Detroit transplants living in Dallas

Author: Matt (Page 30 of 41)

Rat poison found in tainted pet food

Normally in a rant, I would have plenty of things to say. Right now, it’s probably the shock more than anything that is preventing me from typing as I am absolutely livid about the CNN.com breaking news headline I just received in my email.

  • NEW: N.Y. officials say rat poison found in tainted pet food
  • Class-action lawsuit filed against manufacturer
  • Menu Foods doesn’t comment on suit, offers condolences to pet owners
  • Recall announced March 16 after cats and dogs suffer renal failure

ALBANY, New York (AP) — Rat poison has been found in pet food blamed for the deaths of at least 16 cats and dogs, a spokeswoman for the State Department of Agriculture and Markets said Friday.

Rat poison? Who’s sick fucking joke was that? To me this screams someone with some real anti-social mass-murder tendencies. I hope they are able to trace it back to the plant, to the shift, to the individual machine some jackass runs so that I can find them and force-feed THEM the same shit they made me feed my own pets. If there was ever a more disgusting person on the face of the earth than this asshole I wouldn’t believe it.

A spokesman for New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said he was not aware of any criminal investigation involving the tainted food.

Someone better slap some sense into this guy too.

Someone is going to pay the $400 vet bill for my dog, and I expect an apology from every fucking company down the line IN WRITING.

Turtorial: CentOS 4.4 with VMware – virtual machine host in 5 steps

Ever wanted to put together a VMware virtual machine host without using windows, but were too intimidated? If you�re like me, you like the idea of using a low overhead OS on your host boxes to maximize the resources available for your virtual machines.
Unfortunately, up until now any *nix system install had a bit of a learning curve that required hours of using the Google.
Having spent the day yesterday trying to minimize time spent loading host machines so I could get to work with my virtual machines, I put together this how to / tutorial so that others could benefit from the ease of which this system is setup.

Read on to see how easy it really is!
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I’m a productive slob. No really!

According to a story over at extremetech.com, a new book is out that argues neatness is overrated, costs money, wastes time and quashes creativity.

People who are really, really neat, between what it takes to be really neat at the office and at home, typically will spend anywhere from an hour to four hours a day just organizing and neatening.

If you walk into my office at home, you would think, ‘Oh my God, something just exploded in that room!’ But it’s an organized mess. It’s a mess I made, and I know where everything is.

See, this is why I get upset with anyone who tries to tell me to clean up my desk. You touch my desk and move something and I WILL FIND OUT and cut your hands off because I won’t be able to find it. I have my own custom filing system, and stuff at the top of the pile is my reminder. Besides, I’d rather make use of that hour or two spent tidying up with something more constructive… Like being lazy!

Pet Food Recall: We now know what almost killed Monty – Thanks Menu Foods

If you haven’t heard about it all over the news recently, Menu Foods, a major manufacturer of pet food, has recalled some 60 million containers of wet pet food after reports of kidney failure and deaths.

You may or may not remember back just over 2 months ago, Monty had a little health scare which required $400 worth of vet visits, blood & urin tests, and stress on our part. It was never definitively determined what had caused the sickness, but what was very definitive was that the little guy had experienced some type of heavy liver damage in the process.

So you can imagine our surprise to have heard over the weekend that the Eukanuba cuts and gravy pouches which he loves, and which we give him every few days as a treat, probably nearly killed him.

From CNN.com:

Undisclosed number of cats and dogs suffered vomiting, kidney failure; 10 dead

Sound familiar?

I think its rather unfortunate that 2 months ago we weren’t able to 100% nail down the cause of Monty’s illness. But the question remains for me: why did it take another 2 months after our scare for Menu Foods to start their recall? Did it take a few dozen dead animals for them to figure out what was up? I hope that what comes out of this is a more closely regulated pet food industry, because I don’t ever want to feel like I was the one who ultimately killed my pet because of the food I bought for him.

A not so interesting look at my search habits

While researching something at work this afternoon with the Google, I happened to pull of a list of my recent searches and was quite amused.

Google Search Results

The technical searches aren’t that odd to me, but “bg’s reunite”, “haters”, all the food searches, and “vermont ‘red state'” look funny to me in that list.

Oh and trogdor.
What the heck was I thinking that day??

Trogdor the Burninator!!!!

Nobody talks about a lot of things, but these guys do

Our buddies Adam & Darius have started up a blog to tackle the issues nobody wants to talk about.

Nobody Talks About is a blog that points out subjects that �no one� seems to be talking about.

From music and entertainment to politics and media � many things get swept under the rug.

Since we don�t know why people aren�t talking about these things, rather than investigate, we�ll ask, �Why is no one talking about this?�

I’ve been checking them out regularly, and hopefully the rest of the bloggosphere will catch on as well; in their short existance they’ve already brought up some good talking points…

You can catch them over at http://nobodytalks.wordpress.com/.

What to make when you have leftover bacon and German influences

There was a whole package of uncooked bacon left over from the other night when we made bacon-cheeseburgers for dinner. I really wanted to get it cooked up since we have a habit of forgetting about stuff like that and finding it 4 months later as an unidentifiable blob of viscous goo, so we thought “what better to go with bacon than even more red meat!” and whipped up some Rouladen. We found a recipe from Foodtv.com which sounded good, and modified it to our liking.

