Saturday, December 31, 2005
401k 2005 Results
Not too bad all in all relative to key market indices.
Friday, December 30, 2005
Uncle Bob has fun with Yuki
Emerald Bowl
Notice they didn't print new cups for the game but just chose to reuse the Navy - New Mexico cheap ass cups from last year...
They obviously chose to spend their budget on the half-time event of which I captured a nice snap. You may need to click on the photo to really appreciate the quality of the show.
It was put on by a corporation called Bowl Games of America which basically gets kids to pay to come put on a half-time show at bowl games. No - I'm not kidding.
Thursday, December 29, 2005
Cockpit
Nope, it's not a view from the captain's chair of the space shuttle. It's the view from the driver's seat of the new Civic with TomTom GPS nav featuring my new super velcro mount. And nope, I wasn't going 107 MPH. Sometimes I like to go metric and roll KPH!
Huskers Roll
IT'S ALL ABOUT THE HAMILTONS BABY!
Yo reach in my pocket, pull out some dough.
The girl acted like she'd never seen a ten before.
It's all about the Hamiltons baby.
Throw the snacks in the bag and I'm Ghost like Swayze.
Roll up to the theater. Ticket buying what we're handling.
You can call us Aaron Burr from the way we're dropping Hamiltons.
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
Jayhawks Roll
Walk The Line
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Friday, December 23, 2005
Made it to Michigan
It was fun going through Atlanta - snapped up the Journal-Constitution and reading about GT. More later...
Thursday, December 22, 2005
Made it to Arkansas
More later!
Tuesday, December 20, 2005
iTunes Top Songs Played in 2005
Song Title / Artist / Plays
Aftermath / R.E.M. / 25
Breathe / Erasure / 17
Over My Head (Cable Cars) / The Fray / 16
Precious / Depeche Mode / 15
Starry Eyed Surprise / Paul Oakenfold / 15
Bad Day / R.E.M. / 14
Don't Say You Love Me / Erasure / 13
Chains of Love / Erasure / 13
Leaving New York / R.E.M. / 13
The Outsiders / R.E.M. / 13
My Favourite Game / The Cardigans / 12
World's on Fire / Erasure / 12
Krafty / New Order / 12
The Boy in the Well / R.E.M. / 12
Out is Through / Alanis Morissette / 11
Hey Man *Now Your Really Living) / The Eels / 10
Bowl Game Ranking
There are 28 bowls in total.
Sunday, December 18, 2005
ASU Bowl Details
You won't want to miss this game! Just click for the details on the New Orleans Bowl Schedule of Events, Travel Opportunities and Watch Parties.
If you can't make it to
Members of the ASU Alumni Association received the details for the New Orleans Bowl last week and are already making plans! To get up-to-the minute information on this and other exciting ASU events all year long, join the ASU Alumni Association now.
Please forward this message to your friends who are fellow ASU alumni and help spread the word. See you at the game! Go Tribe!
Saturday, December 17, 2005
Package Sent To AR
Arkansas Update
2005 Honda VTX 1300
Walnut instrument panel shows time and temperature
Another view. The bags are from Yahama.
The Parthenon in a stunning night view.
Warning: these pictures are very high resolution
and may damage your monitor if you zoom in too closely.
Arkansas Update
My nephew Richard Tangeman with Janice Dayton.
Guests at party celebrating Gretchen Golden's doctoral commencement.
Richard's daughter Shelby runs the trains.
Gretchen, Will Hansard, and the host at the party.
Will and Gretchen.
The Smiths and Ed hammerand party down.
King Kong
Friday, December 16, 2005
Shhhh
I saw a recent ASU basketball score. They beat a team I had never heard of...ever.
Arkansas St. 91, Freed-Hardeman 77
Anyone else heard of Freed-Hardeman?
Sunday, December 11, 2005
Back in the USA
Highest Altitude Recorded: 11277m or 37K feet
Coldest Temperature Recorded: -62 degrees Celsius
Top Speed Recorded: 1031km/hour or ~640 miles/hour
Some of the cities will flew close to include Kuantan, Toaman, Kota Kinabulu, Manila, Kaohsing, Okinawa and Nagoya.
The Singapore airport is a nice airport to have a few extra hours in as there is free internet (though people kind of hog the stations) and very nice shopping.
Good to be back home though where the primary goal shifts to completing Christmas shopping. :)
Saturday, December 10, 2005
New Projector
It's a good thing Dave Thomas is dead
I just ate at Wendy's. I've been eating their small chili a lot lately, it's only $1.19 and tasty (I've gotten over the fact that there was a mouse head discoverd in Wendy's chili in 1996).
