Category Archives: Scribbles

Computer shopping

I’ve finally had it with my dying audio card, which is unfortunately integrated into the mother board and so can’t be simply replaced. It’s keeping me from using Skype to talk intelligibly to my 90-year-old cousin in Dallas, and also from watching PJTV without annoying stutters.

So I’m shopping for a replacement for my 5-year-old Dell Dimension 3000. So far I like the HP p6300z at about $360 delivered vs the Dell Studio Desktop at about $478. Main difference is the Dell has an Intel chip and the HP has an AMD.

But I’m also addicted to Dells, having never owned anything else. The cheaper HP is a lure, however. I was worried about whether my Outlook Express would make the transition to Windows 7 but that now seems likely with a Belkin Easy Transfer cable. I also have a copy of Word 2002, my old standby, so I’m not worried about accessing my files and continuing to write the books few people ever read. Simply must think it over and decide.

UPDATE:  I bought a Dell, but an Inspiron 546 MT with Win XP on it and a Win 7 upgrade disk for $521 delivered. Also has a low-end AMD chip. Just could not bear to start over again with browser/email and etcetera. Figuring out how to transfer it all should will be hard enough.

Russian spam

For some reason, most all of my comment spam caught by Akismet lately has been from Russia or at least been written in Russian. This is the least offensive one I’ve seen, though if I could read it I might not think so. Our onetime (long time ago, actually) Rooskie allies are coming up in the world, apparently.

What time do they serve the jello?

Getting old means time speeds up. The days fly by, the weeks rush past, pretty soon the season you were just getting used to is being replaced by another one.  And before you know it, you’re another year older and deeper in debt. Wait. That was a song lyric. I think. What is this phenom, which isn’t relegated to the nursing home but seems to affect all oldsters? Well, there are theories.

Why iPad is a joke

It’s not just because of the name’s congruence with a certain brand of female hygiene product. The real joke is that it hasn’t got the features of a 10-year-old, ebook reader bought on eBay for $60. Which doesn’t surprise me. Apple has always been about style and buzz, not about features.

When Mrs. C. got her iPhone, she gave me her old iPod shuffle. It’s nice. I filled it to the max with Benny Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald and old swing tunes. But it’s neither as convenient (needs a computer to recharge) nor as easy-to-use (has no display to tell you what’s playing) as my old iRiver MP3 player which I bought used for $20. Haw.

UPDATE:  Well, I see the new shuffle tells you, in a voice, what the tune is and who’s playing it. But it still needs a computer to recharge.

Retracto

Seeking a retraction to Big Journalism’s latest, ahem, screwup? Retracto the Correction Alpaca has a few, uh, score. This is funny stuff. I wonder if they take submissions?

Via Rare Reader Veeshir.

First Class Piper

index_texas_bagpiper_for_weddings_funerals_jimmymitchell

Jimmy Mitchell, of Forney, east of Dallas, available for weddings, funerals, birthday parties, Celtic festivals, even Bar Mitzvahs. Oy!

Via Google AdWords at Texas History Page.

When reporters play dressup

I enjoyed James O’Keefe’s undercover reports on ACORN’s willingness (in its offices coast to coast) to assist a pimp and his chippy in acquiring a business location. But, despite the 60 Minutes example, undercover reporting can quickly lead to problems that undermine the pursuit of truth.

Thus, despite big media’s retractions of late on details of O’Keefe’s investigation of a Louisiana senator, the fact remains that he dressed up as a telephone repairman. As Ed Morrisey says, he apparently didn’t need to do that if he wasn’t planning to break the law. It logically led to suspicion that was what he was about and his arrest.