Michael Crook Enjoys A Plate Of Humble Pie

Michael Crook, the waste of air who threatened me with fake DMCA notices as well as a lawsuit, finally got his butt handed to him by the Electronic Frontier Foundation

As part of a settlement, Crook had to issue an apology video which you can see over at Laughing Squid.  The apology is less than sincere but at least the little shit has learnt that “free speech” and “fair use” are words that actually mean something.

I could revive all the postings that I took down to get the scumbag to stop threatening me but let’s just savor this moment and let the sleeping dogs lie.

Hey Michael, how’s the pie?

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Firefighters Protest The "9/12" Giuliani

As the 2008 US Presidential campaign continues to roll along, the IAFF Firefighter’s Union comes out with an open letter to the membership urging them not to vote for candidate, and former New York mayor, Rudy Giuliani.

Giuliani is certainly best remembered for his public image following the World Trade Center bombings on August 11, 2001 and is seen as a strong contender for the Republican Party but the firefighters of NYC are asking that he be remembered for his actions after that terrible day.

As they tell it, Giuliani showed tremendous disrespect by first limiting the number of the members who could be at ground zero at one time to 25.  He also, or so they say, “made a conscious decision to institute a “scoop-and-dump” operation to expedite the clean-up of Ground Zero in lieu of the more time-consuming, but respectful, process of removing debris piece by piece in hope of uncovering more remains”.

That the US campaign now runs for nearly 2 years is bad enough but the rancor developing this time around is ugly and doesn’t bode well for the 18 months.

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Warmer, Finally!

The weather in Toronto is finally starting to warm up.  Today, it was actually above freezing all day!

I used up one of my remaining 2006 vacation days by taking a trip downtown to the annual golf show.  Pretty disappointed with the whole thing – advertising, advertising, advertising. 

High At Work

While walking back to the Jeep, I caught this fellow perched above the traffic doing his best to rid the windows of the accumulated winter grunge.  I bet he’s happier that the -30 weather is gone.

 

My First Fark Greenlight

After 5 years, I finally got my first Fark greenlight by submitting an article that says Canadian sports officials are contemplating removing marijuana from the list of banned substances.

Farkers love anything to do with Canadians and/or drugs so this was a pretty safe bet.

If you’ve never visited Fark, it’s a great place to waste some time.  As they say – “It’s Not News, It’s Fark.com”.  Check out the Photoshop contests to see some truly twisted genius.

Flying The Overly Friendly Skies

News that a Northwest Airlines employee has been arrested for allegedly groping a sleeping female passenger and then satisfying himself manually on a flight from Seattle to Minneapolis.

NWA confirms that the “gentleman” works for the airline but declined to say what his job is.  I certainly hope he wasn’t one of the pilots.

As far as I know, membership in the Mile High Club requires consenting participants.

Hands On

Way back in the 60′s, when I was in high school, you had to choose what stream you wanted to follow.  One directed you in courses that readied the student for college or university and the other led to technical skills necessary to get a “hands-on” job.

I took the former which meant that I was “protected” from shop or auto mechanics or anything that would get my hands dirty.  I never went on after HS and instead immediately started working in a warehouse (much to my parents’ disappointment).  The only subject that I can truly say helped me was typing.  Turns out it’s pretty good preparation for a job that involves sitting at a keyboard all day.  I never thought it would come to anything – banging on old manual Underwood typewriters was boring but a great time waster.

So here I am nearly 30 years later and I now find myself working at the Toronto Aerospace Museum as a volunteer and guess what my first project requires?  Working knowledge of machine tools.  Oops.

I’m building a set of free standing display panels and this involves creating the stands from scratch.  So far, I’ve cut stainless steel with a chop saw and now I’m working at fabricating 200+ brackets to hold the stands together.  In keeping with the museum’s theme, the brackets started out with sheets of aircraft aluminum.  These went through a foot-operated shear cutter followed by a trip through a very scary bandsaw and hand finished on a grinder.  I spent a few hours there yesterday and grabbed a few photos of the process.

(click any of the pictures for a larger image)

bracket1

First, a shot of the before and after status.  The raw aluminum is coated with a primer to protect it from scratching while handling.  My coworker spent hours laying out the cut lines and I then took them to the shear cutter.

bracket2No idea how old this cutter is but I heard it came from the Bombardier plant across the airport from the museum.  The only power this machine gets is from the weight of the operator.  You carefully line the piece up, jump on the footboard and your cut is made.  It actually works extremely well and gives a very clean cut.

bracket4

bracket3

Once all the brackets were cut into triangles, it was off to the bandsaw to do the rough shaping.  I created this little tool to allow me to shape 6 brackets at once while keeping my fingers reasonably far away from the sharp bits.  The saw scares the crap out of me.  It rumbles as it starts and I find it a little uncomfortable standing really close to sharp steel teeth rotating at high speed.  Again, this machine is quite old.

bracket5The final step (so far) is to take the individual brackets to a bench grinder to – more or less – round off the corners.  The more I do, the better I’m getting.

I probably have another 2-3 hours work until I complete this step.  After that, I need to remove the primer using acetone and then start assembling the stands.  Each stand will have a sheet of plywood covered with velcro fabric.

 

 

 

A Sick Friend

I haven’t posted anything in a few days.  A close friend is very sick and I’ve spent a lot of time looking after him.  Don’t worry however, he isn’t human.

My business laptop is not feeling well and it’s almost impossible for me to think of much else.  It started with a bum LED screen but has now progressed to power problems.

Why such a big deal about a computer?  This is what I work with every day and most evenings.  I fire it up first thing in the morning and shut it down when I can’t keep my eyes open any longer at night.  Everything I do at work revolves around this poor overworked machine.  After 20+ years relying on a one computer or another, I’ve really lost the ability to work without one.  Sad commentary perhaps, but there it is.

Right now, it sits with no screen, no cover, both batteries pulled – on life support.  I still manage to coax it to life by connecting it to a docking station at work and a KVM switch at home.  Sometimes he starts first time, sometimes it takes a few tries.

The technician from CareTek is slowly replacing and testing almost every part in an effort to pull him back from this near-death experience.  Today, a new screen was supposed to be installed along with power cables but we got hit by one hellish snowstorm.  Everything has been postponed until tomorrow.

Fingers, toes and eyes are crossed.  I’ve sacrificed small animals to the gods of the silicone.  With luck, things will be back to normal.

“Why don’t you get a new one?”, you ask.  A good question that you’d have to take up with the IT group.  They’ll probably end up spending more to get this one fixed than a new one would cost.  That’s OK with me – this trusty ThinkPad and I have been through a lot together.  We’ve logged thousands of hours online and more than 40,000 miles in the air.  We’re a pair of old pros.  He deserves a little respect.