Author: wizardpc

  • A tale of two executions

    Two men were executed on the same night earlier this week. One was in Texas, the other was in Georgia.

    Both men did not know their victims. Both men admit to being involved in the initial altercation that ultimately led to death of the victim. Both men claim to not have been the person to actually commit the murders they were accused of.

    One man became a cause celebre, and a reason to examine why we have a death penalty in the first place.

    The other man became a reason to examine why we are so nice to people we execute.

    I’m not sure what to make of it.

    FTR, I think both men were guilty as sin and should’ve been shot on scene.

  • I miss the good old days

    When interest rates for my money market account (AKA The Emergency Fund) were north of 6%. The bank just notified me that rates are down to 0.87% now, which is still better than the rate for regular savings accounts (0.25%)

  • Tragedy!

    Last night my Nexus One fell out of my pocket and onto the cement. It fell in such a way that the protective neoprene sleeve came off the phone and it slide about two feet across the concrete face down. The impact cracked the glass in the top left corner, but the screen is okay.

    The phone basically lost most of its resale value in that instant.

  • I’ll take “Things that sound like a terrible idea for $200, Alex”

    Google Wallet

    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsaJMhcLm_A&w=640&h=390]

    Let’s set aside the fact that the only way to get this is with a Citibank Mastercard credit card or Google Prepaid card, and that it only works with one phone on one carrier (Sprint Nexus S 4G).

    Does anyone think this is a good idea? Right now there is a group of hackers in Russia salivating.

    “Oh, well, you have to unlock it with a PIN, so it’s more secure than a regular wallet!” Yeah, right. The practical effect of this will be that the guy in front of me at Starbucks will have to pull out his phone, unlock it, open the app, unlock that, and then pay for his drink. Yeah, I know, I’m impatient.

    RFID payment systems have been around for for a while now, and I don’t think I know anyone who’s ever used it. That’s probably a good thing.

  • Gun Porn

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    M&P15-22.

    I picked it up last week. It’s going to be great at New Shooter Range Day.

  • SSL Encryption Broken

    Ruh Roh!

    Do note, however, that it seems to take a half hour to decrypt the PayPal cookie in their demonstration. That’s probably more than enough time for you to have completed your transaction and logged out. The article doesn’t specify, but it seems this is only an attack to be able to see what you are doing, not steal credentials.

  • Weekend Project

    About once a year, my friend Oddball and I like to do a “New Shooter Day” at one of the local ranges. The last time we went, though, the target stands for the pistol berm were….missing. The time before they were pretty well destroyed to the point of uselessness.

    When I was at the LuckyGunner Blogger Shoot, Tom Givens brought some target stands with him that were made out of PVC pipe. I thought that was ingenious, and took note so Oddball and I could make some.

    New Shooter Day is this coming Saturday, so last weekend we made 3 target stands, following the instructions at The Box O’ Truth:

    A couple of notes:

    1. Use a Wire PVC Saw. Things go much faster, and you can shorten the pipes in the parking lot if they won’t fit in your Jeep 😀
    2. Following the instructions, you end up with a 22″ length of pipe at the end. Don’t worry about cutting it down to 16″ unless you really really want to.
    3. You don’t have to use PVC cement if you get fittings that are “slip” fittings. Those type fittings have enough of a lip that they’ll stay on the pipe without cement. The other kind (the name of which escapes me) tend to not stay on as well, and are cheaper than the slip fittings. Our T’s are slip, the elbows are not.
    4. The 1x2x8 stakes are about 80 cents locally. The entire cost is about $10 per target stand, but the consumable stakes are really cheap.
    5. It took about 45 minutes to make all three, including me using a hand saw on the stakes.

    An added bonus to not having to use PVC cement is that the targets break down into smaller components. Right now these are broken down and sitting in my garage.

    One last thing: Box O’ Truth uses IPSC targets, but we’re just going to use old Amazon boxes or poster board*.

     

    *If you use brightly colored poster board, it acts just like those Shoot-N-C targets, only in reverse and a whole lot cheaper. It’s really easy to see the holes from 50 or 100 yards out. I usually go for the green stuff as it’s easier to see a red dot.

  • Thinking of getting a new Android device?

    Wait. Just a little bit. That’s the advice I recently gave my brother-in-law and his wife. Both of them are rocking OG Droids and are looking to upgrade. They said that one of them could upgrade today, and the other could upgrade in January.

