# Friday, September 17, 2004

First Set of Photos uploaded to the Gallery

Patience, all will be posted in time.

[ davidkearns.com ]

Most of these photos are from the hotel that we stayed in for a few days as a “mini honeymoon”. There are a couple of photos from the reception, and one of a McDonalds menu...

Still to come, photos from the nikah ceremony.

Update: Link straight to September gallery now working.

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# Thursday, September 16, 2004

Worse than Nerf Guns

Turn a desktop or tabletop into a mini carnival arcade with a Bulls-Eye Ball™ game of skill and chance!

Action packed desktop game is fun for both kids and grownups alike. Toss and "boink" marble-sized silver balls onto the mini built-in trampoline — and into the bulls-eye!

Competition is accompanied by music, flashing lights, sound effects and the amusing voice of a score-keeping barker.

Choose among three automatically scored games: 30-Second Blitz; 25-Point Rush; and the Bulls-Eye Ace.

Recommended for ages 7 and older.

[ Fun Office Game ]

Oh, and seriously impede office productivity...

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# Wednesday, September 15, 2004

NHL lockout about to become reality

They warned us:

The current collective bargaining agreement between owners and players expires at 12:01 a.m. Thursday. With no talks scheduled, a lockout is a virtual certainty once the NHL board of governors conclude a Wednesday meeting in New York.

[ Yahoo! Sports - NHL ]

Props to Dari.

Maybe I should switch sports and start following Football, Basketball, or Baseball? Baaaah, that's insantity...

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# Monday, September 13, 2004

Headed home

I'm in Tokyo's Narita airport, headed home after a nice vacation.

This trip has further advanced my theory that one truism transcends all cultures:

Wedding photographers are irritating.

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# Monday, August 30, 2004

A tiny break

I don't expect that I will have many blog entries for the next few weeks. Computers will be hard to come by as I take a small trip:

And then back by mid September. See you then!

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# Saturday, August 28, 2004

An-ti-ci-pay-ay-shun

Playstation distractions aside, my Metroid P2E bonus disc arrived:

Metroid Prime 2 Echoes won't hit stores until November 15, 2004, but novice and veteran bounty hunters can pick up an official bonus disc with a playable demo in the new Metroid Prime Bonus Bundle! If you already own a Nintendo GameCube, you can receive a bonus disc by registering your GCN and five games, or you can get it with a subscription to Nintendo Power magazine.

[ Metroid Prime 2 Echoes - Bonus Disc ]

Better than Metroid Prime 2 for sure. The HUD has been reworked a bit, giving it a more subtle “lock on”. Much design work has been done on the pirates, and the newer 2 types the demo shows are reminiscent of Scizor, but still cool. The demo starts off with Samus having the “light” and “dark” guns, which doesn't make sense, so I'm hoping it's just the fact it's a demo. Game feel was very similar to Metroid Prime, and I'm sure there are some great surprises too.

The bonus disc comes with a preview (including Halo rip-off opening movie), a trailer (snippets of game-play), a demo (not a lot, basically what was displayed at E3), a gallery (including a nifty shot of an updated chozo), and a time line of where the games fit chronologically (including story synopsis).

If you have a GameCube and 5 registrable games (mostly anything published by Nintendo directly since Mario Sunshine) I highly recommend ordering this great freebie. If you don't have a GameCube, go buy one and get Metroid Prime and this bonus disc for free.

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# Thursday, August 26, 2004

Prayer Times 2003 for Outlook 2003

Yes!

Prayer Times 2003 is a plug-in that integrates Islamic prayer times in Microsoft Outlook 2003.

Prayer Times enables you to generate appointments for the five main prayers as well as for Friday prayer in your personal Outlook calendar along with your other daily appointments.

[ Microsoft Products and Arabic Support ]

Microsoft actually originally released this unsupported with Outlook 97, it had been taken off their site years ago, and I was still installing the copy I had. They've now updated it a bit for Outlook 2003, and it's integrated a bit better. I expect the next update in 2009.

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Resistance was laughable

I heard it was good. And I resisted.

[ davidkearns.com: Cowboy Bebop ]

The geekery continues. I found an Amazon.com seller who had the Cowboy Bebop Movie, Series, and soundtrack for a decent enough price that I just had to order. Seems like they were all made for the Chinese market, but the DVDs appear to be region-free, and seemingly legit, so I'm happy.

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# Wednesday, August 25, 2004

Another Food Mystery Solved

One appetizer that remains popular year after year is Crab Rangoon. The sweet, delicate flavor of crab and the crunchy texture of deep-fried wonton make for an intriguing combination. What many people don't realize is that, despite having the capital city of Burma in its name, crab rangoon isn't an Asian recipe. Its exact origins are difficult to trace. It may be the creation of a chef at Trader Vic's, a restaurant chain started by "Trader Vic" Bergeron that became famous for its Polynesian cuisine in the 1950's. In any event, today Crab Rangoon (occasionally misspelled as Crab Ragoon) is very popular, particularly in eastern states and the Midwest.

[ Asian Appetizer Recipe - Crab Rangoon Recipe ]

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# Tuesday, August 24, 2004

Intriguing

This looks like something right up my alley:

The Question of God, a four-hour series on PBS, explores in accessible and dramatic style issues that preoccupy all thinking people today: What is happiness? How do we find meaning and purpose in our lives? How do we reconcile conflicting claims of love and sexuality? How do we cope with the problem of suffering and the inevitability of death?

[ The Question of God | PBS ]

Unfortunately, my faux-tivo won't let me choose to record something so far in advance. I shall certainly not want to miss this one.

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Has your company formed a plan yet?

I expect some big issues tomorrow.

While recognizing the security benefits of Service Pack 2, some organizations have asked that we provide them the ability to temporarily disable delivery of this update via AU and WU. These organizations have populations of PCs which are enabled to receive all critical security updates via AU. Since Service Pack 2 will start to be delivered to Windows XP Home Edition PCs on August 18 and to Windows XP Professional Edition starting on August 25, these customers have asked for the ability to temporarily block the delivery of Service Pack 2 in order to provide additional time for validation and testing of the update.

[ Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 2 and Windows Update ]

I've been the guinea pig for my company, and so far it's been smooth sailing. I've reviewed all critical systems and used my computer for regular business and only run in to a few small issues. One security product required an upgrade (which had been available anyway) and CRM needed me to white-list it. I understand that I'll have to tweak security settings if I ever try to setup debugging via DCOM in VisualStudio, but I doubt I'll be doing that so no worries.

Personally, I can't wait until everyone is on SP2, I think Microsoft has done some good work, and it will stop much of the viral shenanigans that have been going on. And the naysayers? Whiners, in my opinion. I've seen nothing insurmountable, and (as far as I can tell) all issues are from the added security, and the added security is what everyone has been begging for, so when you get what you ask for, don't whine about it?

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Jak and Daxter Review

GameFly has been kind enough to send me a copy of Jak and Daxter, which I heard was decent, and so far appears to be so. It looks like I can pick up a used copy for about $8 off of Amazon and just might do that.

The game-play is OK so far, a basic collection platformer. Daxter, the sidekick, is a bit irritating, but most reviews point this out so I was prepared. One nice thing about the game is all load waiting seems to have been eliminated. PS2 games don't, apparently, require those heinous waiting times while a level loads, as long as the game programmers know what they're doing. So far I've been getting used to the controls, looking around the world a bit, and trying in vain to get the “love interest” in the game to care about something besides her little experiment.

If I had paid $40 for this game, I think I may have been disappointed, but at the price you can get a used copy for, this is certainly enough bang for the buck.

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