Tuesday, December 29, 2009

my new wireless router

I didn't own a wireless router because I don't own a laptop/notebook (a modern laptop anyway). But since I still have my cousin's Toshiba Satellite laptop which hasn't been picked up for like a month and I wanted to test the wireless connection, I decided maybe to get a router for future testing of laptops. And one day, I guess I'll get one of my own.

Anyway, I went to Best Buy. The cheapest one they had was a Belkin for like $40. Then I went to Wal-Mart and saw the same thing for $31. Wal-Mart it is.

I set it up and the laptop connected readily enough with no security.

Then I set up WPA security. Unsuccessful connection. Evidently the laptop doesn't support WPA? Because I didn't see that option on the network card properties.

Switch to WEP. Type in the key. Still couldn't connect.

Go back to Setup software and save configuration to flash drive (for some reason it didn't work on my old 512MB flash drive, so I used my 2GB one). Plug flash drive into Toshiba. Run Wizard. Hey it connects! Maybe I had typed in the key wrong?

Shut down. Reboot. Now it cannot see anything (no networks anywhere).

Beats me. Go outside and dig some weeds.

Come back. Hey it's working now. (Don't ask me why.)

I see on the net that the Toshiba Wireless LAN Mini PCI Card does support WPA with a newer driver.

Installed the drivers. It updated from 7.62.0.390 to 7.82.0.550.

Change encryption to WPA2. Run setup and copy setting to flash drive.

Delete old settings on computer. Run Wizard from flash drive.

Hey it's now working on WPA!

network authentication WPA-PSK
data encryption TKIP

Move computer to patio (so it's not right next to router).
Still working OK. Though the connect bars is one less than maximum (though it was max when I first moved it.)

So now I finally have a working wireless router connected to my DSL modem. (I guess I'll be using it instead of my 10 Mbps hub to connect my desktop.)

***

[12/30/09] One thing I notice is that I lose connection when I run the Microwave. The Toshiba then automatically connected to the Kokua Wireless. Well, it was $31 after all..

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

warmest decade on record

The decade of 2000 to 2009 appears to be the warmest one in the modern record, the World Meteorological Organization reported in a new analysis on Tuesday.

The announcement is likely to be viewed as a rejoinder to a renewed challenge from skeptics to the scientific evidence for global warming, as international negotiators here seek to devise a global response to climate change.

The period from 2000 through 2009 has been “warmer than the 1990s, which were warmer than the 1980s, and so on,” Michel Jarraud, the secretary general of the international weather agency, said at a news conference here.

The unauthorized release last month of e-mail messages between climate scientists in Britain and the United States has provided new ammunition to global warming skeptics. Some of the messages seemed to suggest that some data be withheld from the public. Mr. Jarraud said the release of the climate analysis was moved up from year’s end to coincide with the international conference on climate change.

The data also indicates that 2009 was also the fifth warmest year on record, he said, although he noted that the figures for the year were incomplete.

The international assessment on temperatures from 2000 to 2009 largely meshes with an interim analysis by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States, which independently estimates global and regional temperature and other weather trends.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Pradaxa

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH’s blood- thinning pill Pradaxa may provide a more convenient alternative to the standard therapy for potentially deadly clots, researchers said after a study comparing the two medicines.

Pradaxa prevented clots in the legs and lungs as effectively as the generic drug warfarin with no increased risk of major bleeding, a complication of anti-clot treatments, according to a study published online today by the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the American Society of Hematology conference in New Orleans. Boehringer’s drug posed a lower risk than warfarin of bleeding in general.

Newer medicines like Pradaxa and Xarelto from Bayer AG and Johnson & Johnson don’t require the regular checks that warfarin does to ensure patients are getting the right dose. The need for regular monitoring has left doctors wary of prescribing the older treatment for more than six months to a year.

The Boehringer pill “is a far more convenient drug,” since levels in the body don’t react with foods and other medicines the way warfarin does, researchers led by Sam Schulman, a professor in the department of medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, wrote in the study.

Pradaxa reduced the risk of bleeding by 29 percent compared with warfarin, the study showed. Twenty of the 1,274 patients who took Pradaxa experienced major bleeding, compared with 24 of the 1,265 patients who took warfarin.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

cutting global warming would make people healthier

Cutting global warming pollution would not only make the planet healthier, it would make people healthier too, newly released studies say.

Slashing carbon dioxide emissions could save millions of lives, mostly by reducing preventable deaths from heart and lung diseases, the studies show. They were published in a special issue of The Lancet British medical journal, released Wednesday.

The calculations of lives saved were based on computer models that looked at pollution-caused illnesses in certain cities. The figures are also based on the world making dramatic changes in daily life that may at first seem too hard and costly to do, researchers conceded.

Cutting carbon dioxide emissions would also reduce other types of air pollution, especially tiny particles that lodge in the lungs and cause direct health damage, doctors said. Other benefits could come from encouraging more exercise and less meat consumption, to improve heart health, researchers said.

"Reducing greenhouse gases not only helps save the planet in the long term, but it's going to improve our health virtually immediately," said Christopher Portier, associate director of the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. That agency helped fund the studies along with the Wellcome Trust and several other international public health groups.

"It's not 50 years from now, it's now," Portier said.

Instead of looking at the health ills causes by future global warming, as past studies have done, this research looks at the immediate benefits of doing something about the problem.

And for places like the United States, those advantages of reduced heart and lung diseases are bigger than the specific future health damage from worsening warming, Portier said.

Some of the benefits would only come from dramatic — and what could be considered unlikely — changes in everyday life, such as more bicycling and walking and reduced meat consumption. Other proposals studied are more concrete and achievable, such as eliminating cook stoves that burn dung, charcoal, wood and other polluting fuels in India and the rest of the developing world. All are part of a number of proposals examined by researchers that are aimed at cutting global greenhouse gas emissions, mostly from the burning of fossil fuels, by 50 percent by 2050.

"Here are ways you can attack major health problems at the same time as dealing with climate change," said lead author Dr. Paul Wilkinson, an environmental epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

current co2 levels not seen in a million years

The readings at this 2-mile-high station show a troubling upward curve as the world counts down to crucial climate talks: Global-warming gases are building in the atmosphere at record levels from emissions that match scientists' worst-case scenarios.

Carbon dioxide concentrations this fall are hovering at around 385 parts per million, on their way to a near-certain record high above 390 in the first half of next year, at the annual peak.

"For the past million years we've never seen 390," said physicist John Barnes, the observatory director. "You have to wonder what that's going to do."

One leading atmospheric scientist, Stephen Schneider, sees "coin-flip odds for serious outcomes for our planet."

Monday, November 23, 2009

Al Gore rethinking energy

As a nation, we face three interrelated crises that collectively threaten to destabilize our way of life: the climate crisis, the continuing economic crisis and the security crisis, all stemming from our absurd overdependence on foreign oil, the largest reserves of which are controlled by sovereign states in the Persian Gulf.

Fortunately, there is a growing realization that the solutions to the climate crisis are also the most important solutions for the other two crises. We can simultaneously protect our climate and establish stability for our economy and our national security.

-- Costco Connection, November 2009

***

Perhaps not too surprisingly the December issue prints some letters to the editor that are not favorable to Gore.

Here's something interesting (i.e. dirt) on Dr. Fred Singer who is featured there.

