|
Summary: Patrick and Sam visit New Orleans; Thai lunch with Remi and Jesse; Macworld with Geordie, Michael, and Marc; Remi and Jesse's karaoke party at Jesse's place; Patrick cooks an Italian dinner at home with Mom Ryan, Phil, Danny, and Drew; Crawfish boil with Phil, Drew, Danny, Lauren, Tina, Toan, and Quyen; Patrick cooks dinner at home with Tony Q, Phil, Danny, Drew, and Toan; Mom Ryan cooks dinner for me and Patrick; Dinner at Catch with Patrick. |
|
|---|---|
| Mon 1 |
Late breakfast at home with Patrick: blueberry pancakes. Yardwork. Tidying, organizing, cleaning, house chores. Snack: cherry yogurt, one Chuao truffle. Afternoon run: 10 minutes. Weight training: hammer curls, front raise. Dinner at home with Patrick: boiled Northern dumplings dinner. Dessert: I had a gingerbread toy soldier cookie from Mom Ryan, Patrick had vanilla bean ice cream with chocolate covered pretzels. Backups. Tweaked my journal code to display HTML more intelligently than in the past. (Thanks, Chris!) Added some image thumbnails to entries for December 24 and 25. It's painful because I code it by hand and I don't know how to get TextWrangler or HTML-Kit to perform PHP's htmlentities function on selected text. If you know how, please e-mail me. Finally I convinced Tina to use Flickr. Woo! And she has some great photos up already. (Give her time -- she's still on dialup.) Backups. |
| Tue 2 |
Usual oatmeal breakfast. Back to work after 10 or so days off. Web updates and small fixes (mostly news). Created a new SATE poster (lost and found). Acrobat 8 licensing. Answered questions about corruption found in Excel documents for Scott. Active Directory and OS X binding followup with Johnny. Lunch: takeout from the cafeteria: spaghetti with meat sauce, mixed vegetables, garlic bread: $5. Admin privileges reconfiguration. Set up an admin account with a roaming profile. Vista disc burning, research, and testing. Home. Dinner at home with Patrick: chicken/shrimp stuffing/casserole, biscuits, steamed broccoli. Worked on Corinna's website: print stylesheets. I feel a little bit of a sore throat coming on. Patrick packed his bags. He's leaving tomorrow morning for a 4-night stay in New Orleans to assist Sam with a visit to his mom. |
| Wed 3 |
Yesterday I was caught by surprise when I learned that there was a Windows XP keyboard shortcut with which I was unfamiliar. To open the System Properties control panel, you can press Windows+Pause and you're done. One other (longer) way to do this is to press Windows, then press C enough times to get to Control Panel, then press S enough times to get to System (then press Enter). This presumes that your mouse is not within the area in which the Start Menu appears -- when the mouse is in that area, it can muck things up. Another way to do this is to press Windows then press M enough times to highlight (but not select) My Computer then press Shift+F10 (or press the context menu key if your keyboard has one), then press R to select Properties from the popup menu that appears. Windows+Pause is a lot easier. In comparison, OS X doesn't seem to have an easy way for me to assign a keyboard shortcut to open System Preferences at any time. I have System Preferences in the dock, so for right now it's a Ctrl+F3 and a couple of arrows and an Enter key away. Woke up too early, said goodbye to Patrick as he leaves for Nola. I learned at work today that some places document Windows+Pause as Windows+Break. It's been so long since I've had to actually distinguish between using Pause versus Break or Print Screen versus SysRq (what is SysRq used for anyway?) that I really don't know whether Windows+Pause or Windows+Break is correct. Let's go with Windows+Break since that's what Microsoft's documentation says. (I personally think Windows+Break should generate a Blue Screen of Death, however, since the mnemonic works beautifully for that.) Today at work I got a lot of stuff done. Tweaked the SATE poster I created yesterday. Assisted Carol with installing sound themes and setting up e-mail archives -- had trouble with both after some time. The e-mail archives problem was resolved (we're pretty sure someone else had a lock on the file) and the sound themes problem worked itself out after some experimenting. Graduation registration form updates for Joel. Administrative privileges reconfiguration. Image processing for the student database project. Installed Windows Vista Business on a spare Dell GX240. Had trouble with the first restart after install -- it wouldn't recognize the NVIDIA graphics drivers properly. Had to force a power down and multiple tries getting back in eventually permitted me to start in low resolution -- what an awful introduction to Windows Vista. During setup, at least one dialog failed to use standard Windows keyboard shortcuts (tab, spacebar, Enter) and I was forced to use the mouse against my will. I spent a few hours playing with Vista, and my initial reaction is that I'm mostly disappointed. The backup solution it offers sounds promising -- I'll have to try it out. And I found two particularly pleasant niceties. One is a new folder option permits you to make selections with checkboxes which is handy for non-expert users who have yet to master Shift and Ctrl used in control with the arrow keys and spacebar. Unfortunately, this feature appears to be off by default. The second one is