I wish I had taken the time to take a picture of our handiwork, because it was damn good.
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8 Things Geeks and Nerds Need To Work Happily

I think this pretty much describes how I like my work days to go to a “T”.

  1. Let them work when they want
    Geeks work almost every moment they are awake. They are online before they go to the office. They are home working after the office closes. They work weekends. They are even sometimes working in their dreams. Employers should understand this and more importantly appreciate it. Don’t force geeks to work 8 – 5 if there is no real need other than “company morale.” Meetings are one thing, so is socializing with coworkers, but a relaxed office schedule will do wonders for the contentment levels of your employed geeks.
  2. Let them work where they want
    Geeks prefer to have a couch around to nap on if they are tired. Some like no windows, others want to stare out into a city or landscape. At home, geek’s offices are usually more lived in, more comfortable and enjoyable than anywhere else in the world. This is because they love what they do, and they do it so much of the time they need to be comfortable where they do it.
  3. Let them control their lighting
    There is nothing more annoying than working in bright crappy fluorescent lighting if you prefer to work in the dark, or vice versa. Geeks usually have sensitive eyes from staring at CRT monitors for too long. The last thing you want is your geeks to have headaches. Most geeks aren’t very pleasant to work with when they have headaches.
  4. Let them wear headphones
    Geeks are experts in the arts of “focus.” Focusing takes removing all unnecessary distractions from your environment and creating a state where nothing else is going on but what they are working on. The harder the problem they are trying to solve or the more creative they have to be, the more they need to focus. Headphones, or simply a lack of ringing phones and talking sales people allow geeks to focus much easier.
  5. Do not expect them to wear a suit
    Geeks find arbitrary activities that lack real and meaningful purpose, a waste of time and energy. This includes attire. Most companies today are aware of this and even practice casual dress so as to make everyone more comfortable, but geeks are a special case. “Suits” (the kind of person) usually represent a business man who lacks most things other than a nice smile and great negotiation skills.
  6. Do not make them participate in company events (unless you are sure it is geek-friendly)
    Most geeks will not be jumping up and down with joy to attend a company party to celebrate the local football team, unless of course there is beer, and they can hang around and talk to each other about geeky things. Keep this in mind when planning company events. Geeks like to have fun, just not the same kind of fun as your typical non-geek.
  7. Do not hold a lot of arbitrary meetings that could have otherwise been handled through email or IM
    This one is important. Like I said, geeks need to focus to be happy and able to focus. Nothing is more of an interruption than someone walking into their space unexpectedly and saying “hey do you have a minute?” The answer is usually going to be a disgruntled “Sure.” The truth is geeks are fine with attending planned meetings (and will happily be there if the meeting is really a necessary one for them to attend in person), but are usually most happy communicating through email and IM. These forms of communication are most appealing to geeks because they do not interrupt you, and polite geeks will even respond with a quick “hold on a sec, I’m in the middle of something.” Email and IM are recorded, searchable records of conversations. They are efficient and to the point. This also makes geeks happy. Geeks can discuss anything through email and IM and will usually be more willing and thorough with their response. Face to face meetings are important, geeks know that, but I would guess that 90% of conversations and meetings held face to face, would be more efficient and end with happier people, if they were held in a recordable, written, virtual space.
  8. Do not make them do anything other than work
    This one isn’t completely accurate all the time. Geeks are team players, but they are also easily insulted by being given a task below their level of expertise or outside of the scope of their position. They’ll do it, but they won’t be totally happy. This includes: answering phones, taking out trash, going shopping for company supplies, and “filling in” for a sales person.

Original Article posted courtesy Nomadishere.

Resolutions Reboot: 0 for 2 – Let’s try that again…

Back in January I wrote about our resolutions for the new year, so I thought I’d give a little update about how we’re doing…

Get back to the gym!
We started off with good intentions going to the gym the day after making the resolution. Unfortunately, that was the only time we went, until today. We’re shooting to start a routine of 2 or 3 times a week whenever we can fit it in immediately after work. I guess I’ll have to update on this in a week or two to see how we’re holding up.

Quit smoking!
Once again – good intentions, bad follow through.
The good: it’s pretty easy to go all week without a cigarette.
The bad: it’s pretty hard to not have a cigarette over the weekend.
I attribute the bad with going out to the bar or club on the weekends, and having a drink or two. I can’t say I have much craving or withdrawal during the week, but come Friday night as soon as I have a beer, all bets are off.

I’ve come to the conclusion we’ll have our up and down moments with both resolutions, but as long as we keep revisiting them regularly I think we’ll be in OK shape.

Confessions of a vinyl junkie

I’m a recovering vinyl junkie. The majority of the credit card balance I carry to this day is a several thousand dollar investment in records I made at the height of my electronic music djing days. Any of you who have been downstairs know I have records crammed everywhere into my basement office: stacked against the wall, stacked on my shelves, in my 2 record bags, even under my desk. At last count I was over 1,000. Doing the math is scary.

Anyway, I bought into one of the digital audio to vinyl adapters (used Stanton Final Scratch) about a year and a half ago, so I found a new outlet for my addiction; $2 per song is a little better than $10-12 per record I suppose. Unfortunately for me, now that I am ramping my djing back up, these digital dj platforms are still difficult to bring to a remote site. Since I have a gig lined up in a week that couldn’t promise access to Final Scratch, I bit the bullet & had to buy a few new records.

Unfortunately, I think it’s re-awakened the vinyl junkie in me…

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