In 1994 Singer was the Principal Reviewer of a report authored by Kent Jeffreys titled Science, economics, and environmental policy: a critical examination which was published by the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution (AdTI), a right wing[13] think tank of which he was a Senior Fellow.[14] The report attacked the United States Environmental Protection Agency for their 1993 study about the cancer risks of passive smoking and called it "junk science". Singer also appeared on a tobacco industry list of people who could write op-ed pieces defending the industry’s views, according to a peer-reviewed commentary by Derek Yacht and Stella Aguinaga Bialous.[15] Writing for The Guardian, George Monbiot stated that in 1993 APCO, a public relations firm, sent a memo to Philip Morris vice-president Ellen Merlo stating: "As you know, we have been working with Singer and Dr. Dwight Lee, who have authored articles on junk science and indoor air quality (IAQ) respectively ..."[16] Monbiot wrote that he did not have direct evidence that Singer had been paid by Philip Morris.

So I wonder how much of a consensus is there on global warming? Or is it a few nutballs that disagree? (not to say that a few nutballs can't be right)

From wikipedia:

National and international science academies and scientific societies have assessed the current scientific opinion, in particular on recent global warming. These assessments have largely followed or endorsed the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) position of January 2001 that states:

An increasing body of observations gives a collective picture of a warming world and other changes in the climate system... There is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities.[1]

Since 2007, no scientific body of national or international standing has maintained a dissenting opinion. A small minority of organisations hold non-committal positions.

Since 2001, 32 national science academies have come together to issue joint declarations confirming anthropogenic global warming, and urging the nations of the world to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. The signatories of these statements have been the national science academies of Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Cameroon, Canada, the Caribbean, China, France, Ghana, Germany, Indonesia, Ireland, Italy, India, Japan, Kenya, Madagascar, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, New Zealand, Russia, Senegal, South Africa, Sudan, Sweden, Tanzania, Uganda, United Kingdom, United States, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.

A poll performed by Peter Doran and Maggie Kendall Zimmerman at Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago received replies from 3,146 of the 10,257 polled Earth scientists. Results were analyzed globally and by specialization. 76 out of 79 climatologists who "listed climate science as their area of expertise and who also have published more than 50% of their recent peer-reviewed papers on the subject of climate change" believe that mean global temperatures have risen compared to pre-1800s levels, and 75 out of 77 believe that human activity is a significant factor in changing mean global temperatures. Among all respondents, 90% agreed that temperatures have risen compared to pre-1800 levels, and 82% agreed that humans significantly influence the global temperature. Economic geologists and meteorologists were among the biggest doubters, with only 47 percent and 64 percent, respectively, believing in significant human involvement.

***

Then again, some say wikipedia is biased. Actually I didn't really know when I wrote the previous sentence, but I had a hunch that almost everything is attacked by somebody. Kind of reminds me of the right-wing smear on snopes.

***

[7/28/10] I wonder... Why don't most Republicans believe in global warming?

Sunday, November 22, 2009

safemanuals

If a kitchen appliance, electronic gadget, cell phone, camera or something else breaks down, don't toss it just because you can't find the repair manual. You can download nearly 1.5 million user and instruction manuals for free by going to safemanuals.com.

-- GEICO Direct, Fall/Winter 2009

Friday, November 20, 2009

Arlene's computer

This is her new Dell (Dimension E521) that didn't get video last time (for me). I took it down to CyberLife and they got a picture on boot. Took it home, still no picture. Switched monitors. Picture. Next day, no picture. Back to CyberLife. They found a corrupted video driver.

Anyway, this time she got infected with a fake anti-security software virus. But when I booted it up, it looked like the file was already deleted. I ran Malwarebytes to get rid of the residual traces. Several times. Also ran AVG and Windows Defender.

Updated AVG Free from 8.5 to 9.0.

Saw HP Photoshop Express on her desktop. Kept saying needed HP Photoshop Essential to run. Downloaded and installed Essential. That runs, but Express still gets the message. I dunno. I guess use Essential instead of Express.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

going for the green

LONDON — A British heritage charity is encouraging employees to help the environment by eschewing indoor toilets and relieving themselves outdoors.

The experiment applies to male gardening staff at Wimpole Hall, a stately home about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of London.

The National Trust, which runs the property, says the staff are being encouraged to urinate on straw which is then placed on compost heaps.

The trust said Friday that the chemical reaction helps the composting process, while the absence of flushing by 10 members of staff could cut the estate's water use by almost a third.

Officials warned the gardeners to make sure they urinate in spots where they cannot be seen by passers-by.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

China's garbage problem

Americans are still way ahead of China in garbage; a population less than a quarter the size of China's 1.3 billion generated 254 million tons of garbage in 2007, a third of which is recycled or composted, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

But for China, the problem represents a rapid turnabout from a generation ago, when families, then largely rural and poor, used and reused everything.

"Trash was never complicated before, because we didn't have supermarkets, we didn't have fancy packaging and endless things to buy," said Nie. "Now suddenly, the government is panicking about the mountains of garbage piling up with no place to put it all."

Sunday, October 25, 2009

remote control codes (and problems)

[10/25/09] I was trying to program the RCA Systemlink 3 for my Apex TV (the code of which is not in the manual).

Tried the code search technique. The TV turned off, but then wouldn't turn on. Looks like when the code was locked in, it overshot by one.

So I checked what code got locked in and subtracted one (1).

The remote code turned out to be 072 which corresponds to a JC Penney TV (looking through the chart in the instruction book). Also LXI, NAD, Sears, Toshiba.

So the instructions are:

Press and hold the code search button until the indicator light goes on.

Press and release the TV button (the indicator light will blink and remain lit)

Key in 0-7-2 (the indicator light will turn off)

Test by pressing on/off button.

The code for my Sony is 002. The code for my Panasonic is 170.

***

Now for the Sony RM-V402 remote

1. Turn on the component to be programmed.
2. On the remote control, press and hold the S button.
3. While holding the S button, press and release the POWER button
4. Release the S button.
5. Press and release the appropriate component button for the component being set up.
6. Using the number pad, enter the component's manufacturer code.
7. Press the ENT button.
8. Point the remote control at the component.
9. Press the POWER button to verify operation.

Both Toshiba codes 059 and 060 work. Sony code is 001. Panasonic is 016.

***

[2/15/10 - Gave Sony remote to Sue to go along with Hitachi TV. I got it from Wellington in the first place]

***

Finally sold that heavy 27" Sony Trinitron flat screen on Craigslist. (Thanks Caleb.) Now to move back the Apex out of mom's room back outside. And to program the Oceanic DVR remote for the Apex.

From my notes, I had programmed it for the Panasonic on 10/16/09, so that's around when I must have gotten the Sony. The remote control model is the Atlas DVR-5 (5/25/12 - now it's the Atlas OCAP-5 backlit)

From the instructions, to program for the Panasonic

Press the TV button. The light will blink (light up red briefly) once.
Press and hold setup. The TV button will blink on the initial press then blink twice a second later
Release setup.
Enter the four digit code.  [The TV button will blink twice if you did it right]

Panasonic codes are 0051 0250 0055 / 0250 is the one that works for our TV.

Now to figure out the code for the Apex. I remember the first time, I found it using the search technique.

The instructions for the Oceanic remote controls are here (Atlas OCAP-5 backlit).

It turns out that the Toshiba code 0156 works for my Apex.

To auto-program, press TV button, press and hold Setup until TV button blinks twice, enter 991 (TV button will blink twice), point remote at TV and press PWR button, press CH+ repeatedly until TV turns off, press PWR to turn on TV, press SETUP to lock in the code.

*** [4/5/14]

The Oceanic remote went bad with some of the keys not working (notably the 5 key and the page down key).  Though oddly they would start working for a little while before not working again.  Anyway, I got a new remote today (after going to Ala Moana yesterday and finding they're no longer there).