    All indications are that the next version of Android–called Ice Cream Sandwich–will be coming out in about a month. By the start of the Christmas shopping season, phones and tablets will start shipping with ICS.

    If you buy one now, it could be a year or more before you get the update (*cough*Samsung*cough). Even when you do get the update, your old phone may still have some features that will make using the new version confusing (like hardware buttons for back, home, menu, and search–all of which will be rendered obsolete).

    So be patient. Buying a phone today is a lot like buying a computer 10 years ago–by the time you buy it, it’s already obsolete. Wait as long as you can and buy the most phone you can afford at the time. My Nexus One was the fastest phone in the world when it came out, and it’s already showing it’s age 18 months after it was introduced (NFC? Dual Core? Front facing camera? What are these new-fangled things!). While I would love to go out and buy a new Samsung Galaxy S II phone, I am waiting for the next Nexus phone.

  • To the lady in the silver Civic

    I noticed your condescending “Global Warming…It’s Real” and “Don’t be a denier!” stickers.

    I also noticed that you were not carpooling, or riding the bus, or riding a bicycle, or walking to work. Or even driving a hybrid.

    Just wanted to point that out. Like the man says, I’ll believe it’s a crisis when the people who tell me it’s a crisis start acting like it’s a crisis.

  • The $1000 Emergency Fund

    Last week I gave a quick overview of the Baby Steps. Before you start, you have to be current with everyone. Since I didn’t have that particular problem (I got really, really close, though) I can’t give you any advice there.

    I can talk about the subsequent steps.

    Baby Step 1 is your starter emergency fund of $1000. Do this as quickly as you can, because it’s the thing that keeps you from going backwards in “the plan.” The idea is to put this money into a money-market account with check writing privileges and no minimum balance. Bankrate.com has a good tool for finding them. I keep three checks for this account behind the checks for my regular checking account.

    I would avoid accounts that only allow debit card purchases. This account should be inconvenient to use and a debit card is really convenient. You don’t want to “accidentally” spend your emergency fund on something that’s not an emergency. I started off with a savings account at the same bank I had my checking account with and I bought an XBOX off eBay using my emergency fund about two months into the plan. I simply jumped online, transferred the funds, and hit “Buy it now!”

    Don’t do that. I shouldn’t have and almost immediately I felt guilty about it. The next day I opened a money-market account with a bank in Utah (I still have the XBOX and use it daily, FWIW). I can get my money out one of two ways: Electronic transfer that takes 3-5 business days or writing a check. Another thing that will help keep you from accidentally spending this money is that you are only allowed to make 3 withdrawals per month from this type of account.

    Now, a lot of people think that $1000 is just not enough for an emergency fund. I found that in the 2.5 years I had that little tiny account, I was able to cover every emergency I had with that fund. The only exception was when I bought a $1500 vehicle after my previous one left parts of the transmission on the highway. In that case, I had to wait until my next payday to get the extra $500 and I bummed rides to work from co-workers/roommates until then. I could have gotten by with an $800 car (and later I did just that, but that’s another story).

    The entire purpose of the emergency fund is so that you can cancel all of your credit cards. ALL OF THEM. Once I got my emergency fund in place, I never used another credit card again. Ever.

    If you think you need to keep a Visa with a $2000 limit on it “for emergencies,” then simply put $2000 in your emergency fund instead. If you’re married and have kids, your spouse might insist on even more. It’s probably unnecessary to keep more than $2000-$3000 in this emergency fund, with two notable exceptions:

    1. You reasonably expect a coming disaster, such as a job loss or medically necessary surgery.
    2. You are about to have a child. (Not expecting to get pregnant, mind you, but actually pregnant or approved for an adoption you started before all of this. Knowing a due date is a good indicator for whether this applies to you.)

    In both of these cases you put everything you can into your emergency fund. This is true for all stages of the plan. We are on Baby Step 4, but we are piling up cash for when lilwizard shows up at the end of February. When these things no longer become an issue (your job stabilized, you’re back to work after the surgery, or mom and baby are home from the hospital with no complications), you continue with the plan.

    Again, I know $1000 does not sound like enough to some people. Even $4000 might not sound like enough. Trust me, it is.

    The coolest thing in the world will happen to you the first time you use your emergency fund. You feel empowered. The first time I used my emergency fund was when my radiator blew up during a radiator flush. Two hours later, I wrote a check for $300. I literally cried because I realized I had the money to cover this unexpected expense. It was awesome.