web-breadcrumbs-style navigation for filesystem browsing -- very intuitive, useful, and elegant -- I am quite pleased with how Microsoft is evolving this portion of the interface, particularly since Apple does so poorly at it in OS X -- e.g., there's still no easy way to copy a full path to the clipboard from within Finder. (The "solution" involving Terminal has already been suggested to me -- it works, but it's not easy or elegant, and to me that's essentially an admission that the Finder interface is wanting in this respect.) Much of Vista's interface isn't that much different than XP -- just glossier, and of course on this older computer with only 512 MB of RAM it's on the slow side of usable. The desktop wallpapers include a beautiful image from Hiroshige -- perhaps the best of the lot. Many of the other wallpapers are surprisingly disappointing -- you can easily find much better photography in searches of Flickr and Stock Xchang. The logon screen is really ugly: PRESS CTRL + ALT + DEL TO LOG ON or something like that in all caps in the center of the screen. Tremendously disappointing is the redesigned Start Menu which has significantly different -- and worse -- keyboard shortcut behavior than XP. The new Start Menu makes it much harder for me to navigate to what I want with the keyboard as compared with Windows XP because it defaults to the system search feature reminiscent of Apple Spotlight or Google Desktop. I can configure it to revert to a Windows 2000-style Start Menu but not a Windows XP-style Start Menu (which is the one I prefer). I'll see if I can disable searching in the Start Menu entirely and rely on Windows+F when I want to search. Ordered a copy of SQLyog Enterprise. Helped Sue set up Outlook for Esther. Orientation web page updates for Joel. Recordings policy work. Remote desktop work. Installed Office 2007 file format converters for our staff. (We're still using Office 2003 Pro.) More administrative privileges configuration work. More recordings policy work. Manual PharmAdMIT backup. Left work late -- around 8:30 PM. I was surprised when I stepped outside -- the world had gotten all wet while I was working, and the weather report predicted rain for tomorrow but not today, so I had no raincoat or umbrella. I got dinner by myself at You See Sushi -- prawn tempura roll special which included eel and avocado roll and 4 pieces of nigiri: albacore, salmon, yellowtail, and (something else). Home. Worked late on Corinna's website. I'm finishing up the print stylesheets -- only a few more tweaks to go -- and then I'll be ready to send her a summary for review probably within the next week. Weight training: barbell curl, shoulder shrug, push up. |
| Thu 4 |
Mild sore throat this morning upon waking. Morning run: 25 minutes. Usual oatmeal breakfast. Document scanning for Sue. Troubleshot problems with network scanning (no solution yet). Installed Boot Camp beta onto Chris's MacBook Pro. Sent a new SATE poster to Tiki for review. Helped student MC with questions about handhelds and software. Set up Windows XP SP2 on the MacBook Pro. Error 0x8dddd0001 when attempting to connect to update.microsoft.com. Resolved it using a solution I found on the net -- delete all temporary internet files and restart and restart again. Lunch: Panda Express. My fortune: Don't ignore your needs in the area of new challenges. Ran Apple Hardware Test on the MacBook Pro -- clean. Installed Clippy for Carol. (She requested it.) Installed Acrobat 8 Professional for Chris's MacBook Pro. Resolved my OS X and Active Directory binding problem but I don't know how -- it simply worked and I didn't do anything different. Uninstalled Windows Defender and reinstalled Spy Sweeper for my computer and Cindy's. Labelled my USB drive with my phone number. Dinner at PDD's: Danny's pho. Andy's last night in San Francisco. I helped him secure and clean up his computer. We were thinking of going to Beard Papa, but they closed at 8 PM. We were also thinking of going to Bombay for ice cream, but I convinced them to stay in because it was freezing outside. |
| Fri 5 |
Sore throat was at its worst yesterday. Morning run: 5 minutes. Usual oatmeal breakfast. Bus to work was too early. I saw it as I was approaching the bus stop, but I wasn't close enough to run for it. I ended up taking an alternate route and realized that I should have just gone home and waited for the next bus -- the alternate route wasn't worth it. Today just flew by, and I got a lot done. Gave Carol Firefox tips. Archived data to DVD. Inserted a DVD which I knew had data on it and it showed no data! Took it out and did other things for awhile. Put it back in, and now the data shows up. Reviewed Vista. OS X setup for Chris's MacBook Pro (MBP). No-host bar means you pay cash for drinks. Helped Carol with e-mail archiving. Lunch from the cafeteria: pasta primavera, small potato soup, orange juice. Computer support coordinator steering committee meeting with Rebecca. This is my first CSC steering committee meeting. I wasn't sure if I could afford the time to come to these meetings regularly, but after this meeting I think I can contribute a lot. Chatted with Chris about his new laptop. Dinner at home by myself: leftovers (saffron rice, penne in marinara, one pfeffernusse, one Chuao truffle. Joel sent me a link to the sfgate news story saying how Earthlink, Google, and the city of San