Archive for February, 2008 Page 2 of 8



Welcome to the-updated-inquisitivetechie!

New and ImprovedI had to update the blog software when I rebuilt the server. The new theme is K2, by the same author as my last theme Contempt. I couldn’t upload my new theme, so I upgraded, and I am glad that I did. K2 has a lot of nice features and was easy to install. No bugs so far anyhow.

I particularly like the clean look, the new font, and how the comments button and the information bar are moved up under the title of the article. There are also nice behind the scenes updates to the K2 sidebar manager, which make site design easier to manage as well. All in a half an hour. Nice. You can download K2 here. Thanks guys!

Why can’t LINUX have a decent GUI? Really.

I am learning Linux again.  I got sick of hiring Linux guys and decided it was time to (re)learn Fedora Core so I could do the work again myself.

I hate command line stuff these days.  Yes I know, before you uber-geeks get all jihad on me, stop.  I know, LINUX is better.  I just hate typing. (insert line about irony here as you read this on blog). I would rather use a GUI.

It’s just really about all the keyboard gyrations that command line Linux makes me do.  It’s not just letters, oh no…  LINUX adds | and ! and ^ and ><!@@##@%!#$%!11GRRWTF like typing into your daily vocabulary.  Too often.

Not to get get all whiny, but is this really necessary?   Can’t you have the worlds coolest operating system AND a decent GUI that I can use remotely?  If Windows can do it, why cant you guys figure this out?  Is this a counter culture statement of “we’re soooo not Windows dude“?

If you are a LINUX nerd reading this and you have an answer for me, I beg of you leave the answer to my mystery in the comments.  I am a lazy typer, beyond my prime keyboarding days of %@#$ and >><<^^abab start and such.  I like all the fun without all the crazy typing workouts.
On the other hand I have installed Apache, mysql, two databases, a mail server, a web server, a blog, anti spam, web mail, and  many other server level services TWICE over the past few weeks.

The second time was because I fat fingered a single file permission command, and wiped out the file permissions on my whole server. O RLY?

On a positive note, I restored the whole server in two and a half hours yesterday.

I love LINUX.

Voices from the front lines

I read several moving blogs today written by soldiers serving behind enemy lines in Iraq or Afghanistan.

The insights provided are incredible. Images of their daily lives, that are both frightening and funny at the same time. In this post, from ruminations of a soldier medic, you can feel the confusion and intensity of a first time firefight:

Every one looked at every one else as we started hearing booms. They started getting louder, so we all started throwing on our body armor and helmets. My guys all went outside to investigate. At this point, I was kind of scared, but I didn’t really know what to expect. This was the first time something like this has happened to me. I ventured outside cautiously to find out what was going on. The shooting, the booms, all the sounds you don’t want to hear-they just kept escalating. They weren’t going away.”

There are a lot of perspectives that we have a hard time understanding about these soldiers. They are all serious, hard working, dedicated, and well, so young. From Eighty Deuce on the Loose in Iraq:

“OK, heres where the Infantry guy thing comes into play. First off, consider our situation. We are a bunch of males, many of which are straight out of high school. We now live together, work together and pretty much spend 24/7 with each other. And to make matters worse, you coup us up inside a Humvee for 10’s of hours at a time. Its going to get crazy. “

Some of the stories are funny. Gallows humor at times, but there are many belly laughs out there. Bill and Bob’s Excellent Afghan Adventure is full of them:

“There is an old saying that the only difference between an Army story and a fairy tale is that a fairy tale starts with ‘Once upon a time,’ and an Army story starts with ‘No shit, this really happened…’ “

While funny at times, Bill and Bobs’ writer uses real statistics in his skewering the of media and the New York Times in particular, on their sensationalist story about Global Terror War veterans and the violent crimes some have committed since returning from theater.

I found many that had unique photos from behind the lines, which were particularly fascinating to me, because I have seen so few of them on the news. Army of Dude (best. name. ever.) has tons of photos, as does Leave the Gun (confirmed by the author as a Godfather reference – “leave the gun, take the cannoli”), both of which are written by Alex Horton, a soldier working every day in Iraq. Finally, how can you not like a guy called Dude in the Desert?

Snipers - by Leave the Gun

These stories are not being told in the mainstream media, and these soldiers “outside the wire” know it. Their insight is invaluable in us really understanding the war in Iraq, the forgotten war in Afghanistan, and any other place our kids are dying. Read their stories, understand their emotions, and support our troops. Not by buying a new magnetic sticker for your SUV, but by listening to them, by recognizing their sacrifices, and by respecting them.

These are serious young people, and they are serving in chaotic and dangerous places because they said they would. They have earned your respect.

Here’s a couple of ways you can support our troops:

Learn more at 1000 Reasons, or over at Vet Voice.

Send em some love over at Soldiers Angels or AnySoldier.

Get the facts straight over at FactChecker.org

Support Peace

New heroes

Someone mysteriously sent me a terrific book, Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World, written by Pulitzer Prize winner Tracy Kidder. Not a book I would ordinarily seek out, it has changed my mind on many issues, and opened my eyes to many other important ones.

Only because quoting the back of the book saves me an hour or so of rewriting it…

“Doctor, Harvard professor, renowned infectious-disease specialist, anthropologist, the recipient of a MacArthur “genius” grant, world-class Robin Hood, Farmer was brought up in a bus and on a boat, and in medical school found his life’s calling: to diagnose and cure infectious diseases and to bring the lifesaving tools of modern medicine to those who need them most.”

Paul Farmer is genuinely inspiring, as you can see in this YouTube video talking about his foundation Partners in Health. PIH offers help to places of the world that nobody else is. Here are some ways that you can help.

Is the United States headed for fiscal crisis?

This video is about David Walker, the Comptroller General of the United States. He’s the nations top accountant, and runs the General Accounting Office, the agency responsible for auditing the books of the federal budget.

David believes that current record deficits, coupled with the crippling weight of entitlement programs like Medicare will soon bankrupt the United States. He has given up on congress, and has taken his message to you, the average man. It’s short, so please watch the video, it certainly is eye-opening.

David Walker resigned this past Friday, citing an inability to get this message out as one of his reasons. His next position will be as the president and CEO of the newly founded Peter G. Peterson Foundation. The foundation’s mission statement from their web site:

The mission of The Peter G. Peterson Foundation is to enhance public understanding of the nature and urgency of selected key sustainability challenges that threaten America’s future, to propose sensible and workable solutions to address these challenges and to build public will to do something about them.

“As comptroller general of the United States,” said David Walker, the federal government’s top accountant, “there are real limitations on what I can do and say in connection with key public policy issues, especially issues that directly relate to G.A.O.’s client – the Congress.”

“While I love both my job as comptroller general and the GAO,” said Walker, “I love my country more. And I believe that leading this foundation represents a unique opportunity and will be good for my country. My new position will provide me with the ability and resources to more aggressively address a range of current and emerging challenges facing our country, including advocating specific policy solutions and courses of action.”

Sounds like a good man left an untenable situation to me.