So today I will watch Magnum P.I.. Specifically, Season 7, Espisode 6: Death and Taxes.
My brother was nice enough to tape it for me years ago.
12.13.2012
12.04.2012
Deoxit is the bomb
I think this may be my current favorite product ever in the history of the universe. I came across it while researching how to fix pots on old stereo receiver.
12.03.2012
The audio setup
So I've been trying to look at ways to get my iMac a little louder. I am using this machine as my primary entertainment device (amongst other things as they are sweet machines.) Full disclosure, I am a former skeptic who joined the black turtleneck mafia.
11.27.2012
Paying down the debt
Saw an interesting tweet today about paying down the deficit by getting rid of Alaska. We purchased Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million USD back in the 19th century. Surely it's appreciated.
Of course if we focused on the gas and oil in Alaska (approximately 35 billion barrels of oil and 137 trillion cubic feet of natural gas according to this) then the value jumps somewhat.
Right now, a barrel of oil sells for @$84. With 35 billion barrels, we would be looking at around $2.9 trillion in value.
Natural gas is a little more complicated as we have to convert the cubic feet to BTU's. One cubic foot equals 1,020 BTU and the current price is $3.77/BTU. So we wind up with $526 quadrillion in value.
Surprised that something out there actually dwarfs the real US deficit of around $86 trillion. This includes the unfunded liabilities for Social Security and Medicare - not the cooked books the government typically provides.
Of course if we focused on the gas and oil in Alaska (approximately 35 billion barrels of oil and 137 trillion cubic feet of natural gas according to this) then the value jumps somewhat.
Right now, a barrel of oil sells for @$84. With 35 billion barrels, we would be looking at around $2.9 trillion in value.
Natural gas is a little more complicated as we have to convert the cubic feet to BTU's. One cubic foot equals 1,020 BTU and the current price is $3.77/BTU. So we wind up with $526 quadrillion in value.
Surprised that something out there actually dwarfs the real US deficit of around $86 trillion. This includes the unfunded liabilities for Social Security and Medicare - not the cooked books the government typically provides.
11.13.2012
Very cool Mac trick
So with my iMac and Magic Mouse I can do a two finger swiper on the desktop from left to right and open up Dashboard. I've had two things there that I've really enjoyed - weather radar and a map of the earth showing where the sun is shining and where it's night - the grey line map as it is called. Apparently, it's related to Ham radio tech. Very cool.
Well these two widgets both broke and then I stumbled upon this link about rolling your own widgets for Mac. I decided to see if it worked on Mountain Lion and it turns out it does, but the technique is slightly different.
For example, I went to weather radar page that had my local radar and then somewhere on the page, I right clicked (or option click if you're so inclined) and brought up the context menu. There's an option called 'Open in Dashboard...' - you will want to click that. And then you click on the thing you want to add, in my cases this was the animated radar loop, and then click 'Add' in the bar at the top of the screen. That's it. Instant widget.
Earth View
Wunderground Radar Maps
Well these two widgets both broke and then I stumbled upon this link about rolling your own widgets for Mac. I decided to see if it worked on Mountain Lion and it turns out it does, but the technique is slightly different.
For example, I went to weather radar page that had my local radar and then somewhere on the page, I right clicked (or option click if you're so inclined) and brought up the context menu. There's an option called 'Open in Dashboard...' - you will want to click that. And then you click on the thing you want to add, in my cases this was the animated radar loop, and then click 'Add' in the bar at the top of the screen. That's it. Instant widget.
Earth View
Wunderground Radar Maps
11.02.2012
Lyman Street is Gone
I find this video amazing. Mantoloking is a small town in NJ that is a narrow strip of land between the Barnegat Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. I spent a few summers down there. One of the historical bits I found fascinating is that somebody once tried to cut a channel between the Ocean and the Bay there, it's so narrow. Well sand filled it up and eventually it took the Army Corp of Engineers to build the Point Pleasant Canal which, anybody who has gone out of it in a boat, knows the kind of force the water exerts. Riding a 20' power boat through there can be exhilarating.
Location:
Lyman St, Mantoloking, NJ 08738, USA
10.21.2012
Secret Agent and the Beastie Boys
I've had three Beastie Boys songs come on soma.fm's Secret Agent: Eugene's Lament, Electric Worm and Groove Holmes. Electric Worm was the trickiest to pick up on. But man, the Beastie's go off.
10.18.2012
Getting healthier...or at least trying to
Been feeling very rundown the last week or so owing quite a bit to the congestion I seem to be fighting in my sinus. Over the weekend I tried to sleep as much as possible but I ate like crap and felt the worse for it.
10.11.2012
The walk
It's been almost a year since I moved into the city. While the change has been awesome in terms of a more interesting environment, being in my own space and introducing my daughters to an experience they would not otherwise get, there is one area that I'm starting to get excited about.
9.21.2012
The migraine
Ugh, what a rough night. As I was going to bed, I felt the beginning of a migraine coming on. For a moment, I thought about getting up and taking some meds.
9.18.2012
Historical Fallacy
What bothers me most in a lot of articles is the broad brush an author will write with when setting up their main point. It's a natural tendency, one that I've succumbed to previously.
The Problem with Online Content Delivery
As TV moves from the airwaves (hey, I still have rabbit ears!) to pay TV to internet delivery of content it seems there will be some gaps.
9.17.2012
Long weekend
Alright, it wasn't that it was long, per se, so much as there were two nights of staying up late and watching the Venture Brothers with Kai and Allen. Up until 2 am Friday and Saturday night. And while I would love to say there was a ton of drinking - the fact is we all kind of took it easy.
9.14.2012
Media complicity
I don't care who you are, that's funny right there...
Only in Philly
Only in Philly can you get sued to put trash back in an abandoned lot.
Labels:
bureaucracy,
philly,
trash,
wtf
Playing with Watir and Watir-WebDriver
It's been a dream of mine for a while to set up a comprehensive testing solution for the product I work on at work. After yesterday, I feel like I may be on track for that dream.
Been playing with Watir (Web Application Testing in Ruby) for a while now but hit bumps repeatedly with frames and getting access to page content. You see, Watir facilitates writing scripts which can use a browser to access web page and do stuff with it. Pretty slick - when it works. But if you can't access certain content then you're SOL.
When I picked this up again, I saw there was Watir-WebDriver out there. It basically facilitates using selenium like code in testing. It seems like it has better support for accessing objects in web pages which is just what I needed.
Anywho, I picked it up and was able to clear a couple of hurdles fairly quickly which ultimately is how you judge any software you're working with. Pretty happy with the results. I want to bang out a handful of more tests and then possibly explore adding page objects to get things a little more abstracted and, hopefully, simplified.
Should be fun.
Been playing with Watir (Web Application Testing in Ruby) for a while now but hit bumps repeatedly with frames and getting access to page content. You see, Watir facilitates writing scripts which can use a browser to access web page and do stuff with it. Pretty slick - when it works. But if you can't access certain content then you're SOL.
When I picked this up again, I saw there was Watir-WebDriver out there. It basically facilitates using selenium like code in testing. It seems like it has better support for accessing objects in web pages which is just what I needed.
Anywho, I picked it up and was able to clear a couple of hurdles fairly quickly which ultimately is how you judge any software you're working with. Pretty happy with the results. I want to bang out a handful of more tests and then possibly explore adding page objects to get things a little more abstracted and, hopefully, simplified.
Should be fun.
Mobile post
Just trying out the iPhone app.
Location:
Center City West Philadelphia
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)