Imablog Perspectives of a Canadian in the Old/Deep/New/Geographic South: This is where I ramble on about nothing in particular and post a few nice pictures.

Posts from November 2003

Solar power

One thing I've always wondered is why people don't use more solar power. Especially in southern and equatorial regions where there's plenty of sunny days. There are week long stretches where there's not a cloud in the sky, and everything outside is baking in the sun. Everytime I look around, I see all this potential energy that could be converted and used. That's probably because I was going to be an astrophysicist before I switched to medical physics, so I know how much energy there is hitting the Earth in the form of sunlight.

Solar cells (also called photovoltaics in the industry) are thin and easily applied. Nowadays, solar cells are more efficient than they were a few years ago. You can put them anywhere. On the roof of your house, the top of your car, on your garage. Anywhere that gets sunlight.

They're brittle you say? Encase them in a clear plastic box. That'll protect them from getting pooped on by birds too.

They don't generate enough power? Who cares. So what if a bank of solar cells can't generate enough power to run your house. All you need is for it to generate power so you don't need to draw as much from the power grid. You still get lower energy costs. And if you can generate enough to run your house, then terrific!

Expensive? Sure, but in the long run, you'll be saving money.

Storage batteries? Only if you're generating more energy than you use. And even if you do, you could probably negotiate with your power utility to funnel the excess back into the grid for a credit on your power bill, lowering your power costs even more.

Solar power can even be used to heat water, giving your hot water heater a break.

The US needs to seriously look at alternative sources of energy, instead of digging for more oil or beating countries into submission to get theirs.. When I was in elementary school back in the 70s, energy conservation was the big message. We were always told to turn the lights off in empty rooms, walk instead of taking your car for short trips. Use public transportation. This was the time of the big oil crisis, OPEC embargoes and all that, although at the time I was too young to know or care about that stuff. The oil crisis is over, oil still remains a finite resouce, but consumption has skyrocketed.

Now, as I go around my daily routine, I see everybody driving big SUVs and trucks that get a few dozen miles per gallon of gas. I walk around downtown during the evening, and there are empty office buildings with all their lights on. People drive their cars down the block to the grocery store. Heck, in my apartment complex, people drive the hundred meters or so it takes to just get to the pool!

Now, I'm certainly not a tree hugging, hemp wearing rabid environmentalist. I don't think everyone should stop driving gas guzzling cars. I do recycle what I can. I drive my car to places where I can't walk to, but I don't carpool (athough I've thought about it). I'm just wishing people would be more responsible and forward thinking about their resource consumption.

I certainly don't think we're headed into a energy crisis. We have energy issues, definitely. Witness what happens every summer when energy usage jumps as people crank up their air conditioners and fans. Nothing emergent or catastrophic yet. It will happen eventually though, and sooner rather than later if nothing is done about it now.

Things to read and consider:
Energy Crisis: Chicken Little Speaks
Is There an Energy Crisis? at ABC News
The Coming Energy Crisis?
Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
How to Make a Solar Power Generator for Less Than $300
Solar Energy International
MrSolar.com, a place to buy stuff to 'solarize' your house.
Alternative Renewable Energy at Energy Conservation News and Resources

More Pumpkins

More pumpkins to enjoy. These ones are pretty cool and creative.

Found at The Right Half of My Brain.

What are these people looking for?

Browsing through my MT activity log, I notice some people searching my blog for some unusual items. Here's a small selection of some of the search words being entered.

dragonball
gundam (what's a gundam?)
jawn
milkshake
bling bling
grundy puffs
cheese monkey (huh?)
sphyncter (sic)
godzilla
neng
clitoris

Leaves me wondering what it was these people are looking for here, and how the heck they got the impression that it could be found here?

of course, now that I've listed all these words, it should only be a matter of time before my blog starts showing up on search engines, which will lead to more people coming here searching for strange things that will only show up here because I've posted about people searching for strange things.

On another note, MT-Blacklist seems to be working as expected weeding out comment spam here. I probably don't get nearly as much as other more visited sites, but it has blocked 4 attempts since I installed it about a week ago. Hooray!

Eudora 6.0's new SpamWatch and POPFile are also cutting down significantly the amount of spam my eyeballs get subjected to.

