Programming Windows 95 (Microsoft Programming Series)
Life's Little Instruction Book: 511 suggestions, observations, and reminders on how to live a happy and rewarding life
Life's Little Instruction Book; Volume II
Portable Life 101: 179 Essential Lessons from the N Y Times Bestseller Life 101 : Everything We Wish We Had Learned About Life in School-But Didn't
Chicken Soup for the Soul: 101 Stories to Open the Heart and Rekindle the Spirit (Chicken Soup for the Soul)
Chill Factor: A Novel
See How They Run
Pagan Babies
Out of Sight
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Top 10 List of recent iTunes purchases from listening to Pandora:
- Dear Head on the Wall by Alejandro Escovedo
- Thanksgiving by Jason Anderson
- By Your Side by Coco Rosie
- The Search by Dolorean
- Another Lonely Day by Ben Harper
- All Will Be Well by The Gabe Dixon Band
- The Truth Comes Out by Corb Lund
- Hoquiam by Damien Jurado
- Sinnerman by Nina Simone
- It’s Good to Be in Love by Frou Frou
It’s great to be an American. It can never be denied that our government provides well for us. Each election we debate which areas need improvement, which areas should be left alone, and hopefully elect candidates who will achieve that agenda. And if not, well, we’ll get ‘em next election. There’ll always be critics and cynics, but even they would have to admit to more good things about our government than I could ever hope to list here, from the mundane (garbage, sewage, waste treatment) to the critical (food, clean water, health, safety, financial assistance) to the spectacular (snow removal, public television, air traffic control).
I’ve always loved how towns and cities build and maintain parks for no gain other than to give the citizenry space to relax or play a game. I’ll always support the construction of skate parks. I would never argue against the creation of more parks even if the last time I set foot on a skateboard, it was narrow and made of hard plastic with rubber wheels that would catch on every pebble or patch of sand. You shouldn’t have to be a boarder to get behind the idea of a park for kids to entertain themselves with physical activity. I also love that if you don’t like the particular parks in your town, you can just go over to a neighboring city and hang out in one of their parks instead.
In most areas of the country there’s even plenty of subsidized transportation to get you there. I just read somewhere that Boston was ranked #2 in the top list of cities that are accessible by foot. The Massachusetts Bay Transit system, the T, is a great example of what a government project should achieve. There are 5 different subway and streetcar lines (red, orange, green, blue, and silver), plus the commuter rail, buses (diesel, electric, or LNG), wheelchair vans, cars for the handicapped or elderly, and even boats.
Or if you prefer, there’s a massive, regulated hansom industry in Boston. That’s one thing I miss about living out here in the sticks: taxi availability. We can get on the commuter rail and be in Boston in about 30 minutes, but we can’t get a taxi cab to take us down the road to a St. Patrick’s Day party. But, I digress.
The government has been providing for us in many areas for a very long time. Unfortunately, it feels like all the big ideas, all the revolutionary government projects, all the greatest things about this country, were undertaken far too long ago. In simpler terms, what have you done for me lately?
I don’t mean to be glib, because it’s not something I take lightly, but where’s our space race? Where’s our Hoover Dam, Statue of Liberty, or Mount Rushmore? Where’s our Chicago’s World Fair? Where are the bold projects that lead the way? Particularly lacking is the government’s involvement in technology.
In the past thirty years, computers have gone from obscure thinking machines for mathematical functions to penetrating most aspect of our daily lives. A computer was probably involved somewhere along the way in the construction or delivery of everything we buy, wear, eat, use, or consume. My alarm clock has a computer in it.
With all this heavy reliance on computers for banking, commerce, communication, management, construction, or entertainment, I find it a little disturbing at how hands off the government has been. Instead of action and leadership, we get regulations and bureaucracy. Of course, the concept and implementation of the internet itself was the results of a government project through DARPA, but since that was over forty years ago, it can’t be considered recent. Where are the great new projects that show that the government recognizes it’s a digital world and some things need fixing?
A clear example of this lack of leadership is the continued presence of spam. Why isn’t anything being done about spam? The government has tried to deal with spam by passing nearly meaningless laws. Even when ledislators “get tough” on spam enforcement, it means that they’ve enacted measures to allow their constituents to do all the heavy lifting and sue some spammers for deceptive advertising or for not providing an opt-out. These laws are based on the ability of the citizens to track down the spammers, serve them with papers, get them to appear in civil court, and prove the case. Have these laws had any effect? Has your inbox noticed the difference? Mine sure hasn’t. I still get spam at work and home and that’s after the emails have passed through about 4 different spam and anti-virus filters.
Spam is nearly impossible to fight from the receiving end. And even if you do stop it from eventually getting to your inbox, that doesn’t mean it wasn’t sent. There could have been hundreds or thousands of routers, switches, and computers which had to carry the message all the way there only to be refused and then bounce the message back, most likely involving a different path than the way it came, involving even more equipment. Rejecting spam can take up twice as much bandwidth as having received it.
The worst part about spam is it never, ever stops. When I first setup the email server at work in about 1995, I got in the habit of reading the email logs. I remember right from the get-go, we regularly got email addressed to two usernames that didn’t exist at our company. Our company name is similar to those of many other companies that operate around the country, and clearly two people from one of these other companies with a different, but similar, URL got onto some kind of mailing list. Every year, these same two names appeared as the target of thousands of emails, even though a single message has never, ever been read - every single one was bounced or rejected. A few years ago we outsourced our email server and I don’t bother reading the logs, but I’m sure that if I did, I’d see the same two email addresses today.
