Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Last post of 2009 (electronic circuit knowledge)

An overseas student just contacted me asking for use of components in electronic circuits. He is particularly interested in troubleshooting electronics (transistor level or integrated circuits). It is hard to answer such a general request because the knowledge of this is learned by being in situations where a particular goal or fault is involved. The student then has to reason out what is happening and correct the problem.
CMOS circuit level design
One of the requirements for this is tool knowledge (how to use an oscilloscope, multimeter, bred board for example).

By learning this, the student can reason on what is happening. That way the situation can be diagnosed until the whole thing works.

Other topics required would be "safety with live circuits, how components behave, how to take measurements of voltage, current, frequency and other parameters.

Last but not least is safety when dealing with electrical systems. No technician can qualify if his teacher thinks he is a risk to himself or others.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

The blog made it through

It's been an interesting start for the blog. It involved a bit of everything this year (getting started, updating stories and issues, renewing domain(s) and working for success for both blog and website (http://modecideas.com)

Now that both are started, all you watchers might want to make suggestions about the direction and new topics you would like to know/talk about.
In the meantime I wish you all well and hope you are raring to go in the coming year.

Monday, December 28, 2009

How are air travellers screened?

Based on recent incidents on regular passenger flights and concerns over militant attacks, measures are being taken to screen and identify dangerous passengers.

An alleged attempt by a passenger to blow up a transatlantic flight has thrown a fresh spotlight on air security. What measures are being taken to screen air travelers?

PASSPORT AND VISA CHECKS

The UK is reintroducing passport and visa checks for all non-EU citizens entering and leaving the UK, as part of a wider crackdown on illegal immigration and terrorism.

More here:How are air travelers screened for security?

Thursday, December 24, 2009

HP camera 'can't see' black faces


A YouTube video suggesting that face recognition cameras installed in HP laptops cannot detect black faces has had over one million views.
More here:HP camera 'can't see' black faces

What Happened to the Traditional Christmas?