IoP Book Sale

If you're in the market for some physics related books, the Institute of Physics is having a huge book sale. Books are discounted up to 75%, so if they have a text you've been eyeing for a while, but have been putting off because it's too expensive, see if it's one the books on sale. The list of books sorted by title (which I'm browsing through now) is 18 pages long, so there are plenty of books to choose from. Lots of proceedings, lots of hardcore physics books, and a bunch of general interest books. The sale ends Dec 31, so go check it out!

More Blogshares

Hey, somebody over at Geek Rants bought shares in my blog!

So what happens if somebody comes along and snaps up a majority or all the shares in your blog? Do they own your blog? Does that give them decision making power over your blog or what you write in it? Do you have to have shareholder meetings?

What are people doing here?

My 'People Visited From' block (courtesy VisitorLocation) has been up for a little while now showing where the last 6 or 7 people have surfed in from since the last rebuild. Some of them are from pretty far away places: Australia, Iran, Peru, The Netherlands. Most are from the US. So it makes me wonder...how do people make their way here? How did they find this little blog of mine and what are they looking for that brings them here? I see a lot of Google and Yahoo! referrals in the logs. What do they think of what they find here? Not many of them leave comments, so they're all just silent visitors.

Saving Bandwidth

Just putting this here so I remember it when I get to work.
Saving Bandwidth
WebCompression.org

Bandwidth Conservation...it's not just for the bandwidth challenged.

Friday Five

It's been a couple of weeks since I did one. Here we go again...

1. What food do you like that most people hate?
Hmm, I'm not sure there are any. I love a really nicely roasted spaghetti squash with butter and salt. Do people hate spaghetti squash?

2. What food do you hate that most people love?
Onions. Do they count as a food?

3. What famous person, whom many people may find attractive, is most unappealing to you?
I think Janeane Garofalo is pretty good looking. Don't know how many others do.

4. What famous person, whom many people may find unappealing, do you find attractive?
Well, Pam Anderson does absolutely nothing for me.

5. What popular trend baffles you?
Reality TV. Why are these pseudo-reality shows so popular? Survivor, Bachelor ad nauseum, Real World, etc. Ugh, just give me some good escapist TV or sitcoms. That's why I watch TV anyway. When I want reality, I just watch the news.

Kicking Fedora's Wheels

With Redhat's recent decision to end support for Red Hat Linux in favour of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, I've decided to give the new Red Hat sponsored Fedora Project a try.

A few people around here have installed it already, and gave it favourable reviews. I've found a machine to install it on (might need to cannibalize a few other machines to get enough HD space and RAM), and am in the middle of downloading the 3 ISOs to burn onto CD. Now all I need is to find a place to put the computer I'm going to install on.

This should be an interesting adventure.

A new box to play with

Have a new Fedora box to play with. The only machine I could scrounge up to install it on was an old Dell Optiplex GX1, 400 MHz Pentium II with 128 MB and 4 GB hard drive. Not the fastest machine in the world, and probably a little underpowered, but it was the best one I could lay my hands on. Should be enough for me to see how it behaves.

Managed to shoehorn a fairly complete installation, although it only leaves me with about 600 MB of disk space to play in. I'll have to see about scavenging another hard drive to put into this box.

Installation was pretty simple, and similar to installing Redhat Linux 9. Boot off the CD, select the packages you want and let it go. Installation on this box took about 2 hours to install about 3 GB of stuff. Like I said, not the fastest machine around.

Too late to play with for today, so the fun will have to wait until Monday.

Matrix: Revolutions

Saw Matrix:Revolutions this afternoon. Reviews were lukewarm, and didn't seem to be all that well received from what I've read of peoples' comments on various boards, but I thought it was an excellent movie. I thought it was more in line with the first movie than Reloaded was. Plenty of action, some fabulous fight scenes, and very thought provoking. The ending reminded me of Star Trek: TMP. If you've got some time to kill, I think Philosophy and The Matrix has some interesting articles to read.

Can't wait to see it at the IMAX now.

Playing with Fedora

Spent some time this morning poking around inside the Fedora box I built on Friday. Overall, I'd say it's pretty similar to RedHat 9. Some of the software is newer (GCC 3.3.2, Perl 5.8.1 were the first ones I found). Apache and MySQL were a version behind, but since those just came out a couple of weeks ago, not unexpected.

Haven't really pushed it too hard yet, although since it's on an old 400 MHz PII, I can only push it so hard. It runs pretty well on the old box I stuffed it into. Web pages were served up pretty quickly. OpenOffice apps took a while to load, but ran fine. Seems stable enough. Now to read through some of the Fedora mailing list archives to see what interesting things people are discussing.

