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Archive for October, 2005

Year 2038 Bomb

Yes, we squashed the Y2K bug pretty hard, leaving many of us wondering if the billion dollar spending was actually worth while. Although I wasn’t directly involved in any Y2K projects in the late 90’s, every architecture paper I produced back then had to have a Y2K chapter to indicate if we were Y2K compliant.

I just read a technical but very interesting article about the potential 2038 problem. Basically, it is because of the limitation set in a type of a programming language (C to be exact) which does not allow the number of seconds to go beyond 2,147,483,647. Anything written in C language will break on Jan 19, 2038, which is 2,147,483,647 seconds after the beginning of the C time (12 am , Jan 1, 1970).

Based on my knowledge after consulting with 30+ companies in the past 10 years, majority of the companies and the government agencies have at least a portion of their systems written in that language.

However, I don’t think the problem will be nearly as severe as Y2K issue since

A) we still have 33 years before the bomb goes off
B) Unlike Y2K, only a subset of the systems worldwide are written in that language
C) Since everybody is moving to Java or staying put with Cobol, I don’t think C will stick around for too long.

This is definitely a good opportunity to sell “Re-Engineering” proposal to the clients to re-write their legacy systems from C to something else. It looks like someone just found another gold mine for the starving IT consulting industry. Wait, the next line on the proposal would probably say, “In order to reduce the cost and improve efficiency, we will offshore this task to India and China.” Oops! Another lost opportunity for the American IT workers. Well, this is a whole different kind of topic…

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The Golden Climb

Dog climbAlthough the physical climbing site was in Golden, Colorado, today was truly a golden day to climb. After the unexpected snow storm and freezing cold temperature in the early week, this weekend’s weather was simply gorgeous.

Ironically, North Table at Golden is where I did my first outdoor climb back in June. I wrote a post after the climb on Mike’s heavywinter site. At that time, I didn’t have my own blog.

I can definitely tell the differences comparing with 4 months ago when I climbed here with Kevin. Back then, it was all about reaching to the top. And now it is about how I reach to the top. I start to purposely ignore some big holds and look for something harder to experiment a few moves. Hey, I am on a top rope! If I fall, so what! I finally have the skill to maintain the balance and stop at a spot to enjoy the view on the vertical surface. North Table is pretty high up there with the views of Golden and Denver under your feet. Although this is no Aspen, North Table beats most of the climbing sites I went to.

I also witnessed a pretty bad accident today. A lady was leading on a quite tough route (We didn’t have the guidebook so we could only observe). First she clipped the quickdraw in a wrong way, and then she placed her leg under the rope. When she missed her clip, she took a hard fall and flipped upside down, knocked her head on the rock and scratched up her leg pretty badly. And, she didn’t wear a helmet. Although she was lucky enough to walk away without serious head injury, that was a plain stupid act. You gotta know your shit when it comes to extreme sports. I am an indoor 5.8 lead climber and I will never attempt an outdoor lead until I feel really comfortable with indoor 5.9. By looking at how she climbed, she was simply not qualified to lead on such a hard route. In my opinion, the people who will most likely get hurt in any extreme sports (climbing included) are either the beginners who are trying to pull some stunts, or the ass-kickers who trust themselves way too much and neglect the safety measurements. So, it’s important to know your limit and believe that shit could happen at anytime to anybody no matter how good you are. My 2 cents. ;-)

Anyway, check out the Golden Climb album. There are quite a few cool pictures (Matt’s dog went all the way to the top and gave me an unexpected “job well done” congrats. That was cute!)

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American Inventor Audition Anyone?

Simon Cowell from American Idol moves on to the next project to produce American Inventor for ABC.

Set to premiere in early 2006, the show is auditioning for contestants in 8 city tour.

american inventor

You could win a million dollars. Although you have to go through the public humiliation since Cowell is the boss, that still beats eating pig’s guts on Fear Factor.

Oh, look!! Denver is on the list!!! Boy, I have only a month and half to come up with something ridiculous so I can get on the “worst audition” list. ;-)

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What Is Your Envy List?

When I saw the title “What is your envy list? - 25 people you want to be” on the cover of the magazine, three (OK, four) people’s names immediately popped up in my head. I have been envying these people ever since I knew how to spell their names.