Anyway there's new instructions for this remote which is the RC122 (RC 1226001 on the Oceanic site).  There's no setup key now.  What you do is press and hold the TV and Select/OK button at the same time until the the five buttons at the top blink twice.  Then enter the four digit code.  The first code for Panasonic is 1021 which works.  A lot of the other codes work too like 1028, 1253.  Trying to find the code for the Toshiba DVD-R, 2584 and 2624 seem to work the best.  At least they turn on/off the Toshiba.

***

[10/20/12] What about the Brookstone jumbo remote control at Donna's house?  Found the manual online.  The manual says it's the "super-sized tv remote".

Here's the specific instructions for the Panasonic TV.

Press and hold the TV button until the power light goes on.
Enter the code 003.  The power light will go off.
Press the on/off button to see if it worked.

[go here for my post on my 8-in-1 Jumbo Universal remote that I bought for Walgreen]

*** [7/5/14] Bought a Sony remote control (Remote Commander RM-VZ320) from Best Buy.  This is intended for Donna because the remote for her Sony DVD player doesn't work.  Well, it's not strictly a DVD player but part of a Sony home entertainment system (with amplifier and speakers.  But hopefully it'll work.

I also want to see if it'll work with the Sony DVD/VCR combo in the dining room at my mom's place.  In particular, I want to see if I can access the setup to see if it's set up for a wide-screen TV.

I see the manual is online along with the code list.

Anyway, I tried it out with my equipment at home.

To set up any device, first press the SET button for 3 seconds until the light goes on.  Then while still holding the SET button down, press the appropriate device button (e.g. TV) then release both buttons.  The light should still be on.  Then enter the 5-digit code that you looked up in the code list.

Here's the codes that seem to work best for my equipment.

Panasonic 42" Plasma TV: 00650

Scientific Atlanta cable box: 50877 (the menu button brings up the settings menu), 51877 (the menu button brings up the DVR menu).  I can't find a setting where both the setting and DVR menu are both accessible.

Toshiba DVD-R: 12277.  Unable to bring up the setting menu (where you can adjust for the aspect ratio of the TV for example)

Apex TV: 00765.

Sony Blu-Ray player: 11516.  The subtitle button (the B button) doesn't work.  However the eject button does work.  That's interesting because the official Sony remote doesn't even have an eject button.

***

OK, testing at CCOH.

The Sharp TV in the dining room: 00818

The Panasonic DVD/VCR combo: 10864.  Unfortunately I can't access the setup menu.

*** [7/13/14]

Took the Sony RM-VZ320 remote to Donna's house (to replace her broken Sony RM-ADP015)
Here are the codes I found that seem to work for her system
TV - Toshiba: 01256, 01356, 01524
Satellite Receiver DirectTV: 41377
Sony Home Theater DVD: 31622, 32522

The main reason for this remote was got get her subtitles working.  The B button works for this.  However a major disappointment is that the Menu button doesn't work, so I can't easily get back to the main menu after the movie has started.

[Sony RM-VZ320 remote split off into a separate new post and continued here]

*** [10/23/14]  Ugh.  The remote for my Toshiba DVD-R isn't working.  Opened it up and one of the batteries looked kind of corroded.  So dumped the battery and tried to clean the contacts.  Still didn't work.

See that the Oceanic (Scientific Atlanta) remote still works on the Toshiba (I guess I must have programmed it earlier - [yeah see above]), but unable to access the setup menu.  So I better not unplug it.  [Cool, I found that the record button on the Oceanic remote works on the Toshiba DVD recorder.  But I can't access the menu to finalize the DVD-R.]

Looked on ebay for a replacement remote (model SE-RO265) and saw none available.  The DVD recorder model number is D-KR10.  Hey I found one on ebay $28.  And here's a DVD recorder model D-R410 for $39.99.  Too bad shipping is $39.99.  And no remote.  [10/25/14 - swetenman is selling an EZ Copy remote for $20 which is supposed to be compatible.  Do a search for "EZ COPY Remote for TOSHIBA DVD RECORDER D-R400 D-R430 DVDR DVR HDMI". Hint: Doing a search for R0265 gets more hits.  That's a zero after the R.]

[12/7/14 - according to my notes written on the back of a Charles Schwab envelope, the SE-R0265 remote is evidently compatible with the following models of Toshiba DVD-Recorders: D-R400, D-R430, DKR10, DKR40, DKR40KU, DR400.

Anderic sells a replacement remote for $26.95 on ebay.  So I guess I can always go with this one.  It's 24.95 on their website.  But going through the ordering process, shipping is $4.95.  I guess I'll continue checking on eBay.]

[10/24/14 - hey this guy is selling a Toshiba DR430KU on craiglist.  Maybe it's compatible.  Looks like they use the same remote control.  $40.77 from replacementremotes.]

I have several RCA SystemLink generic remotes.  Don't know why I have so many.  I think somebody must have given me one or two.  But most of them are so old that they don't have a DVD button! 8).  Wait, here's one with a VCR•DVD button.  But I guess I don't have the manual with the codes for that one.  I guess I can try Code Search.  Didn't work.  Tried the codes at this link.  Didn't work.

[10/26/14]
And now the remote for my Roku HD isn't working right.  It had problems before, then cleared up mysteriously.  And now it has problems again.

Before I had to hold down the button for maybe a half-second before the Roku would respond.  But when I tried it last night, it wouldn't respond.  Then I accidentally pressed the Netflix button and it responded.  So now the buttons seem to work, but not the main select button.  I assume it's the remote that's the problem.

My options are to buy a replacement remote, buy a new Roku, try one of the universal or learning remotes  or use my ipad app.  I guess I'll use the ipad app for now.

Darn I kind of wish I bought a learning remote (which I only now am learning about) before my Toshiba DVD recorder remote died.

Or maybe I'll get a Logitech Harmony.  I've heard about those but never actually tried one.

[10/26/14]
Hey, cool I see I can program the Apple TV to use a third-party remote

Cool, I programmed the Oceanic remote to control the Apple TV!  The Apple TV didn't recognize some of the keys in AUX mode, so I used the VCR mode.  Score one for Apple TV.

I guess I can also use this feature to check whether a remote is emitting a signal.

[10/26/14]

Damn. I lost what I was typing.  OK, let's recap.

Went to the guy who had the DVD-Recorder, but didn't have the remote

Off to Best Buy.
See cheap RCA remotes have code for Roku.  Like $10.95, even cheaper at Amazon.

But looked at rcavideoaudio.com and none of their remotes stated they had support any DVD-R's.

Looking at the Logitech Harmony's, model 650 and 350.  I guess they would work, but pretty expensive.  A little cheaper at Amazon.com.

Then I see the One For All remote.  Model OARUSB04G. For like half the price of the Logtitech..  And I see it comes with a USB cable for connecting to the computer.  Like the Logitech Harmony.  And it has learning capabilities.  And the comments on Amazon say it's JP1 compatible.

OK, let's program it.  Choose Toshiba DVD.  I guess it works, but still can't access the setup menu.

I think the Info button corresponds to the Display button on the Toshiba remote.  And the List button corresponds to the menu/list button.  But I don't see a button corresponding to the Setup button.

My Panansonic TV and Time Warner cable box seem to work fine.

OK, let's try the USB cable.  Connect to computer.  Go to website at simpleset.com.  Has me upload the settings file.  Then choose DVD, only gives me the option of Toshiba, not a particular model number.  So no real difference.

Getting nowhere fast.

There's a list of codes given.  The instruction say SimpleSet codes are used for programming using the On-Remote Setup method outlined in the Getting Started guide.  The problem is I don't see any Getting Started Guide.

