July 2005

Nikon D50

Killing some time in Chicago this evening I stopped in to look at the Nikon D50. It looks like it will be a great alternative to the more expensive D70. The body is smaller and the grip is smaller, slightly, than the D70 and quite a bit smaller than the D100 making it more accessible to folks with smaller hands.

Hotel Internet

For the second time in as many months the wireless internet in a Chicago hotel is less than advertised. In my sum total of a half-dozen hours attempting to use wireless internet at two different hotels in Chicago it has been down at least an hour. A pricey outage when they charge $300 a month for th eservice.

On the ohter hand the updated Treo is bringing this post from the Embassy Suites which does not see fit to have internet in their meeting rooms.

More on the Treo650

Well after a few hours of wrangling I did the Treo update last night. The big news is that as advertised it added dial-up networking so the phone can now be a bluetooth modem (which I haven't tested yet). The slowness problem is still there though. It is a bit more annoying now though. The screen comes up to 90% complete instantly and then the same delay plagues waiting to be able to use the phone. Humbug.

Back from Break

Its been three weeks since I have posted an update. I spent two of those weeks on "block leave". This was leave that we were all highly encouraged to take in light of the fact that our trip to the desert is not far away.

I spent my first week of block leave in Colorado. I had a great time. I saw many old friends and made a couple of new ones. Among other activities, I played with Chara and Roma, went mountain biking (see attached picture) and, of course, hit the bars in Old Town. My only regret about the week is that I did not get to see everyone I would have liked to have reconnected with in Colorado. Oh well, I will probably be back sometime in 2007.

I spent the second week of block leave in Tennessee. My friend Jay, who I have known since law school came out to visit. We spent our time driving between Chattanooga, Nashville, and Clarksville looking for the best bars and clubs and restaurants. Jay did a respectable job of keeping up with this soldier considering he's a bit out practice - what with being married and all.

I've been back in Clarksville for about a week now. It is always very hard for me to come back to Army life after taking leave. There is nothing like spending a few weeks as a carefree civilian to make me miss parts of the life I gave up when I enlisted way back in November, 2003. Now that I have been back a few days, however, I am getting into the routine again and dont really mind being here. I just wish I was flying.

WaterWatch

The USGS has a great tool called WaterWatch. The site gives real-time information from stream flow sensors around the country. In addition to giving information about how the current flow compares to historical data, the information would be very useful to anyone doing water rescue across the country. This site provides one more example of why SAR incident command posts will need to have a good internet connection sooner rather than later and how incident commanders will need to broaden their thinking in the kinds of information they can have at hand.

Indian Springs this week

Several happenings this week that impact Indian Springs. One is the establishment of a National Center of Excellence on unmanned aerial and ground vehicles at Creech Air Force Base (formerly Indian Springs Auxiliary Air Field).

Four legal notices for Indian Springs appeared in this week's paper as well. Three involve permits for the transfer of water by the Southern Nevada Water Authority. The fourth, also published July 12th, is a request by Indian Springs Sewage Co., Inc. to discontinue providing sewage service to the community.

Cowboys Helping Kids???

We ran a story a couple of days ago pointing to the KNPR report on Cowboys Helping Kids the reported trail ride across (South to North) America to support kids and domestic violence victims. Since then the project's $5,000 donated website has been taken offline and later replaced with a sponsor page listing the sponsors of the project.

Attached to this post are a few images of what the website looked like when it existed at www.cowboyshelpingkids.com.

Slow TREO 650

Recent frustrations with the ">slow Treo 650 have led me to start looking for others with the same problem. There don't seem to be many. The biggest problem seems to be in switching from anything to the phone application. With the Sprint Treo 650 it can take 5-30 seconds to switch from a Palm application to the phone. So far the experimenting has been minimal with only removing the extra 1GB SD card (no difference) and having done the upgrade a couple of months ago.

Update: It looks like there is another update to the operating system for the Treo 650. So far this is one of the very annoying parts of convergence. I'll now spend another hour or so downloading, backing up and installing software so my cell phone will work. Not the most productive use of my time.

Cowboy or crook?

KNPR has a report suggesting there may be something fishy up with Richard Fipps' Cowboys Helping Kids. The report cites a neighbor who reports that Fipps was at home in North Las Vegas on June 28 when the website chronicling his trip says he was in Montana. The site above doesn't ring true to me but I'm hard pressed to find exact problems. All of the entries do seem vague and very general. There is a lot of emphasis placed on reaching Ely and then no mention of being in the town. It's odd.

"It's a sad thing that one person can try to do something good for someone and somebody has to be negative about the intentions," Fipps says on the site explaining the early end to his trip. But the sentence comes from nowhere, out of the blue. Though it did come a few days after Fipps was contacted by a reporter inquiring about the story.

Ten Tips for New Trainers/Teachers

Kathy Sierra has a great post on Ten Tips for New Trainers/Teachers. Including that it is almost always far more important that your learners nail fewer subjects than be "exposed" to a wider range of subjects. This is one of my personal favorites as I tend to always want to cram too much information into a presentation. Sure, like most it starts with a nice simple design, a few slides and a few words and we'll let the questions fill in to round it out. Then, mid-way through the preperation it hits you, maybe there won't be any questions. I'd better prepare a few backup slides you say. And then the backups become a part of the show and so it goes.

Read more of Kathy's tips. Thanks to Matt Raible for the link.

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