Outlanders, Burglary, and Being Scared

First, I haven’t posted any blogs in a while because I’ve been working on the web site for my Planetside outfit, the Outlanders. You’ll see a link to that site on the right-hand side. It uses the same technology as Barnson.org to drive it (Drupal), but it’s a newer version. Once that new version graduates from “release candidate” to “release”, I’ll be updating Barnson.org as well.

Second: My life used to be pretty boring to all appearances. Yeah, I’m always excited about my work, technology, and music, but outside of those arenas, we didn’t have much in the way of interpersonal conflict with neighbors or any other strangeness to be worried about. I mean, it seems like there are people who thrive on disasters. For a really great treastise on this subject in an easy-to-read fiction form, try The Losers, by David Eddings. It’s an engrossing read by a popular fantasy author, but it’s not fantasy. It’s a modern-day urban good vs. evil morality play, and really worth the time to read. It’s not very long, either.

Unfortunately, I found my life closely resembling The Losers last night…

First, I haven’t posted any blogs in a while because I’ve been working on the web site for my Planetside outfit, the Outlanders. You’ll see a link to that site on the right-hand side. It uses the same technology as Barnson.org to drive it (Drupal), but it’s a newer version. Once that new version graduates from “release candidate” to “release”, I’ll be updating Barnson.org as well.

Second: My life used to be pretty boring to all appearances. Yeah, I’m always excited about my work, technology, and music, but outside of those arenas, we didn’t have much in the way of interpersonal conflict with neighbors or any other strangeness to be worried about. I mean, it seems like there are people who thrive on disasters. For a really great treastise on this subject in an easy-to-read fiction form, try The Losers, by David Eddings. It’s an engrossing read by a popular fantasy author, but it’s not fantasy. It’s a modern-day urban good vs. evil morality play, and really worth the time to read. It’s not very long, either.

Unfortunately, I found my life closely resembling The Losers last night…

Anyway, our life was pretty routine until our neighbor (I’ll call him Jim) married a Russian bride he found through an agency (I’ll call her Nona). My wife and his new wife became friends, and kept in touch even after this neighbor and his kids moved up to Canada. They started having some marital problems I won’t go into, which culminated in her arranging to come back down to the U.S. and then go into hiding with her children. Obviously, her husband was upset and suspected us of complicity in her decision to run from him. We know little more than he does about her whereabouts, other than that she’s found a safe place to stay. But that was just the beginning of the excitement.

Before I go on, allow me to caveat that we are nosy neighbors. No ifs, ands, or buts about it, we want to know what’s happening in our neighborhood, particularly if it involves those we know and care about. Part of our development is “twin homes” (townhomes that only share a single wall), so we live pretty close to a lot of people. More so than larger acreage Suburbia. We’ve known these neighbors having marital problems for years now, and consider them both friends, although the husband seems a bit psycho at the moment.

So it was with great distress my wife peered out the window and noticed several men in white t-shirts hauling stuff out of Jim’s kitchen, and handing it over the fence to other waiting men on their side of the house. In general, this activity resembled one called “burglary”.

I did a dumb thing, I guess. I hopped on my bicycle, rode around the corner (I figured my bike was a safe bet if I had to get home in a hurry, I was about to confront at least 3 fully-grown men and accuse them of burglary), and parked it in the street in front of their house. I must admit it. I was scared. Scared enough, and with enough adrenaline pumping through my veins, that my hands and knees were shaking. I just hoped that the men I was confronting wouldn’t sense my fear confronting them. I’m really a wimp, a very non-confrontational person that would rather talk my way out of any problem than fight my way out.

“Excuse me,” I began as I approached the front steps where the men and two women were hanging out, “I have a concern.” I walked closer to the steps and stopped about five feet away. “A few minutes ago, my wife noticed you guys taking items from your neighbor’s house here and handing them over the fence. I’m friends with Jim, and would appreciate it if you put them back. The police are on their way now.” I added that last part because my wife had dialed 911 to report the burglary, and the look on the face of these men, particularly the chubby blonde one to my left, were murderous.

I received a moment of stunned silence in return.

“What do you think you’re doing, riding your bike over here and accusing us of stealing?” shouted the blonde. From his slightly slurred speech, I guessed he’d been drinking.

The goateed, brown-haired guy in a wife-beater t-shirt (you know the type I’m talking about, mesh tank-top undershirt) seemed to take a more moderate approach. “Hang on a second. We’re just hanging out here, having a few drinks. What are you talking about?”

I reiterated what my wife had seens almost verbatim from the first time, but this time he caught on.