Let's try the oneforall.com website...  A search turns up no results.  Looking inside the battery cover they another code under the OARUSB04G.  It's URC 6540BE0-XXX-R  Then under that 4408UE.  Then under that MAXQ622X-2576-4.

OK, here's a thread from remotecentral saying similar to the URC-6440.

Then another link to hifi-remote.com.  It has to do with JP1.

What's that?

From wikipedia: A JP1 remote is a type of universal remote, usually with a six-pin interface connector labeled "JP1" in the battery compartment, manufactured by Universal Electronics Inc. The JP1 interface allows the remote to be reprogrammed, adding new code lists and functions. Home theater hobbyists use JP1 to avoid obsolescence.

All JP1 remotes are made by Universal Electronics, Inc.[2] UEI sells various models under their One For All brand name,[3] and supplies remotes to consumer electronic manufacturers such as Radio Shack, Sony, and Sky, as well as North American cable TV providers such as Comcast, Rogers, Cox, Shaw, Charter and Time Warner.[4]

I see a file for Toshiba D-R400.  But what do I do?

OK, here's the place to start for beginners.

Then I went to JP1 For Beginners

[see separate entry for this One For All remote]

*** 1/31/15

I had brought one of my old RCA Systemlink 3 remotes to ccoh since their other generic remote got lost or stolen.  And now that one is gone too.  Let's give them another one.

OK, how to program it?  The above instructions don't seem to be working.  The TV light doesn't go on and off.  The other SystemLink 3 (the one with the reddish-purplish buttons) seems to be working, though you gotta press some of the buttons firmly.  The SystemLink3 with the green fluorescent buttons works too.

I guess I should dump the one that's not working.

... Let's try new batteries before I toss the remote.  WDYK, it worked.  Though I had to press the TV button pretty firmly before it worked.  Samsung code is 105.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Americans cooling toward global warming

Americans seem to be cooling toward global warming. Just 57 percent think there is solid evidence the world is getting warmer, down 20 points in just three years, a new poll says.

And the share of people who believe pollution caused by humans is causing temperatures to rise has also taken a dip, even as the U.S. and world forums gear up for possible action against climate change.

In a poll of 1,500 adults by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, released Thursday, the number of people saying there is strong scientific evidence that the Earth has gotten warmer over the past few decades is down from 71 percent in April of last year and from 77 percent when Pew started asking the question in 2006. The number of people who see the situation as a serious problem also has declined.

The steepest drop has occurred during the past year, as Congress and the Obama administration have taken steps to control heat-trapping emissions for the first time and international negotiations for a new treaty to slow global warming have been under way. At the same time, there has been mounting scientific evidence of climate change — from melting ice caps to the world's oceans hitting the highest monthly recorded temperatures this summer.

The poll was released a day after 18 scientific organizations wrote Congress to reaffirm the consensus behind global warming. A federal government report Thursday found that global warming is upsetting the Arctic's thermostat.

* * *

[10/27/09] Have you heard that the world is now cooling instead of warming? You may have seen some news reports on the Internet or heard about it from a provocative new book.

Only one problem: It's not true, according to an analysis of the numbers done by several independent statisticians for The Associated Press.

The case that the Earth might be cooling partly stems from recent weather. Last year was cooler than previous years. It's been a while since the super-hot years of 1998 and 2005. So is this a longer climate trend or just weather's normal ups and downs?

In a blind test, the AP gave temperature data to four independent statisticians and asked them to look for trends, without telling them what the numbers represented. The experts found no true temperature declines over time.

Friday, October 16, 2009

backup programs

Still looking for a good backup program that works with external hard drives.

Maybe the first thing to try is Windows XP Backup (found from this article while googling cloning your computer.

Monday, October 12, 2009

RevoluSun

As the sun beats down on her St. Louis Heights home, Susan Chandler walks to her laundry room in the morning and taps on a DC-AC inverter to check how much carbon dioxide she has kept out of the atmosphere. Her daily average: 14.2 pounds.

Then she walks to the meter box on the side of her house and watches the black line rotate backward.

"I love to see the meter spinning backwards, which means I'm reducing my electricity," she says. "Rather than going to HECO, it's saving the world."

Chandler had earlier installed solar water heating and CFL light bulbs in her five-bedroom residence, but decided to make a bigger leap toward the "green" movement by adding six photovoltaic panels from RevoluSun to reduce her dependence on the grid.

"I'm making my own electricity," said Chandler. "For me, it's pretty exciting."

A professor at the University of Hawaii Public Policy Center, Chandler opened her house to the community yesterday to showcase RevoluSun's solar module, which generated 86 kilowatt hours of power and offset 142 pounds of atmospheric carbon dioxide in just 10 days.

Chandler expects her electricity bill to be around $25 with the addition of the solar panels, compared to the $125 bill she's paid in the past.

RevoluSun, a new company, hopes to educate the community and expand awareness of affordable solar systems to help Hawaii become more sustainable and lower electric bills.

***

[10/27/12] From Consumer Lines October 2012

Because of the many considerations involved with purchasing one of these systems, we developed “Going Solar,” a helpful online resource accessible at: http://goingsolar.heco.com.

Solar water heaters can last 15 years or longer, and PV systems can last 30 years or more.

While these systems will pay for themselves over time with the savings on your monthly electric bills, they do require a financial investment.

An important consideration is connecting your PV system to the grid. Most residential customers select our
Net Energy Metering program, which provides full retail credit for excess electricity sent to the grid. Other
options are the Feed-In Tariff and the Standard Interconnection Agreement. These programs are described
in detail on our website.

Friday, October 02, 2009

Firefox memory leaks?

[10/28/10] OK, nothing has really worked that well so far. I think the only solution is to install more memory on my computer.

But in the spirit of never giving up, I'm going to try SpeedyFox.

Mozilla Firefox is a fast browser, but with the lapse of time it starts working much slowly. The reason is fragmentation of profile databases. A free tool SpeedyFox is designed specially to resolve that problem. [via frwr_news]

***

[10/2/09] When I leave my computer along for long stretches, it often becomes really slow with long hard drive activities when using applications. I suspect it's swapping memory to disk, so I may have a memory leak.

There was recently an application on frwr_news to fix Firefox memory leaks (and other apps). Decided not to use it at the time. But I googled Firefox memory leak fix and came across this pages which suggests some Firefox configuration tweaks.

So far I changed browser.cache.disk.capacity to 5000, it was defaulted to 10000.

And I'll toggle Network.prefetch-next to false.

[10/12] Seems to be working. My computer used access the hard drive for long stretches after leaving it alone and coming back hours later. Notice it's not doing that any more (cross fingers).

***

[4/23/10] The slow firefox came back. I think all the settings reset when I upgraded the browser. Anyway, I took a look with task manager what was running when firefox was releasing the memory, and it showed a program called sysfader was running. Googling it showed it manages some windows animation effects (like fading out windows and menus.) So I turned it off and firefox now seems to release memory on shutdown much (much) quicker. The last time I did it anyway... We shall see. The first time I tweaked sysfader, it somehow changed the windows appearance from Windows Classic style (which I prefer) to Windows XP style. [I knew something looked different.] So I changed it back.

***

[5/28/10] Firefox was getting really slow after exiting. It would remain in memory (looking at task manager) as the hard disk churned for several minutes. Then memory would slowly get released back to the system. I think I finally figured out what the problem was. It was clearing the disk cache when exiting. I turned off that option and it's much faster now in releasing the memory after exiting. And the disk churning is very minimal now. Go to Tools/Options/Privacy. Then click the Settings Box to the right of Clear History When Firefox Closes. Uncheck Cache.