Francisco finalized their deal to bring wi-fi to the people of SF by 2008. I told him I didn't think they'd be complete by 2008, and he agreed. I also told him: Heh, I can see it now -- in 2 or more years you'll be able to see on your Palm Pilot that 3 N-Judahs in a row will arrive all at once 30 minutes from now -- ALL FOR FREE! I don't really believe that, but cynicism surrounding MUNI is hardly unwarranted. James announced today that he's leaving our office for a director of admissions position with UCSF School of Dentistry. I have very much enjoyed working with him all these years and will miss him a great deal. It sounds like his new position will be a great fit and opportunity for him at this point in his career, so I am glad for him. He'll be just 3 floors down in the same building, so it's not entirely goodbye. I think he said his last date is about 6 weeks from now -- so generous he is to the very end. I chatted with Melissa briefly today. At home, in the late evening I explored OS X Dashboard widgets and Sherlock. I played Nanosaur for about 3 minutes, then Marble Blast for about 40 minutes. Had some of the port that PDD gave us for xmas -- delicious! Trivia: My My Pictures folder says it contains 11,661 files and 523 folders, which account for 17 GB of data. Late meal: leftovers. Sleep. |
| Sat 6 |
|
| Sun 7 |
|
| Mon 8 |
Morning run: 5 minutes. When I arrived at work, I found Chris's MacBook Pro had been on all weekend. I found it in the locked drawer very, very warm -- almost hot to the touch. I was unable to wake it with any keypresses or mouse movement. I forced a shutdown and let it cool for a while. My primary computer also would not start this morning. It hung while "loading your personal settings" after logging in. I fixed that with a cold restart. Disabled outicon.exe from startup which is related to Outlook 2003 but I don't know what it is for and I've been running Outlook 2003 for years and never needed it and found only one insignificant result searching for outicon.exe on microsoft.com (via Google, of course). (See tomorrow's entry for a followup about outicon.exe.) Troubleshooting with the MacBook Pro (MBP). Met briefly with Cindy about a request for an HTML e-mail template. Implemented Mike Cohen's lidwake fix. Turned on FileVault for all OS X accounts on the laptop. Helped student KP with laptop problems and questions about posting news to the current students page. Some pages on bookendzdocks.com display with overlapping text in Firefox 2.0.0.1 in Windows XP. Quick fix: disable Javascript and reload the page. Workaround: View the page in IE. Product ordering for Chris. Lunch from the cafeteria: roasted vegetables, plum-glazed chicken, steamed rice. Helped student MK with wireless. Problems with Cindy's computer: opening My Documents takes forever, very slow response from the computer. Computer maintenance for Chris: very low available disk space on C: drive, updates for Firefox and Mozilla, etc. Chatted with Lucia about the HP1040 fax machine. Scanned a document for Scott. Added right-click to the MBP using RH Designs software. Used the Microsoft Files and Settings Transfer Wizard for the first time ever today. It worked and was very useful to migrate Chris's settings from his old laptop to his new one. I've been having a devil of a time trying to figure out if TrueCrypt can encrypt the entire partition on which Windows is installed. The website doesn't make this clear at all, but I've seen some evidence elsewhere that it's not supposed to be done. More laptop setup for Chris. Home. Dinner at home with Patrick: herb-roasted chicken, grilled carrots, skinny french fries. Worked on Corinna's website. |
| Tue 9 |
I discovered while browsing the website of the trash and recycling provider for our neighborhood that bones are okay to go into compost, which is the opposite of what I had found in the past on several other websites discussing composting. Morning run: 5 minutes. Usual oatmeal breakfast. Student computing committee meeting. Realized that Outlook 2003 failed to start automatically this morning, so I reenabled outicon.exe and restarted and now it works as I expect. outicon.exe must be something Microsoft delivered in an automatic update that is related to startup for Outlook 2003. I don't know any more than that about it. Staff meeting -- I received my award for guessing the highest number of applicants without going over -- a $25 gift card to Macy's! HTML e-mail for Cindy. Lunch: salmon burger, onion rings ($6.67). Meeting with Marie, Maricar, Cindy, and Joel about the development office's activities. Dinner at home with Mom Ryan and Patrick: broccoli, corn, and rice casserole; biscuits. Dessert: one chocolate each -- I had the last Chuao from Tina, and Mom Ryan and Patrick each shared one Godiva from Melissa. Apple announced iTV, iPhone, and a new Airport today. The iPhone user interface appears to be extremely elegant. However, at $500 I won't be buying one anytime soon. And I really only wanted a phone that was just a phone. I don't care about carrying music or TV or photos with me. So maybe just phone and internet. Maybe in a few years they'll have a scaled down version that does what I want. I couldn't tell if the iTV can output to VGA or DVI -- I don't have a TV and don't want one but I do have a widescreen computer monitor and might be interested in iTV if it can hook to my (or a) KVM. Backfilled data for January 5. Watched Simpsons with Mom Ryan and Patrick: Homer's Phobia. Mom Ryan stayed over tonight. |