Mark Cuban
If there is ever going to be a “World’s Luckiest Bastard Award”, this guy gotta win the grand prize. He sold a startup company to Yahoo for a few billion dollars during the venture-capitalists-gone-wild-and-any-junk-worth-a-million era back in the late 90’s. Then, he heavily invested in and promoted HDTV. Now look around, everybody’s got a HDTV or dreamed about having one. Just before the mainstream media began to pay attention to the blog phenomenon, he teamed up with Weblog Inc and started Blog Maverick. Then AOL bought it. Oh, and not to mention his full time job is running around with Dallas Maverick and showing the world that he could afford 1+ million dollar fine if he needs to freely express his emotions on the basketball court. He had a TV show too? Man, it amazes me that this guy hasn’t placed a wrong bet and every move he makes is a few steps ahead of the crowd.

Alex Tew
Yeah, that milliondollarhomepage boy made 300+K in a month with a brilliant idea and a few lines of code. What’s not to envy?!

Sergey Brin and Larry Page
They are Google’s daddies. They turned a Ph.D thesis/research topic into a billion dollar business, without even running the company themselves. I am kicking myself for not accepting Stanford’s offer back in 1995. I’d be in the same department with these two guys if I wasn’t aiming at the money (Univ. Penn offered a full Ph.D scholarship package and Stanford only admitted me into a Master program with no financial aid). Google was born on campus in 1996. Both these guys are worth billions with their stock holdings.

What is your envy list?
Have a few names in your head and then check out Fortune’s 25 people envy list. I read the article afterwards and I got 75% hit ratio (if including the Lucky Hall of Fame list).

I think what separates these people from the rest of us are:

A) They all had a great idea
B) They worked hard to turn the idea into reality.

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My Car Is A Total Loss AND The Seat Belt Saved My Life

A few minutes ago, I got a phone call from the Farmers Insurance agent who was assessing the damage of my car. (Here is the post about my car crash two days ago) First, he told me my car was a total loss. Then he said to me, “You know your seat belt won’t track back anymore. I thought I would be talking to you in a hospital. You are a very lucky lady.”Then he told me that the impact was so severe that most of the internal structures of my car were damaged. I don’t know cars at all, but after listening to a long list of the auto-part jargons, I was pretty scared. Axel was broken; front wheel was almost detached; suspension was smashed and another dozen internal parts were not repairable anymore.

Now I try to rewind and think back the moment when the impact had happened.I only remember that the seat belt was holding me so tight on the seat that I wasn’t really going anywhere even though the car was slamming back and forth for a few seconds. Before the agent hung up the phone, he said to me, “This Honda did what it was supposed to do to save your life. I am glad you were wearing the seat belt.”

Now, to be honest, I am in a much deeper shock than I was 2 days ago right after the accident. I didn’t realize this could be the accident to severely damage my physical well-being if not taking my life. And the only reason why I am still here typing this post is because I worn the seat belt. I know we all beat this topic to death. I saw plenty of people on TV showing us the consequences of not wearing one. But this is BLOODY REAL to me. And to all the people who are reading this post at this moment, WEAR YOUR SEAT BELT! And make sure your passengers are wearing seat belts too. You can save yours and other people’s lives.

I will go back to the body shop this Thursday to pick up my belongings and say good-bye to my Honda before they tear it apart. It’s sad … After all, the car has accompanied me for the last 2 years, moved me to Colorado, and gave a lot of people rides to the mountains after it arrived in Denver. As sad as I am right now, I am truly happy that I am not part of this “total loss”.

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We Love These Companies

customer first award2005 Annual Customers First Awards just released the 15 winners. Here are my top three:

Netflix
I must say that Netflix absolutely deserves the first spot. If you love watching DVDs and haven’t tried Netflix, you are missing out on something big. I love Netflix because of the convenience and the large title collections they have in stock. And if you live in any metropolitan areas, you can get your DVD in 1 day after the selection makes to the shipping list. The business model is simply brilliant.

Craigslist
The next best thing is Craigslist. I spent only 800 bucks to furnish my place with the items I found on this site. If you are a landlord or looking for a place to stay, use this site. I recently helped a townhome owner to rent part of his place. I didn’t think he would have any luck because of the location and the competition, but we found a tenant within one week. The site gets millions of hits and nicest part of it is that it’s free and easy to use. No registration. You can’t beat that deal. The only thing I don’t understand is how they make money? I don’t see Google Ads on the site. I have been scratching my head for a while…

Whole Foods
Ok, Whole Foods is expensive. But the quality is top notch. I am sick and tired to shop in Safeway, Kroger, KingSuper, etc… ‘cause they all have the same stuff. Grocery shopping was so boring until I discovered Whole Foods. Besides the quality, we all want different experiences. I just don’t understand why all the grocery chains can’t be a little more creative to sell some new products?!