OK, seems to slowing down as the cache fills up. But still faster than before (so far).

[6/9/10] Firefox was getting superslow again thrashing the hard drive, even before exiting. And a long time after exiting too. Try a new approach. Create a new profile as per these instructions.

[6/10/10] I had left Firefox running and went to sleep. Hours later, I came back and the hard drive was churning. Took a little while to exit firefox. Seemed to exit memory a little quicker, but far from instantaneously. Maybe a couple or three minutes.

OK, try this config.trim_on_minimize and see how it goes.

[9/9/10] still trying. latest tweak: change browser.sessionhistory.max_total_viewers from -1 to 0. Supposedly this reduces the amount of RAM Firefox uses for its cache

Thursday, October 01, 2009

merging outlook express messages

Nelson had a block of missing messages from his Outlook Express sent folder which were still on the old computer and wanted them on his new computer. Not sure why there were missing.

I found this message thread which was helpful for hints, but I couldn't make it work when I tried to exactly follow their suggestions.

Here's what I wound up doing after playing around a bit.

Found the location of the old messages and backed up the folder to an external drive. (Did this previously).

Created a new Outlook Express identity on the new computer. Called it something like Old.Messages.

Copied the old messages to the Old.Messages Outlook Express folder on the new computer overwriting any duplicate files. (Make sure it's the right folder or you might overwrite the current messages! You might want to back up the current messages first.)

Go to Outlook Express and change to the Old.Messages Identity. Rename the folder you want to import to something different than what's in the current messages Identity. (I did this for safety so as not to erase the current messages. Again, you might want to back up the current messages, just in case.)

Go to the current Identiy. And create a folder that's the same name as the one you renamed in the Old.Messages.

Go to Outlook Express and go File, Import, Messages, Microsoft Outlook Express 6. Choose the Old.Messages Identity. Click Next. Click Selected folders. Choose the folder which holds the messages you want to import.

Click Next. The messages should be imported into the current identity.

Then you can copy the messages you want in the new folder to the desired folder.

Actually I think you can import directly into the folder. Not sure if it'll overwrite the current messages or just make a duplicate if the message is already there. Duplicate I think.

Animator vs. Animation

A pretty neat flash movie by Alan Becker

Sunday, September 06, 2009

The Web Book

The Web Book v1.0 - 10216 KB
How to create Web sites and applications with HTML, CSS, Javascript, PHP and MySQL.

A full-length book, free for personal use.

The Web Book is a complete 330-page book that tells you how to create a Web site from scratch. It covers everything from registering a domain name and renting some hosting space, to creating your first HTML page, to building full online database applications with PHP and MySQL. You can download The Web Book as a PDF file completely free of charge for personal use.

[via frwr_news]

Friday, September 04, 2009

Did You Know?

Did You Know?

[via chucks_angels]

Googling. I see this is an adaptation from Shift Happens.

Monday, August 24, 2009

comparing HDMI cables

While I don't even have a HD TV, one day I probably will.

And so I'm not looking at getting an HDMI cable and saw this guy reviewing cables at Amazon. But come to think of it, the HDMI cable will probably come with the cable box and/or Blu-Ray player, so the following will probably be useless, but since I've written this far, WTH, here goes.

* * *

Explanation of technique used for Review (actual results are below with accompanying title).

My first inclination when I received this cable, was to attempt to do a side-by-side comparison of various HDMI cables to determine what benefit, if any the various cables provide. To make such a test fair however, I had to find identical televisions, input devices, (cable box, blu-ray, standard dvd, etc), and a place to put them; as you may imagine this proved to be way more effort than it would be worth.

After contemplating the issue I came to the conclusion that such a test would be pretty worthless anyways. Since I (like most people) never watch identical televisions side by side the real question lies in whether one HDMI cable improves the picture enough that it is discernable without viewing the pictures simultaneously. After all, if a viewer cannot discern a difference between the two without looking at both together, then there is no justifiable reason to buy one over the other.

With this in mind I used the following equipment to test the cables:
Television: Sony Grand WEGA KDS-55A2000 55-Inch SXRD 1080p Rear Projection HDTV

Cables:
1. HDMI Cable 6ft 6 ft 1.3 1080P FOR PS3 TO DVD LCD HDTV
2. Cables To Go 98035 Premium HDMI v1.3 Digital Audio/Video Cable (8 Feet, Black/Grey)
3. Mediabridge - 6ft Ultra-High Speed HDMI Cable - 120 Hz - Version 1.3 Category 2 - 1080p - PS3 - Blu-Ray
4. Monster M Series M1000 HDTV HDMI Cable (8 ft. / 2.43 m.)
5. Sony 5mm High speed HDMI cable ver. 1.3 (White)

Inputs:
1. PlayStation 3 80GB
2. Optimum HD Cable Box/DVR (not sure of the model number)

**The Test**
To conduct the test I had my wife label each of the cables with a number, the cables were mixed then piled together behind the television. With my wife assigned as the operator. I and two friends sat on the other side of the television. We watched pieces of Planet Earth on Blu-Ray, as well as Transformers on Blu-Ray and Standard Def. In addition, we watched the same song from American Idol in both HD and SD, and portions of an NBA playoff game.
Each of us had a card numbered 1-5 with space for comments on image quality, sound, etc., for each cable. The test was, as aforementioned, blind. This was to ensure that one of my friends (one of whom provided the $200 monster cable) and I, owner of the .01 + shipping no name cable (and most of the other ones) would not be biased by knowing it was our cable. If you shell out $200 for something you really want it to outperform, which creates bias.

And now:

**The Results**
All three of us agreed that there were no conclusive differences in the test. After a lot of switching between various inputs the conclusion was that while we occasionally perceived slight differences it was never clear and would be impossible to tell if the two pictures were not side by side.
Thus I must conclude that these 5 HDMI cables are, for all practical purposes, identical. Which means that they all had average performance and the main purchase determiners are price, aesthetic quality and build quality.
So to sum up, taking into account my opinion of the different cables, the HDMI Cable 6ft 6 ft 1.3 1080P FOR PS3 TO DVD LCD HDTV is the cheapest and feels it, it will probably need to be replaced soonest as well but at .01 cent plus shipping you can afford to. The Cables To Go 98035 Premium HDMI v1.3 Digital Audio/Video Cable (8 Feet, Black/Grey) and Mediabridge - 6ft Ultra-High Speed HDMI Cable - 120 Hz - Version 1.3 Category 2 - 1080p - PS3 - Blu-Ray were pretty similar but I like the design and build quality of the Cable-to-Go a little more, it feels more solid, I feel like this one would last a while longer than the first cable but I didn't do any endurance tests. My least favorite of the bunch in terms of feel/price was the Sony 5mm High speed HDMI cable ver. 1.3 (White) which I felt, was very thin and cheap feeling considering its price tag, I wouldn't bet that it would outlast either the Cable-to-Go cable or the Mediabridge. The Monster M Series M1000 HDTV HDMI Cable (8 ft. / 2.43 m.) is well made and aesthetically pleasing and looks as if it will last you until something replaces HDMI, I cannot however recommend it because the price tag is simply preposterous, as it provides no visual or auditory improvement.

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

temperature rise not explained entirely by carbon

A team of scientists led by a University of Hawaii oceanographer had a big surprise when they looked to the ancient past for clues to global warming.

Atmospheric carbon increased 70 percent during the period known as Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum 55 million years ago, said Richard Zeebe. Yet it was less than expected to explain a rapid increase in temperatures, he said in an interview.