| Wed 10 |
Usual oatmeal breakfast. Purchasing research for Chris. Sent Firefox and Outlook tips to new staff. HTML template edits for Cindy. Chatted with Lucia and Alyssa about ordering from The Technology Store. Finished applications training for Carol. Chatted with Susie about the faculty database. Helped student JP with problems starting Word and Excel: "(null) is not a valid Win32 application." Not sure what's going on. I recommended that the student remove and reinstall Office. Also helped with wireless setup and installation of anti-virus and anti-spyware. Installed Acrobat 8 Professional on my computer. Lunch: sandwich from the cafeteria. Installed SQLyog Enterprise 5.2.2. SQLyog setup and configuration. Student database work. Reinstalled Brother all-in-one drivers. Tested network scanning -- it works! Chatted with Chris about his computer setup at home. Computer maintenance for Joel. Updated the new employee checklist. Patrick and I checked out the 3D buildings in Google Earth 4. Increased security on home computers by removing admin privileges from the accounts we use daily, mirroring the steps I've recently taken with computers at work. Cleaned Patrick's trackball which had gotten gunked up. He doesn't know how to clean it yet. I also installed a bunch of updates from Microsoft and Mozilla. Installed Adobe Reader 8 for OS X. Lots of account setup configuration. |
| Thu 11 |
Morning run: 15 minutes. Usual oatmeal breakfast. More HTML template edits for Cindy. Met with Susie, Lorie, Mary Anne, Marie, and Michelle about the faculty database project. One-on-one meeting with Cindy. We had an interesting discussion about student blogging. www.ucsf.edu recently began linking to student blogs and I think our office needs to determine a policy if students request something similar on our website. Waited outside the library for people possibly coming to the web steering monthly lunch, but no one showed, so I got lunch at the cafeteria: roast turkey, mashed potatoes, stuffing, gravy, corn off the cob. Computer support coordinator meeting. Chatted briefly with Geordie and Michael. Tomorrow is Macworld, and I'll meet them and others for lunch at Thirsty Bear at noon. Took in student JP's laptop -- it has a virus. Remote desktop troubleshooting. I found a dollar bill on the sidewalk today. Dinner at home with Patrick: penne with sausage in marinara, garlic toast. Upset stomach. While on my way home, I couldn't remember if I logged out of Cindy's computer, so I checked from home -- it seems okay but I left her voicemail with instructions just in case. Failed to load the wnaspi32.dll driver! error message when starting CDex 1.5.1. Logging in as admin and starting CDex does not exhibit the problem. Returning admin privileges to the previous account seems to make the original problem go away. So it seems CDex cannot run as a limited (non-admin) user. I suspect similar problems with Iomega Automatic Backup Pro 3.3.0.12. Went to bed earlyish, around 9:30 PM. |
| Fri 12 |
|
| Sat 13 |
Woke up around 1:00 AM. Couldn't get back to sleep. Got up at 4:00 AM. Snack: yogurt. Stifled an urge to create a web page graphic consisting of an object atop a subtlely reflective surface. E-mail. Went back to bed around 7 after Patrick got up. Got up around 10 something. Lunch at home with Patrick: turkey burgers and fries. Photo processing. I'm way behind on uploading photos to Flickr. I still have new year's eve photos to finish processing and upload -- almost ready. Stopped at the bakery for some cookies. Patrick and I went to Remi and Jesse's karaoke party at Jesse's place in Portola. The party was a lot of fun -- we spent 3 or 4 hours there. Patrick sang People, Smile, Run to You, and Maybe This Time. People and Smile were his stronger songs. Afterwards we went grocery shopping at Safeway. Dinner at home with Patrick: noodle soup with shrimp, mushrooms, and baby bok choy. I chatted briefly with Drew. Patrick and I tried to watch The Da Vinci Code on DVD but the DVD encountered read errors at about 12 minutes and 30 seconds. |
| Sun 14 |
|
| Mon 15 |
|
| Tue 16 |
Usual oatmeal breakfast. Meeting with Susie and Cindy: blogging, faculty database, new person. Followup with student DS about internet service problems and VPN. Helped student CC by e-mail with setting up POP3. Met with student AC about how to build a website. AC gave me a five-dollar gift card to Starbucks -- so sweet! Announced website downtime and resolution to all. Updated preview sessions for Joel (reopened March). Reviewed new clin pharm intranet site. Lunch: taco and enchiladas from Carmelina's. Listserv update for student AF. Installed updates for the MacBook. Reported a Boot Camp 1.1.2 problem to Apple: the trackpad fails to move the cursor after successfully restoring from hibernation, restarting the computer works around the problem. Helped student MK set up wireless for a Palm TX -- the mac address is printed on the back. Also helped MK find Yahoo Messenger for Palm. Helped Carol with computer problems probably related to not enough available RAM. HTML e-mail edits for Cindy. Finally got a finished version working and tested perfectly in Outlook2003/WinXPSP2, OWA/WinXPSP2/Fx, OWA/WinXPSP2/IE6, Yahoo!Mail/WinXPSP2/Fx, Gmail/WinXPSP2/Fx2001, OWA/OS1048/Fx2001, OWA/OS1048/Safari204, Yahoo!Mail/OS1048/IE52. PageMaker registry problem resolution for Joel. Dinner at home with Mom Ryan, Patrick, Phil, Danny, and Drew: foccacia, salad with pancetta-and-mozzarella-stuffed pepperoncini, lasagne with shrimp and scallop, wine, fruit juice. |