It was about 4:00PM so the place was dead. In fact, I was the only customer in the store. I was sitting in the dining room eating my chili as two employees were wiping tables. I overheard a conversation between the two. One asked the other if "cleaning the dining room" meant picking up garbage off the floor or whether it just meant wiping off the tables. The other responded that she had always thought it just meant wiping the tables. The floor was covered with straw wrappers, crumbs, and drink lids. They just left them. Nutty!
Chronicles of Narnia movie review
I saw Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. I loved the books as a kid and read them several times. The movie was visually awesome, but I found something missing. It moved through all the plot points, but never really explained anything and I never really understood the characters motivations very well.
The Miami Herald gets it right when they say:
"There's little warmth or depth to the characters who, for the most part, trudge through the film with little wonder at the magical journey they're making."
Worth checking out for the amazing scenery and special effects (mostly the animals). Plus, Aslan the Lion is nifty. I give it so-so marks.
Tuesday, December 06, 2005
Busy Day in Malaysia
We then came back to Penang for lunch in one of the Intel cafes. It was cheap but not that great in my opinion. My meal was loaded down with bones of sorts. Judging by the way most folks cleaned their plates my opinion is likely in the minority. We then took a fairly extensive tour of one of Intel's assembly-test operations which was quite interesting.
The day concluded with one of our co-workers dropping us off in Georgetown - the Capital of Penang where we walked, shopped and enjoyed a Starbuck's Frap - at a location Winter has likely not been to:
Prangin Mall
No 33-G-1A,
Prangin Mall - Komtar,
Jalan Dr. Lim Chwee Leong,
10100 Pulau Piang
Anyway - we concluded with a nice boneless meal at McDonalds :) The double cheeseburger was tasty.
Sunday, December 04, 2005
Malaysia!
Penang itself is a very small island off the Northeast portion of the mainland. Back to the hotel - it is pretty much a resort which is cool. The downfall is that it is on the other side of the island from Intel so we'll have about a hour cab ride each way. Here's a snap of the Shangri-La.
Saturday, December 03, 2005
18 Hours Later...Singapore!
Crazy car swap
Thursday, December 01, 2005
Asia Bound
Wednesday, November 30, 2005
Christmas and Candy
We're starting to see a lot more of the "special edition" candy out in CA. I saw for the first time a white chocolate Take 5 bar:
as well as an Orange Kit Kat and a Coffee Kit Kat. Tried the Take 5 and it was tasty.
Monday, November 28, 2005
BLIZZARD PART III
BLIZZARD PART II : NO WORK!!!
Sunday, November 27, 2005
BLIZZARD!!!
Candy Review
Saturday, November 26, 2005
Here's the projector I just ordered
REVIEW FROM PC WORLD MAGAZINE
Epson has upped the ante for DVD-equipped projectors with its MovieMate 25. The product features excellent image quality, tons of great extras, and an astonishingly low $1199 price tag. The only negative is its substantial 13.4-by-12.2-by-7.1-inch size--bulky for a unit that's designed to sit on a living-room table.
Other than in size, the MovieMate 25 is superior in every way to rival Optoma's impressive MovieTime DV10. The extras start with an 80-inch, floor-standing, pull-up, 16:9 wide screen. A 40-watt subwoofer works with the projector's integrated speakers to produce deep, natural sound.
Epson has also added lens shifting, an attribute normally found on high-end projectors. This feature enables you to raise an image, lower it, or move it sideways without resorting to the typical keystone controls (used to square up an image when the projector is tilted up or down).
The projector's native resolution is 480p (854 by 480), ideal for playing DVDs. The product is rated at 1200 ANSI lumens--plenty of brightness for presentations in smaller rooms or for movie viewing at home. I customized settings effortlessly using an easy-to-navigate menu system, though I never managed to attain quite enough detail in black areas. Still, the unit's smooth, brilliant color impressed me.
Rated at 26 decibels, the projector performed very quietly during my tests. In fact, except with regard to its lack of compactness--an admittedly important consideration for a tabletop projector--the MovieMate 25 was a joy to use, and ranks at the top of its class.
Georgia Tech Win
Tech may have lost to Georgia, but the quality of last week's win can't be denied. I took these pics of my tv as the game wound down.