"This constitutes an enigma because carbon dioxide released cannot account for the entire warming. This means something else contributed significantly to the warming," he said.

"We're not saying carbon dioxide is not important," he emphasized. "It is very important. Current and future warming is almost entirely due to carbon emissions. There is no doubt about this."

However, his team believes other mechanisms could have contributed to the rapid heating during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum period, which they said represents "a possible analogue for the future."

"The question is still open by how much the global temperature will increase until the end of the century, depending how much carbon dioxide we put into the atmosphere," Zeebe said.

Monday, August 03, 2009

a coin flip isn't a coin flip

We use coin tosses to settle disputes and decide outcomes because we believe they are unbiased with 50-50 odds.

Yet recent research into coin flips has discovered that the laws of mechanics determine the outcome of coin tosses: The startling finding is they aren't random. Instead, for natural flips, the chance of a coin coming up on the same side as it started is about 51 percent. Heads facing up predicts heads; tails facing up predicts tails.

Three academics—Persi Diaconis, Susan Holmes, and Richard Montgomery—through vigorous analysis made an interesting discovery at Stanford University. As they note in their published results, "Dynamical Bias in the Coin Toss," laws of mechanics govern coin flips, meaning, "their flight is determined by their initial conditions."

Monday, July 27, 2009

We choose the moon

BOSTON (AP) — Families crowded around black-and-white television sets in 1969 to watch Neil Armstrong take man's first steps on the moon.

Now, they'll be able to watch the Apollo 11 mission recreated in real time on the Web, follow Twitter feeds of transmissions between Mission Control and the spacecraft, and even get an e-mail alert when the lunar module touches down. Those features are part of a new Web site from the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum commemorating the moon mission and Kennedy's push to land Americans there first.

"Putting a man on the moon really did unite the globe," said Thomas Putnam, director of the JFK Library. "We hope to use the Internet to do the same thing."

The Web site — WeChooseTheMoon.org — goes live at 8:02 a.m. Thursday, 90 minutes before the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 launch from Cape Canaveral, Fla. It will track the capsule's route from the Earth to the Moon, ending with the moon landing and Armstrong's walk — in real time, but 40 years later.

Internet visitors can see animated recreations of key events from the four-day mission, including when Apollo 11 first orbits the moon and when the lunar module separates from the command module, as well as browse video clips and photos and hear the radio transmission between the astronauts and NASA flight controllers.

The site also connects the mission back to Kennedy, who first set the goal to have a man on the moon by the end of the decade during a May 25, 1961, speech before Congress.



* * *

And, of course, we all know, it was faked anyway..

* * *

[7/17/09] NASA could put a man on the moon but didn't have the sense to keep the original video of the live TV transmission. In an embarrassing acknowledgment, the space agency said Thursday that it must have erased the Apollo 11 moon footage years ago so that it could reuse the videotape. But now Hollywood is coming to the rescue.

Smithsonian Institution space curator Roger Launius, a former NASA chief historian, said the loss of the original video "doesn't surprise me that much."

"It was a mistake, no doubt about that," Launius said. "This is a problem inside the entire federal government. ... They don't think that preservation is all that important."
Launius said federal warehouses where historical artifacts are saved are "kind of like the last scene of `Raiders of the Lost Ark.' It just goes away in this place with other big boxes."

The company that restored all the Indiana Jones movies, including "Raiders," is the one bailing out NASA.

As part of the moon landing's 40th anniversary, the space agency has been trotting out archival material. NASA has a Web site with audio from private conversations in the lunar module and command capsule. The agency is also webcasting radio from Apollo 11 as if the mission were taking place today.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

developing nations unspecific on emissions

L’AQUILA, Italy — The world’s biggest developing nations, led by China and India, refused Wednesday to commit to specific goals for slashing heat-trapping gases by 2050, undercutting the drive to build a global consensus by the end of this year to reverse the threat of climate change.

As President Obama arrived for three days of talks with other leaders of the Group of 8 nations, negotiators for 17 leading polluters abandoned targets in a draft agreement for the meetings here. But negotiators embraced a goal of preventing temperatures from rising more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, and developing nations agreed to make “meaningful” if unspecified reductions in emissions.

The mixed results underscored the challenges for Mr. Obama as he tries to use his first summit meeting of the Group of 8 powers to force progress toward a climate treaty. With Europe pressing for more aggressive action and Congress favoring a more restrained approach, Mr. Obama finds himself navigating complicated political currents at home and abroad.

If he cannot ultimately bring along developing countries, no climate deal will be effective.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

url shorteners

On the short-messaging service Twitter, space is at a premium: You've got 140 characters to make your point, and you probably don't want to waste half of it on a super-sized link to your latest YouTube obsession.

There's an increasingly popular quick fix: a free URL shortener. On one of these Web sites, you can plug in a long Internet address, known as a URL, and it will assign you a much shorter one that is easier to post in e-mails, on Twitter, Facebook or anywhere else. Some link-shrinkers let you personalize the new address with a unique phrase such as your name, or show you how many people click the link after you've posted it.

URL shorteners have been around for several years to offer alternatives to long Web links that were too unwieldy to paste into e-mails. Perhaps the oldest and most popular is TinyURL, a free service started in 2002 by Kevin Gilbertson, a unicycle enthusiast from Blaine, Minn., who was tired of seeing URLs get split up in e-mails related to his online unicycle forum.

Now the rise of Twitter and other social Web sites that encourage users to share small bursts of information has spawned several TinyURL followers, whose names run the gamut from the very short — tr.im — to the not long — notlong.com.

Twitter has directly contributed to the prominence of two services in particular: TinyURL and bit.ly, which began in July as a project at New York-based Web media incubator and Twitter stakeholder Betaworks.

Until recently, Twitter automatically shrank lengthy links by running them through TinyURL. But this spring Twitter switched its default link shortener to bit.ly after finding TinyURL unreliable, said Alex Payne, one of Twitter's lead engineers. (Gilbertson said Twitter didn't contact him about the issues or the change.)

Bit.ly is seeing growth that Betaworks Chief Executive John Borthwick called "pretty amazing." About 100 million bit.ly URLs are clicked on per week.

Friday, July 17, 2009

steering with your brain

TOKYO (AP) — Toyota Motor Corp. says it has developed a way of steering a wheelchair by just detecting brain waves, without the person having to move a muscle or shout a command.

Toyota's system, developed in a collaboration with researchers in Japan, is among the fastest in the world in analyzing brain waves, it said in a release Monday.

Past systems required several seconds to read brain waves, but the new technology requires only 125 milliseconds — or 125 thousandths of a second.

The person in the wheelchair wears a cap that can read brain signals, which are relayed to a brain scan electroencephalograph, or EEG, on the electrically powered wheelchair, and then analyzed in a computer program.

Research into mobility is part of Toyota's larger strategy to go beyond automobiles in helping people get around in new ways.

The new system allows the person on the wheelchair to turn left or right and go forward, almost instantly, according to researchers.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

New Cancer Treatment Shows Promise in Testing

A new method of attacking cancer cells, developed by researchers in Australia, has proved surprisingly effective in animal tests.

In one striking use of the method, reported online Sunday in Nature Biotechnology, mice were implanted with a human uterine tumor that was highly aggressive and resistant to many drugs. All of the treated animals were free of tumor cells after 70 days of treatment; the untreated mice were dead after a month.

The lead researchers, Jennifer A. MacDiarmid and Himanshu Brahmbhatt, say their company, EnGeneIC of suburban Sydney, has achieved a similar outcome in dogs with advanced brain cancer. “We have been treating more than 20 dogs and have spectacular results,” Dr. Brahmbhatt said. “Pretty much every dog has responded and some are in remission.” These experiments have not yet been published.