Blogshares

Hmm, the guy over at Geek Rants bought up all the remaining shares in my blog.

I wonder if this has any significance, other than boosting my blog share price. I wonder what I should do now...issue more shares? Have I been taken over? Oh what to do, what to do...

A pox on blog spammers

The masses are stirring, provoked by the likes of Adam Kalsey, Jeremy Wright and Jay Allen's MT Blacklist plugin.

Junk mail in my mailbox is already a PITA. Spam in my email is even more of a PITA. At least I have filters that trash most of it before I get to see it. But to have to deal with it in my blog is about the last straw.

So, if you blog with MovableType, make sure you have the latest version of MT-Blacklist installed. Declare your blog a spam-free zone and fight back against spammers.

I still want to shoot them with large cannons.

Remember

Lest We Forget Canada.com Remembrance Day CBC Remembrance Day Canadian Legion

11 AM, November 11, 1918

Today marks the 85th anniversary of the end of World War I, the Great War, the War to End All Wars.

In Flander's Fields

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

- Lt. Col. John McRae (1872-1918)

Canada Remembers the Korean War

Which Biological Molecule Am I?

Water
You are water. You're not really organic; you're
neither acidic nor basic, yet you're an acid
and a base at the same time. You're strong
willed and opinionated, but relaxed and ready
to flow. So while you often seem worthless,
without you, everything would just not work.
People should definitely drink more of you
every day.


Which Biological Molecule Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla

Found at GeekGrrl

More yummy chinese food

Went to another very yummy Chinese restaurant Friday night. Dragon Palace out on Daniel Island.

It's an unassuming place in a strip mall, but inside it's gorgeously decorated. The smells and tastes reminded me of eating at Chinese restaurants back home in Edmonton. Had Roasted duck with shitake mushrooms, steamed conch and beef chow mein. Very tasty food, not as warm as I would have liked, but still very tasty.

Saturday we went back for lunch. This time we tried the dim sum items on their menu. There aren't many of them sadly. We ordered shrimp dumplings, pork dumplings, little juicy pork buns (another dumpling variant), and the roast duck cold plate. It's not a traditional dim sum with carts wheeled around, but the food was pretty tasty.

Now all Charleston needs is a real Chinese restaurant with real dim sum service on Sundays.

Laying Low

Joint Commission is cruising through the hospital this week. Time for me to lay low and keep a low profile. Not that much of what I do will draw their attention, but the less of it I have to deal with, the better.

New Trucks

My wife has decided our next vehicle should be a Nissan Titan. She wants the crew cab version. It's a big monstrous truck with a big engine, big truck bed, big wheels, big everything. Made a quick trip to the local Morris Nissan to see if we could find out more info. They had the 2003 King Cab version, so we poked around it a bit to check it out. Definitely a big vehicle. Very nice and looks very comfy inside. Hate to think of what the gas mileage will be on the beast though.

'Tis the season

The endless loop of Christmas songs on the radio has begun. Started off my morning drive to work to the sounds Christmas music. Halfway through the second song, I had to change stations. Fortunately I have a very short drive to work. I'm just not ready for never-ending Christmas music yet. It's hard enough for me to get into the holiday spirit around here without snow and decently cold weather. I mean really, how can you feel Christmasy when you're still walking around in shorts and sandals?

Maybe I'll go get some bags of cotton batting and decorate my office to make it look like it snowed in there. It's too bad the thermostat only goes down to 60.

More Blogshares

It seems that to increase the price of your blog in Blogshares, you need to comment on blogs. On a lot of blogs. Blogs that are also in Blogshares. Or have people link to your blog. Blogshares only seems to care what's on the main index page of the blog, and with comments being transitory things, you need to do a lot of commenting. Which usually means a lot of blog reading. Now, I don't know about other people, but I work during the day, and have other things to do in the evening so my blog reading is usually a spare time thing. And I generally don't have much to say about to other bloggers in their comments.

And aside from search engines, I think I might have 2 or 3 regular readers (myself included), so I don't think too many people are linking to my blog. Not that I care that much.

So I guess my blog will be relegated to Blogshares mediocrity, and my blog valuation will remain at $1000, aside from occasional spikes when I find something interesting enough to comment on.

I guess it's a good thing there's no real money involved.

Farewell Voyager

APOD's got a pretty cool representation of what Voyager 1 is about to encounter at the edge of the solar system.

