As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as A Girl


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Late last night or early this morning I started cleaning out the closet in my office, when I came across a book that I read a couple of years ago as required reading for course cluster in female studies. I have read some bizarre books but by “As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as A Girl” has to be one of the oddest and strangely intriguing stories I have ever read. Thus I felt the need to introduce you to this story.

Check out this link for a summary of this brilliantly researched and written bizarre tale of medical tragedy, misguided advice, gender disforia and a renewed belief in the human spirit.

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Microsoft antitrust litigation


Microsoft is the target of another antitrust litigation, this time in an Iowa court.  This story has an interesting twist, read about it here.

Plaintiff’s Exhibit 7264 gave me a good little chuckle. Almost three years ago, on January 7, 2004, Jim Allchin, the senior executive at Microsoft, sent an E-mail to Microsoft’s top two executives, Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer, and the subject was losing our way.

Mr. Allchin says, I’m not sure how the company lost sight of what matters to our customers, both business and home, the most, but in my view we lost our way. I think our teams lost sight of what bug-free means, what resilience means, what full scenarios mean, what security means, what performance means, how important current applications are, and really understanding what the most important problems our customers face are. I see lots of random features and some great vision, but that does not translate into great products. He goes on to say, I would buy a Mac today if I was not working at Microsoft.

I am sure Apple will capitalize on this – as well they should.  I only hope they do it in such a way that it is reminiscent of the 1984 Orwellian Macintosh commercial that Apple aired during the superbowl.  In my opinion the best commercial of all time.  I vote for this commercial to be a parody, Steve Carell would make a good Bill Gates :)

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Reflecting on my inner nerd


Technology has become the modern day version of the ’57 Chevy – at least that is what I keep telling my wife. People are crawling out of the woodwork as self proclaimed technologist – It’s been a long road of abuse to nerdom and I think that far to many people are catching an episode of StarTek 2.0 on G4TV (BTW – if you have not seen StarTrek Cribs on YouTube you have to check it out) and laying stake to the techie guru throne. As I articulated this week to a colleague the road to nerdom is paved with 8th grade wedgies and significant weight loss in the 9th and 10th grade. But that got me thinking, was the cream puff ’57 Chevy the real winner in late 50s or was it the brush painted sleeper that disillusioned the crowd – that’s what the 9th and 10th grade nerds have become, that brush painted nova that cleaned the clock of cherry street rod. The key to the kingdom is learning how to stay true to your inner geek while polishing the external geek. This is one of the first weeks that I have not traveled in the past two months so I have been spending some time knocking some projects off the list, one of those project is a Virtual Appliance – While building the appliance – I do my best work between 8 PM and 3PM a true nerd quality, I realized that I really am a nerd. The proof is in the pictures so lets get started:

Pictures of the Mindstorm robot that guards the door to my home office:

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As if it is not enough that I still play with Legos – BTW these are not normal legos the big box in the middle is an onboard computer – of course I have to spend countless hours writing perl and java code to make my robot do cool stuff like follow my dog around the house – My daughter thinks it is the funniest thing. If you think legos are for kids google “lego mindstorm rcx” or check out this site http://graphics.stanford.edu/~kekoa/rcx/.

Next I found some pictures that I sent to colleagues when my daughter was born – she is 6 days old in these pictures.

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It’s never to early to start educating :)

Lastly I have amassed a ridiculous amount of compute power in my house. I think the total number of systems stands at approx 15 not including a few laptops – 1 quad proc and 3 dual proc systems. Virtual machines in the 20+ realm with most major open systems Operating Systems up and running from Windows XP, 2K, 2K3, Linux (Debian and RedHat based distros – my favorites are Ubuntu on the desktop and CentOS on the server), FreeBSD, HP-UX, Solaris and others.

I have to keep the window open in my office in the winter to keep the temperature regulated and in the summer I have a portable air conditioner that runs 24×7. You can see the AC unit in the third picture just to the left of the window – 10K BTU unit does a nice job, this year I put a drain line through the floor and into the basement sink so I do not have to empty the water every day, that was a real pain.

Lots of other equipment including RAID arrays, a Cisco IOS switch, FC Switches, a SCSI bus analyzer, and a SCSI-to-FC bridge to name a few.

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It’s tough work staying atop the nerd mountain but it sure is fun, and it keeps the house warm in the winter. I also like having enough compute power to do almost anything I need to at home – It’s a huge advantage when you can work a week straight without sleep or a shower :)

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Happy Trails


Last Wednesday, December 13th 2006 the world said goodbye to 76 year old Al Shugart, the father of the modern disk drive. Al Shugart founded Seagate Technology and without his contributions many of use would not have 10 thousand songs attached to our hip.

Watch a speech given by Al Shugart entitled Half a Century of Disk Drives and Philosophy: From IBM to Seagate.

“It is important to remember when starting and growing a new company that cash is more important than your mother.” – Al Shugart

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Homebrew wireless antenna


This was a howto that I used to have on my website, it has to be at least 4 or 5 years old but I was doing some filesystem cleanup this weekend and I thought that I would post it.

The purpose of this post was to share my 802.11b homebrew wireless antenna parts list and experience. Today I have a Linksys WRT54G roamabout cardrunning the Sveasoft Talisman firmware but when I originally wrote this I was using a Linksys WAP11 access point. For a wireless card I use a Cabletron pcmcia wireless card.

 

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The card that you use is very important important, internal wireless cards in my experience (if anyone know different please let me know) do not offer the ability to attach an external antenna. I recommend a card that uses the Prism/Prism2 chipset.

My research initially started with commercial antenna that were approx $120 to $150 for a 5dbi antenna (remember this was a few years ago and prices have come down). I then stumbled across the 802.11b Home Brew Wireless Shootout page. Since I originally wrote this I have upgraded to amplifier indoor nf 150a commercial antenna, the thing is sick and if you never want to loose your signal I highly recommend it :) . There are two important components, the antenna (in this case an omni-directional) and the amplifier.

For my homebrew antenna I choose the Flickenger coffee can waveguide design.

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The hardest part of making the antenna was finding the proper parts. I have itemized the list of parts needed here:

(1) Coffe Can (36 oz, does not need to be a Yuban coffee can) – In my case it was a Maxwell House can – this happens to be what my parents drink. – $0

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These parts I ordered from www.hyperlinktech.com. I would have included the direct links but they seem to change as the catalog changes.

(1) N-Female Panel Mount 4-Hole? 1 in. Flange Crimp Connector for Cable Types: RG58/141/142? Hyperlink CA195RW? WBC195? LMR195? Belden 8240/8219 – $32.90

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(1) RP-TNC Plug to N-Male, 195-Series Cable – $20 (This allows connection of the antenna directly to the WAP device)

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(1) ORiNOCO? AP-600/700/4000 Compatible to N-Male, 195R-Series Cable – $15 (The is for connecting the antenna directly to your pcmcia wireless card – great for war driving)

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For additional instructions see Rob Flickenger’s web page on building the coffee can antenna. Happy homebrewing.
Good luck, I am in the process of doing some benchmarking on my coffee cantenna using netstumbler (http://www.netstumbler.com/). I should have the results posted after the holidays.

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