Cancer experts who were not involved with the research say that the new method is of great interest, but that many treatments that work well in laboratory mice turn out to be ineffective in patients.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

EPS declares carbon dioxide an endangerment

The Environmental Protection Agency on Friday (4/17/09) formally declared carbon dioxide and five other heat-trapping gases to be pollutants that endanger public health and welfare, setting in motion a process that will lead to the regulation of the gases for the first time in the United States.

The E.P.A. said the science supporting the proposed endangerment finding was “compelling and overwhelming.” The ruling initiates a 60-day comment period before any proposals for regulations governing emissions of heat-trapping gases are published.

Although the finding had been expected, supporters and critics said its issuance was a significant moment in the debate on global warming. Many Republicans in Congress and industry spokesmen warned that regulation of carbon dioxide emissions would raise energy costs and kill jobs; Democrats and environmental advocates said the decision was long overdue and would bring long-term social and economic benefits.

Friday, July 10, 2009

cow gas

One contributor to global warming — bigger than coal mines, landfills and sewage treatment plants — is being left out of efforts by the Obama administration and House Democrats to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Cow burps.

Belching from the nation's 170 million cattle, sheep and pigs produces about one-quarter of the methane released in the U.S. each year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. That makes the hoofed critters the largest source of the heat-trapping gas.

In part because of an adept farm lobby campaign that equates government regulation with a cow tax, the gas that farm animals pass is exempt from legislation being considered by Congress to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

The EPA under President Barack Obama has said it has no plans to regulate the gas, even though the agency recently included methane among six greenhouse gases it believes are endangering human health and welfare.

* * *

Vermont dairy farmers Tim Maikshilo and Kristen Dellert, mindful of shrinking their carbon footprint, have changed their cows' diet to reduce the amount of gas the animals burp — dairy cows' contribution to global warming.

Coventry Valley Farm is one of 15 Vermont farms working with Stonyfield Farm Inc., whose yogurt is made with their organic milk, to reduce the cows' intestinal methane by feeding them flaxseed, alfalfa, and grasses high in Omega 3 fatty acids. The gas cows belch is the dairy industry's biggest greenhouse gas contributor, research shows, most of it emitted from the front and not the back end of the cow.

"I just figured a cow was a cow and they were going to do whatever they were going to do in terms of cow things for gas," said Dellert. "It was pretty shocking to me that just being organic wasn't enough, actually. I really thought that here we're organic, we're doing what we need to do for the planet, we're doing the stuff for the soil and I really thought that was enough."

She learned it wasn't. The dairy industry contributes about 2 percent to the country's total greenhouse gas production, said Rick Naczi, a vice president at Dairy Management Inc., which funds research and promotes dairy products. Most of it comes from the cow, the rest from growing feed crops for the cattle to processing and transporting the milk.

To satisfy consumers' demands for sustainable production, the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy in Rosemont, Ill., is looking at everything from growing feed crops to trucking milk to reduce the industry's greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent by 2020. That would be the equivalent of removing about 1.25 million cars from U.S. roads every year, said Naczi, who manages the program.

One way is by feeding cows alfalfa, flax and grasses, all high in Omega 3s, instead of corn or soy, said Nancy Hirschberg, head of Stonyfield's Greener Cow Project. The feed rebalances the cows' rumen, the first stomach of ruminants, and cuts down on gas, she said. Another way is to change the bacteria in a cow's rumen, Naczi said.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

System Security Virus

6/18/09 Mary C computer HP Pavilion a1213w

Upon booting into Windows XP, the following pops up

System Security
Protect Your PC
Open File Security Warning
Nintendo WFCReg.exe
C:\program files\Wifi Connector

Looking up on the web for a solution.

download MBAM (MalwareBytes Anti-Malware) (had to dl w/ ie since Firefox locked)
run setup, says can't run, infected
boot up into safe mode
install MBAM
run quick scan
found 37 infections
remove selected

restart computer
system security message doesn't show up
run antimalware again
check for updates
run full scan 52 minutes, 48 seconds
no malicious items detected

disk cleanup

download avast
install avast (play freecell while waiting)

scan on reboot
delete files in temporary internet files
HP\9972322\Program\Interop.SHDOCVS.dll
infected by Win32:Adware-gen [adw]

9 - ignore (might be false positive?)

c:\windows\temp\skynet ... temp
etc.
infected by win32.Alvrem.BH [rtk]

1 - delete

remove spyware doctor (out of date)

turn on Windows Defender
quick scan

Suspicious files found (by avast)
c:\windows\system32\drivers\skynetnlxbttvp.sys
delete

search being redirected in ie
virus detected in memory

reboot & scan on boot (twice)
detected and deleted

file windows\system32\SKYNET ... infected
delete


Fri 6/19/09

IE seems OK
Firefox errors out on first run
locks up on retry

Thunderbird reads email ok

uninstall firefox and install latest version
install SP3

run Windows Update until no more updates

Internet Explorer on desktop

install Chrome

install and run ccleaner


Makana's account

slow starting up
deactivate HP Organize from startup (was making startup slow)
deactivate myspace IM from autostartup, put shortcut on desktop
deactivate googletalk from startup, put on desktop
remove wkcalrem from startup
register avast

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

The Climate Change Climate Change

In April, the Polish Academy of Sciences published a document challenging man-made global warming. In the Czech Republic, where President Vaclav Klaus remains a leading skeptic, today only 11% of the population believes humans play a role. In France, President Nicolas Sarkozy wants to tap Claude Allegre to lead the country's new ministry of industry and innovation. Twenty years ago Mr. Allegre was among the first to trill about man-made global warming, but the geochemist has since recanted. New Zealand last year elected a new government, which immediately suspended the country's weeks-old cap-and-trade program.

The number of skeptics, far from shrinking, is swelling. Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe now counts more than 700 scientists who disagree with the U.N. -- 13 times the number who authored the U.N.'s 2007 climate summary for policymakers. Joanne Simpson, the world's first woman to receive a Ph.D. in meteorology, expressed relief upon her retirement last year that she was finally free to speak "frankly" of her nonbelief. Dr. Kiminori Itoh, a Japanese environmental physical chemist who contributed to a U.N. climate report, dubs man-made warming "the worst scientific scandal in history." Norway's Ivar Giaever, Nobel Prize winner for physics, decries it as the "new religion." A group of 54 noted physicists, led by Princeton's Will Happer, is demanding the American Physical Society revise its position that the science is settled. (Both Nature and Science magazines have refused to run the physicists' open letter.)

The collapse of the "consensus" has been driven by reality. The inconvenient truth is that the earth's temperatures have flat-lined since 2001, despite growing concentrations of C02. Peer-reviewed research has debunked doomsday scenarios about the polar ice caps, hurricanes, malaria, extinctions, rising oceans. A global financial crisis has politicians taking a harder look at the science that would require them to hamstring their economies to rein in carbon.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

recycling plastic bottle caps

“Like cigarette butts, people toss aside bottle caps because they’re small and seem insignificant,” says Suzanne Frazer, co-founder of Beach Environmental Awareness Campaign Hawaii (B.E.A.C.H.).

B.E.A.C.H. launched a new campaign on Earth Day raising awareness of the impact plastic bottle caps have on marine life. Volunteers say plastic bottle caps are one of the top 10 items found during beach cleanups and are the second most-littered item after cigarette butts.

