December 31, 2003
Review: The Kennedy's Stand
I got 6 new CD's for Christmas, Stand has quickly risen to the top of the replay list. It's jangly, happy, fun, poppy, folk music by a husband wife team from NYC. Highly recommended. If you don't trust me they have MP3 samples of every song from the album on their web site.
You can buy the CD from their web site too.
Permalink | Comments (0)New Day Care Rules could force parents to stay home with kids
Virginia is considering upping the square footage requirements for day care centers from 25 sq ft per child to 35 sq. ft. per child.
"I have parents stopping in the office daily asking what's happening with the licensing," said Clark Andrs, director of River's Bend Children's Center in Chester. "Most of the parents have told me if this happens, they can't afford it. They will probably stop working and stay home with the kids."
Assuming that the law is ultimately revenue neutral for day care owners, (that is, they make up in increased per-child fees the loss from less kids) they will end up making the same money to watch less kids, and more kids will have a stay home parent.
And this is a bad thing?
I know, I know, I'm a libertarian and I should be railing against the government setting any regulation. However, if we assume that they will regulate (a very safe assumption) then a law whose unintended consequence is a good thing will be a welcome change.
Permalink | Comments (0)December 30, 2003
Books officially declared dangerous
Reading an almanac now makes you a terrorist suspect.
The slippery slope theory inevitably leads to making all books illegal.
Permalink | Comments (1)December 29, 2003
O'DonnellWeb 9.0 goes live!
Do you like? Please say something in the comments. My wife hates it - but she never liked the brain design either.
The changes:
- New color scheme - very clean front page with minimal extra stuff.
- All new content on the About page.
- The blogroll has been moved to the links page. All links are annotated!
- The archives are all grouped on the archived page, instead of being spread all over the right column as in the previous design.
- New contact form.
If you see any major errors please let me know.
Permalink | Comments (3)December 28, 2003
In-laws visiting
and I've lost my office as it is a guest bedroom for a couple more days. The redesign is about 90% done - it looks damn good :) I should be lauching it on Wednesday.
Permalink | Comments (0)December 25, 2003
Just 15 minutes
I want just 15 short minutes with the guy that decided to package toys by using 75 steel reinforced twist ties to hold them in the box. I'm certain that there is a special place in Hell for that guy, and I'm going to use my 15 minutes to send him there.
Consider it my Christmas present to parents everywhere. Assembly isn't even the hard part of Christmas morning anymore, it's getting the damn toys out of the box that makes me want to scream.
I must have been a good boy though, because Santa brought me a bunch of CD's, some DVD's, and a couple of books.
And a monkey.
Permalink | Comments (3)December 24, 2003
Merry Christmas
Click on picture for large version
Permalink | Comments (2)December 23, 2003
Big Changes Coming...
A major redesign is in the works here at ODonnellWeb. I'm tired of my blog, and I'm tired of certain elements of the content. Debuting (I hope!) on 1/1/2004 will be a whole new blog, or actually 3 or maybe 4 blogs rolled up into one.
12/25 Update: I'm going to keep it as one blog. After thinking about it a bit I realized I must have been smoking crack when I had the idea the maintain to 3 or 4 blogs. I mean, I've never actually smoked cracked (as far as a know) - but it would explain that ridiculous decision. One blog - slight redirection in content, totally new design. Coming soon. Maybe not by 1/1 - but soon.
December 22, 2003
Billy Beane as your stock broker
A Morgan Stanley analyst reads Moneyball and sees a primer for investing in the stock market, not just for investing in baseball players.
5 tool prospect = high growth rate stocks
Slow guy with high OBP = stocks with solid PE and PS ratios.
The relationship is sort of flipped though. In baseball, the 5 tool player was the old school thinking that Beane has ignored. In finance, fundamental analysis is the old school thinking that went out of style in the dot com boom.
Permalink | Comments (0)The World's First Fully Automated Domestic Assistant
Yes, I realize that it is a very clever marketing ploy for the I, Robot movie due out this summer. Still, a guy can dream can't he?
I wonder how many bloggers won't get it and will think this is a real product?
