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September 2007 Archives

September 3, 2007

Failed Upgrades

Another few months, another woefully neglected blog. So neglected is it that I realized my Movable Type installation is out-of-date. Six Apart has moved on to version 4.0 of the Movable Type publishing platform, and I'm still running version 3.34.

For the most part, I've never been a big fan of upgrading things just for the sake of it. If something isn't broke, there's no reason to fix it. That's not to say that every software title installed on my computer is running the same version that I first installed. I like new features, improved interfaces, and more eye candy as much as the next guy. I certainly never miss a Windows Update, but one could easily make the argument that Windows is exempt from the aforementioned adage as it's fundamentally broke and therefore always requires fixing.

However, upgrading something like Movable Type isn't as cut-and-dry as it might sound.

Continue reading "Failed Upgrades" »

September 4, 2007

1,000 Words

First Day of School

Are we there yet, indeed.

September 23, 2007

Airplane Fiction

Early next month, I'll be traveling to China for a week on the premise of business. CeBIT Asia is taking place in Shanghai from October 10-13 and our company will be attending the show during one of those days as a guest of our distributor in China, which has a booth at the show. Naturally, you don't go to China simply for a trade show. There will be copious amounts of site seeing along the way that will take us to Beijing and Xi'an before arriving at our final destination in Shanghai.

The first, and only, time I've traveled internationally was 7 years ago when my wife and I honeymooned in Cancun, Mexico. Obviously, the travel landscape has changed significantly since then. We entered Mexico with nothing more than our birth certificates. Now, we have passports and the required travel visa to enter China.

With the latest restrictions on air travel and the items you're allowed to carry on-board, I've given more thought than normal to what will occupy the space of my carry-on(s). With this fresh in my mind, I was quick to catch the headlines of many recent articles detailing the lengths at which the US government is willing to go to categorize and inventory US citizens as they travel to and fro. To wit, it appears that the NSA / FBI / CIA / DHS is concerned with the reading materials of passengers.

Reading happens to be one of my passions in life. It's rare that I don't have at least one book on my nightstand at home and a queue of several more waiting in the wings to be read. Naturally, books are a staple of my carry-on luggage in every flight (and long car ride) I've ever had the pleasure of taking part in.

And why have I gone to such lengths to write all this up, you're asking?

The book that I'm currently reading, which will most likely be finished while I'm somewhere in the middle of the Pacific en route to Beijing, is the science fiction classic The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress from Robert Heinlein. The front cover of the book states it to be "(h)is classic, Hugo Award-winning novel of libertarian revolution." It is a book following the revolution to free Luna (the Moon, which has become a futuristic version of early 19th century Australia) from the oppression and tyranny of its token ruler (the Warden) and his puppet-masters on Terra (Earth).

I suppose now would be a bad time to also state my support for Ron Paul's campaign for President?

Oops. I suppose a print-out of this entry will also find its way in to the database detailing my reading habits.

About September 2007

This page contains all entries posted to Are We There Yet? in September 2007. They are listed from oldest to newest.

June 2007 is the previous archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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