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# Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Dear Word Detective: I am having an argument with my brother. He insists that the phrase "out of pocket" refers to expenditure from one's own resources, with the expectation of later reimbursement. I contend that one is "out of pocket" when one cannot be reached, is outside of the place where one can contact or be contacted...

...the bottom line is that you're both right, although your brother is a bit more likely to be clearly understood when he uses "out of pocket."

[ Previous Columns/Posted 01/20/00 ]

Well, I haven't started arguing yet, but I've noticed that Mikah has been using the phrase a lot, and now it seems Andy has too. I agree with the above guys brother. Out of Pocket means that you have to expense something and get reimbursed later. A second possible meaning is that you have used all of your pocket up and there is no more. How it could mean unreachable, I just don't know.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 10:26:51 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [3] -
english
# Saturday, October 07, 2006

My wife's country and my motherland are about as far apart in the world as you can get. One never sees news stories involving the Irish in Indonesia, or Indonesians in Ireland. Or do they?

An Irish company is poised to turn Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam's Sabang port into one of Asia's largest and most competitive container ports. Dublin Port is investing in the facility, which is strategically located on Weh Island at the mouth of the Malacca Strait, one of the world's busiest waterways.

[ The Jakarta Post - Dublin Port to turn Sabang into one of Asia's largest ports ]

Well what do you know?

Saturday, October 07, 2006 9:00:58 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
news | odd
# Thursday, October 05, 2006

A bit of googling and it seems that Comcast frequently has issues with their DNS servers.

Comcast has ocassionally messed up its DNS servers - last year they had a series of systemwide DNS outages that lasted several days. (My Comcast DNS servers are 68.80.0.12 and 68.80.0.5.) Today Comcast DNS is being slow - but not out. That is good, because it means I can still get to Google and I can still use it to find other DNS servers.

[ davidbau.com: Memorable DNS IPs ]

Based on this guys comment about OpenDNS, I switched to using that. I haven't a clue what OpenDNS is, or why they do it, but I can look into that after my deadline...

Thursday, October 05, 2006 11:35:35 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
admin
# Tuesday, October 03, 2006

StraightOuttaLynnwood.jpgThe new Weird Al album is out, and I think it may be his best ever. I love his love song to his pancreas:

My spleen just doesn't matter
Don't really care about my bladder
But I don't leave home without
My pancreas

My pancreas is always there for me (ahh oooh ooh)
Secreting those enzymes (bop bop ba-ooh)
Secreting those hormones too
Metabolizing carbohydrates just for me

[ XVR27's "Weird Al" Yankovic Homepage - Lyrics - Pancreas ]

Not to mention a great new holiday song for Weasle Stomping Day, a warning to [Not] Download This Song, and Al mocks those that'd Sue You so easily.

Andrew brought this to my attention because of his seething hate of all things Canadian, and Al's Canadian Idiot anthem. Though the parodies don't stop with Green Day, Al does send ups of Chamillionaire, Usher, Taylor Hicks, and R. Kelly. All genius.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006 9:43:59 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2] -
music
# Saturday, September 30, 2006

Delegates and Events can be a bit confusing, especially to Nate's favorite instructor. Personally I do them so seldom that I find I need an example each time I write one. This time I googled and found the following:

All of us have been exposed to event driven programming of some sort or the other. C# adds on value to the often mentioned world of event driven programming by adding support through events and delegates. The emphasis of this article would be to identify what exactly happens when you add an event handler to your common UI controls.

[ Delegates and Events in C# / .NET ]

Saturday, September 30, 2006 10:01:40 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1] -
.net

Symptom: When saving a file in Visual Studio 2005, the entire IDE becomes non-responsive (ie. freezes) for about 10-15 seconds. Meanwhile, the save icon in the status bar is animated. After 15 seconds, the file is saved and the IDE is responsive again.