Permalink | Comments (0)December 21, 2003
My computer is possessed
I just turned the speaker volume of my PC speakers all the way down - and was confused by the sound of country music coming from them. My PC speakers are somehow receiving the signal of Thunder 101.5 FM - a country station in Richmond VA. I don't have an FM tuner card in my PC, and my FM transmitter is turned off. If I turn the volume up just a little the FM sound ceases.
Weird...
Permalink | Comments (0)Music for your mood
CDBaby.com has a cool new feature - music selections segregated by your mood or activity. Examples:
Music to have sex to
Road trip music
Music for a sunny day
Music for a rainy day
While browsing the site, I stumbled into Alex Woodward, a previously unknown (to me) artist whose CD I will buy very soon. I can't put my finger on who he reminds me of - but it's VERY catchy roots pop.
Permalink | Comments (0)December 18, 2003
Scooped by just about everybody
Daryl and Kimberly both beat me to the article, but it is so good I'm blogging it anyway. This has to be the first homeschool article I've ever read that gets that HSLDA, as a Christian organization, does not speak for the majority of homeschoolers. Bravo to the author for "getting it." Bravo too for writing a balanced and entertaining story.
Permalink | Comments (1)The New Wave of British Heavy Metal
There are some lost memories coming back after a few minutes skimming this website.
Now I need to track down some Saxon and Tokyo Blade CD's. All my stuff was on tape - and is long gone.
Saxon, somewhat surprisingly, is still together, still touring, and still making new music. Their website is not too bad either, although it does need more MP3's.
Permalink | Comments (2)Unions Suck
Here is a classic example of why I hate labor unions. Alex Rodriguez wants to be a Red Sox. The Red Sox want Arod. The teams have worked out a mutually beneficial trade. The union has effectively killed the trade because they claim it could have a negative effect on baseball salaries.
Excuse me? In what fantatsy world is the union living in which salaries can never go down? If Arod wants to play for the Red Sox in exchange for nothing more than a lifetime supply of New England Clam Chowder, he can damn well do it. Last time I checked, this was America.
I hope Arod and / or the Sox push this into the courts. I know there is a collective bargaining agreement in place, but this is wrong on so many levels. It's also a very bad PR move for the union. They are pissing off their most highly paid member, and one of their most popular too.
Permalink | Comments (2)December 16, 2003
This explains everything

via Baseball Musings
Permalink | Comments (0)All I want for Christmas is Arod in a Sox uniform
Boston Dirt Dogs, which has been amazingly accurate all off season, is reporting that Manny for ARod is a done deal and should be announced by the end of the week.
I think Harry Carey would have put it best.
Holy Cow!
Permalink | Comments (0)December 14, 2003
Parenting 101
Attention Parents:
There is a nasty flu going around. It is very contagious. People are dying. If you or your child has the flu, please stay away from my family. In particular, stay very far away from after school activities that involve groups of children. The fact you paid for the activity in no way gives you the right to show up and infect 20 otherwise healthy people with your strain of the virus. You're sick. Life sucks. Excercise some adult judgement - GO HOME AND STAY THERE.
Thank you.
(This is all theoretical. I am not sick. I intend to stay not sick. The key component of my strategy is to stay away from people that are too stupid to stay home when they are sick.)
Permalink | Comments (3)December 12, 2003
Puke Air
The world's largest collection of airline motion sickness bags. I guess everybody needs a hobby...
From Metafilter.
Permalink | Comments (0)The Christmas Story
Real Live Preacher is retelling The Christmas Story in his own special way, filling in the blanks between the Immaculate Conception and birth of Jesus. It's powerful and entertaining storytelling - regardless of your religious affiliation (of lack of the same).
Permalink | Comments (1)December 11, 2003
Scary Flaw in IE
Microsoft Internet Explorer has a not so new flaw that makes it very very easy for a hacker to display a fake URL in your browser. For example, you could get a fake email with the return address of your bank, telling you to verify some account activity, or that they were confirming a deposit, whatever. The link (if you allow HTML email, which you shouldn't) would actually take you to a spoofed site, but the browser would show that you are at www.yourbank.com. If the forged page is an exact replica of your bank log in page, you would have no reason to be suspicious. As soon as you try to log in, the hackers will have your information and something as simple as you ending up at your real bank home page will eliminate any suspicion if you wonder why your log in did not work.
