Sad and Depressing Cold, Part II

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Things don’t look good for the trees.

I got more information today about just how cold it was. It was the coldest freeze since 1963. That takes us back a year before I was born and even just shortly after my father moved to Arizona.

He was telling me today how well he remembered the winter of ’63. It’s was 16ºF in Tucson and he wasn’t happy because he’d moved to Arizona from Florida thinking he’d never be cold again. (Apparently, the 40º temperatures in Florida were too cold for him, too.)

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IT Crowd Comes to US (in a good way and a very, very bad way)

tvshowsondvd.com => Navarre Corporation’s BCI Signs Exclusive DVD Publishing Agreement with Fremantlemedia

BCI, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Navarre Corporation (NASDAQ:NAVR), has licensed the long-term North American DVD publishing and distribution rights to programming from FremantleMedia’s portfolio of award-winning diverse television series and films including popular game shows The Price Is Right and Family Feud, the hit British sitcom The IT Crowd and the multi-million dollar Impossible Pictures’ series, Prehistoric Park.

The agreement offers BCI DVD publishing rights to various genres including:

Current British TV series, including programs such as:
The IT Crowd, the International Emmy-nominated comedy series from FremantleMedia’s UK production company, talkbackTHAMES

I can hardly wait!

The article goes on to say something very scary, indeed! NBC is trying to make a US version of the IT Crowd. Didn’t they learn their lesson with Coupling and Fawlty Towers?

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Sad and Depressing Cold

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This weekend, Phoenix experienced a very rare freeze. The worst since sometime in either the 60s or the 70s.

Temperatures plummeted into the 20s even inside the city.

The next morning, hundreds of “ficus” trees, popular throughout the city and normally green year round, were brown and dead. In one night, the trees died en masse. Even the nurseries, who prepared with heaters and fans, lost hundreds of plants and thousands of dollars of inventory. Everywhere you drive, the brown tried stand out jarringly.

That, in itself, is depressing enough. What’s worse (to me anyway) is that I have two of these trees in the front yard. Each one was planted within one week of the birth of each of my children. They were James’ and Michelle’s trees.

It’s sappy, but someday, when they were adults, I expected them to be able to come back and drive past this old house and point to those trees out to their children and say, “Your grandfather planted that tree when I was born.”

I can replace them, but it can never be the same.

The nursery says there’s a slight chance some of them may survive. It’s just a question of waiting a few weeks to see if they can grow back any leaves after these fall off.
4-Years

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Rocks and more Rocks…

National Geographic => Stonehenge Didn’t Stand Alone, Excavations Show

Recent excavations of Salisbury Plain in southern England have revealed at least two other large stone formations close by the world-famous prehistoric monument.

One of the megalithic finds is a sandstone formation that marked a ritual burial mound; the other, a group of stones at the site of an ancient timber circle.

The new discoveries suggest that many similar monuments may have been erected in the shadow of Stonehenge, possibly forming part of a much larger complex, experts say.

Cool.

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Torchwood – End of Days – Reviews, Spoilers

End of Days
by Chris Chibnall

All that buildup, for nothing…

Synopsis

Due (presumably) to Owen’s opening of the rift last time, people from other times are being deposited all over the world. The loonies think it is the End of Times as prophesied in many of their various loony books. Jack, being from the future, knows this isn’t the end of the world. (And again we ask ourselves, “Without a Time Lord, is the past/future fixed?”)

Visions of dead people peoples start appearing to the Torchjwood team, telling them they must fully open the Rift to fix the problem. Bilis Manger from the previous episode provides Gwen with a vision of the future – Rhys will be murdered. She locks him up in Torchwood for his protection, but Bilis (who can materialize at will anywhere in time) arrives and murders him.

Inconsolable, she joins the others in opposing Jack and demanding the Rift be opened. Jack refuses, so Owen kills him.

They open the Rift and everything returns to normal – except one thing. Bilis reveals that he used them to open the Rift and release Aberdon, the Great Devourer who was imprisoned beneath the Rift. Aberdon, turns out to be a Godzilla-sized demon-looking creature whose very shadow drops everyone dead.

Jack (who has again recovered from being dead) reasons that (A) Aberdon devours life and (B) Jack is immortal therefore if he lets Aberdon kill him, Aberdon will be destroyed. And so that comes to pass, but Jack appears to be really, really dead this time.