Fiction entry wins first place!
been published again in the Memphis Mensa Newsletter as the
first-place winner in the Memphis Mensa Bad Fiction Contest.
(here's the sentence)
It is January 8, just another bleak winter's day for most people, but for me the day that carries the heavy double shoulder-burden of Elvis' birth in 1935 and Dave Thomas' death sixty-seven years later; my battered Buick station wagon roars through the morning mist out of Bear Bryant's childhood homeland, crossing the black father-of-waters into the looming triangular grip of a strange Egyptian icon crawling up into the gray Tennesse sky like the dark fist in the opening scene of some grotesque Nazi propaganda movie.
Arkansas State goes Bowling!!!!!
Friday, November 25, 2005
Black Friday
Speaking of football - How about the Huskers! They finally seemed to have had a game where things clicked.
Steam Engine Blues
wheel configuration. Thus an engine with 2 guide wheels, 8 drive wheels,
and 4 wheels in the rear for weight support, would be called a 2-8-4.
Here's a quiz: What is the wheel configuration of the starring locomotive
in the old Burt Lancaster flick 'The Train'?
Steam Engine Blues
I forget where it was I first saw you,
It was either New Hampshire or Maine.
But I’ll never forget what you looked like
as you stepped off that big southbound train.
We only got to talk for a minute,
I was married back then, so were you.
But you smiled as you rolled by in the club car,
Bein’ pulled by that old 2-6-2.
Now I’m settin’ down here with the poor folks;
They say I’m lazy, and I drink too much booze.
But it’s unfair to rush me to judgment,
‘cause I’m a victim of the steam engine blues.
I had my next gig down in Memphis,
I had a guitar, and I drove them old Fords.
But they fired me; they thought I was a picker,
And they found out I could barely play chords.
So I moseyed on down to the rail yards,
I had thirty-five bucks, and no more.
I got lucky and hopped into a boxcar.
It was hooked up to a big 4-8-4.
Now I’m settin’ down here in the train yard
With the friends and companions I choose.
You can call me a homeless old wino,
But I’m a victim of the steam engine blues.
Well it wasn’t too bad in that freight car;
we had a fire on the floor, and some wine.
There was an old black man there from New Orleans,
And he said, “Lordy, but ain’t this place fine!”
We got thrown off that boxcar in Dallas,
I was cold, and had no place to go.
Imagine my surprise when I saw you,
You were standin’ by a black 2-8-0.
Now I’m settin’ down here in the train yard
With the friends and companions I choose.
You can call me a homeless old wino,
But I’m a victim of the steam engine blues.
Well I left out of Texas for Phoenix,
And I hoboed in the west for a year.
I tried to get better at the guitar,
While subsisting on hot dogs and beer.
The last time we met was Wyoming,
They were clampin’ down your coffin door.
They took a forklift and set it on a flatcar,
And pulled it off with a 4-6-6-4.
Now I’m settin’ down here with the poor folks;
They say I’m lazy, and I drink too much booze.
But it’s unfair to rush me to judgment,
‘cause I’m a victim of the steam engine blues.
Just a victim of the steam engine blues.
Thursday, November 24, 2005
Arkansas Lives!
problems of late. I'm still not posting pictures but
perhaps soon. I entertained Carol and her mother at Thanksgiving
dinner today, cooking a complete meal with both smash taters and
sweet taters. No marshmallows on the latter. Happy Thanksgiving
to all our thousands of readers. Go Huskers and Go Jackets!
Buffalo Head In Use
As for bowl projections every projection has Georgia Tech in a different bowl so it is too early to say at this point. Georgia Tech vs. Nebraska is intriguing in the Champs Sports Bowl as is Georgia Tech vs. South Carolina in the Peach... we'll see.
Tuesday, November 22, 2005
Unusual Law Makes Coroners of Attorneys
BY NATE JENKINS / Lincoln Journal Star
Saturday, November 19, 2005
Deb Gilg wasn’t prepared for this.
She’d gone to law school, earned a degree, and honed her skills as a practicing attorney. The qualifications seemed sufficient for a job she was eyeing in the mid 1980’s – Keith County attorney.
Voters agreed, electing her in 1986.
Soon after, Gilg got wind of a job description that caused her to question whether she was indeed qualified for the position.
County coroner?
“It was very surprising,” said Gilg, who was Keith County attorney until 2002 and now juggles a private practice with her duties as deputy county attorney in Saunders County. “I felt I had a responsibility to the people I served to do it.”
