Bunny’s TMI

More than you ever wanted to know about what goes on in my life and my brain.

Spam Rage

Also from the tech email list (following the previous one):

Ejoying the comments on this thread today. Hey, watch out for spam rage.
It may have cost one guy $250,000 and up to five years in prison last year.
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,61339,00.html

“a Silicon Valley computer programmer has been arrested for threatening to torture and kill employees of the company he blames for bombarding his computer with Web ads promising to enlarge his …”

“Here’s what happened: I go to their website and start complaining to them, would you please, please, please stop bothering me,” he said. “It just sort of escalated … and I sort of lost my cool at that point.”

No Comments »

Half-life 2

from: http://www.frozenreality.co.uk/comic/bunny/index.php?id=76

No Comments »

Reasons to ride in the front of the bus

Or just not ride them at all….

http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/11/18/bridge.accident.ap/index.htm

No Comments »

Kitty update

Khalua is getting more uppity, I know she gets up on counters when I’m not there, but I had to yell her down from the kitchen counter this morning before I left. Punk kitty. Mocha has learned to fight back, and win sometimes, but Khalua still gets him occasionally. Khalua earned herself a nail trimming last night for attacking Mocha and removing chunks of his fur – which I’ll have to vacuum up (I hate vacuuming!). There was even a bit of blood on her nails as I trimmed them. Yet later she was cuddled up on me purring and then went and stuck her head under Mocha’s for a bath. Which he was nice enough to give her, until he decided that this was some trick of hers and he started chomping on her ear, so I had to toss them off the bed. I’m not sure how it works for cats – does this count as the terrible twos or their teenage attitude phase?

No Comments »

Things I’m grateful for today

That I live far enough away to have not heard the gunshots when a man shot his brother and sister-in-law and killed them somewhere on the fairly short street that I live off of.

That I closed my Washington Mutual account before 600,000 account #s were stolen.

That CS forced me to develop the habit of opening all my mail every day.

AP(f) and I had lunch together in my office today and had a nice chat. Her accounts was one of the ones stolen, so she has to dispute all these claims. That really sucks. All the more reason for me to finish paying off my debt asap, so I can just put everything on my credit card every month and pay it off every month like I used to. Disputing credit card charges is much easier than trying to get the bank to give back your money. And AP(f) said that you should always use your card as a credit card & sign for it, because if anyone ever gets your pin & uses it – then you can’t dispute the charges. I think I’ll probably change my pin soon, I’ve had the same one for too long. Bleh. And I already shred any stuff I don’t keep. Other than checking my credit report occasionally, that’s about all I can do without going into paranoia mode. :)

No Comments »

I am sooo not P.C.

Exhibit A: Reading about this in the Aggie made me laugh: http://moveoncalifornia.org/

Who are they kidding??

Exhibit B:

CS:beat it

Jenny:beat what?

half life 2?

already???

it has a goal? I thought the point was, shoot stuff until you die

or is that only multi-player?

CS:thats multiplayer

single player acutally has an end

Jenny:didn’t you just start yesterday??

wow

CS:hehe, umm

no I was out volunteering for the homeless

and going to a PETA meeting

Jenny:eww

I wouldn’t date you if you were part of PETA

cause they’re either crazy/bad or just too stupid to realize that the other PETA members are crazy/bad

and they have enough programs, if the homeless didn’t want to be that way, they wouldn’t

CS:hehe fine

I was playing video games all day

Don’t get me wrong, if I walk by a homeless person and have some spare food, I’ll give it to them. But never money. And I’m polite to the random ones that start talking to you. And I’m a huge animal lover, but PETA’s methods are whacked and give all others a bad name. SPCAs and such are awesome.