Bottom line, this has the potential to seperate you from your money very quickly.
The solution is simple - DON'T USE INTERNET EXPLORER.
Mozilla produces a much better and safer browser. This does not work in Mozilla. It shows the actual URL you are at.
Permalink | Comments (3)The Engineer's Yell
E to the x, Dy Dx, E to the x, Dx Cosine, secant, tangent, sine, Three point one four one five nine Square root, cube root, BTU, Slipstick, slide rule, Yea, Purdue!
Slide rule? This is a few years old. You can substitute HP for slide rule and the rhyme still works though. BTW, I had never seen this until today. One of those Purdue traditions I apparently missed.
Permalink | Comments (0)December 10, 2003
Really ugly web design
and all of it resided at ODonnellWeb in the past.
1999
2000
Mid 2001
Late 2001
2002
I've actually had a website on the Internet since 12/31/1995. Archive.org has nothing on me prior to 1999. And for that I am eternally thankful!
Permalink | Comments (5)Men are irrational around hot women
In a study, men looked at pictures of hot and not-so-hot women (as judged by Am I Hot.com) and were then offered a choice of a couple of financial rewards. The guys looking at the hot women made the bad financial decision more often than the guys looking at average women.
Well, Duh. Men have been making stupid decisions because of the fairer sex for centuries.
However, at least now I have an excuse for all my future bad decisions. I can blame it all on my hot wife :)
Permalink | Comments (0)December 09, 2003
Earthquake
We apparently had an earthquake in Fredericksburg today, 4.5 on the Richter scale. I didn't notice.
Permalink | Comments (0)Steve Jobs on Digital Music
Interesting article. He may be the only CEO level person in the entire digital music debate that has actually used Kazaa, loaded up an Ipod, etc. He knows of what he speaks.
Permalink | Comments (0)December 08, 2003
Christmas - the season of nutcases
Took a look at the site. Once you get past the sheer ugliness of it, these people are scary. They are boycotting Kimberly-Clark because, now get ready because this is shocking, they show naked babies in their commercials for diapers. Oh, the horror of it all. They are also after Mattel for having a pregnant Barbie without a ring on her finger, and Amazon for selling books they don't approve of.
Oh, and I just noticed the "Howard Stern is Satan" bit on the website too.
National organization with 47 chapters? I don't think so.
Note - obviously child pornograpgy is a serious issue. However, these people are adding nothing to the fight, except maybe some Monday morning comic relief for me.
From: "Sharon Brodt"Permalink | Comments (3)Add to Address Book To: chrisodva@yahoo.com Subject: Please Help Date: Sat, 6 Dec 2003 02:55:57 -0500 Dear Chris,
My organization,Parents Against Child Pornography,needs your help.
http://www.geocities.com/pacp18505
Nationaly(47 chapters) we help educate children and parents about sexual preditors and other dangers our children face everyday. We also work with the FBI by scouring the internet for illegal sites that can harm our children
We raise funds by selling autographed items so we can buy materials to give to parents and children at malls, health shows, etc.
Please help us fight this battle, for our childrens sake.
Check out our site and consider donating autographed items.
If you need more details please contact me at:
pacp18505@yahoo.com
Thank You
Carmen Brodt
PACP HELP NET
1317 Prospect Ave.
Scranton, Pa. 18505
December 07, 2003
Too bad the Kindergarten Cop is busy as Gov. of CA
Check out this article on violent and aggressive kindergartners. I've extracted a few blurbs below.
Not every school district in America is besieged by kamikaze kindergartners, but those who see a problem believe they are witnessing the result of a number of social trends that have come together in a most unfortunate way. Many cite economic stress, which has parents working longer hours than ever before, kids spending more time in day care and everyone coming home too exhausted to engage in the kind of relationships that build social skills. "Kids aren't getting enough lap time,"Homeschooled kids aren't lacking for lap time! Economic stress...which is of course is only made worse by the tax code in this country.
