Month: October 2003

  • Burt Rutan Will Say Something Cool Too …

    Yuriy Gagarin said “Let’s Go!” (Poyekhali!)
    Alan Shepard said “Why don’t you fix your little problems and light this candle?”
    Valentina Tereshkova according to rumors fainted and didn’t say anything or screamed “let me out of here” or something to that effect. We’ll probably never know the truth.
    Neil Armstrong said “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind” (and we’ll probably never know conclusively if he said “a man” or “man”.)
    The question is – what did Yang Liwei say?

  • Hey You. Yes, You. How About Some Tech Support Here?

    I finally decided to build a nice SB62G2 based computer for my wife. But I can’t decide the following:
    a) What kind of memory to get for it. That number of choices for DDR RAM confuses me to no end and there is no good FAQ in sight.
    b) What kind of DVD burner to get (they all look good)
    c) Which Pentium 4 is in the sweet spot of price/performance.
    d) Which 17 inch flat panel monitor to get (about $500 – $600 range)
    e) Which video card for the said flat panel to get.

  • The Legend Of Darius McCollum

    I remember reading in papers about a 15 or 16 year old train obsessed kid who faked his way into signing out an MTA train and driving it for a long stretch only to be caught after an automatic switch disabled the train due to speeding. For some reason I thought that the story happened in the early nineties, but it looks like it actually happened much later. I also remember the kid was not punished too strongly and had a chance to work for the MTA.

    I always wondered about what happened to him. And as it turned out instead of getting a job at the MTA Darius McCollum had an amazing career impersonating MTA workers and ended up getting a 5 year prison sentence recently.

    There was a big long article in Harper’s Magazine about all this:

    Before leaving his girlfriend’s apartment in Crown Heights, on the morning of his nineteenth arrest for impersonating and performing the functions of New York City Transit Authority employees, Darius McCollum put on an NYCTA subway conductor’s uniform and reflector vest. Over his feet he pulled transit-issue boots with lace guards and soles designed to withstand third-rail jolts.”

    Ooooh, I want those boots.

    Darius spent hundreds of hours watching trains at 179th Street. He estimated the angle of every track intersection in the yard. By the time he was eight, he could visualize the entire New York City subway system. (Later he memorized the architecture of the stations.)

    That’s heavy duty Asperger’s for you.

    “By this time Darius had cultivated a constellation of admirers at the 179th Street yard. Darius has always been deeply disarming. His charm resides in his peculiar intelligence, his perpetual receptivity to transporting delight, and his strange, self-endangering indifference to the consequences of his enthusiasm. Darius never curses. He has no regionally or culturally recognizable accent. He has a quick-to-appear, caricaturishly resonant laugh, like the laugh ascribed to Santa Claus, and he can appreciate certain comedic aspects of what he does, but he often laughs too long or when things aren’t funny, as when he mentions that he briefly worked on the LIRR route that Colin Ferguson took to slaughter commuters. Darius litters his speech with specialized vocabulary (“BIE incident,” “transverse-cab R-110”) and unusually formal phrases (“what this particular procedure entails,” “the teacher didn’t directly have any set curriculum studies”). He frequently and ingenuously uses the words “gee,” “heck,” “dog-gone,” “gosh,” and “dang.””

    I actually know what “transverse-cab R-110” is. It’s one of those newer prototype trains with a full width cab.

    “It is unlikely that Darius will omit the year he spent wearing an NYCTA superintendent’s shield. While he was doing a stint as a conductor, he discovered that he could have a shield made in a jewelry store. He began wearing it on a vest he pulled over his TA-specified shirt and tie. He had a hard hat and pirated I.D. Darius considered himself a track-department superintendent, so he signed out track-department vehicles and radios and drove around the city, supervising track maintenance and construction projects and responding to emergencies. “

    Amazing. In fact, it looks like he did a pretty good job. But still got some hard time for it.

    “”In any event,” Berkman said, “I don’t understand what the point is. … So far as I can tell there’s no treatment for Asperger’s. That is number one…. Number two, Asperger’s would not disable him from knowing that he’s not supposed to form credentials identifying him as an employee of the Transit Authority and go in and take trains or buses or vans or cars or other modes of transportation, which I gather has been his specialty…. “

    And I completely agree with the judge.

  • Tastycrats And Fingerlicans

    I finally sent out a New York State voter registration form. To get to vote in the general election you have to pick a party. There is a list of checkboxes which lists the parties recognized by the New York State: Republican, Democratic, Independence, Conservative, Liberal, Right to Life , Green and Working Families.

    To be listed on the form the party has to have a membership of at least 50,000. A while back the Green Party failed to gather that many members and was removed from the ballot. They went to court and first of all got themselves back on the list somehow and also won a provision to add “other” field to the new form. So apparently now you can write in Jedi Party, MP3 Party, Tastycrats, Fingerlicans, One Cell One Vote, Green Party, Brain Slug Party, Dudes For The Legalation Of Of Hemp, Bull Space Moose Party, National Raygun Association (NRA), People for the Ethical Treatment of Humans, Voter Apathy Party, Anti-Socialists, Rainbow Whigs or you can go with established and conservative Marijuana Reform Party Of New York State.

    I scribbled in Libertarian.

  • TT: Thought Tally

    * The only Libertarian candidate in the California recall looks really scary:

    Eeeek. Maybe he should stop smoking. And get a shave. And splurge on a good photographer once in a while. And get a better tie.