Spammers don’t care if they ever hit their target. They’re just throwing crap at the wall and hoping something sticks. They’re just playing the percentages and since it doesn’t cost them anything to send the emails, those percentages can be pretty low and still equate to a fortune. Why isn’t the government making any real effort to stop it other than enacting regulatory laws that put the burden on the citizen? Can you imagine the outcry if every night there was a knock at every American’s front door with someone pitching a bottle of snake oil or a peek at some dirty pictures? Yet that’s exactly what happens to us regularly through email and its left up to every individual, company, or ISP to police the situation ourselves.
The U. S. Postal Service seems to me to be a prime governmental body to be involved in advancing the cause of email. With the competition that has sprung up in the way of package handling and the reduced volume due to online invoicing and bill paying, an excellent stream of revenue for the U. S. Postal Service would be to charge money to deliver an email in the same way that it charges to deliver a letter. In exchange for this fee, they could provide services like confidentiality, security, authentication, a confirmed receipt, and tracking information.
Another advantage with using the USPS is that tampering with the mail is a federal crime. So is using the mail for the commission of a crime. The same could be made true of USPS email. If some shyster spammer passed an email through the USPS, the weight of the federal government should come down on him. In the movie, Tom Cruise was only able to take down The Firm after he had gathered evidence of billing fraud and brought down the mighty hammer of the government due to the realization that the fraudulent invoices were sent through the US mail.
Chances are most spam would drop anyway even without the threat of felony prosecution. If a spammer had to pay money for every email sent, it could change the percentage game enough that spamming wouldn’t be such a lucrative business after all. At the very minimum, it would get spammers to care more about whether their emails were reaching an audience at all, let alone an interested one, and thus stop knocking at doors that weren’t being opened.
The USPS would also resolve another problem with email: the difficulty in changing email addresses or managing multiple addresses. You can now keep the same phone number when you change cell phone carriers, but if you change ISP’s, you’re SOL. I wouldn’t know where to begin if I ever left my job or cancelled my Verizon DSL. I’d have to plan for at least a month to hope to get half of my subscriptions, correspondence, newsletters, and registrations switched over to a new address, if it’s even possible at all.
There could be other advantages of having a central clearing house for email. Virus disinfection could be handled on a higher level than it is currently being handled through the “go-out-and-buy-whatever-package-you-think-will-work-update-it-regularly-never-open-any-attachments-and-pray-for-the-best” approach that stands now. It would also help if the virus could be traced back to the first registered citizen that released it to the internet so it could be stopped at the source.
Email is only one of the problems that I see as affecting us on the technological front. There are also serious problems with the patent office, the copyright system, open document standards, internet commerce, and allowing some very powerful corporations to have the power to dictate terms for the regular use of the systems on which our country’s computers are based. These are only the things I can pick off the top of my head, but each is ripe with problems, misguided intentions, and example of a laissez-faire attitude toward technological innovation. I don’t expect these or any of the other problems facing the industry to be corrected with the wave of a wand, but shouldn’t we expect that at least something be seriously attempted? Let’s build today’s equivalent of the NASA space program and stop pushing the burden onto the citizen.
“The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.”
George Bernard Shaw
Personal
I’ve often found that the best method for getting a life change to stick is to couple it with other, sometimes benign changes. You’ll be more apt to quit smoking if you also change your hairstyle, buy some new clothes, and start working out. Also, I’ve found that when you change something in one area of your life, you end up fixing other areas of your life. And, change is important. You have to constantly evolve, mature, grow to hope to experience even a fraction of life to its fullest. Some of the most profound changes in my life have occurred when I really shook things up: I moved out of my parents house, finally ended an on-again-off-again relationship, got a better job, all in the same summer - and what a wild summer it was.
Sometimes all you need is a little spark, just a simple change. So, here’s a few ideas of things you can change in your life that might kick-start some more important revisions.
1. Change cologne/perfume
Everytime I’ve switched to a new cologne, I’ve felt like a new man. I remember in Junior High School when I smartly splashed too much Polo over my Izod with the tucked-in-collar. Then there was the Drakkar Noir club-hopping summer. I recently switched to Nautica when I started back at the gym.
2. Change hairstyle/haircut
This is probably pretty good advice anyway. Hairstyles change each year, although some years the styles are so similiar it’s not easy to notice the subtle differences. But, there’s nothing worse than seeing someone with a hairstyle from two decades ago.
3. Change clothing/wardrobe
This is important whether you’re just updating an out-of-date wardrobe or getting clothes that fit. Of course when people lose weight, they go out and get new clothes to show off how much wieght they’ve lost, but they should also have fitting clothes when they gain weight. And don’t make the mistake of getting baggy, schlumpy clothes to hide yourself. Why add to the feelings of bulk?
4. Rearrange a room
After living in a room; bedroom, livingroom, bathroom, whatever, for a while you’ll usually discover that some things just aren’t right - like you keep banging your shin on the coffee table, or the sun is in your eyes in the morning. Or, you’ll just want a fresh room by moving the furniture, changing the curtains, or buying new bedding. Sheets don’t keep their crisp, cool feel after too many washes, bouncing around with jeans and sweatshirts. You should move the livingroom furnite at least every two years and the bedroom furniture every five.
5. Hang some new photos
A good idea is to change your desktop wallpaper with pictures of old friends, different times of your life, or the things you find the most important. It’s great to have new pictures of your kids to remind you of the reasons for all your hard work, and all the things you’ll continue to strive for. You can also move the photos around on your walls which can completely transform a room and call attention to important photographs that may have been overlooked for far too long.
"Human beings, by changing the inner attitudes of their minds, can change the outer aspects of their lives.”
by William James
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The Catcher in the Rye
by J. D. Salinger
Oh My God, Whatever, Etc. by
Ryan Adams on
Easy Tiger
Things You Say, But You Don’t Mean by Ryan Auffenberg on Climb
The Cost by
The Frames
The Reminder by
Feist
Let it Die by
Feist