“Christmas was an enjoyable time for us children,” says Rita, looking back to the 1930’s. “Everybody went to church, where we sang our favorite hymns. When we came home, Mother cooked a turkey, and we had Christmas pudding and cream. We sincerely believed it was Jesus’ birthday, his day. But things have changed. The only thing many children seem to think about now is Father Christmas coming to bring presents.”
By Awake! correspondent in Britain
OVER the years, the celebration of Christmas has changed in many ways—and not just in recent times. Even in 1836, English author Charles Dickens said: “There are people who will tell you that Christmas is not to them what it used to be.”
Perhaps surprising to some, Christmas has not always been a popular event. In the 19th century, when Dickens wrote, Christmas had diminished in popularity. Most British newspapers ignored it during the early part of that century.
Dickens and his older American counterpart, Washington Irving, made an effort to idealize Christmas. Why? Not solely to restore old traditions but also, at least as far as Dickens was concerned, to alert readers to the harsh realities of life for the underprivileged and thus to better their condition.
19th-Century Realities
While the industrial revolution brought prosperity to some, it also resulted in slums, squalor, and sweated labor. “Every great town has one or more slums,” wrote Friedrich Engels in 1844, “where the working class is crowded together . . . , removed from the sight of the happier classes.”
Britain’s Factory Act of 1825, which only concerned cotton mills, stated that no person should work in a cotton mill for more than 12 hours a weekday or 9 hours on a Saturday. In 1846, historian Thomas Macaulay blamed such intense labor for “stunting the growth of the mind, leaving no time for healthful exercise, no time for intellectual culture.”
A revival of Christmas festivities took place in the midst of such 19th-century social and moral problems.
Dickens and Christmas
Charles Dickens led in arousing social conscience to the problems of the poor. In his classic novel A Christmas Carol, published in 1843, Dickens skillfully employed his knowledge of Christmas traditions to achieve his end.
A Christmas Carol was an immediate success, and thousands of copies were sold. The following year, nine London theaters staged dramatized versions of the tale. On Christmas Eve 1867, Dickens presented a reading of it in the United States at Boston, Massachusetts. In attendance was a Mr. Fairbanks, a factory owner from Vermont, who said to his wife: “I feel that after listening to Mr. Dickens’s reading of A Christmas Carol tonight I should break the custom we have hitherto observed of opening the works on Christmas Day.” He was true to his word. The following year he added the tradition of giving a turkey to his employees at Christmastime.
Christmas Commercialized
Charitable handouts became commonplace during the Christmas season, ranging from charitable trusts dispensing coal to poor widows to village squires making gifts of money and food. Christmas soon became, in theory, the opportunity for all classes to meet in social harmony. Allowing the divisions between the rich and the poor to become deliberately blurred at this time of year salved many consciences.
A number of festive traditions were either revived or created. For example, the first Christmas cards appeared in 1843, and as printing became cheaper, the market prospered. Christmas trees, a much older tradition, also greatly increased in popularity after Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria, introduced the German manner of decoration, employing tinsel, ornaments, and candles.
The commercial promotion of Christmas was gaining momentum. Today, a little over a century later, Christmas has become so commercialized that there is public outcry over it. This raises the question: What was Christmas like originally?
Origins of Christmas
Providing historical background, The Chicago Tribune just last December noted in a front-page story: “Ironically, the holiday that Christians now complain is being co-opted by commercialism traces its roots to a pagan festival that was taken over by Christianity.
“The first reported observance of Christmas as the birth of Jesus Christ was more than 300 years after the event. In the 4th Century, Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire, and, scholars believe, Christians set Jesus’ birthdate at Dec. 25 to coincide with existent celebrating by non-Christians.
“‘Rather than battle against the pagan holidays, they decided to join them and try to replace them,’ said University of Utah professor Russell Belk . . . ‘The pagan holidays replaced by Christianity were the Roman celebrations of Saturnalia—which were carnivalesque celebrations with gift-giving—and later the Yule celebrations in England and Germany that celebrated the winter solstice,’ Belk said.
“Christmas has gained and slipped in popularity over the centuries. It was banned for a time in England and America by Puritans who objected to the frivolity associated with it. But toward the mid-1800s, Belk said, ‘Christmas was in trouble, waning in popularity.’ He said religious leaders welcomed an injection of commerce, via gift-giving and Santa Claus, to revive the holiday.
“That revival, Belk said, was credited largely to English author Charles Dickens, whose 1843 ‘A Christmas Carol’ showed a reformed Scrooge who became a generous giver.”
What About Christmas Customs?
Dickens is said to have “enjoyed all the attendant paraphernalia of Christmas.” But from where did the paraphernalia come?
Providing interesting insights into this matter, New York Newsday of December 22, 1992, quoted John Mosley, who wrote the book The Christmas Star: “‘The early church leaders didn’t celebrate Christmas in December specifically to celebrate the birth of Christ,’ [Mosley] said. ‘It was their way of dealing with the winter solstice,’ the turning point of winter, when the sun stops its drift to the south and heads north again, bringing new light.
“Evidence for this is seen in the symbols of Christmas, Mosley said. Most obvious is the use of green plants, which symbolize life in a time of darkness and cold. ‘The most obvious green plant is the Christmas tree,’ he said. ‘And the northern Europeans celebrated the solstice in the forest; they worshiped trees. So the Christmas tree is really a throwback to tree worship in prehistoric times.’
“Also, Mosley said, ‘What do you put on the trees? Lights. Light recalls the Sun and symbolizes the Sun. It’s for the rebirth of the Sun and the return of light after the solstice. The main things involved in solstice celebrations everywhere are light and green plants.
“Dec. 25, he added, ‘was also the original date of the winter solstice, and many of the things we do now, and which we think are relatively modern Christmas customs, really trace their origins to the solstice celebrations.”
Music also characterizes Christmas celebrations. Thus, it is not surprising that the Roman festival of Saturnalia was renowned for its feasting and merrymaking, including dancing and singing. That the modern Christmas owes much to the ancient Saturnalia, scholars no longer dispute.
Deep Misgivings
England’s Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. George Carey, complained about the “Victorian, Charles Dickens Christmas.” The reason? “I am concerned in case our children are affected by the commercialism,” he said.
According to the newspaper The Scotsman, Anglican bishop David Jenkins believes that Christmas commercialism is driving people to the point of nervous breakdown. “We worship greed and Christmas becomes the feast of greed and folly,” he said, adding: “Ordinary persons are made miserable by their credit card debts. . . . There is increasing evidence that after Christmas people get into despair and have family rows. It is increasingly causing more trouble than it is worth.”
The Church Times of England aptly summed up the problem of Christmas: “We need to be liberated from the great bacchanalian orgy we have allowed it to become!”
What to Do About It
You can recognize Christmas for what it is, a pagan celebration that falsely parades as the birthday of Jesus, and have nothing to do with it. That is what Rita did, the woman mentioned at the outset. She became one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and she is now united with more than 4,500,000 fellow Witnesses, who shun Christmas completely.
Yet, it is not always easy to take a course that differs from that of the majority. (Compare Matthew 7:13, 14.) The Church Times acknowledged: “It takes a brave man, woman or family to opt out of a festival that is thrust upon us so aggressively by our peers.”
Many who have made the decision to “opt out” agree. But they also know that a deep love of truth has given them both the incentive and the strength to take and maintain that stand. The same can be true of you—if that is your desire.
[Box on page 17]
Did you know these facts?
* Jesus was not born on December 25.
* Shepherds in Israel had their sheep under cover in the depths of winter and not in the fields at night.
* The ‘wise men’ were in fact Magi, astrologers, and visited Jesus when he was a young child, not a baby.
* Nowhere does the Bible say that Christians are to celebrate the birth of Jesus. But there is an express command to commemorate his death.