No Comments »

More reasons that I like Macs

Now that they have OS X that is. :)

http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-755.html#lnk2

Consumer Reports Almost Gets It

by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

Consumer Reports, the well-known magazine featuring reviews, comparisons, and recommendations of a wide variety of consumer products, has at long last said something nice about the Macintosh, to the point of printing “59,940 reasons to reconsider Macs” on the cover of their December 2004 issue. (The article quotes Symantec as saying there are 60,000 PC viruses versus only 60 for the Mac, hence the 59,940 number, although I’ll bet many of those 60 don’t work in Mac OS X at all.) Along with essentially no problems from viruses, Consumer Reports correctly notes that Macs don’t suffer from the spyware epidemic that afflicts Windows-based PCs. Plus, the magazine praises Apple for its industry-leading ratings for reliability and support satisfaction, the latter of which Apple has increased over the past three years while the ratings of PC companies have fallen. (Unfortunately, the full text of the article is available only to Consumer Reports subscribers.)

<http://www.consumerreports.org/>

Sounds great, doesn’t it? The coverage is certainly an improvement from years past, when Consumer Reports tarnished its reputation among Mac users by making clueless statements about Macs and comparing them to PCs in non-representative ways. These days, the magazine discusses Macs and PCs separately for the most part, which helps, but even still, reading one of their articles about computers still raises my hackles. The base problem has long been that Consumer Reports tends to be primarily concerned with cost, with reliability and usability coming in later. That hasn’t changed, and after the positive things the current article says initially, later statements return to the ignorance of the past.

In terms of price, Macs are almost always more expensive than PCs, mostly due to the equipment that’s standard on a Mac but extra on a PC. But in this initially laudatory article, Consumer Reports goes on to claim (with no data) that Macs cost more than similarly featured Windows PCs. When you look in their Ratings table, you can see that the iMac G5, at $1,674, is indeed more expensive than all but one of the comparable PCs (an $1,850 Sony), but of course, the iMac listed includes a high-quality 17-inch monitor, whereas none of the PCs do. So much for “similarly featured.” (LinuxInsider features an article that claims Macs are in fact cheaper than similarly configured PCs from Dell.)

<http://linuxinsider.com/story/37806.html>

More annoying, there’s absolutely no acknowledgment that Macs cost less to support and maintain. The article states up front that Macs don’t suffer from viruses or spyware, but nowhere is the connection made that such an advantage translates directly to lowered costs in buying software, paying for consultants, and lost productivity.

Consumer Reports also praises Apple’s reliability and support, but once again fails to make the obvious connection with price. Perhaps Apple’s reliability ratings are due to using higher quality parts and workmanship, which might account for somewhat higher prices? Might there be a cost to the user in dealing with unreliable hardware? And don’t you think that providing better support could have a cost associated with it?

Coming from a magazine that is normally good about calculating ongoing and lifetime costs for different products, this complete avoidance of the real-world costs of a computer is shameful. The anti-Mac blinders are especially bothersome because the article does correctly identify factors that add to the cost of buying a Mac, namely having to buy new software and spend time transferring and converting data.

Also strange is the fact that Consumer Reports ignores the usability of the operating system. They’re not shy to complain about a complex interface on a washing machine, but they say nothing about the relative ease-of-use of Mac OS X compared to Windows XP. Ironically, although Consumer Reports seldom comments on the industrial design of computers, they find space to compare the iMac G5 unfavorably to the iMac G4 in terms of screen adjustability and to complain about the extra cost of Apple’s Bluetooth-based wireless keyboard and mouse, which are necessary to avoid ugly cables from the back of the iMac. Of course, nowhere do they say anything about the pitiful industrial design of most PCs or make the connection between design and cost.

The article’s final criticism of the Mac is correct, though overblown. There’s no question that Mac users have fewer choices in software, especially for entertainment and educational titles. Of course, the real question is if appropriate software is lacking for any particular purpose; the Mac certainly has thin spots, but for most people, I suspect they’re irrelevant. As long as you can find software that meets your needs, the fact that you’re choosing not to buy numerous other packages simply doesn’t matter.

