Standard Mischief

Archive for May, 2007

WordPress 2.2 & Subversion

I just did an upgrade to Wordpress 2.2 with the help of subversion

It seems that everything worked. Holler if you see anything broken, please.

Subversion holds the promise of having future WordPress version upgrades to be as simple as issuing a command on the command line:

$ svn sw http://svn.automattic.com/wordpress/tags/2.2.1/ .

..for a possible future WordPress 2.2.1 version. Of course, to be able to use Subversion, you must have a hosting provider that gives you command-line access to your web server, and also you need to ensure that the provider has the subversion (http://subversion.tigris.org/) (svn) client installed.

2007-05-21 16:30 by Standard Mischief, Filed under:standard mischief blog news     No Comments

teh food stamp diet (AKA eating cheap)

Nicole and Tino decide to imitate a few congress-critters showboating the “food stamp diet”. I’m assuming our representative are doing this to demonstrate how awful it is to live on the USDA entitlement program, and why it ought to be kicked up a notch. Tino cuts through the crap of the whole thing in the first post here (at least I assume that was Tino, as Nicole seems to be guest blogging too.) If you’re in it just for the food pr0n, that starts here. They have also lumped everything into a category, so if you want to read the whole thingy chronologically backwards, just go here.

Update: Most everything seems to also be crossposted at Nicole’s site too.

I’m sorely tempted to imitate. Not only do I think it would be good blogging grist (intended), but I assume I could add an interesting perspective. The key to eating cheap, however, is planning ahead, and I’m kinda busy right now. If I do it, perhaps I’ll start next week.

I’ve no doubt at all that Nicole and Tino can accomplish this, and I did something similar a decade ago for months at a time. It’s true that a dollar went a little further but I was feeding myself, my now ex-fiancee, and her (in the mist of a growth spurt) teenage son for ~$25/week. I could have even done it for less but they were pretty picky eaters. Planning the whole thing out took gobs of my free time. That $25 per week figure also did not include $20 worth of pizza or some other luxury we blew on payday every two weeks.

Here’s how I did it:

1. 90% of everything we bought was on sale and I had a coupon.

2. I hit three grocery chains per week to buy the deals. This was not as bad as it sounds because all three were on the way home from work.

3. The stores Safeway and Giant doubled coupons up to fifty cents. That meant, of course, that a 50¢ was better than a 75¢ one.

4. A defunct chain called “Food Plus” doubled coupons up to a dollar, but they didn’t have nearly the loss leaders that the other two had. Overall though, prices were cheaper so I bought most of the non-coupon purchases there.

5. I dumpster-dove coupons. A newspaper guy would always dump a bunch of Sunday sections in a nearby recycle bin. This worked so well that I ended up calling the county to dump the bin when it got full. I didn’t want that newspaper guy to start dumping the Sunday sections elsewhere.

6. Rainchecks. Invariably teh soccer moms of the world would swoop in on Sunday and buy all the deals. I’d go in Monday when the shelfs were bare and get management to stamp the ad circular, saying that the store was out of stock. That would give me two more weeks that I was able to buy at the advertised price. Not only was I not forced to blow the budget to stock up at home, but that also gave me extra time to scare up some coupons. If the store was out of stock on Monday, they would almost always be restocked by Wednesday, so I could buy the deals that week too, without battling with the soccer moms.

7. Because I could get 12¢, 2 L bottles of soda, and I always had about twenty five coupons, the kid would have his surgery high-fructose goodness available out of the strategic soda reserve. No choice over Pepsi or Coke, however.

8. I also have to note that if you are using a doubled coupon, it’s almost always a better deal to buy the smallest allowed size as possible (the exception being when the larger size is on sale). If you need more, just use another coupon.

One other thing to note is that occasionally I would dumpster dive food. This only happened once or twice, I never depended on it for making the budget. I’ve learned that many people are pretty funny about what they stick in their mouth, and it’s next to pointless to try to change their mind.

One of the scores was a bunch of food and utensils. I dove right in and salvaged a few backpack loads worth of canned goods and a few nice pots and pans. The cache seemed to be from a nearby apartment that was being cleaned out by management. I found it funny that my ex didn’t have a problem with the nice copper bottom stainless-steel cooking-wear I salvaged (we boiled water in it first), but said she couldn’t possibly eat the canned goods. I drew a large X on each of the salvaged cans and ate them myself.

I left quite a few groceries like spice containers, bags of pasta, and the like because they were opened already or not in durable containers. There was a lot of unopened ramen, stowed in clean cardboard boxes inside the dumpster, but I left all of those behind. I couldn’t come to terms with that myself.

2007-05-20 17:00 by Standard Mischief, Filed under:deranged rants     No Comments

5 out of 7 live linux CD distros…

5 out of 7 live linux CD distros have this strange image artifact when booted or installed.

photo of strange image problem

It isn’t the picture that matters, it’s the artifacts that come along with it.

Really, really annoying because it’s damn near impossible to Google me up a solution. I’m pretty sure someone has already solved this problem somewhere, but I’m not exactly sure what keywords that person used to describe the problem. As we all know, if you can’t ask the right questions, you have a poor chance of being able to search for the solution.

I’m currently using a hard drive install of Debian obtained via their netinstall.iso image. I do not get the vertical line artifacts that are arranged in a horizontal pattern when booting most any version of Knoppix. I’m assuming it’s a problem with my hardware video drivers and the wrapper software used to get it to work.

I’d just do the hard disk install of Knoppix, except that the installer script breaks things.

My current plan is to boot Knoppix sometime when I’m less busy and see what video settings get automagicly configured at start-up. Updates to follow.

2007-05-14 00:00 by Standard Mischief, Filed under:deranged rants     5 Comments

Big Pharma buys itself some congress-critters

In what quite possibly may end up being my mantra, I’ll ask again. If Free Trade is good, isn’t it good for everyone, or is it only good when it directly benefits Corporations, LLC, and other types of corporate personhood thingys?

A few days ago, on May 8, the US Senate voted to add a “poison pill” amendment to a bill that would allow importation of drugs sold in other countries.

On a 49-40 vote, the Senate required the federal government to certify the safety and effectiveness of drugs before they can be imported, a requirement that health officials have said they cannot meet.

That’s a link to a story pulled off the AP. Unfortunately, they fail to explain further why the federal government can’t or won’t certify overseas drugs. The AP also fails because they don’t cite the name or bill number of the legislation.

My best guess is that it was S. 251, which - just for the record - comes in at a short 6,045 words.

If this is the proper bill, however, it does not have the text of the poison pill amendment. It’s been four days, Thomas.loc.gov is lagging.

The cited concerns, “safety” and “counterfeit” are pure FUD. I’m having a hard time understanding how the exact same drugs, frequently from the very same manufacturing facility, are somehow tainted just because the were packaged differently and then sold overseas. Are not the drugs available in “Australia, Canada, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, Switzerland, South Africa, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxemburg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway” safe and effecitve? Or is someone making the case that the rest of the world is getting scree swept up from the floor of the manufacturing facilities? Also, seeing as we already have a problem with counterfeit drugs in this county, cheaper prices perhaps would remove some of the incentive to counterfeit drugs because that would be less profit to be made. It seems that simple countermeasures such as verifiable lot numbers should be able to take care of the problem. Pfizer is also implementing color-shifting logos as an additional countermeasure.

No, this amendment is just about allowing big pharma to be able to sell drugs at one price in one market and another price in a different market. It uses the resources of our government to protect the current business model.

2007-05-13 01:00 by Standard Mischief, Filed under:not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any d     No Comments
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