Friday, October 27, 2006

In "Swans deliver a climate change warning", we see a classic example of burying the lede. You have to read through four paragraphs and most of a fifth in this slanted opinion piece to finally see the following, "Experts said that the slow arrival was due to warmer than usual conditions on the continent, in particular the birds' other main wintering grounds in the Netherlands, and an absence of the north-east winds that aid their migration from the Arctic tundra of northern Russia."

Apparently remaining in the Netherlands over the winter isn't unusual for the swans. As for myself, I'd much prefer Florida.

Like uncountable thousands of Windows users, I have been testing Windows Vista on a backup machine and using that platform to test IE 7. Sparked by a nasty virus/trojan/bho infection that I acquired by recovering files for a friend from his seemingly lost hard drive, I decided to test Firefox 2 on my production machine.

The scales have been lifted; I see clearly now. Download Firefox 2, make it your default browser, and put your browser troubles behind you. Click on the Firefox download button conveniently located in the left column of this blog to protect yourself from all too many nasty exploits and vulnerabilities in IE 6.

BTW, it took the better part of three full days to regain full confidence that my machine was clean again, despite the measures that I had taken prior to the infection. In a later post, I will explain the tools that I used to clean my machine and the new measures that I have taken to protect my production environment in addition to switching to Firefox 2.

"Bad climate science yields worse economics"

An excellent example of truth, succinctly expressed, by Steven Milloy, FoxNews.com's Junk Science columnist.
Mark Cuban does a great service for NBA fans and advances the understanding of the effect of the new synthetic basketball on play this season in his post, "NBA balls...".