“Oh, man, that’s not it at all!” replied Goatee. “You see, Jim’s my friend too,” (I consider this unlikely, since Jim had been living in Canada until the day before since these new neighbors had lived there, but I digress,) “and he asked us to keep an eye on his house. His wife showed up in a big gray van with two other women today and hauled like twenty things out of the house. We were afraid she was going to take the rest, so we brought the TV and stuff over here. I mean, there’s like nothing in there, man, it’s pretty bare. We were even thinking about buying their house.”

In my mind, I thought about the surroundings. They had been handing items over the back fence, when they could have easily used the front yard and the nice, large front doors. All the lights were off in their house, when you’d think they’d at least want the kitchen light on so they didn’t trip over the stuff they were supposedly safeguarding from Jim’s wife. They had been whispering to each other very quietly as they moved the items over. I smelled bull manure being thrown my way, here.

“For some reason, I doubt,” I began, but Blondie interrupted again.

“Look, this is ridiculous. He left his door unlocked and asked us to watch his house. You’re accusing us of stealing his stuff. Why don’t you keep the TV at your house if you’re so concerned about it?”

I was, for a moment, completely thunderstruck by the leap of illogic. Was he actually implying that he thought they could make this right by giving me my neighbor’s stolen goods? Apparently so.

“I have no desire to keep Jim’s television,” I replied. “I think it should stay in his house where it belongs. For some reason, I doubt Jim asked you to take his stuff out of his house to protect it.”

“Wait a second, dude,” Goatee said as he backed into his house. I wasn’t sure what he was up to, and I wasn’t entirely certain I wanted to find out. In his absence, the quiet Tall Guy in the corner, the two women sitting on the front porch, and Blondie all began trying to explain what was up, and how they were actually just concerned neighbors trying to guard Jim’s goods from his “bitch” wife. I nearly laughed, because I know Nona, and that would be the last word I’d use to describe her mildly hyperactive yet affable demeanor.

In a few moments, Goatee popped out of his house, a twenty-one inch television in his arms. “Here, dude,” he said, “take the television. Keep it at your house. We’re just trying to be good neighbors.”

I backed away and held up my hands. “No, thank you, I don’t wish to touch it.” In the back of my mind I was thinking because I’d really rather not have my fingerprints on your stolen goods. “I’d just like for you to return it to his house, and lock the house on the way out.”

I could sense their mood gone from initial shock and outrage, to planning. I didn’t want to stick around to see what they’d planned, so I said my goodbyes, hopped on my bike, and rode back home. My wife and I had a discussion for a few minutes about the incident. She reminded me that these same neighbors had stolen the dog run out of Jim’s back yard several months earlier, and only returned it when confronted. In her opinion, these people were of the opinion that if nobody lived there, then nobody wanted the house or its goods.

A few minutes later, two city cops arrived. They had us explain the situation, immediately went over next door to speak to the perps, and then returned with some forms for us to fill out. The lady cop informed us that the police could not enter Jim’s home without a search warrant or Jim’s permission, and that she did not see any out-of-place items at Goatee’s home that appeared to be stolen goods upon being invited in to investigate. They also couldn’t prosecute without the homeowner filing charges. I think I’ll call Jim today to let him know what happened. Anyway, we gave her contact information for Jim, then bid goodnight.

There was a lot of movement in Goatee’s house later that night. Lots of moving around, lights turning on and off; they were up later than we’re used to them being up. I had some insomnia, mainly due to stupid worries about what these irrational neighbors might do in retaliation for us turning them in.

I guess to sum it all up, either these neighbors were colossally stupid in the execution of their Good-Samaritan ideals, or they were trying to cover their burglary by justifying the crime. I suspect the latter, given the total illogic of waiting until midnight to hand things over a backyard fence with all the lights off. But hey, maybe Jim will give them the benefit of the doubt. Given that he’s back in Canada, though, I think there’s not much he can do, so I suspect these would-be thieves will get away scot-free or be able to explain their way out of prosecution.

UPDATE 11 June 2003: Those of you following the story might be interested to know that I called Jim, and he informed me that he asked those neighbors only to watch and call him if Nona showed up at the house. Definitely burglary, and he wants to press charges. I’ll keep this entry updated as news progresses.

Planetside Tips

Here are some tips I picked up recently off the Sony boards that I thought were relevant. If you don’t play Planetside, this will probably make no sense to you.

Here are some tips I picked up recently off the Sony boards that I thought were relevant. If you don’t play Planetside, this will probably make no sense to you.