| Wed 17 |
Usual oatmeal breakfast. Before starting my telecommute day, I read my RSS feeds while doing my morning run. I didn't know who Louie Anderson was and had to look him up on Google Images. Cousin Jeanne in Malawi says she finally received the cookies which I (checking journal...) made on November 24 and attempted to mail on November 25 and successfully mailed on November 28. I was told by the post office that it would take about a week, and I don't know what caused the delay, but I'm glad she got the cookies eventually. They were wrapped in ziploc freezer bags right after they came out of the oven, and she said they were a little stale but still edible. Finally got around to installing Colibri 17α for Windows, which Victor recommended to me a half-year ago. Will try it out for a fortnight or so. Realized recently that the Apple OS X widgets feature has the following design problem: in order to remove widgets, you need to click on the add button -- it took me a really frustratingly long time to figure this out. Weight training: tricep kickback, leg lift. Recordings policy summary work. Dinner at home with Patrick: ramen with fishcake, mushrooms, and shrimp in heirloom-tomato-based broth. Dessert: Häagen-Dazs lowfat coffee frozen yogurt. Chatted with Nate. Cut my hair. Tried to fix Slickr which stopped working recently, possibly due to the demotion of my account from administrator user to limited user -- when the screensaver kicks in, all I see is the slickr logo growing and shrinking in the center of the screen. Changed permissions on Slickr folders, didn't work. Changed permissions on Slickr registry keys, didn't work. Removed slickr, restarted, reinstalled slickr. Sent e-mail to Gabriel. Night run: 5 minutes. Weight training: front raise, woodchopper. Snack: yogurt. |
| Thu 18 |
Usual oatmeal breakfast. WebCT interest group (WIG) meeting: Brian demoed WebCT 6, aka Blackboard followed by about 10 words (the name of Blackboard's product is really long). Fixed Acrobat 8 Pro and PageMaker 6.5 on Joel's computer. Acrobat no longer worked because there were problems installing Acrobat 8 Pro on his computer and I didn't get a chance to resolve it. PageMaker had the problem described in Adobe Knowledgebase document 328519 ("Cannot find PageMaker's registry settings") ever since I demoted his account from Power Users to Limited User status. I had resolved this previously on September 9, 2005 by giving his account Power User status since solution #3 -- the registry hack -- did not work for me at the time. This time I dug deeper in the registry (search for certain keys with "PageMaker" and modify the permissions) and now it works -- PageMaker can run when logged in with a limited user account. Finished apps training for Alyssa. Around noon today I began having sharp pain in the center of my lower back. There was no injury -- it just came on suddenly without warning. I had to close my door and lie down on the floor for a few minutes. It was hard to do that without making the pain worse. After about 10 minutes I got up, still in pain, and did some quick searches on Google. No pain in the legs -- a good sign. I still had pain 30 minutes after the initial onset, so I made a decision to go home and lie in bed. Canceled appointments, checked in with James who had a laptop setup scheduled for tomorrow, checked in with Lucia who had only minutes ago scheduled a meeting with a student on my calendar for this afternoon. I'll stay home tomorrow, rest through the weekend, and see how I feel on Monday. Home. Slept until about 5:30 PM. Made turkey burgers by myself for dinner. Patrick called from Aaron's place, and Aaron -- "the queen of back pain" -- gave me advice. HTML e-mail work for Cindy. I noticed something strange about certain keyboard shortcuts in IE7 today. The regular menus from IE6 are no longer visible, but they are not entirely gone. If you press the Alt key, they reappear. However, Alt+F will no longer open the File menu as it did in IE6. To open the file menu, you must now press the Alt key then let go of the Alt key then press the F key. This is annoying for three reasons: (a) it's a change in behavior over IE6 so I must learn a new behavior, (b) Alt+F doesn't do anything else in IE7 (so there's no obvious reason why the behavior had to change), and (c) the new behavior is slower than the old behavior. Lately I've also been very frustrated with trying to get DVDRW media to burn properly in both Windows XP and OS 10.4.8. I can't recall the exact error messages, but one says that it marked the entire disc as read only due to errors (Windows XP, Nero) and another in OS X says please discard the disc and use another one -- on more than one kind of disc. I'm buying what I believe to be high quality discs, but it doesn't seem to matter -- I still encounter errors. Over the past few years I've been increasingly feeling that local storage is growing less and less reliable, particularly since hard drive manufacturers today don't warrant consumer-level hard drives for more than 1 or 2 years when