In addition, many educators worry about rising academic pressure in kindergarten and first grade in anticipation of the yearly tests demanded by the No Child Left Behind Act. In Texas, which has led the nation in embracing such tests, most kindergartens now go the full day, yet some have eliminated recess or limited it to 15 minutes a day.
Kimberly? Kimberly? I don't think she actually visits here, but I expect she'll have this article too. Academic pressure certainly should not be applied to 6 year olds, but I doubt it has anything to do with their behavior issues.
Hinshaw and other experts on child behavior also point out that aggressive behavior in children has been irrefutably linked to exposure to violence on TV and in movies, video games and other media. "Dozens of studies have shown this link. Probably hundreds," says psychologist Jerome Singer, co-director of the Yale University Family Television Research and Consultation Center. "The size of the effect is almost as strong as the relationship between smoking and cancer."
Bullshit, bullshit, and more bullshit. We are talking about 5 and 6 year old here. I don't think they are playing Grand Theft Auto every night. A six year old would not even want to play many of the violent games - it would not hold their attention for more than about 30 seconds.
There is little doubt that very young children are watching loads of TV before they even reach kindergarten. In October the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation released the results of a survey of 1,065 parents with children ages 6 months to 6 years. The stunning finding is that 43% of the kids age 2 and younger watched TV on a typical day and that 26% had a TV in their room. The median amount of time spent watching: two hours a day.
Again, it is not the TV that is the problem. It is what the parents allow them to watch. I don't think it is stunning that the pre-school set is watching TV. There are very good, age appropriate shows for them. This is a parenting issue, not a TV issue.
And that's two hours a day that are not spent doing what toddlers most need to do: interacting with people who love them and can teach them how to behave. Parker, in Fort Worth, blames this lack of socialization at home more than anything else for the wild behavior he's seeing in his district's youngest students.
Public school kids not properly socialized? Who would of thought it? I thought only us homeschoolers were failing to properly socialize our children.
On the front lines in Philadelphia and Fort Worth, schools are trying to teach kids what they have failed to learn at home.The money quote. For all the PHD's blathering on about video games and such, it comes down to something much simpler. The parents are completely failing to raise their kids to be civil members of society. And all the government school in the world won't fix that problem. Permalink | Comments (1)
December 06, 2003
First Hand Account of President Bush's T-day visit to Iraq
This came from a friend who is active military. He is not the author. And for my more cynical left wing visitors - it is an authentic letter.
An Email from a Captain in IraqPermalink | Comments (1)We knew there was a dinner planned with ambassador Bremer and LTG Sanchez. There were 600 seats available and all the units in the division were tasked with filling a few tables. Naturally, the 501st MI battalion got our table. Soldiers were grumbling about having to sit through another dog-and-pony show, so we had to pick soldiers to attend. I chose not to go.
But, about 1500 the G2, LTC Devan, came up to me and with a smile, asked me to come to dinner with him, to meet him in his office at 1600 and bring a camera. I didn't really care about getting a picture with Sanchez or Bremer, but when the division's senior intelligence officer asks you to go, you go. We were seated in the chow hall, fully decorated for thanksgiving when all kinds of secret service guys showed up.
That was my first clue, because Bremer's been here before and his personal security detachment is not that big. Then BG Dempsey got up to speak, and he welcomed ambassador Bremer and LTG Sanchez. Bremer thanked us all and pulled out a piece of paper as if to give a speech. He mentioned that the President had given him this thanksgiving speech to give to the troops. He then paused and said that the senior man present should be the one to give it. He then looked at Sanchez, who just smiled.
Bremer then said that we should probably get someone more senior to read the speech. Then, from behind the camouflage netting, the President of the United States came around. The mess hall actually erupted with hollering. Troops bounded to their feet with shocked smiles and just began cheering with all their hearts. The building actually shook. It was just unreal. I was absolutely stunned. Not only for the obvious, but also because I was only two tables away from the podium. There he stood, less than thirty feet away from me! The cheering went on and on and on.
