April 2005

If you build it, they will come

Monday morning and time for cliches from sports movies. In any event the field of dreams is more a column of light in this case. On the way home from the rodeo yesterday evening we witnessed the flocking of the moths to the Luxor light beam. They were so numerous as to warrant speculation about whether they were moths, birds or bats drawn by the rich collection of insects. Turns out they are healthy moths fed on the wet winter Las Vegas has experienced.

Filibusters are wrong when we disagree

Recently I received an email from Senator John Ensign, (R- Nevada), in which he states "I believe the
use of the filibuster in approving or disapproving judicial nominees is unconstitutional. Please be assured we are looking at every option to stop this practice including legal action."

Interesting. It is worthwhile taking a look at where the tradition of filibustering judicial nominations originated. At least six judicial appointments by President Bill Clinton were held up with filibusters in the previous administration. Although the practice started with the Republicans in the Senate using filibusters to block nominations they found objectionable that is not a basis for determining its constitutionality or not.

Many of the pieces of propaganda on this matter suggest the Senate is somehow duty bound to vote using a simple majority on nominations. However, the founding fathers, in the Constitution left no such guidance. The Constitution says that the President makes appointments with the "advice and consent" of the Senate. It is notably silent on how the chamber is to arrive at its consent. Perhaps they will one-day choose a 90-vote super-super-majority. That, it seems, would be equally constitutional and would likely lead to many centrist appointments.

Are many centrists better than a mixture of extremists? A question for another day...

Miscalculation

The Washington Post has a story today confirming a memo laying out the perceived political benefits to be gained from the Senate's intervention in the Terri Schiavo case. After weeks of disclaiming political motives the memo puts the lie to the story.

Of course the polls on the subject suggest that the desired political outcome was an all-around miss. "This is an important moral issue and the pro-life base will be excited that the Senate is debating this important issue," the memo states. Polls taken a few days later suggest a majority of Evangelical Christians felt the Senate's action was wrong.

Playing with a new theme

I'm experimenting with a new theme that I really like so far. A few display quirks in Safari and I'll have to re-work a header graphic.

Update: Back to the old for a while as the new theme was missing tabs for little things like being able to edit pages.

Still no action on Medicare

A trust-manager friend of mine described a near crisis from a few years ago. It seems, with a flourishing economy and several years of balanced budgets America might be headed towards a debt-free future. You may remember those days when the progressive Democrat was in the White House. The concern was where would trust managers find high-quality well-backed debt when the United States Government stopped issuing Treasury Bills. It would be difficult to find a replacement for Treasury Bills that offered the same sort of security and guaranteed return.

Google Satellite Maps and American History

It seems that Apple once was forced to remove references to Groom Lake from its products. I wonder if Google will have to do the same with this map. Google has done a great job of adding satellite images to their mapping product. I wonder what the aliens will do now that their once secret landing spot is so readily visible? :-)

Don Park has another use for Google Maps, picking out bicycle routes.

Update: Some truly amazing images can be seen in looking at the history in this view of the history of atomic testing at the Nevada Test Site. Subsidence craters from many of the hundreds of underground nuclear tests conducted by the United States and United Kingdom are visible.

Setting up and running Qmail/Vpopmail on OS X

A place to keep some notes....

Guide to qmail, vpopmail and qmailadmin setup on FreeBSD

So I found a great page on setting qmail up on OS X.... with one problem... it destroyed the NetInfo database that keeps user information. Fortunately I was logged in as root and could use this procedure to recover.

1. "ls -l /var/backups" – this prints a list of everything in the backups directory. It should respond with something like:
  total 40
  -rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 19001 Aug 4 03:15 local.nidump
The date on the file (in this case "Aug 4 03:15") indicates when the backup was made. If it's not from a time when the computer was working right, or if the response doesn't list a file named "local.nidump" (e.g. if it simply gives you the localhost# prompt without printing anything first), you don't have an appropriate backup, and these instructions won't work for your situation. Sorry.

2. "cd /var/db/netinfo" – this gets us to the directory where the live NetInfo databases are kept.

Happy Anniversary

There is something great about having April 1st as the anniversary of employment in my current job. Today has proven to be just one computer calamity after another. Compound a systems that perform marginally and string it together with duct tape and low and behold there are sometimes train wrecks.

Battling the frustration I set out to grab a bite for lunch and learned that Rebel Subs the convenient not Subway shop across the street is no more. Drat. Having set my stomach on meatball sub I went for the banal meatball subs that Subway can churn out from any of their sub-approximating factories in storefronts across the country. 10% discount proclaims the sign out front. It doesn't say that is only if you don't get a "already discounted" meal. Oh and they don't take the sub-club cards and so on....

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