Gwen waits for days by his corpse to no avail. She kisses him goodbye and he revives afterall.

Jack reveals to Gwen that no visions had come to tempt him to open the Rift, and the only thing that could have tempted him would have been “…the right kind of doctor.”

Moments later, Jack hears the familiar sound of an unseen TARDIS. With a huge smile on his face, Jack runs to the sound and leaves the Torchwood crew with a mystery: What happened to Jack?

Analysis

This episode rounds out the series with a final, last gasp of total illogic.

The devil (so to speak) in the guise of Manger, tempts each and every member of the Torchwood team into opening the rift all the way. In the last episode, he “engineered” Jack and Toshiko to be sent back in time and then made sure they only sent enough information to partially open the rift. The partially opened rifts resulted in the strange temporal crossovers that begin this episode. Couldn’t he have just arranged for them to open the rift fully at that time?

His argument is, if the rift is opened all the way, everything will return to normal, and, once his nefarious goal is achieved, everything does seem to go back – including Rhys being resurrected, even though his death really had nothing to do with the rift.

There’s a lot of tension between everyone else and Jack, who turns out to be right all along.

The notion that Aberdon would be killed by Jack being immortal is beyond stupid. Perhaps that sums up the whole episode.

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Alternative Medicine

I don’t think I’ve been ambiguous about my opinion of “alternative schools of medical thought” so my opinion on this should come as no surprise.

Now, I don’t deny that the possibility exists that some alternative treatments might prove efficacious, but all they have to do is be proved to work and they’d become mainstream medicine. (Don’t go on about the insidious pharmaceutical cartel that slaves tirelessly to prevent us access to effective but inexpensive and unpatentable treatments.)

Nonetheless, the problem with believing in these kinds of nonsense is that it causes peoples’ brains to rot. Take for example this following translation of a recent (completely serious) post on a Taiwanese website.

Lately, I don’t feel quiet right.
My period lasts unusually long.
Finally it was over; however, my left side got numb since yesterday.
I am worried that I might have a stroke.
My blood pressure and eating habits are normal, but I don’t know why I don’t feel well.
I kept wondering maybe it has something to do with the two rose bushes I planted in the front yard last September.
The rose buds were very ugly and kept eaten by bugs in the beginning.
However, the bushes have been blooming lately and the roses are very beautiful.
I think the rose bushes are interfering with my health.
Does anyone know something about it? Please help me.
If my condition gets worse, I might go to see a doctor.
I am so worried.

Well, if the experts on an online parents’ forum can’t help you with some sage gardening advice about your possible stroke, as a last resort, you might try seeing a doctor.


Translated by my wife. For those who read Chinese, the original is below:

最近身體很差
一下MC留不停
現在已經解決了
結果昨天又左半邊腳酸手麻
一直到今天左半邊都怪怪
很怕自己是中風的現象
但是我血壓正常飲食正常
也不知道是為什麼
一直懷疑是9月10月的在家門口種了兩株玫瑰花的原因
起初玫瑰花長的醜醜都會被蟲吃
但是最近花苞一直開
花朵也漂亮
所以在懷疑是不是因為種了玫瑰花
影響我的身體呢
有媽咪知道嗎
拜託幫幫忙嚕
我想再繼續麻下去得去檢查了
好擔心喔

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iPhone bad news already starting…

TUAW => iPhone Will Not Allow User Installable Applications:

Well, my earlier concerns are beginning to bite me already:

The impression I got from the information coming out of the keynote was that the device would feature a full install of Mac OS X, and would run any and all desktop-based applications, as indicated by Apple asserting that the device “Runs OS X.” You can imagine my surprise when while talking to the booth attendant I was informed that users will not actually be able to install any applications. This is a point of utter confusion with me. Why would Apple refer to the software running on the device as “OS X,” when in reality, it will be running the long rumored stripped-down version of the operating system.

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Where’s the Mac?

I suppose no blog that even ever remotely deals with Apple issues can avoid mentioning the iPhone today.

It’s pretty cool, but… I want to see more about the applications available. Sure, “it’s OSX” but… cell phone carriers like to charge you for every little thing you put on your phone. If programs can be developed for this phone and placed on and used without incurring charges from Cingular, it’s going to be great. (Too expensive for me, but great.) If you have to pay for every little thing, it deserves to tank in the worst possible way.