In the end, I’m certainly pleased to see the truth about the Mac’s lack of viruses and spyware being trumpeted in a consumer products magazine, and I’m equally as pleased to read about Apple’s top ratings in reliability and support. But I remain frustrated that Consumer Reports remains incapable of making the related leaps of logic that explain just why Macs and PCs have the price tags they do, and how those price tags aren’t necessarily related to the overall cost of ownership.

No Comments »

Linky stuffs

Ok, so if you just ran aluminum foil, or tin foil if you could get it, through a typewriter, wouldn’t that be about the same as this: http://www.enduringfuture.com/index.html? Heck, you could write on it and just press hard and still get a pretty similar effect. I don’t know if this is neat or just silly.
foil book
Yeti sports rock: http://www.yetisports.org/ I’m sure you’ve seen or played some of these games – I know I have, but this is the website of the guy that actually created them, so they’re all here. And yes I love the games for the penguins. :)

And a cute site for the creative types: http://www.mariaclaudiacortes.com/colors/Colors.html

Fun ways to waste time: http://addictinggames.com/

1 Comment »

Quote of the day – I hope I make you feel good!

People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but they will
never forget how you made them feel.
~  Jim Downing
No Comments »

Long weekend update

It’s only Monday and I’m already having to think way too hard to figure out what I did Thursday!

Wednesday night I got to hang out with SP & have a great chat and watch the strange but amusing movie “Tampopo.” I think I enjoyed it more having someone to joke about it with than I would have watching it alone. And it was great getting in some girl-talk. That kept me up late, so I slept in on Thursday.

I managed to get a few chores done & then PH & I went to IKEA where I spent way more than the $20 gift certificate I went there to spend. We stopped by 4th Street in Berkeley on the way back and I picked up some stuff from Dansk’s closing sale. Since he had to stop by his dad and he couldn’t lock me in the car, I actually got to spend more than 2 seconds with PH’s dad. We had dinner at some Thai place and then got home rather later than either of us had planned. Which led to my second day of sleeping in.

Friday I did more stuff around the house, went and got my contacts, had CS clean & paint the interior of the fireplace before leaving to go to a concert. I stayed home and relaxed for a while… I honestly don’t remember what I did. That night I went to a “crop.” Basically a bunch of people getting together to scrapbook. I mostly just got my stuff organized but not actually put into the scrapbook. I also decided that doing stuff more than 5-10 minutes drive away on a weeknight – even if I have that day off – is not a good idea. Finding my way in the dark through really bad traffic had me 30 minutes late, when I had given myself 30 extra minutes from Mapquest’s estimate. Yuck. So again I was up late working on that – and you guessed it, slept in again!

Saturday I cleaned and then ran to the store to get Settlers of Catan and be home before people started showing up. I actually had more people show up than I expected, and I don’t know about everyone else, but I had a great time. Even though I didn’t win a single game of Settlers or of Munchkin…. sigh…. After everyone left CS & I watched “Love Actually” which I actually loved. ;) I am partial to Hugh Grant movies, although I don’t really think he’s that good looking, maybe it’s just the accent?

I had planned to go to Apple Hill on Sunday, but I was a bit worn out from all the fun and decided to have a nice lazy relaxing day. No netflix came Saturday =( so when CS got bored I put him to work putting up some lights in the living room. Followed by a nice nap, 1/2 of “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back” and then I actually got to bed early!

Work went by rather quickly today, and this evening my neighbor stopped by and replaced my hall light with the new one I got at Home Depot a bit ago and fixed my bedroom closet light which had partially detached from the ceiling. He’s going to help me fix my bad sockets too and maybe “retile” my entryway. :) I’m going to go read in bed with the kitties, so I’m done updating. Oh! Except to say the kitties have gotten free reign the last 4-5 nights now, Khalua hasn’t been running around banging stuff and Mocha hasn’t foot pounced. Now that they aren’t waking me up though, they’re pinning me in place by sleeping right up against my legs on either side. Sure fire cure for tossing & turning! :)

No Comments »