Soldiers were hollering, cheering, and a lot of them were crying. There was not a dry eye at my table. When he stepped up to the cheering, I could clearly see tears running down his cheeks. It was the most surreal moment I've had in years. Not since my wedding and Aaron being born. Here was this man, our President, came all the way around the world, spending 17 hours on an airplane and landing in the most dangerous airport in the world, where a plane was shot out of the sky not six days before.
Just to spend two hours with his troops. Only to get on a plane and spend another 17 hours flying back. It was a great moment, and I will never forget it. He delivered his speech, which we all loved, when he looked right at me and held his eyes on me. Then he stepped down and was just mobbed by the soldiers. He slowly worked his way all the way around the chow hall and shook every last hand extended. Every soldier who wanted a photo with the President got one. I made my way through the line, got dinner, then wolfed it down as he was still working the room.
You could tell he was really enjoying himself. It wasn't just a photo opportunity. This man was actually enjoying himself! He worked his way over the course of about 90 minutes towards my side of the room. Meanwhile, I took the opportunity to shake a few hands. I got a picture with Ambassador Bremer, Talabani (acting Iraqi president) and Achmed Chalabi (another member of the ruling council) and Condaleeza Rice, who was there with him.
I felt like I was drunk. He was getting closer to my table so I went back over to my seat. As he passed and posed for photos, he looked my in the eye and "How you doing', captain." I smiled and said "God bless you, sir." To which he responded "I'm proud of what you do, captain." Then moved on.
December 05, 2003
New Blogroll Additions
I added a few sites to the blogroll. Instead of letting them fester in obscurity in the list to the right, I'll highlight them here.
Which is probably no less obscure. But at least I tried.
Jeremy Zawodny - MySQL developer for Yahoo - mostly techie / blog related
Corsair The Rational Pirate - Libertarian in the NOVA burbs. I'm violating my rule about never linking to blogspot - maybe he'll move soon.
Straight White Guy- and very funny too.
Mighty Lambchop Gospel - Not sure where she is - good taste in music though.
Blog O' Fun - A new game, or online game, reviewed just about every day.
Also, I added a few links in the newly revised "In Heavy Rotation" section.
Kids & New Media Literacy
An interesting article from M.I.T. The authors two main points are that:
1. We are surrounded by pop culture. Limiting kids exposure is a good first step but ultimately we have to help our kids deal with in a critical and rational manner. Also, since we are surrounded, it makes sense for parents to actively look for opportunities to use pop culture to reinforce whatever it is we are teaching our kids.
2. In much the same way we would never consider a child that reads well but writes poorly to be "literate," a kid who is consumer of new media (Web, games, DVD, etc) without being able to produce some is also not quite literate.
That second point is the really interesting one for homeschoolers. We have the ability and flexibility to integrate web design, dvd authoring, or film production into our kids routine. Is the next Hitchcock at this very moment hunkered down in a basement or kitchen working on his/her multiplication tables?
Permalink | Comments (0)December 04, 2003
Old like Britney Spears or old like my grandmother?
A local Girl Scout Troop makes a video for kids on how to be safe. Tips for descrbing threatening strangers include describing the stranger as old like Britney Spears, or old like your grandmother.
OK, that is funny. But should we really be forcing 9 -11 year old girls to focus on the bad aspects of life like this? Abuctions are a problem, but especially out here in suburban VA, these girls are far more likely to be hit by a car than faced with a possible abduction. The majority of child abuctions are by family members anyway. So, maybe they should have included, "old, and exactly like my father who I haven't seen in 6 months" as one of the options.
From Fark - my hometown paper made Fark.com!
Permalink | Comments (0)December 03, 2003
How Does A Homeschooler change a lightbulb?
You'll have to visit Fragments From Floyd for the answer.
And really, you should be visiting Fragments every day anyway.
Permalink | Comments (0)December 02, 2003
Harry Potter as a Libertarian Primer
A couple of articles detailing how Harry Potter, especially The Order of the Phoenix, promotes a libertarian worldview.
Can we expect the establishment politicians to join the evengelical christians in decrying the next book as a subversive threat to our children?
Permalink | Comments (6)