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Last night I realized I was whining too much in this blog about products that don't work. So I decided to write today's post about a product that exceeded my expectations. We designed our home with a residential elevator. We didn't want to go through all the effort of building our dream home and then decades from now need to move when stairs become an issue. I was worried about having an elevator because it seems like exactly the sort of thing that will break on a regular basis. Last night I realized my negative expectations had been wrong. I need to lighten up. That elevator has worked like a charm, and we use it all the time for moving heavy objects up and down stairs.

So, as I'm walking across the living room last night, composing in my mind today's post in praise of the elevator, Shelly tells me the elevator is broken. And so it is. I'll have to call someone about that today. So I changed my plan and decided to write about my broken elevator instead. (Every word of that is true, by the way. I was literally composing the elevator praise post in my head when it broke.)

This morning I woke up at 6 AM and walked the dog as usual. I should mention that we designed the house with an automatic dog door, which functions as advertised, except it scares the bejeezus out of little Snickers and causes her to poop in the kids' rooms. So I walk her instead. In the rain.

After the dog does her business, I visit our spiffy new coffee maker. It's terrific. I push one button and it grinds the beans, mixes it with fresh water (it's plumbed!) and produces a steaming cup of excellent java. Except lately it has only been spitting out something like brown dishwater, which I drink anyway, for the placebo effect. Today I decided to take action. So after half an hour with the manual, I corrected a setting that had somehow unraveled itself, as if by ghosts. (Yes, the coffeemaker has a setting that allows you to create brown dishwater instead of something more like coffee. I'm not clear why.)

Coffee in hand, I go to my computer to start writing. But my computer decided to reboot itself last night, against my will, for some sort of Windows update. And it locked up. So I do a hard boot. And wait. And wait. And wait, while the creative juices slowly drain from my body. Once rebooted, I try to start Firefox. And I wait, and I wait. I like to check the comments on my daily strip before I do anything else. Great, I see that my Canadian stalker is back in full force, leaving crazy comments, driving out the normals. She's been cyberstalking me for about seven years now, off and on, whenever she goes off meds. She likes to call anyone I do business with and tell them I've been sexually harassing her, sending goons to search her home, bugging her phone, and my favorite: using my comic strip as a way to send secret messages to her. The police can't help me because she's Canadian. We block her IP address on a regular basis, but she keeps changing machines.

Anyway, seven years is enough. I'm in a bad mood. So as of today, I'm declaring her my mascot. Yes, stalker, this time I am talking directly to you. For the first time, it's not the voices in your head. Leave some good crazy comments that we can all enjoy.

My strategy is to get you so wound up that your husband, if you still have one, puts you back on your meds. Nothing else has worked. Let's try this.

 
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Apr 4, 2010
Mozilla is working on making firefox start faster (Even if it has updates, the plan is to do less work at start-up pretty much)

People have gotten Linux to go from off to working desktop in 3 seconds... (on a netbook with a solid state hard drive... might not be quite that quick with rotating media) My laptop boots in about 10-15 seconds max (it's actually faster to reboot than to hibernate if nothing is running...)

Ubuntu won't reboot unless you tell it to and most updates don't require a restart.
 
 
Mar 16, 2010
I think it'll just make them conscious of their weight...
 
 
Mar 3, 2010
Re: Canadian Stalker Girl

You know, if you really wanted to block her you can do a reverse IP on her, find out what ISP she is using. Block the entire ISP's set of IP's. If you get hate mail for it - blame it on her.

Once I was working in a "Supervised Apartments" complex in Tampa, FL. It was for people who were mentally distressed... a place for them to transition back into society from the acute inpatient ward. A guy in one of the apartments had paranoid schizophrenia and would hear voices... sometimes they came through his TV.

I had the night shift and was zoning out on the couch at 3:30am watching TV myself when a heavy recliner came flying through the huge plate glass window at my feet. After we "Baker Acted" his ass he told us his TV was telling him the staff was going to hurt him and better to get the staff before that happened.

I was in the mental health field until I got my MA - and then bailed for the IT field. I've got more crazy stories over those 5 years in psych than you have stalkers - I'm sure of it.

You have the most interesting blog I've read online Scott.
 
