes & Noble, Borders or The Tattered Cover.

Other than the main character of the woman who was raised by wolves, the characters are either not very well drawn or they just don’t behave as drawn. For example, the other main character — the merchant-turned-prince, is he an adolescent or a man? Or are we supposed to believe that he changes during the course of the book? If the latter, the transition is not well-managed. One minute he’s acting like a pimply-faced 17 year old, the next he’s matured and ready to settle down and raise little merchant princes and princesses.

Similarly, his love interest is a cipher through most of the book, and then she’s not.

Don’t get me wrong. I liked this book, and look forward to reading others in this series and others by this author.

Posted in Literary perlustration | Leave a comment

Categories

One of the things I’ve thought my blog lacked was an ability to show the posts by category. This seems to me an obvious capability, but I haven’t seemed to be able to find an easy way to do it.

Today, I found this. Brilliant. Just include something in the text of your posts and then present a list of search results.

Here’s the categories that are going to show up in my list of categories:

  • Literary perlustration (Book reviews)
  • Obiter dicta (Commentary — political, IT, whatever)
  • Jocosity (humor)
  • Numeracy (Mathematics)
  • Blogorrhea (a play on logorrhea)
  • Vincula (Aggregations of links, about links, basically anything link-related)

This has a dependency on the search spider indexing my blog, but it doesn’t seem to do so (heavy sigh).

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The Shadow of Saganami

The Shadow of Saganami by David Weber.

Mr. Weber is one of the top, if not the top, practitioner of the craft of military science fiction (the only one I would rate better or even in the same league is — Tom Clancy). If you want a good ‘sampler’ of his work, check out the Baen free library. David Weber has ten entirely free works downloadable in every format you could possibly be using.

This novel, however, fits more into the genre of space opera. A galactic empire needs defending and the cast of characters is drawn up on either side of good and evil to do battle. Like most stories of this type, in The Shadow of Saganami, the villains are very villainous and the heroes very heroic. Though we know good is going to win bad has its moments along the way. I liked The Shadow of Saganami and look for more stories set in the same universe.

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Polaris

Polaris by Jack McDevitt was a perfectly acceptable science fiction novel. I read the whole thing in basically one sitting, and sighed contentedly when I was done.

It’s a far future mystery. The twist wasn’t bad at the end. It caught me by surprise, and that isn’t that common. Who was it who said good science fiction is good fiction first and then good science? The mystery here was good; the science I found to be less plausible.

I always have a hard time believing in conspiracy theories and one of the basic premises here is that there was one, and that it worked over hundreds of years. I won’t be a spoiler more than that.

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Science In the News

A co-worker sent the following to me at the end of long chain of e-mails.

It is not original — more than 20,000 hits on Google.

In any case, I laughed until my sides hurt.

A NEW ELEMENT HAS BEEN DISCOVERED.

This hurricane mess and gasoline issues are proof that it exists. A major research institution has recently announced the discovery of the heaviest element yet known to science. The new element has been named “Governmentium”. Governmentium (Gv) has one neutron, 25 assistant neutrons, 88 deputy neutrons, and 198 assistant deputy neutrons, giving it an atomic mass of 312.

These 312 particles are held together by forces called morons, which are surrounded by vast quantities of lepton like particles called peons. Since Governmentium has no electrons, it is inert. However, it can be detected, because it impedes every reaction with which it comes into contact. A minute amount of Governmentium causes one action to take over four days to complete, when it would normally take less than a second.

Governmentium has a normal half-life of 4 years; it does not decay, but instead undergoes a reorganization in which a portion of the assistant neutrons and deputy neutrons exchange places. In fact, Governmentium’s mass will actually increase over time, since each reorganization will cause more morons to become neutrons, forming isodopes. This characteristic of moron promotion leads some scientists to believe that Governmentium is formed whenever morons reach a certain quantity in concentration. This hypothetical quantity is referred to as Critical Morass.

When catalyzed with money, Governmentium becomes Administratium – an element which radiates just as much energy as Governmentium since it has half as many peons but twice as many morons.

Posted in Jocosity | Leave a comment

Kruschev: The Man and His Era

Well written and well worth the read.

I was about 10 years old when he died. The parallels between him and Gorbachev are interesting. Had he come to power in the 80′s instead of the 50′s I wonder how different the world would be.

The picture of the Soviet Union in the 20′s, 30′s and 40′s is very vivid.

It is to his credit that when he was in a position to do something about it he tried to make amends and rehabilitate the reputations of those who died, and that he also lead the cultural change that made it much less likely for a Soviet citizen to be sent to a labor camp.

Posted in Literary perlustration | 2 Comments