Please see the Outlanders Outfit Strategic & Tactical Guide to Planetside for more frequently-updated tips on how to play and excel at Planetside. With your contributions, we can make this the best player-maintained Planetside tips manual in existence.

  1. Infiltration suit + Advanced Engineering + your base about to fall == fun. Stock up three ACE’s in your inventory (more if you can) and put them on the vehicle platform. When you see all the lemmings jostling at the vehicle platform to try to get their dozens of Reavers or whatever, blow the ACEs up. You know none of those guys are wearing Reinforced armor or heavier because they have to go pilot or drive something…
  2. Remember that, if you are an engineer deploying Spitfires and Mines, to choose creative locations like the tops of stairs and behind trees. Put mines near your Spitfires to discourage runovers. Even though those Spitfires and mines won’t rack up many kills, you’re doing your job by slowing the enemy down. That’s the important thing, slow them down.
  3. When driving a Galaxy, an easy way to get everyone to drop at the same time is just to lock (shift-v, click “lock”) the vehicle. This dumps all your passengers at the same time. It won’t eject vehicles, though. The driver of the vehicle needs to alt-g his own vehicle. And the gunner of said vehicle needs to NOT do so, and let the driver do his job, or else he’ll eject from the plane sans vehicle.
  4. Hot-dropping is often overrated. To effectively overrun a base, though it’s not as impressive, park your galaxy a minute’s run from the base. The surprise is much better than a huge red blip on their radar letting them know there’s incoming.

Gator Baiter

So Slashdot linked to an article about Gator, the muchhated and much-imitated adware/spyware program that many people accidentally install on their Microsoft Windows [WARNING: Strong language] operating systems. I almost exclusively use GNU/Linux, particularly Gentoo, at home and work, so I’m not susceptible to accidental installation of this program… <read more>

So Slashdot linked to an article about Gator, the muchhated and much-imitated adware/spyware program that many people accidentally install on their Microsoft Windows [WARNING: Strong language] operating systems. I almost exclusively use GNU/Linux, particularly Gentoo, at home and work, so I’m not susceptible to accidental installation of this program… <read more>

I say almost because the kids use Windows to play games, and I use a Windows machine through VNC at work to run some Novell administration utilities.

I work at a bank. The unfortunate fact for Gator is that, due to banking secrecy legislation, having a piece of spyware report what web sites we visit to check on delinquent customers is probably illegal. Thus, I regularly clear it off employee computers — or rather, I did before I installed DansGuardian on our proxy server and blocked all executable downloads. Go me, work is easier now 🙂

Umm, anyway, the discussion about a new study analyzing Gator’s ad-generating trends is quite animated. My favorite comment is this one, entitled “Translation of the Article”, by saintjab:

“Gator is crap. Gator is being sued by many people who think the product is crap. Gator has several competitors who are equally as shady and crappy as Gator. Gator spies on you, reports to an unknown authority about your habits and tendencies, and people still use it. These people are not quick to show themselves because they know they are idiots for using this crap. Then the author proceeds to compare this crap with the success of a legitimate company like Google. How is this a helpful article? It only states the obvious. Gator and its ilk are crap and now there is a crappy article about it all”

“Otherkin”?

This faith called “Otherkin” made the front page of Kuro5hin today. I must admit that I, like probably every other science-fiction fan on the planet, occasionally play with the idea that if I just think harder I can make that pencil on the desk move with my mind (heck, there’s a training course you can take to teach you how), or that I’m really the malevolent god Hastur. Or whatever.

But building a faith around it? Well, no accounting for taste, but stuff like this is one of the reasons I avoid religion.

This faith called “Otherkin” made the front page of Kuro5hin today. I must admit that I, like probably every other science-fiction fan on the planet, occasionally play with the idea that if I just think harder I can really make that pencil on the desk move with my mind (heck, there’s a training course you can take to teach you how), or that I’m really the malevolent god Hastur. Or whatever.

But building a faith around it? Well, no accounting for taste, but stuff like this is one of the reasons I avoid religion.

Gentoo vs. everybody

So I’ve been running Gentoo Linux on my home machine for several months now, and other than one thing, I’m in love. It’s an amazing, stable system, easy to geek out on, yet incredibly easy to run once you get everything working. That’s a big “once” there.

So I’ve been running Gentoo Linux on my home machine for several months now, and other than one thing, I’m in love.The first thing is, why am I not in love with Gentoo? Here’s my answer: Ebuilds take too freaking long!!! OK, other than that, here’s why I like it.