 
Mar 2, 2010
Hourglass says, "I think Dilbert would make a great Get A Mac Ad."

What a brilliant idea. I am gob smacked by the potential of this idea. Scott ... call your agent ... NOW! Seriously.

Webster
 
 
Mar 2, 2010
I think Dilbert would make a great Get A Mac Ad.
 
 
+1 Rank Up Rank Down
Feb 28, 2010
It's "stigmada", right?

Did that get rid of her? I haven't seen any Manson-esque hypnagogic word salad posts since.

It's a funny strategy, though I'm not sure about the ethics. How would stalkers feel if there stalkees posted pictures of them taking out the garbage?
 
 
Feb 27, 2010
Scott, I have enjoyed reading your whines about technology. Now I don't feel so bad that none of my crap works either. I feel a little hopeless, but not as bad. ;)

~ManDee
www.chubbygirlcomics.com
 
 
-1 Rank Up Rank Down
Feb 26, 2010
Scott I hope things gets better.
I wish you happiness.
 
 
Feb 25, 2010
You might be right, Zowie.

In which case, Scott should buy a new PC and replace his elevator with an escalator. And not just any escalator, one of the really expense ones that they use in airports.

And I retract my recommendation on the Etch-a-Sketch. ;-)
 
 
Feb 25, 2010
Drowlord,

"PCs .... they're a lot cheaper, allow for a great deal more customization, and have way more software."

Sure, but Scott's complaints are not relevant to these positives. Nor is it likely that these issues are relevant to his needs -- certainly not the "cheaper" bit. ;-)

Scott's topic is "Things that work". Specifically, he was bemoaning PC "freezing".

Like you, I have worked with, and continue to work with, both MACs and PCs -- for decades.

I can't explain why you have not experienced the difference on issues like "freezing".

But I have experienced a remarkable difference, and it is commonly understood that there is a difference. Hence my comments in response to your question on why people recommend MACs -- being quite different from why JWs thrust Watchtowers in your face.

On the Window 7 install, I think you may have missed my point. I said you could run it on a MAC -- if you wanted to. I was not recommending it as a solution to anything.

I am not a "MAC fan boy". I'm just a guy who identifies with Scott's simple desire -- to own things that work. In my experience, MACs and MAC OS' fit into that category very well.
 
 
Feb 25, 2010
@Webster: I've used Macs off and on since the late 80's. I used the Apple II series before that. There's nothing wrong with them, but there's nothing all that special about them, either. I primarily use Windows-based PCs because they're a lot cheaper, allow for a great deal more customization, and have way more software.

I have Snow Leopard on a macbook for doing iPhone development, and it's a decent machine. I can say authoritatively that it isn't "a solution" to anybody's computer woes; I deal with most of same annoyances on it that I have with Windows. Periodic pauses, crashes, freeze-ups, and hiccups with any network access.

Installing Windows 7 on a Mac? Why would anyone do that? Without the Mac operating system, the hardware is a pretty average collection of components that are severely overpriced.
 
 
+1 Rank Up Rank Down
Feb 25, 2010
See what I mean? I pressed the "post comment" button once and it spewed out 2 copies of the nonsense below. Even your website technology hates you. You should be worried, Scott. ;-)
 
 
+5 Rank Up Rank Down
Feb 25, 2010
Scott,

I have to say this, so for forgive me. Better, stop reading this immediately and move on to the next comment.

You are a brilliant writer. In fact, I think you are among the top five living humour writers. If I included dead humour writers, I'd still put you on my top 10 list.

You are a brilliant guy. Your imagination never ceases to amaze me. Dan Brown has nothing on you.

You are an interesting guy. I envy your "real world" friends.

You must be a great cartoonist, because millions of people love your cartoons. But Im not a good judge of that bit, because I don't like cartoons. My father was killed by cartoon character. I remain bitter. I sometimes read the words inside your balloons though, because you are a great writer.

But for God's sake man, you must stop seeing yourself as a technologist. Technology hates you. Technology has your number. It is out to get you. Technology will bring you to your intellectual knees. It will turn you into a raving lunatic one day. (You will know when this happens. You will develop an uncontrollable urge to deposit gibberish on web sites hosted by sane people.)