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I Will Hold Off Buying 360

Xbox 360 gamesEverybody is talking about XBOX 360 in every corner on this planet.. OK, maybe just in every corner in US. But after reading tons of reviews, I decided NOT to buy a 360 this year.

Here are the top reasons:
1. One of the greatest offerings come with 360 is the online broadband bundle. I am not a XBOX Live player and I don’t have a profile with five-star meter in any game zones. So I don’t really care for this hot feature
2. I’ve got an iPod, a DVD player and all three current game consoles. So I don’t really need another “media-center”
3. Day one games are not that appealing. I looked at the list and the hot ones are mostly in FPS, driving simulation and sports categories. I don’t see Halo3, Splinter Cell 4, and Fable 2, although rumor says these hot titles will come out when PS3 hits the stores. I can wait until they are out.
4. Maybe Microsoft will drop the price when PS3 is released the next year?
5. Is the first generation hardware going to be glitch-free? I probably will feel more comfortable with a release version 3 or 4 after some fix patches are applied.
6. Although I admit that I am a total graphics whore and I will probably buy the machine just because of the enhanced graphics, I am skeptical about the day one graphics performance. PS3 has already warned gamers that the initial release of the games may not have drastic visual differences. So until I see some demos and truly believe that the dots and gray lines are much sharper, I am not going to trust what I read or hear.

On the other hand, I will drop 400 bucks in a split second as soon as Sony releases PS3. Screw the reviews; I just love that system especially if they would release either Final Fantasy XII or Kingdom Hearts 2 with the new hardware. Microsoft has to work a little harder to win the loyal Playstation fans’ wallets.

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Look! Yuna Crashed Into A Truck!

If you are watching the news about the Colorado’s snow storm and feel sorry for those who had their cars wrecked, then feel sorry for me ‘cause I am one of them. And this is my dead Honda in the picture.

damaged Honda CRV

I was on my way to Colorado Springs this morning and somehow I hit the black ice with 55 mph speed. I pretty much lost control and all the skills I acquired by playing “Need for Speed” and “Grand Turismo” didn’t help in the real world scenario. Although I managed to get over to the left shoulder, it was too narrow for my fat Honda. I was squeezed right between a truck and the guard rail. The car died instantaneously.

The collision stopped the sliding car and the seat belt literately saved me from slamming around. I smelled the gas. My driver side of the door was completely stuck. For a second, those car explosion and burning scenes were flashing through my head. Ironically, other than a slightly twisted neck, I was OK without a single scratch.

After a few minutes of sanity check, I dialed 911. The lady on the phone told me there were too many injured people who needed help so they couldn’t help me. She gave me a towing company number and hung up. “No cop?” I was scratching my head.

The truck driver whose car got all scratched up because of me stepped out and asked me if I were OK. Then he said to me, “I don’t have a driver’s license, so I have to run. “ He took off before I could even take down his license number. Wow, anything could happen in this world.

So, my victim ran away; 911 wouldn’t take my call; my car had no heat and I started to feel cold; I called towing company but couldn’t give them exact location so they told me to call back until I found out where I was (and how in the world was I supposed to do that? Walk on highway in storm??); nobody on the highway was checking on me (they all drove around me; what the hell???!!) and oops, my cell phone only had one bar left. What else could go wrong?

Ok, I admit that at that time, I started to cry like a girl until a highway patrol trooper stopped and knocked on my window. It was probably half an hour after I had the accident and the cars were starting to back up because of me. The cop took me to his car and started to look for a towing truck. I finally felt much better, warmer and safer. Thanks to my climbing buddy too who stayed on the phone with me for a while to offer a lot of options and advices.

I stayed with Officer Ernie (I only got his first name) for nearly two hours. He was on the radio, cell and computer to coordinate a towing truck but accidents happened everywhere this morning. The traffic was backed up miles in front us and my dead Honda was pretty much blocking half of the left lane. We simply couldn’t get one to come in until another trooper showed up to help to redirect the traffic.

On my way back to Denver, I counted 5 accidents with one truck completely flipped over. The tow truck driver told me I was one of the very few passengers he had in the last 3 days ‘cause “everybody ended up in the hospital”, he said. I could feel a chill went down my spine. Ok, buddy, you are not helping!

Ironically, the Honda body shop he took me to is right next to my usual climbing gym. After getting all the nasty paperwork done, I had about 2 hours before Hertz rental to deliver a car for me. Hmm… rather than sitting here waiting, I could go for a climb. So I did and I got my ass kicked badly. I, a solid 5.10 climber fell on a 5.8 route. Lesson learned? Never engage in extreme sports after a car crash. Durh.. what the hell was I thinking..