90 AU out, and moving at over 3 AU/year. That's over 448793612 km/year (278866864 miles/year) or 51197 km/h (31819 miles/h) or 14 km/s (8.8 miles/s). Now that's fast.

175 000 miles!

Finally reached 175 000 miles on my beater car last night. Yes, it took me almost 4 months to put 1000 miles on my car. Yes, it doesn't get driven much anymore. Basically all it does is take me the 10 mile round trip to and from work, with the occasional trip out to the mall or other shopping destinations. And only if my wife isn't with me. If she is, we have to take her car because she doesn't like riding in mine anymore. She's paranoid it's going to break down and leave us stranded on the road. But it still runs pretty smoothly, and seems pretty reliable. I'm pretty confident I can keep it going to 200 000. My wife might have other ideas though. Guess we'll see what happens.

Attention: JCAHO has left the building

Joint Commission survey is over, and I hear we scored pretty high with no Type 1 findings. This is a good thing. So we're good for another 3 years. Excellent.

Let the eating begin!

The eating season is upon us. Thanksgiving luncheons at work today (my dressing contribution is baking in the oven now), maybe another one tomorrow before heading off to my wife's parents house for Thanksgiving on Thursday. Ham, roasted turkey, smoked turkey, macaroni and cheese, dressing, pie, biscuits, collard greens (which I refuse to eat) and all the other yummy stuff.

Then it's off to Chicago for RSNA. That'll be 4 days of hotel living and restaurant eating. Looking forward to downing more than a few deep dish pizzas from Pizzeria Uno and Gino's East. Mmmm...deep dish pizza...mmmm.

And then back in time to start the Christmas baking. Stocking up on supplies to send out Christmas cookies again this year. We did fruitcakes a couple of years ago, which were surprisingly well received. I think it was the thorough soaking with rum we gave them. Making more than a 2 or 3 fruitcakes becomes rather expensive though. Last year we made spritzer cookies, which always seem to be popular. Butter, sugar and flour. That's pretty much all they are. It's hard to make them not taste good :) This year we'll be doing it again.

Once the cookies are done, it'll be time to start planning Christmas dinner. More turkey, ham and dressing. More mac and cheese and greens.

After that is New Year's dinner. Usually a little lighter fare. Leftovers from Christmas (if there are any left), maybe a ham, rice, a pot of black eye peas (which my wife's mom says bring good luck for the new year).

And then 10 months to rest up before starting it all over again.

Friday Five

It's been a while since I've done one, and since I was away on the 28th, I'll just do this one retroactively.

1. Do you like to shop? Why or why not?
I sort of enjoy shopping. Most of my shopping is very targeted. I usually know what I want/need, go in, buy it and get out.. Occasionally I'll just walk around and window shop. Mostly depends on how the crowds are.

2. What was the last thing you purchased?
Bought 3 DVDs (Matrix Reloaded, Bend it like Beckham, Drumline). It was a Blockbusters special: buy 2 previewed movies, get one free.

3. Do you prefer shopping online or at an actual store? Why?
I prefer to do most of my shopping online. No crowds to deal with. But some things I'll buy at the store, particularly if the price after shipping comes out about the same as the in-store price. Then it's just easier to go out the store and buy it.

4. Did you get an allowance as a child? How much was it?
Nope. Had a paper route though.

5. What was the last thing you regret purchasing?
Nothing in recent memory.

RSNA Day 1

It's day 1 of RSNA (well, actually day 2, but nothing much goes on on Saturday). Getting to McCormick Place is a lot easier now. There's this new McCormick Place Busway that runs along Lakeshore Drive and the Metra train tracks. No more dealing with traffic to get to McCormick Place. Once the bus finishes picking up people, it's a quick 10 minute ride to the conference.

Spent a little bit of time in the morning wandering through the poster exhibits. Found out about a new open source image processing toolkit from NLM. Something I'll have to check out for some stuff I want to do.

Ran into a couple of my colleagues from work and cruised through the technical (vendor) exhibits with them for a while.

Wireless computer access was a cool new thing at RSNA this year (might have been there last year, but I didn't go). So if you happened to have a wireless capable PDA or laptop, there was no more waiting in line to get onto the computer terminals. Sweet. I have to get one for next year.

Then at 11:30 it was off to the Chicago Hilton for some AAPM committee meetinsg. Those took up the rest of the afternoon.