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August 28, 2006

Katrina Anniverary - New Orleans One Year Later

The federal government's response was bad enough, but how's it going one year later? Here's some info from The Center For American Progress

1,833 lives lost. 270,000 homes destroyed. $55 billion in insured damage. Up to $1.4 billion in American tax dollars wasted by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Today, the costs of Hurricane Katrina are still staggering. But even more staggering has been the slow pace of recovery on the Gulf Coast. No one was happy with the federal government's initial response to the hurricane. Eighty percent of the American public think the federal government's response could have been "much better," and in September President Bush stated, "This government will learn the lessons of Hurricane Katrina." But on the eve of Katrina's one year anniversary, it is clear that the nation is still waiting for the help Bush promised. Yesterday, as part of the White House's "public relations blitz," Bush trumpeted in his weekly radio address that the federal government has "committed $110 billion to the recovery effort." But those billions of dollars have yet "to translate into billions in building." Perhaps most disappointingly, Bush has forgotten about his promise to the nation to confront poverty "with bold action." As Newsweek's Jonathan Alter writes, "The mood in Washington continues to be one of not-so-benign neglect of the problems of the poor." Lessons haven't been learned and time has run out for excuses. (The Progress Report has compiled a comprehensive timeline of the past year's events and American Progress has developed a list of actions America needs to ensure preparedness and recovery capacity for natural disasters.)

Have a great day!

August 14, 2006

Trading/Bartering/Offering [UPDATED Again]

Darren and I have been talking, and we've both realized we've got some computer equipment we really don't need anymore. We were thinking, instead of just junking this stuff in a closet forever, or getting rid of it in a possibly wasteful way, why not offer it to others for trade or for free so that it gets reused?

He's got a few things, and I've got a few...off the top of my head I've got:
a four port hub
a ps/2-vga kvm switch (if I still have it)

other stuff - I'll update with more...hopefully darren will too...be sure to post what you've got!

[UPDATE: Darren's Stuff for trade/giveaway.]

  1. 2x512 MB (that's 1 gb to you scottie!) 184-pin PC3200 DDR400 DIMM
  2. 2x512 MB (that's 1 gb to you scottie!) 168-pin PC133 DIMM
  3. SATA/150 PCI card (for connecting a SATA HardDrive to an IDE Motherboard.

I'm sure there's some other stuff I can find as well... laters.

[UPDATE 2: One More Item From Darren.]

4. Netgear RT311 Internet Access Gateway Router.
5. Microsoft SideWinder Precision 2 Joystick (USB)
6. iRock FM Transmitter.
RFG400FM-unit.gif

DART Adventure #1 - the noisy bike

After riding from work to Mockingbird station today, I entered the elevator to head up to street level to find another guy already in there with his beach bike, complete with rear-mounted "saddle bags" made of bent wire (he didn't make it, it was a manufactured item, I'm just illustratin' here...).

I had my earphones on, as I always do for the DART trips, and this guy just starts talking...from what I could make out over Al Franken's voice, he was talking about how "when [he] gets going real fast and goes around a corner, that cage starts hittin' those back wheel spokes and starts goin' 'whoomp whoomp whoomp whoomp'". I responded by suggesting he make some brackets (to hold the cage away from the wheels) and he responded that it wasn't a problem except for when they didn't have anything in them.

Luckily, the elevator had gotten to the top by this time and I exited...and he walked up to some other people and started talking to them. I went across the street to wait and I saw him about five minutes later tearing out of there on his bike, pulling a Kroger shopping basket alongside him.

And that's that for now.