it used to be a lot more. Actually, ZDNet UK reported last week that Seagate is planning to restore 5-year consumer drive warranties in March 2007 (this after xbitlabs reported on July 26, 2004 that Seagate was planning to restore 5-year consumer drive warranties as of June 1, 2004?), so there seems to be a bit of seesawing going on in the industry. Iomega, as an example, has had a history of providing popular and innovative data storage solutions but its solutions, in my experience, are not always reliable when you need them to be. Let's say we have computers which use no hard drives -- only solid-state storage to boot a Web OS (e.g., a modified and "embedded" OS X?) -- and all other data is stored on networks. The people who make the OS would then be in a much better position to not simply provide "backup solutions" but rather to provide a level of robustness in personal computing which likely has never existed before. We shouldn't have "backup solutions" -- we should have computing environments which don't fail. The existence of a backup solution implies an inherent problem -- that your computing environment is not robust. Yes, hard drives fail, but people don't care that a hard drive failed, they care that data was lost. When your hard drives are in a RAID and maintained by professionals, data isn't lost, but this doesn't happen today in every home with a computer. How much would people pay for security like that? What if Google is planning to give that away for free? Imagine if you never had to worry about backing up your data and that you could revert to any previously saved version of a document at any time and that everything you touch is stored forever and that even after a devastating natural disaster you could still retrieve everything? If we presume the OS and its applications have been sufficiently designed to be reliable, the weak links then become the network connection and the hardware. However, we might eventually get to a point where it becomes inexpensive to build robustness even in personal computer hardware or network connections. For example, if you have multiple displays and one fails, there's no reason the OS can't detect the failure and automatically take the appropriate actions (e.g., move windows from that display to other displays, prevent the cursor from entering the failed display, etc.). Or if you have only one display, and that display fails, the OS could announce through a computer-generated voice what had happened and announce your options for continuing your work. ("Press 1 to save all documents and shut down the computer...") Let's say you have the whole kit: Web OS, network storage, redundant network connections and smarter hardware -- let all of that mature for, say, 10 or 20 years, and then maybe we humans will have finally gotten personal computing right in terms of reliability. |
| Fri 19 |
|
| Sat 20 |
|
| Sun 21 |
|
| Mon 22 |
Morning run: 6 minutes. Pre-breakfast at home: yogurt. My favorite breakfast at the cafeteria. Java 5 Update 10 installation for me and Joel. HTML e-mail work for Cindy. Updated listserv for student DS. Took a CDWG web survey. New news for students. Delivered laptop to Carol in a meeting. Resolved a printing problem for Shannon: form fields in Word 2003 appeared correctly on screen but did not appear upon printing. Problem happened when printing to PDF as well. Resolution: In Word, select File > Page Setup > Paper > Print Options and change certain items. (I didn't figure out exactly which checkboxes fix the problem -- I kinda turned on a bunch, printed to PDF to test, turned off some, printed to PDF to test, and so forth until I got it right.) New homepage news for Susie. Enabled wireless for Chris. Met with student QT about "Windows Message: The system is not fully installed. Please run setup again. (OK)" Did a second-R repair with the Windows XP SP2 setup disc she had. UCSF logo distribution for Frank M. Computer virus removal for student JP using SAV32CLI. LGBTI visibility committee meeting with Kevin and others. I felt I wasn't very effective at this meeting, which is trying to increase visibility of LGBT and I people at UCSF. I came up with unfocused and inarticulate ideas, and I think I said transvestite when I meant transgender -- oops, how embarrassing. Joel should be on this committee instead of me. Recordings policy work for the student computing committee. I didn't have much time for lunch today, and so I ate packaged sushi to go from the cafeteria which was pretty awful just like I expected. Dinner at home with Patrick: leftovers. Drove back to work to pick up large packages which I had shipped to work. Home. Installed Acrobat 8 Pro. Lately I've been reading a free PDF from MailChimp called Designing, Coding & Delivering HTML Email (2nd Edition) and it is easily the best how to I've ever read for creating HTML e-mail. Even when I thought I was doing everything right, after reading it I realized I was still doing many things wrong. Also lately I've been finding that if I print something out there's a much greater chance that I'll read it, either on the bus, or while in the living room chair or on the sofa, or on the can. So much for digital paper, handheld readers, mostly mythical instant-on electronic tablets and lots of other devices people predicted 1, 5, 10, 20, and 30 years ago we'd all be using today to read text. The