Why Witnesses Don’t Celebrate
The Witness, the official newspaper of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Dubuque, Iowa, U.S.A., presented the following question in its feature “Question Corner.”
“My wife has asked my 10 children to help celebrate my 80th birthday.
“However, two of the children are Jehovah’s Witnesses and said they do not celebrate birthdays because they live their lives closely following the example that Jesus left us and according to the Bible.
“They say that neither Jesus nor any early Christians celebrated birthdays. It was a pagan tradition and one that Christians would have nothing to do with. It was viewed as a pagan tradition at the time of Christ and is to be viewed the same way today.”
Priest John Dietzen answered the question: “I know this is hurtful for you, but the information you give is correct. Among numerous differences in belief and practices between Jehovah’s Witnesses and other Christian denominations is this one.
“Consistent with this belief, their members do not even celebrate Christmas, partly because it celebrates the birthday of Jesus and also because the date of Christmas was established, apparently in the fourth century on the day of the winter solstice (according to the old Julian calendar), which was before then a great pagan feast.”

Santa Claus: Thomas Nast/Dover Publications, Inc. 1978
Tree and stockings: Old-Fashioned Christmas Illustrations/Dover Publications, Inc
Source: Awake 1993 December 22 16-19

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Ban on sales of Microsoft Word upheld

Microsoft has failed in its attempt to dismiss a court case that would stop it selling Word.

The software giant appealed against a ruling which found it infringed a patent owned by Canadian company i4i.

With the failure of the appeal Microsoft must now pay i4i damages of $290m (£182m) and comply with an injunction ending the sales of some versions of Word.

The injunction is scheduled to go into effect on 11 January.

More here:Ban on sales of Microsoft Word upheld

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

News:Firefox for mobile 'days away' from launch

By Jonathan Fildes
Technology reporter, BBC News
The first mobile phone version of the popular web browser Firefox is "days away" from launch, the head of the project has told the BBC.