Well, I guess after a long nasty scary day, it wasn’t too bad after all because things could be a whole lot worse. At least I got to:

  • sit in a cop’s car for the very first time and chat with a nice cop. Oh, I found out a supervisor like Officer Ernie can actually make $80,000.
  • I didn’t get a ticket for reckless driving and my victim ran away so I didn’t have to pay for his damage.
  • I got a snow day off!
  • And most importantly, I am alive and all of my body parts are still at where they are supposed to be.

Tonight, I am sitting in my Denver apartment to chill out. Tomorrow morning, I am going to give the nasty highway another shot. This time, I am going to go 40 miles an hour if the snow condition isn’t improving. So wish me luck!!

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Pro Blogger - I Am Going To Give It A Shot

When I started blogging about 3, 4 months ago, I didn’t know people could actually become professional bloggers to make livings by blogging.

If any of you found my site through Darren and Duncan’s Problogger.net and Blog Herald, you will know that these two guys are starting a new blog network called b5Media with Jeremy Wright. I submitted an application with a few ideas to them about a month ago and then went back to my normal routine.

Today, I got informed that b5Media would like to work with me to create a few pro blogs. I am very excited to have this opportunity to work with some respectful A-listers. Although I am well aware the amount of time I have to put into the new projects, I am willing to give it a shot. Otherwise, I will never know how this whole pro blogging thing works.

Darren Rowse is another reason why I want to work with b5Media instead of applying with Weblog Inc. Although I have only exchanged a few emails with him, I truly respect Darren’s work ethics.

So, what does that mean to my personal blog site? I only have 24 hours a day and I still have a full time job. So, I will have to slow down a bit, however I have no intention to close the shop here. After all, this is one site where I can exercise the right of freedom of speech and bitch about anything in any location at any given time without worrying about Ads click rates.

Anyway, I will keep you guys posted if I am writing any new blogs. In the meantime, let’s have a good time in the village.

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Blogs vs News Sites

Mike from Heavywinter just wrote a post to state his disappointment in today’s news media. Like many bloggers out there, Mike chooses Blogosphere when it comes to digging newsworthy articles to read. As he stated in his post:

…train wrecks, abductions, wheather phenomenon, killings, etc. There’s nothing truly new about that stuff. …Different names, different places, different dates, but nothing truly new among it.

But what about the 90% heating bill increase warning that will affect our wallets soon, or Greenspan’s Jan 31 step down plan that will eventually affect every corner of the US financial sector?

I am not denying the powerful social influences caused by the 18 million blogs out there, and the 80,000 new ones being created every day. Comparing with one year ago when there were only 4 million blogs, today’s Blogosphere is filled with an incredible amount of information and the talents. Look! AOL is buying Weblog Inc! Finally, the mainstream is taking blogs seriously. However, as you all noticed, the blog articles simply either link to the original sources, comment on the original sources or do both. So, my argument is - why reading the second hand news when the original sources are available?

Regardless how many brilliant articles Boing Boing has been collecting or Jason Kottke has been filtering, the blogs are simply not positioned to take over the roles of the traditional news sources. The reason is very simple - resource. The big boys such as CNN, NBC, USAToday, etc have the deep pockets AND the connections to get the stories that few bloggers can lay hands on. They have the money to hire experts from all areas to give in-depth analysis. They are able to walk into the press conferences hosted by the White House. And when you look at the big blog sites, they are still linking back to the news from Yahoo and Reuters’ RSS feeds.

Mike may be able to survive without newspapers and solely rely on the blog articles to get what he needs. I know I would be dead in the water if I don’t read USA Today, money.cnn.com or The Wall Street Journal. On the other hand, my day would be dead boring without digg.com’ geeky tech news and fark.com’s goofy odd news.

After all, the Internet readers are trying to find the best balance. We need to read original sources and we want to hear what people are saying. It’s like TV’s original dramas blended with the reality shows. So in my opinion, the traditional news sources and the Blogosphere work hand in hand to provide us with both sides of the world. The only thing we need to watch out is information overflow, ‘cause I am about to explode with a few dozen feeds I am scanning through each day! Soon, reading RSS feeds is going to become a full time job when each citizen owns 15 blog sites.

Happy reading everyone!

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About Free The Cow Project

Purpose : Achieve real financial freedom by stop working for others.

2006 Project Overview

Starting Project Size: $26,400
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Current Project Net Income: $81.18

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