only thing that doesn't seem right is that MailChimp's website claims that Microsoft Outlook cannot sent multipart MIME, but I believe that is incorrect -- that Outlook 2003 can -- and I have not yet confirmed it other than what I saw in my own testing. My testing showed that sending HTML e-mail from Outlook 2003 sends as multipart MIME and that it also automatically includes a text-only version of your HTML e-mail as the text-only portion of the multipart MIME message. I put some things for sale online. Unpacked the shipment I received today -- a hamper and some after-Christmas sale items from Pottery Barn. The hamper is a little lopsided, but I think we can fix it with felt feet or something like that. It would be too troublesome to return it because it's so large. Patrick has had a nasty cough since last Thursday after drinking cheap wine with Aaron. Not sure if it's the wine that did it, but it sure is convenient to blame it on bad wine. |
| Tue 23 |
Usual oatmeal breakfast. Student computing committee meeting with Bruce. Web development with student AC. Recordings policy -- sent to JK. Ordered a new monitor for Joel. New news for students. Research for daylight saving time 2007 issues. Linkchecking. Installation of DST2007 files. Manual PharmAdMIT backup. Home. Drove to Mom Ryan's for dinner: Shake and Bake chicken boob, corn off the cob, farfalle in a very light cream sauce, dutch crunch bread and faux butter. Dessert: dulce de leche ice cream. Afterwards we watched a little of American Idol on TV with her. To bed early. |
| Wed 24 |
Breakfast on the run: grapes. Walked up to campus with some pharmacy students including CA. Listserv setup for Kendra, Lucia, and Helene. Documents review for Cindy. Set up job posting e-mail template for Cindy. Student computing committee work: EDUCAUSE survey. Five web edits for Cindy. Installed Audition 1.0. Noise reduction and podcast preparation. Ordered computer supplies. Fixed Chris's new laptop so that he can control power options even as a limited user. Filed for reimbursement. Met briefly with students JN and QT. Time zone updates for nearly all office computers. I learned from Rebecca a couple of weeks ago that there's a Year-2000-esque issue coming up in March because the United States government changed when daylight saving time is to begin. Instead of it starting on the first Sunday in April, it's now going to start on the second Sunday in March. Any electronic equipment, operating systems, and software that hasn't been updated might handle this time change improperly. Patches for lots of software already exist -- just search Google on daylight saving time 2007. Today my Vista computer would not wake properly from hibernation. Or rather, the display (a Samsung SyncMaster 940T) wouldn't wake up. Manual backups for PharmAdMIT. Made a copy of my Xubuntu 6.06 desktop cdrom. I missed Dane's OS X imaging class, to which I really wanted to go -- maybe next time. Lunch: panda bowl from Panda Express with chow mein, vegetables, and mushrooms with chicken. A corny dinner at home with Patrick: organic soft corn tacos, corn chips, corn on the cob. Dessert: leftover coconut cream pie. Watched Heroes episode 12. Early to bed. |
| Thu 25 |
|
| Fri 26 |
Morning run: 10 minutes. Usual oatmeal breakfast. Resolved the problem in which the message: "Microsoft Visual Basic -- Compile error in hidden module: DistMon (OK) (Help)" appeared when starting or closing Excel 2003 by logging in as administrator and moving the file called PDFMaker (no filename extension) to a different folder. Student database project. Helped Scott most of the day with admissions interviews. Today we did 50 interviews, and Scott's organization made the event run very smoothly -- I was impressed. Many first-year students stopped by to say hello and were disappointed that we didn't have the chat room this year because everything was more structured this year getting students through the day's different sessions. I stopped at the hospital gift shop. Home. Weight training: plank. Yoga: downward facing dog, standing forward bend. Dinner at home with Patrick: tortellini in marinara with grilled chicken breast. |
| Sat 27 |
|
| Sun 28 |
Woke up too early. Read in bed for a bit. Back to sleep. Slept in. Showered. Usual oatmeal breakfast. Worked on Corinna's website most of today -- browser testing. Lunch: ramen with mushrooms, baby bok choy, shrimp, wontons, tomatoes, corn. Dinner at home with Patrick: spaghetti with sausage in marinara sauce. Dessert: coffee frozen yogurt. Found an old sheet of paper with notes on it from May 10, 2006, so I backfilled that journal entry with the data (who ate what at Panya, some additional notes). Started using Office 2007 today. Of all the Office apps, Outlook is the one I use the most. I'll give it a few weeks to let it sink in. Chatted online with Drew. |
| Mon 29 |
Morning run: 10 minutes. Usual oatmeal breakfast. Made a welcome back sign for Joel. Met with Susie, we began creating a job description for a new hire. Goyan image work for Susie and Cynthia H. Listserv review for Chris. Anti-virus and anti-spyware configuration troubleshooting for student JN. Lunch: Subway sandwich. Helped Lucia with questions about Outlook and our spam firewall. Podcast work: prepped images, created new web page, dropped in images and a Quicktime control onto the web page, added links and text, set up local navigation. PHPM requirements updates for Cindy. OS X updates. Linkchecking. Troubleshot windows hang with blue screen (but not BSOD) upon morning arrival for Scott and Lucia, dug through event viewer. Snacks during the day: pretzel sticks, an orange, Annie's cheddar bunnies. Dinner at home with Patrick: pig tri-tips. Installed time zone (daylight savings time) fixes for home computers. |