Still, the notion that the device can switch off the expensive cell network and onto wifi networks when available makes this a product I might actually use.

The Apple TV was more interesting to me, it’s not much different than my prediction from November 2005, so I’m really looking forward to this product. Considering that a substantial portion of my video viewing is done from digital media rather than cable, a device that could send out my video to my HD TV would be a very welcome addition to my household.

I really wonder what happened to announcements about OSX 10.5, iLife 07 et al? I was rather looking forward to an OS upgrade.

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A tale of two robots

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Depressed as I am about having to write yet another review of a crappy Torchwood episode, I’ve decided to just write a bit about the latest addition to our household: K9 Mk II

This story requires a bit of history.

A few years ago, probably in 2002, we bought a first-generation iRobot Roomba: K9 Mk I. For those not familiar with Roombas, they are robotic floor vacuums. We liked it and it seemed to work, but, all too soon, the side brush mechanism for cleaning along the walls broke. iRobot sent us a replacement part, but after re-assembly, K9 never worked again. He just sort of started, turned slightly to the left and stopped.

And so, K9 sat under a futon gathering dust in entirely a different fashion than was intended.

With the kids keeping the floor fairly dirty at all times and Irene claiming not to have enough time to vacuum the house regularly, I bought her a brand new Roomba for our anniversary and Christmas. (Yes, I know, it sounds like a gift only a husband in a sitcom would buy for an anniversary. Fortunately, Irene is from Taiwan, the Isle of Geek and this kind of gift actually works for her.) And so K9 Mk II came to our household.

The new one is nicer, as well it should be. They’ve had several years to improve it. This one can be scheduled to run at night and even locates and returns to its charging station when finished. It all works pretty much as advertised.

There’s one little problem though: Asian hair. My wife’s hair has the tensile strength of steel and every 2 or 3 cleaning cycles, I have to disassemble to brush assembly and literally cut the hair off of it with a knife.

After having performed this maintenance on the new Roomba, I dug out the old one and decided to clean it off and check the brush assemblies. Sure enough, they’d been improperly re-assembled. They’re much more difficult than the new one, but I took it all apart, cleaned everything up, put it all back together right, switched it on and… it didn’t work.

At that point, I figured there wasn’t much to loose, so I took it to a friend who likes to tinker with robotics. He discovered what appears to be a whole sub-culture of Roomba devotees. He ran it through all the diagnostics and everything appeared to be correct.

Still it refused to run.

Finally, he found a couple people online with the same exact problem. They didn’t know what was wrong, either. Then someone said they had the same problem and found out it was the battery, despite the fact that the display lights indicated it was OK. Since all Roomba batteries are alike, I popped the battery from the new one into the old one and… it worked!

Decision time: Spend nearly $50 on a new battery, or let a working Roomba waste? I went cheap and bought one from eBay, which actually had to be soldered into the battery pack.

Our laundry room is partially exposed to the outside. The room temperature swings with the outdoor temperature and dust gets in. We use it to store a lot of stuff we rarely use, so it is quite a mess. This weekend, I decided to clean it up to the point where I could loose K9 (I) on it. In places, the dust was thick like sawdust. There had been some floor rugs in the room, but they had begun to decompose from the summer heat. (I threw them out.)

After K9′s first pass, it didn’t look that much better. The dust compartment hardly had anything in it. Was it all for nothing? I checked the brushes and they were choked with carpet shag from the deteriorating rugs. I cleaned the brushes and sent him running again. This time, it collected more dust, but the room wasn’t clean yet. In fact, he had even distributed the dust all around the floor.

For the third and final pass, I put both K9s in the room and set them to cleaning. it was rather fun watching them bash into each other. (Somebody should really make a spectator sport of out of it.) When they’d finished, the room was clean.

I emptied the first Roomba’s dust catcher and it was about as full as the time before. I emptied the second and was shocked. It had nearly 5 times as much dust collected in it.

Clearly the enhancements over the years are not just in the extra features, the new unit does a much better job cleaning

I read an article the other day saying that Roomba is making inroads into homes, but people are still buying them as gifts for others rather than themselves. Apparently they feel it’s not really good enough to use, but novel enough to give away.

I’ll add my voice to the crowd and say that they really do work, and they’ve obviously gotten better with time. Who knows what’s in store for the future?

You can get more information on the Roomba at my Amazon shop.

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