Tuesday, 31 August, 2004. 10:58:38 PMI've written about voting systems before, and how they are insecure
in general, and a tempting way for a person or group to rig an election.
The breaking news right now is that an actual feature has been demonstrated
in Diebold voting machines going back several years, whereby a two
digit code is entered, causing it to maintain two separate sets of books.
The vote tabulations in the second set of books can be changed at will. After
the machine is switched into cheat mode, it reports votes from the second
accounting area, without giving any kind of indication at all that it is
reading from the second set of books. The tabulation of votes in the
second set of books can be altered in just seconds and is completely
undetectable. Of course, it's much easier to manipulate a single machine
rather than hundreds of thousands of individual voting machines. Diebold
makes this easy, because all of the voting results are rolled up into
a single machine, called the central tabulator. That central tabulator
has the same kind of double book accounting scheme that the voting machines
have.
It makes you wonder what Diebold might have in mind, particularly
since the company has given $411,320 in contributions to Republican
candidates.
Friday, 27 August, 2004. 12:12:12 PM
Thursday, 26 August, 2004. 10:16:21 AMI'm working on an article about the Edmund Scientific Astroscan, and why
after nearly 30 years of production it's still a terrific telescope for
a beginning astronomer.
Tuesday, 24 August, 2004. 11:43:22 AMI finished the article on Felon and Immigrant voting last night, and it's
located
here.
Sunday, 22 August, 2004. 11:04:37 PMNew photos are in the August 2004 directory. Subjects are Kristiana, dogs,
and our new Audi.
Sunday, 22 August, 2004. 10:03:46 AMEdvard Munch's painting
"The Scream" was stolen from a museum in Oslo, Norway.
Friday, 20 August, 2004. 04:55:07 PMHarsh Reality of IT Project Life Cycle
# Phase 1: Uncritical acceptance.
# Phase 2: Wild enthusiasm.
# Phase 3: Dejected disillusionment.
# Phase 4: Total confusion.
# Phase 5: Search for the guilty.
# Phase 6: Punishment of the innocent.
# Phase 7: Promotion of nonparticipants.
Friday, 20 August, 2004. 03:09:31 PMTEXT: Easel Displays for Home and Office
URL: http://www.xylemdesign.com
Optional description: A bunch of apparently clueless morons who claim to offer a very
broad selection of display, artist and decorative easels as well
as other stands available online. As far as I know, they are not involved
in terrorist activities, but my contact with them is extemely limited. I
could very well be mistaken about that. They spammed me wanting exchange links. Well, here's their link.
Wednesday, 18 August, 2004. 11:47:43 PMIt seems that everyone in the world is starting to link to this very
interesting piece by Philip E. Agre.
What Is Conservatism and What Is Wrong with It? I'm
still thinking it over, and I may read it a couple more times. The scope
of the article is very broad, but wasn't nearly long enough to include
all the details. So, the article requires a lot of thought before any
particular conclusions can be drawn about it. I'll probably write something
more about it later. In the meantime, I am working on a short article about
felon and immigrant voter rights, just for fun. I might be done with
it this weekend.
Monday, 16 August, 2004. 02:50:49 PMWired magazine is no longer capitalizing the first letter in the word
'internet". Also 'Web' will become 'web' and 'Net' will become 'net'. The
reason that it was capitalized is that an internet is a network of networks,
and the Internet was the name of the network created when all of the smaller
internets were connected. The word Internet was something like a proper
name, and was accordingly captialized. Wired magazine is dropping the
capital letter because their interpretation is that it signified some
kind of special importance, due to some trait of hubris in the engineers
that developed the Internet, and that a lower-case letter places
the Internet into its rightful perspective.
The usage of the capital 'I' seems to be similar to the usage of the capital
'G' on the name of the Christian god. A god could mean any diety that
was ever imagined, but God (at least in Christian societies) can only
refer to one entity.
Author Joseph Turow argues that the capital letter should be dropped because
the term has become a common noun. He disliked the capitalized term, because
it seemed to be akin to a brand-name, like Kleenex. Since the Internet
isn't owned by anyone, it shouldn't look like it's someone's brand.
I like the idea of dropping the capital letter 'I' from the word, because
it takes an extra keystroke to form the capital letter. I could decrease
the time it takes me to type the word by, perhaps, a fifth of a second.
Friday, 13 August, 2004. 03:44:15 PMAlex's parents are vacationing with friends in Florida right now, in
Clearwater. For a while it looked like Hurricane Charley was going to make
landfall near there, but it's finally coming ashore right now about 100
miles to the south. They could get brief gusts of wind up to 80 MPH, but
it's probably going to be just a very bad thunderstorm for them. They
might have even left town to avoid the weather.
Monday, 09 August, 2004. 03:35:03 PMAlex just called to tell me that Kristiana pulled herself up to a standing
position from a sitting position.
Sunday, 08 August, 2004. 09:42:26 PMKristiana is finally crawling on the floor. She's not very fast yet, but
if she sees something she wants, she can move towards it.
Sunday, 08 August, 2004. 08:49:17 PMThis was a busy weekend. On Saturday, Alex and I bought an Audi A6
station wagon. Then I drove to Harlingen TX in my del Sol to visit my
friend Joe and sell my car to him. I had my telescope with me, and it
turned out to be a clear night, though there was a lot of water vapor in
the air. This morning we hung out for a while, and I caught a plane back
to Austin. I'm going to miss that del Sol.
Thursday, 05 August, 2004. 12:52:15 PMI sent this message to the webmaster for the Mercury Messenger spacecraft
home page:
Hi, Congratulations on the successful beginning to the Mercury exploration
mission!
I have a request. Could some images of the position of the spacecraft
in the solar system be added to the Messenger web site? The site for
the Cassini mission has them, and they were very informative to refer
to during the long trip to Saturn. A similar page for Messenger would be
really nice.
Thanks.
Tuesday, 03 August, 2004. 10:07:41 AMThe Messenger spacecraft launched last night at 2:15AM, headed for Mercury. It arrives in 2011.