| Tue 30 |
|
| Wed 31 |
Morning run: 15 minutes. Edited my journal entry of January 30, 2006 because in rereading it today I realized it was unclear about the LC50 monitor -- as written it made it seem as if the Panasonic LC50 did not sleep properly, but it does. I still am mostly dissatisfied with the Dell 2005FPW monitor -- there was another issue with the driver that I could not recall exactly and which I hadn't mentioned in that journal entry. The driver is essentially very difficult to install -- the files you need weren't provided on the cdrom included with my monitor, and I honestly can't recall where I got mine but I am pretty sure it wasn't on the cd. Windows XP does not easily detect the monitor even when searching for drivers online, so installing it is not easy. Indeed, the problem I mentioned a year ago about the poor design of the placement of the lock connection point has made itself evident -- occasionally now when I touch the monitor cable the entire screen turns a bright cast of yellow and if I wiggle (or even simply touch) the cable where it is connected to the monitor then the screen returns to normal. This is either a cable failure or the VGA connector on the monitor has worked loose from its connection inside, and my bet is the latter due to what I mentioned a year ago. I'll be sticking with Samsung monitors from now on. I've had problems with Samsung monitors in the past, but they are not the kinds of problems due to poor design and engineering as with the Dell 2005FPW. Today I had to look up what keys people press to access accesskey shortcuts on web pages viewed in Firefox 2.0.0.1 in OS X and was pleasantly surprised to learn that it's simply Ctrl+accesskey. This is better than Firefox 2.0.0.1 in Windows because it's one less key. Windows now uses Alt+Shift+accesskey. This does not mean that keyboard shortcuts are better in everything in OS X. I think I've said it before, but it is worth repeating -- even Xubuntu has better system-level keyboard shortcuts than OS X which is far more advanced in functionality and engineering than Xubuntu in perhaps nearly every other way. Windows 3.1 had better system-level keyboard shortcuts than OS X (remember C:\ONGRTLNS.W95?). Also, I think a Firefox 2.0 for Windows bug regarding accesskeys fail to work when the accesskeys happen to be numbers seems to be resolved in 2.0.0.1, but I haven't bothered to look it up to confirm. Usual oatmeal breakfast. Spy Sweeper spot checks -- Rob and his staff noticed that our enterprise version of Webroot Spy Sweeper is not updating automatically as we expect, so I did a spot check to determine which of our computers were and weren't updating. Of 11 computers, 3 were not autoupdating properly. This problem can be resolved by uninstalling and reinstalling using the latest installer, but we're going to see if OAAIS can force the problem on the server end and push the updates out somehow. Student computing committee wiki work (electronic calendaring). Jobs listserv updates for Joel. Preview session web page closure for Joel. Chatted briefly with Valerie about SF Micro and computer support provided by OAAIS. Followup with Chris about PHPM reqs and terminology. Student database work: with help from Peter Laursen, I resolved a problem I had with SQLyog involving more rows than expected updating because I was using TEXT data types with a table that had no primary key. Peter's response was speedy and efficient -- this Webyog forum experience was a very pleasant and useful one, I thought. I need to find one student's SAA ID and then I think the data will be complete. Next step: set up mirroring and get the live site working. Steaven is back, has really beautiful and shiny new glasses, and helped us stuff folders for interviews coming up. I did a brief demo of Windows Vista for Steaven and Scott. The computer I installed it on has only 512 MB of RAM which really isn't enough for Vista. It would use virtual memory, but it was often unbearably slow. Lunch with Joel: he brought his lunch and I had Panda Express. We watched funny things on YouTube. Fixed a printer jam problem for Alyssa by opening and closing doors and trays on the printer. Fixed a printing problem for Chris by unplugging and replugging the USB cable from and into the docking station. Installed Office 2007 Pro Plus on my computer at work. Susie needed some info from me, so I typed it up and sent it to her. Manual PharmAdMIT backups. Dinner at home with Patrick: quesaladas, corn chips, black beans. We watched Heroes episode 13 (The Fix). I figured out I can make it run full screen by dropping the monitor resolution down a bit. At the higher resolution, it was too jerky. We used my primary computer because I couldn't figure out how to make Firefox 2.0.0.1 go full screen in OS X. (F11 doesn't do what I want, Full Screen doesn't appear under the View menu, clicking the green plus sign doesn't do what I want.) Worked on Corinna's first review draft. |