    * Governator’s middle name is Alois. He heh.

    * Finally figured out the origin of an expression “drink the Kool-Aid”.

  • Embed With Microsoft

    An auction for a special Microsoft shirt:
    “The MICROSOFT� WINDOWS� EMBEDDED signature NAME and LOGO”

    This reminded me of a t-shirt I’ve seen somewhere that said: “Embed me, link me, treat me like an object”.

    Logo apparel is an amazingly effective propaganda tool. My favorite Microsoft shirt says “MS Commerce Server 2000 Surf Naked”. I still wear it even though it’s 3 years old.

    I really want to get “Apple T-Shirts: A Yearbook of History at Apple Computer”, but it’s apparently rare and expensive at $180. Dang.

    Some pretty cool shirts at http://geekt.org/:
    Heh heh, so Outlook’s original code name was Ren. I am still working on that database of Microsoft codenames. Stay tuned.

    I think Dave Cutler gave out Zero Bugs shirts also, but Netscape’s shirt is more famous.

    How I wish there was a source for logo polo shirts from cool companies. I could go for some Amdahl, Cray, Microsoft, Apple, Xerox PARC shirts.

  • Blue Lights In The Tunnel

    Was taking pictures from the front window of an R40 train again. By the way, in theory it’s ok to take pictures in NYC subways without a permit unless you use “lights” (this may or may not include flash), a tripod for non-commercial purposes. It’s a complicated issue and is pretty open to interpretation, and in fact transit cops might not be aware of it at all. I had been asked by a transit cop once to stop taking pictures and erase what I already shot because of “the 9/11 stuff”. I told her politely about MTA rule Section 1050.9, Paragraph (c), but as I had no desire to argue with her also erased the pictures. You see, if I wasn’t lazy and got an official permit which supposedly “can be obtained from Division of Special Events by contacting Connie DePalma (718) 694-5121, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., weekdays” I could show that to her. Besides, nobody likes a dorky smart ass with a camera.

    Anyway, the pictures are pretty, but “hold on Luke, we are going into hyperspace” effect becomes tiresome fast enough. So I’ll spare you. Here’s a slightly more interesting shot taken handheld at 1/10th sec., f/2.0 ISO 400 while the train was standing in a tunnel (if your monitor brightness is set too high, you might not see the details). For all the coffee that I consume my hands are pretty steady.

    I always wonder how it was for the people stuck in the tunnels during the blackout. They probably actually had to walk through whole tunnel stretches like that to get out after a while.

    The train signaling system is not too complicated. I think I figured out a sizable chunk of it from just watching the tracks, and the rest can be picked up from here. There’s even a “train simulator” for Windows (but for some reason the coolest part, “cab view”, doesn’t work for me.

    “… The color aspects of subway signals are vaguely similar to those of street traffic lights — red means “don’t go, but stop,” yellow means “slow down,” and green means “go”. The similarity, however, ends there. Green does not just mean “go”, but certifies that the next signal, the one after the green one, doesn’t say “stop”. Yellow is even more different in meaning: While a yellow street traffic signal means “slow down, because this signal is in the process of changing to red” (which many motorists, of course, interpret as “speed up so as to pass it before it does”), a yellow subway signal means “slow down, (most often) because the next signal already is red, and you must slow down and proceed with caution before reaching it. While street traffic signals usually go from green to yellow to red, subway signals usually go from red to yellow to green…. “

    Blue lights probably indicate locations of emergency phones, but could be something else. I am not sure.

  • 100 Inch ……. TV

    I was browsing a site that sells weird keyboards and fount this :
    “A Perfect Monitor Solution”

    Just $285.00
    I think various pixel pushers and the nuts who set their screens to ridiculous resolutions could actually get some use this product.

    Wow, this reminded me the Soviet “КВÐ?-49” TV set that was sold with a water (or glycerin) filled lens so that you could make out something on it’s tiny screen.

    Oh, and a $9.95 kit for making a 100 inch TV. “The picture produced by this lens compares only to the high-end HDTV plasma screens costing over $12,000!! “ and “With every order you will also receive… A FREE 3 DAY, 2 NIGHT VACATION OVER 20 WORLDWIDE LOCATIONS!”

    Don’t know about the plasma screen comparison and that vacation, but from what I’ve heard the projection apparatus kind of works.

    And I also remembered my high school AP Physics teacher Mr. Lloyd who explained how Fresnel lens works.

  • Ok, It’s a Quick Meme. And I Can’t Sleep.

    The way this works, you cross out authors not appearing on your bookshelf and add new ones as needed.
    :: ::
    G. K. Chesterton C.S. Lewis Cordwainer Smith
    Terry Pratchett Tom Clancy Henry Kuttner
    J.R.R. Tolkien
    Kurt Vonnegut
    Octavia Butler Robert Nozick John C Wright
    Dorothy Sayers Milan Kundera Erich Maria Remarque
    Richard Dawkins Søren Kierkegaard Cyril Kornbluth
    Jaroslav Pelikan F.A. von Hayek Rudyard Kipling
    Neal Stephenson Robert A. Heinlein
    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Ayn Rand

  • Unless You Are A Masochist, Of Course


    Spotted this message on a bus window. I guess the person who wrote it wants his/her windows to be tagged with messages written in Magic Marker™.