Because of an unusual state law exercised only in Nebraska, Gilg became county coroner when she was elected county attorney – even though she had no training in the sensitive, scientific field of death investigations.
Gilg responded to her deficiency by earning certification as a forensic examiner, even though such training is not required under state law. At the time, she was believed to be the only county coroner in the state with certification as an examiner.
Nebraska’s reliance on elected county coroners instead of state medical examiners’ offices staffed with trained scientists puts it in the national minority. And the fact the state doesn’t require its coroners to have any forensics training after being elected makes it one of a tiny number of states that national experts describe as scientifically negligent.
Only four other states that have elected coroners – South Dakota, Colorado, Idaho and Indiana — do not require forensics training.
The lack of training shouldn’t be a concern, explained the executive director of the Nebraska Association of County Attorneys.
“When questions arise, I think most of them (county attorneys) are pretty good about sending them in for autopsies,” said DeMaris Johnson, the director.
“We’re talking about elected county officials here – they live in the community. They want to make sure things are done right.”
That mentality strikes Peter DeForest and other experts as naive. It is also at odds, said DeForest, with the public’s appreciation for the mental and scientific prowess necessary in death investigations. That perception, he said, has been cultivated by fictional narratives ranging from Sherlock Holmes to the popular television show CSI.
DeForest, a professor of criminalistics at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, lectures on the need for government jurisdictions to have a uniform, scientific approach to death investigations that places scientists at the front end of investigations to both determine whether a crime was committed and then ensure important evidence is not contaminated.
“Having someone with a law background,” DeForest said of the Nebraska coroner system, “certainly isn’t the ideal thing.”
A primary duty of coroners in Nebraska is deciding whether the circumstances of deaths warrant autopsies. Was the death a suicide or homicide?
“It’s usually obvious,” said Lancaster County Attorney Gary Lacey, who has no medical training. “But there are some times when I worry whether a suicide is actually a homicide.”
In those cases, Lacey said, he orders autopsies to be safe. Requiring training for newly elected county attorneys/coroners, he said, “wouldn’t be a bad idea.”
Lancaster County Public Defender Dennis Keefe said everybody in the system, including Gary Lacey, probably would prefer a professional medical examiner’s system. But that would raise costs, he said.
Still, he said, change is overdue.
“I think it’s an antiquated system that does not provide law enforcement or the public with the best information possible.”
Gauging the overall cost of Nebraska’s system is difficult because each county pays its own bills. Autopsies ordered by Lacey are done by Dr. Matthias Okoye. Earlier this year, the Lancaster County Board of Commissioners increased his contract for 2005 from $170,000 to $270,000.
In Oklahoma, a state with roughly twice the population of Nebraska and one with a state medical examiner system, the annual cost is about $5 million, according to that state’s chief medical investigator.
“That’s not much,” for a system that helps ensure death investigations are handled properly, said the investigator, Kevin Rowland. A primary attribute of the Oklahoma system, he said, is its independence from law enforcement and other arms of government that participate in the judicial process.
“That way there’s no conflict of interest,” he said.
Two central offices in the state – one in Tulsa, the other in Oklahoma City — decide whether to do autopsies based on input from licensed physicians that serve as county medical examiners. Fewer doctors have been willing to take on that low-paying, part-time job, so the state is changing course. It’s replacing county examiners with forensics-trained investigators responsible for multi-county regions. To keep costs down, the investigators will use their homes as offices, and Rowland predicts fewer autopsies may be ordered, cutting costs more.
Like untrained county attorneys in Nebraska, he said, physicians who act as medical examiners in Oklahoma are cautious because they lack expertise, leading to autopsies that might not be necessary.
The last time a Nebraska lawmaker proposed a state medical examiner’s system was in 1999, when Sen. Kermit Brashear of Omaha introduced legislation. He said he does not plan on introducing similar legislation again.
Many counties in rural reaches of Nebraska don’t have the luxury of a nearby forensic pathologist. In Keith County, for instance, Gilg recalls having to send bodies 130 miles northwest to Scottsbluff to have autopsies done. The practice is not uncommon. Many western Nebraska counties are forced to send bodies to either Scottsbluff or North Platte.
That can pose a “huge problem” in death investigations, said Gilg, because warm air causes bodies to decompose quicker. In essence, the primary piece of evidence in a homicide case, for example, can be severely compromised.
Because the county lacked vehicles that could keep bodies cold while in transport, officials improvised, Gilg said.
Bodies were sent to Scottsbluff packed in ice in the back of a hearse. Keeping them cold before they were packed was also a problem.