The browser, codenamed Fennec, will initially be available for Nokia's N900 phone, followed by other handsets.

It is currently going through final testing and could be released before the end of the year, said Jay Sullivan at Mozilla, the group behind Firefox.

The open-source browser will be able to synchronise with the desktop version.

More here: New Firefox

Monday, December 21, 2009

News:India survey says Facebook affects productivity

Indian firms are losing productivity because office staff spend too long on social networking sites, a survey says.

The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry (Assocham) says workers use Orkut, Facebook, Myspace and Linkedin for "romancing" and other purposes.

More here:Facebook affects productivity

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Taking miscreants to court

Every once in a while someone comes along who thinks he is above the law. When one of them turned up earlier this month and took his computer away without permission or payment it was the last straw for me.
Arrangements are under way to call him to account for his bad attitude.

He will be summoned to court when a date has been set. It may be interesting to find out just how immune he thinks he is.
Until then the rest of us can go forward as normal.

Have you ever had problems like these?

Friday, December 18, 2009

News:Fine for Google over French books

A Paris court has found Google guilty of copyright infringement in a ruling which could have ramifications for its plans to digitise the world's books.

The search giant must pay 300,000 euros (£266,000) in damages and interest to French publisher La Martiniere.

It was one of many to take Google to court for digitizing its books without explicit permission.

Google was also ordered to pay 10,000 euros a day until it removes extracts of the books from its database. more here

Footnote:My own novel was one of the books captured by google. The link to the real site is here:Return (by John Durham)

Part of it was made available on www.weread.com

No decrease in illegal downloading

This morning I read an article titled as above. It made me wonder what it will take to get through to those who just won't do what is right by law or conscience or for any other reason.

No decrease in illegal downloading, says BPI.

For the uninitiated, music files are available online in a number of places. Search engines quickly find specific artists or titles of interest where individuals can obtain copies (many of which are copyright protected).

As a technician, I have been asked to remove such files from home computers when their drives became so full there was no more space for the operating system to run properly!

How would you feel when asked to clean up the mess of a disobedient youngster while knowing that once the work is done, he will resume the same practice over again (if not restrained)?

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Did you protect your site yet?

After reading yesterday's article, you were likely concerned about who might attack your web pages. There is reason to be. If a dishonest person can hijack all or part of your site for spamming operations, you become part of the problem.

You may not even be aware of what happened because you don't receive copies of the stuff it sends out.

Do you want to be part of the problem or part of the solution? Look up project honeypot today, and put a spam trap on your web site!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Catch those spammers with your web site!

Some years ago I put a link on my site which helped track and identify spammers and their activities. It is called "Project Honeypot". By adding this link, attempts to abuse my site were detected and logged by the system. Today they announced Our 1 Billionth Spam Message".


Their main page is here:
Honeypot.org
If you have a website and are concerned about this problem, please consider placing a link on your site to catch these nasties so they can be identified and stopped!

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Look after your Windows CD

Earlier today I was asked to go to a neighbor's house to help fix his operating system problems. He has Windows XP home installed. After doing the physical maintainance on his files I asked for his CD to run a system file check.

In brief, this procedure is started by going to Start, Run then entering "SFC /SCANNOW". Windows then uses the CD to check windows system files on the hard drive. If it finds a damaged or missing one, it extracts a copy from the CD and replaces it.

It is an effective way to prevent your windows system from breaking down through lack of care and normal ongoing file read/write operations.

In this case, the owner couldn't find it and wasn't aware of its importance to his PC. While he searches it out, I'm taking time to remind everyone of the risk to your PC if this work is not done or you lose/damage your CD. It must be in good condition for files to be repaired properly. Scratches and scuff marks often render the files unreadable. If the CD is like this, you may have to have it polished (or replaced at considerable cost).

If your Windows system is not performing well, and you are sure it is not infected, then breakdown of the files is the most likely cause. SEE TO IT AT ONCE!