As suggested by someone (refreshingly sane) earlier, give yourself a break and take up the mantle of a Ludite. You will be a much happier man.

And by the way, if you MUST fiddle with computers, buy a Mac. Failing that, buy an Etch-a-Sketch. That's the only technology I have ever owned that never gave me any grief. Except for the day that I dropped it and accidentally erased my final draft of The Great Canadian Novel. But hell, that was my fault. Like all great Canadian authors, I'd been drinking heavily.

Webster
(Recovering Tehno-junkie, almost famous author of the iconic Canadian novel, "Up Your Volcano")
 
 
-1 Rank Up Rank Down
Feb 25, 2010
Scott,

I have to say this, so for forgive me. Better, stop reading this immediately and move on to the next comment.

You are a brilliant writer. In fact, I think you are among the top five living humour writers. If I included dead humour writers, I'd still put you on my top 10 list.

You are a brilliant guy. Your imagination never ceases to amaze me. Dan Brown has nothing on you.

You are an interesting guy. I envy your "real world" friends.

You must be a great cartoonist, because millions of people love your cartoons. But Im not a good judge of that bit, because I don't like cartoons. My father was killed by cartoon character. I remain bitter. I sometimes read the words inside your balloons though, because you are a great writer.

But for God's sake man, you must stop seeing yourself as a technologist. Technology hates you. Technology has your number. It is out to get you. Technology will bring you to your intellectual knees. It will turn you into a raving lunatic one day. (You will know when this happens. You will develop an uncontrollable urge to deposit gibberish on web sites hosted by sane people.)

As suggested by someone (refreshingly sane) earlier, give yourself a break and take up the mantle of a Ludite. You will be a much happier man.

And by the way, if you MUST fiddle with computers, buy a Mac. Failing that, buy an Etch-a-Sketch. That's the only technology I have ever owned that never gave me any grief. Except for the day that I dropped it and accidentally erased my final draft of The Great Canadian Novel. But hell, that was my fault. Like all great Canadian authors, I'd been drinking heavily.

Webster
(Recovering Tehno-junkie, almost famous author of the iconic Canadian novel, "Up Your Volcano")
 
 
Feb 25, 2010
I was guessing at stigmada too but I guess checking the comments that rburr must be right and it is Atlantisarch. They could be the same person I guess.

'My old man's a hatstand' etc etc
 
 
-2 Rank Up Rank Down
Feb 25, 2010
KJMO

I'm a Mac user (since 1985) and I often suggest that people (who are suffering some of the symptoms that are known to be "PC typical") switch to a Mac. Just as I would recommend ASA to somebody suffering from joint pain. Many have followed that advice over the years. I've never had a complaint.

Sure, every group has its zealots. Although it is very rare to find a Windows software zealot. That's the distinction that you might want to think about before comparing enthusiastic Mac users to a mindless religious cult.

And by the way, if you like the new Window 7 software (I hear it is a big improvement over the earlier garbage), you can run that on a Mac as well.

 
 
+6 Rank Up Rank Down
Feb 25, 2010
Why is it that many Mac users (see Bernard SG's comment) find every opportunity they can to put on their superiority caps and say "well if you were using a mac your life would be sunshine and unicorns" Mac users are like the Jehovah's Witnesses of the computer world.... I don't want to convert!

On second thought maybe it's more like Scientology since you need to give Apple lots of money to be in their club.

P.S. Bernard... please don't mistake my sarcasm for anger. I get approached by eager Mac users several times a week and it always struck me as very funny especially since my 4 year old PC laptop has outlasted all Macs my friends have.

 
 
Feb 25, 2010
@Phloxicon: well it might not be PC to poke the disabled with a pointy stick of humour, but it was amasingly funny... well done for breaking with social convention
 
 
Feb 25, 2010
@Phloxicon: well it might not be PC to poke the disabled with a pointy stick of humour, but it was amasingly funny... well done for breaking with social convention
 
 
Feb 25, 2010
@Phloxicon: well it might not be PC to poke the disabled with a pointy stick of humour, but it was amasingly funny... well done for breaking with social convention
 
 
 
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