Also at risk for being compromised under Nebraska’s system and others that use elected county coroners, said a former supervisory scientist with the FBI Laboratory in Washington, D.C., is the integrity of investigations because science takes a backseat to elected officeholders.
“With the coroner system, it’s rooted in politics, and it’s hard to extract that,” said Max Houck, now director of the Forensic Science Initiative at West Virginia University.
Elected officials helping oversee lean county budgets, for example, could be prone to considering cost when deciding whether expensive autopsies should be done.
Long transports of bodies such as the trip required from Keith County to Scottsbluff can add $400 to $500 to the cost of each autopsy, pushing the total amount to roughly $2,000. By comparison, Okoye’s contract stipulates that should he do more than 135 autopsies, each one after will cost $1,700.
Gilg said she never was involved in a case where an autopsy was not done even though the evidence warranted one.
Asked if cost was ever a factor in decisions about whether autopsies were conducted, she paused for several seconds before responding.
“It could be a factor,” she said.
Monday, November 21, 2005
Candy Review
Sunday, November 20, 2005
Big Week-end
I happened to be in Tahoe this week-end and placed a bet on the Jackets (+18 points) to win. I also picked Auburn (-7 points) so scored a double victory. Here are my tickets.
Tahoe was lots of fun. Relaxation was the focus and we watched lots of football, played games (Catchphrase and Spades were the most popular) and ate lots of food. Here's a snap of Steph and I.
Chatted with Dad and he's still struggling to use one of his computers at home so we really haven't seen much activity from him on the blog. The working computer is upstairs...but that one isn't conducive to blogging for some reason...?
Anyway - we are anticipating the short week here in CA and have already bought ingredients for a pecan pie.
Saturday, November 19, 2005
Monday, November 14, 2005
Gift of Gap
An intern in our office works at the Gap. She gave me a Gap friends/family card. With it I can get 30% off any purchases between December 1st through 4th. If any of you guys want some Gap discounts (it works on Gap.com) let me know and we can hook it up.
Sunday, November 13, 2005
Champs Sports Bowl Prediction
That would be a fun one. Standard Sunday out in CA. Watched some football. The poor Raiders were destroyed by Denver. Raked leaves, washed car, shopped for groceries. Nothing too exciting.
Saturday, November 12, 2005
Light Saber
Well it happened. I wanted the blue but it was unavailable so I got the Vader red. Yesterday in Best Buy I see they have the Anakin blue in stock! Next up....Luke Skywalker green!!!!
Anna Nalick and Rob Thomas
Tuesday, November 08, 2005
Cheap Hog Tees
http://www.hogheavenonline.com/main_objgroup.cfm?nCategoryID=26&nObjGroupID=464&sAuxTitle=T%2DShirts
Monday, November 07, 2005
Jayhawks Blast Huskers!
The Jayhawks knocked off Nebraska for the first time since 1968! I was there to celebrate! More pictures can be seen by clicking the link to "Bill's Homepage" in the column to the right.
Saturday, November 05, 2005
not interested in Free Land? How about Freelines
King's Freelines
1/4 pound butter
5 pounds sugar
1/2 gallon or 3 cans evaporated milk
1 gallon whole milk
1 1/2 ounce vanilla
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 pounds pecans
In a huge pot put all ingredients except pecans. Heat on a high fire, stirring continually so the mixture doesn't boil over. Stir until the mixture is a caramel.
Pour onto large greased sheet pan, then add pecans. Allow to cool a bit, until you can handle it.
Using a spoon, whip the mixture. "Talk to it, show love to it," says Wilkerson.
Either leave completed mixture in sheet pan to cool entirely, or before it's fully whipped, use a spoon to remove the mixture into smaller rounds, placing them on a second sheet covered in wax paper.
Wilkerson warns that "candy has a mind of its own" and varying temperature and humidity can effect the result. Makes 25 3 1/2-ounce pieces.
Thursday, November 03, 2005
Free Land in KS
Summary is here: http://www.kansasfreeland.com/
Washington, KS appears to be one of the more prominent locations with reasonable access to Topeka and Lincoln. Only 90 miles to Lincoln! 67 miles to Manhattan, KS.
Tuesday, November 01, 2005
New retro cellphone nonheadset handset
Yukivader
Robert and I had similar Halloween costumes. Yuki spooked the neighborhood as Darthvader (Darthyuki) and I went as a Sith Lord (it's a darkside jedi).