In like manner, the condition of file records (the system that stores and supplies your files each time they are needed), is prone to such wear and tear. This often involves decay of the 'foundation' on which your system works. So like a building, if the foundation crumbles, it falls!

Hopefully it is not that bad in your system.

You can usually fix it by going to "My Computer", right clicking the drive that needs attention, then going down to "properties" (on the drop down menu). There you can click the "tools" tab and click the "Check now" button.

After that, just leave it for as long as it needs to go over your file records and repair them.

If that still isn't enough, you may need a program like "Spinrite" to do detailed repairs of the file system. Note: You have to buy Spinrite separately from Windows. It is a low level physical file record scan and repair system that will do a methodical (possibly lengthy) check and repair of the file records and disk surface on your PC.

Once this is done, you should find it easier to do the other things needed.

Note: If the problem got this far in the first place, then not enough is being done to keep the PC in good condition up to now. These are valuable tips, so make wise use of them!

Friday, December 11, 2009

Updating web pages on http://modecideas.com

After the recent seminar on website development and the way it promotes your business, I decided to do updates on my site. The aim was to improve the impact of the pages to increase hit traffic and improve business inquiries. This morning I updated http://modecideas.com/index.html since it is the default page for the whole site. It seems to be on line now, so I'm looking forward to more inquiries from it and a bit more promotion from the improved format. Please chime in with comments and suggestions at any time!
Finally after looking over the layout I changed Tonia's comments to a cursive script font (as she would have written it). That should be enough changes for now!

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Web traffic seminar

Our local community regularly provides helpful seminars on all sorts of topics for small business people at the Upper Hutt Cosmopolitan Club. Tonight is one on getting web traffic to your site. I'm taking along copies of my 2 best traffic producing pages so others might get the idea and have more success. Wishing all you web site owners improved results!

Monday, December 7, 2009

ISP blocking

This morning I received a private message from a long time friend. He was having trouble getting his posting processed to the pchelpers list. There is nothing to suggest this person did anything wrong or even committed a minor infraction.

Instead it looks more like a general block imposed by his internet service provider to prevent list mail from being delivered!

This may yet be another example of what happens when an internet service provider endeavors to protect the security of its customers by banning mail from certain sources. What can email users do about it? In some cases they may use a different email address which won't be affected by this problem. In others the block covers an entire domain due to the unethical practices of a minority.

In such situations innocent victims may have to use an alternate email from a source that is still accepted by the system. This is one situation where it is necessary to adapt by having an alternative email source (one which has not been black listed because of the behavior of others).

Many of us are able to recall instances where our favourite ISP did something that forced us to make changes- to adapt to the changing conditions to keep the record clean!

I and various others have been affected at times simply as a side effect of the badly behaved people who enjoy making trouble for others.

Friday, December 4, 2009

News:Grid computing tunes tiny transistors for future chips

A vast network of computers is being harnessed to design components for the next generation of silicon chips.

Simulations of transistors smaller than 30 nanometres (billionths of a metre) are being run on the UK e-science grid, which links thousands of computers.

The results will help designers cope with the physical constraints that occur when working at such tiny scales.

About 20 years worth of processing time has been used by simulating hundreds of thousands of tiny transistors.


More here:Future chips

Thursday, December 3, 2009

News:Intel unveils 48-core cloud computing silicon chip

Intel has unveiled a prototype chip that packs 48 separate processing
cores on to a chunk of silicon the size of a postage stamp.

The Single-chip Cloud Computer (SCC), as it is known, contains 1.3
billion transistors, the tiny on-off switches that underpin chip technology.

Each processing core could, in theory, run a separate operating system.

More :here

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

News:Windows 7 'screen of death

Microsoft has confirmed that it is investigating a problem described as
the "black screen of death", which affects its latest operating system.

The error means that users of Windows 7 see a totally black screen after logging on to the system.

The firm said it was looking into reports that suggest its latest
security update, issued on 10 November, was the cause the problem.
more here:

more