Solution: "With the help of a network packet analyzer I was able to find out what stalls Visual Studio. I found that whenever I saved a file, in my web project, Visual Studio did a DNS lookup on a host on my local network. This host was offline so although it managed to resolve it's IP address, there was no response from it. After a timeout period Visual Studio stops trying to connect to this host and goes on with it's business of saving the file.

I searched my registry to find the source of this host name and found it to be present in: HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\8.0\ProjectMRUList. This registry key is where Visual Studio stores all recent projects that have been opened. In that list a project, located on a remote computer, was found. When I removed that item from the registry, Visual Studio no longer took 20 seconds to save it's Web project files."

[ Slow VS.NET 2005 Editor is driving me nuts - Rick Strahl's Web Log ]

Not only has my IDE been freezing up like crazy when I saved, it was also doing it on a regular basis due to the "auto recover" saving every 7 minutes. This fix has brought my VisualStudio back to where I expected it to be, but just deleting the offending items from this "ProjectMRUList". In my case a project that I loaded remotely off of Nate's laptop, which now that we are working remotely, is no where near me or my home LAN.

Saturday, September 30, 2006 1:41:13 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
.net | admin
# Thursday, September 28, 2006

Since it is Ramadan I will attempt avoid name calling and beratement and try to keep it above the belt, but Starbucks Gossip has a point, stop it with the "witty comments" about Starbucks sizes.

The other day, for instance, I was in the drive-thru at a local Starbucks and decided to order a vanilla cappuccino.

“Would you like a tall?” said the voice in the speaker.

“No,” I said. “I don’t want that much. A small will do.”

Silence on her end.

“We don’t have smalls, sir,” said the voice. “A small is a tall.”

Silence on my end as I cogitated over that.

“But a small can’t be a tall,” I said. “It’s a contradiction in terms. You don’t have short larges, do you?”

“Uh ...” went the voice. “Hold on.”

[ Size matters, but not at Starbucks ]

If you want a small coffee, go to 7-11, they still have that size. Starbucks chose their sizes (tall, grande, venti, solo, and dopio) for a good reason, they are homage to the grand tradition of Italian Cafés. Perhaps you'd prefer if the tall was called an alto, but in cafés around the world they call a tall a tall, and they did before Starbucks existed.

Why are the names of the sizes at Starbucks such an issue? I'd say it's the face of the "Ugly American" rearing again. Is there something wrong with Italian names? Do you argue, when purchasing sheet music, when they used the traditional Italian terms?  Do you complain to your wine shop when they use French terms? Perhaps you have issue with "Cappuccio" as well, and would prefer Starbucks to call it a "Hot Pressed Coffee with Milk and topped with Steamed Milk"?

And, for arguments sake, let's pretend you actually have a point and the names should be what you've dictated, haven't you notcied that dozens of other jounalists and comedians have already covered this? You are simply rehashing their barely humorous comments of yesteryear. Perhaps you think you are covered because in Escanaba Michigan everyone gets all of their news from the Daily Press, and the Starbucks was only put in a few weeks ago (or never), and no one watches any televison or movies, so you believe that your comments are fresh and clever. Well, think again, please, for all of our sakes.

(Odd that he does a rant against Starbucks in a town without a single Starbucks in it)

Oh, as for "grande" and "venti", I guess the purist thing to do is force people to order multiple talls, since outside the US and Canada a "tall" is plenty enough coffee for anyone, perhaps a double-tall, but anything bigger is just gluttonous. Perhaps your criticism should be that Starbucks didn't reproduce the authentic Italian café by duplicating it in toto. What's next, citing Ikea with violations for using Swedish names for their products? The horror!

Thursday, September 28, 2006 12:32:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [5] -
rant
# Wednesday, September 27, 2006

And if I didn't before, it's *blogies like this that would win me over:

You know, every time I have preordered a console in Ireland, I've just been absolutely amazed at how easy and reliable it is.

[ Wii Preorders Pretty Easy in Ireland - Kotaku ]

* short for Web Log Entries, no? Well this isn't really an article, or a story, just a blurb. Maybe blogurbs?

Wednesday, September 27, 2006 12:16:09 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
games
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