“In just three events since launching this new campaign we’ve collected more than 2,000 bottle caps,” says Frazer. “It’s going really well and those caps won’t end up in our landfills or harm marine life. It’s an ongoing problem. At one cleanup at Kokololio Beach in 2008, volunteers found 1,232 caps and lids.”

“This activity has brought to light what’s recyclable and what’s not,” says Frazer. “A lot of people with blue bins are not sure what to put in them. Many don’t even know why they’re asked to remove caps and lids from the bottles, and when they do, they don’t know what to do with them.”

Frazer recalls a recent incident at Hanauma Bay that highlights the confusion.

“I picked up 20 bottle caps in a just a few minutes then noticed a guy with a bag bulging with plastic bottles,” she recalls. “Turns out he was just throwing caps on the shoreline. People go through garbage cans and take recycled bottles and dropping bottle caps because they know they don’t get money for the caps.”

Frazer says caps are made from a different type of plastic from the bottles and have a different melting point. Any twist-on plastic cap or lid that is made of rigid polypropylene plastic (recycle symbol No. 5) is accepted for recycling, including caps from beverage, shampoo and food product bottles. However, pump, sprayers, plastic lids from margarine containers and any caps that are made of multi layers of plastic resins or metal are not accepted. “In just three events we found more than 3,000 caps, but about 1,000 of them could not be counted,” says Frazer. “It can get confusing, but we’re happy we’re off to a great start and pleased schools are asking how they can help.”

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

unconventional global health research

Can tomatoes be taught to make antiviral drugs for people who eat them? Would zapping your skin with a laser make your vaccination work better? Could malaria-carrying mosquitoes be given a teensy head cold that would prevent them from sniffing out a human snack bar?

These are among 81 projects awarded $100,000 grants Monday by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in a bid to support innovative, unconventional global health research.

The five-year health research grants are designed to encourage scientists to pursue bold ideas that could lead to breakthroughs, focusing on ways to prevent and treat infectious diseases, such as HIV, malaria, tuberculosis, pneumonia and diarrheal diseases.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

reduce your environmental impact

Reduce Your Environmental Impact

Yes, you can save money, energy and help save our planet in just one month - without giving up modern conveniences. Just make one of these following small (and easy!) eco-changes each day this month for major environment-friendly results. Feel free to share your progress and ideas for ways to make a difference in the fight to save our planet at countryliving.com/gogreen.

~~Fluorescent Lightbulbs

Use soft-white compact fluorescent lightbulbs (CFLs), not traditional incandescents.

BECAUSE: If every American household replaced one standard bulb with a CFL, we could save enough energy to power 3 million homes a year.

~~Place potted plants (like Boston ferns, peace lilies, or English ivy) on windowsills and tables.

BECAUSE: Fifteen plants can absorb most of the average home's airborne toxins within 24 hours.

~~Switch your computer display to go to sleep mode after five minutes of inactivity.

BECAUSE: Sleep mode consumes 90 percent less energy than an animated screen saver - which requires as much energy as normal use.

~~Return wire hangers to the dry cleaner.

BECAUSE: More than 3.5 billion hangers reach landfills each year, amounting to 200 million tons of steel that could be put to new use.

photo credit: kemie/istock

Keywords:

~~Tighten your gas cap until it clicks three times.

BECAUSE: Each year in the
United States , 147 million gallons of gasoline literally evaporate into the atmosphere because of loose, damaged, or missing caps.

~~Register to get your name off junk-mail lists.

BECAUSE: Printing junk mail wastes 100 million trees a year. Canceling can reduce your intake by 35 pounds a year. Sign up at proquo.com or at dmachoice.org.

~~Choose natural soy candles over petroleum-based paraffin.

BECAUSE: Paraffin emits 11 toxins; soy doesn't.

~~Scrub down your wheels at a car wash, not at home.

BECAUSE: A drive-through uses less than half the water per car than the typical do-it-yourselfer - and many establishments recycle their soap water.

~~Build a fire with an artificial, petroleum-free log made from wood fibers and biowaxes.

BECAUSE: Man-made logs, surprisingly, burn longer than wood and emit 75 percent less carbon monoxide.

~~Drive with cruise control on the highway.

BECAUSE:
Keeping a steady pace burns gas at a constant rate, which lets you drive as much as 10 percent farther on a single tank.

~~Keep your freezer's temperature at 0 degrees F and your refrigerator between 35 degrees and 38 degrees.

BECAUSE: Adjusting a too-cold freezer by five degrees can cut its energy use by 20 percent.

~~Eat meat-free once a week.

BECAUSE:
Producing a pound of beef consumes 145 times more fossil fuels than a pound of potatoes.

~~Bar Soap

Leave bar soap by the sink.

BECAUSE:
Most liquid soap comes in nonrenewable plastic packaging. Substituting one bottle with a bar in each U.S. home would keep 2.5 million pounds of plastic out of landfills.

~~Organic Cotton Clothes

Wear organic cotton clothes.

BECAUSE: Organic cotton's low-impact production methods - which employ fewer pesticides - generate less than a fifth as much greenhouse gas as standard cotton.

~~Stash a pitcher of water in your fridge.

BECAUSE: A faucet releases a gallon a minute. Letting the tap run while the water cools wastes a resource that's often in limited supply.

~~Submit your taxes electronically.

BECAUSE: We would save 660 million sheets of paper - almost 80,000 trees - if every taxpayer filed electronically. Internal Revenue Service: irs.gov.

~~Donate your old cell phone to charity, or return it to the manufacturer for recycling.

BECAUSE: Electronic trash amounts to 70 percent of
America 's toxic waste.

Information on donating can be found at sharetechnology.org and recycling at mygreenelectronics.com.

~~Plug your devices into power strips, and turn off the strips when you're not using them.

BECAUSE: Some plugged-in appliances and strips use electricity even when they're turned off. But one 6-outlet strip, when shut down, uses 87 percent less energy than devices left in six individual outlets.

~~Place a recycling bin next to the wastebasket in your home office, to make conserving paper as easy as discarding it.

BECAUSE: Producing one ton of paper from recycled pulp saves 7,000 gallons of water (and 17 trees).

~~Check the water meter. Then wait an hour, without using your faucets or toilets. Now check again. If the number rises during that time, call a plumber.

BECAUSE: A dripping tap wastes five gallons of water a day. Fixing a leak can save at least $50 a year.

~~Use your dishwasher's air-dry cycle, or switch the machine off after the final rinse and crack open the door.

BECAUSE: Skipping the heated-dry cycle can cut your per-wash energy use by up to 50 percent.

~~Use Reusable Shopping Bags

Stow a reusable bag in your car for errands.

BECAUSE: If every American stuck with cloth totes, we'd waste 380 billion fewer plastic bags this year.

~~Car Maintenance

Have your car's air filters cleaned and tires inflated.

BECAUSE:
A yearly tune-up can improve your car's efficiency by 15 percent and keep more than one ton of carbon dioxide out of the air.

~~High-Efficiency Showerheads

Replace traditional showerheads with high-efficiency, 2.5-gallon-a-minute models.

BECAUSE: Your shower will consume 30 percent fewer gallons of water every time you wash.

~~Wash with Cold Water

Wash laundry in cold water, or use warm-wash and cold-rinse cycles.

BECAUSE: Most detergents work equally well regardless of water temperature. Using cold washes in every
U.S. household would save the equivalent of 100,000 barrels of oil a day.

~~Use a toaster oven for simple baking tasks.

BECAUSE:
The countertop appliances consume half as much energy as electric ovens (and keep the whole kitchen cooler)

With Many Thanks,

Mother Earth [forwarded from Donna]