Scamville: The Social Gaming Ecosystem Of Hell
This is when I really like Arrington’s work. Reminds me of TagWorld, with the 0 captcha, 0 verification signup and touting their registration counts.
This is when I really like Arrington’s work. Reminds me of TagWorld, with the 0 captcha, 0 verification signup and touting their registration counts.
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I’m going to, periodically, do a tribute to old computers of mine. Today it is the Dell Optiplex GX-Pro
I had this machine from 1996 to 1998. My configuration was a Dual Pentium Pro 200mhz with 64 megs of RAM and a 720 megabyte Hard Drive. The OS that this machine ran was Windows NT 4.0 (aka Daytona).
This machine was a dream. The Pentium Pro 200mhz was a pretty substantial processor in terms of power, and coupled with the 32 bit only splendor of NT 4.0 ran more like a “modern” OS than Windows ’95, which I had prior. The only challenge was, drivers for Windows NT 4 were in scarce supply, and often flaky.
The internals of this machine were also really nice, especially for a home-tinkerer like me. The power supply flipped up and out, and the entire drive cage was removable to operate on, making adding hard drives (I eventually had three in there) easy.
The machine served me well until I upgraded to an Intergraph TDZ-2000 3d workstation (more on that in a later post).
The GXPro then went on to serve as the primary machine for my parents until it was retired in place of a Pentium IV and eventually their iMac.
The machine currently is buried in my parents garage.
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The cuteness that is my baby:
Onsie is was a gift from the band for his birth. We have outfits (REM branded) up to 2 years old. Reminder: “Live at the Olympia” released next Tuesday!
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What I am looking forward to is the collective sounds of all heads turning the other way again, when Apple shows OS XI (which I think will be the next version) next year, along with a ton of integrated, shiny devices. I have a feeling OS 11/XI has been in the works for a while and will represent some radical paradigm shifts in how we use computers.
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And here I was thinking the “Internet” as it were put the onus of representation further down the packet stream, and not in the packet itself?
[From Ballmer: "The Internet Was Designed For The PC. The Internet Is Not Designed For The iPhone"]
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This echos my Palm experience. 10 second lag between click and action means a horrible device experience.
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Today is my normal day to do a long run in preparation for the Rock and Roll Marathon (donate!) which I am running on December 6. During the week, I run 3-5 miles every other day, and Sunday’s do a super long run. My “usual” non-training run is a 13 mile through Griffith Park. It’s a beautiful run, taking me through Burbank, to Glendale and into the park.
Today I was going to do a longer version of that run by going in the opposite direction for a few miles and looping up and around back toward the park. However when I got the place where I would go back east, I decided: what the hell, I’ll run west until I I reach half the total distance i want to run, then run back.
I ran through the cities of Burbank, Toluca Lake, Valley Village, Studio City, Sherman Oaks and halfway through Encino. All told, I travelled three separate corridors through the Valley.
I usually only drive these routes, and Amy and I, sadly don’t get out to explore much (we stick around Toluca Lake). Some things I saw and noticed:
All in all, it was a great run. Not as scenic as the Griffith Park run, but ultimately scenic in a different way. Los Angeles is a weird place with a very fractal sense of community, history and locality. Each little area is a self-similar representation of the bigger city and county as a whole. Running through one city and a few municipalities (there are only three cities in the Valley, technically), you see, block to block, the short history of the area play out.
From stamps in cement with the date that the pavement was laid, to businesses proclaiming over a half century of existence residing next to a Starbucks. We are new and old, and celebrate neither.
Next weeks run needs to be over 18 miles, and my plan is to possibly head north, which is somewhat not altogether safe depending on where you do so, so I have to plan that accordingly.