  1. Konqueror is incredibly fast compared to Redhat 8 or 9
  2. Everything is incredibly fast compared to any other Linux distribution I’ve used.
  3. I can be doing an “emerge -u world” (which pretty much rebuilds my whole system if I need it), simultaneously with watching a movie under mplayer on a single-CPU system, and other than a couple of small hiccups in the DVD from time to time, everything works perfectly.
  4. When I run xmms, I never, ever have a skip on any ogg or mp3 playback. Considering that I’m in the process of ripping my entire CD collection, I’m amazed. I can be ripping, playing back, and simultaneously compiling Mozilla, and never drop a beat on playback. Occasionally the video may lag due to what a heavy load it is, but otherwise it’s amazing.
  5. Rock-solid stability. I’m running the Gentoo-optimized 2.4 kernel, with everything built with some pretty decent optimizations, and the only thing that has ever locked up my system was me trying to run some stupid 3D visualization when I was running xmms under real-time priority (ergo, as root, dumb dumb dumb). I chalk that one crash up to PEBKAC.
  6. Did I mention it was really fast? Neverwinter Nights plays a whole lot faster than it does under Windows. I mean, really, really noticeably faster.
  7. Comparing my 933MHz Pentium III at home running Gentoo to my 2.4GHz Pentium 4 at work, the Pentium 4 feels like a slow dog out of the gate. I’m thinking it’s time to upgrade to Gentoo at work, too.

What’s not to like? Well, the length of time it takes to emerge (that’s the command you run to install a software package) is one big thing keeping me from using it everywhere. As slow as it is installing KDE on my 933MHz Pentium III, I imagine it would be sheer torture on my 366MHz Sony Vaio laptop. Then again, just leave the laptop alone for a couple of days while I’m at work, and it should be finished.The other things are that sometimes there are things I just don’t know what I’m doing wrong. Like making USB work for my Palm Pilot, for instance. The devices don’t exist under /dev/usb. The really nice thing about Gentoo is dependency handling. For instance, I have both KDE 3.1.1 and KDE 3.1.2 installed side-by-side, and can easily swap between the two if I need to for some compatability reasons. And emerge makes it simple to clean up afterward.

I’ll write a more detailed review at some time in the future. For now, I need to go play some NWN.

Artificial Intelligence — How do we get there?

I made this post on Slashdot.org today, and felt like I wanted to mirror it in my weblog. I really think that an “inclusive” approach toward Artificial Intelligence, one that is multi-disciplinary, can be the key toward creating our ultimate goal, which is (basically) a new class of slave. I’ll leave the moral implications of creating our own mechanical slaves out of the discussion for now, but really, the main benefit of creating an artificial intelligence, besides having it do stuff for us, would be to give us some company…

I made this post on Slashdot.org today, and felt like I wanted to mirror it in my weblog. I really think that an “inclusive” approach toward Artificial Intelligence, one that is multi-disciplinary, can be the key toward creating our ultimate goal, which is (basically) a new class of slave. I’ll leave the moral implications of creating our own mechanical slaves out of the discussion for now, but really, the main benefit of creating an artificial intelligence, besides having it do stuff for us, would be to give us some company…

Posting follows:

Once we can define what it is we’re trying to artificialize, maybe we can make more progress in artificializing it.

There’s the rub. I don’t think we can begin to understand how the brain works until we build stuff that approximates its operation enough to create working theories. The Wright Brothers didn’t have a full understanding of flight dynamics prior to building their first aircraft. We’ve come to that knowledge through a lot of trial, error, and testing.

The main problem is that intelligence is such a nebulous thing. The Wrights had one goal: “make it fly”. Now when engineers design, they use that basic goal and expand it with “faster”, “safer”, “more manueverable”, “more fuel-efficient”, “able to carry this weapons loading”, “lower stall speed”, “stall avoidance in low-speed turns”, etc. We need to come up with some basic rules on what capabilities we expect out of an AI, then expand on it.

We have some pieces of that now. Like the little round vacuum-cleaner thing. The goal is for it to vacuum floors. Great, it does that. Now make it navigate stairs. Once it can do that, then make it learn to pick up stuff on the floor, rather than vacuuming around it. Then maybe create an attachment that allows it to load a dishwasher.

You get the idea.

I think the point of view of people that think AI has “failed” is a bit skewed. Yeah, we don’t have any AI that can reason at human level yet. But we have devices that can easily beat the intelligence of roaches. And we’re working on things that can exceed or augment the intelligence of small mammals at this point. We’ll get there, but incremental progress is the only way it’s going to happen, IMHO. And we’ll arrive at the goal from several different directions, probably including analog (mechanical approach, responding to stimuli using non-digital means), emergent behaviors (colonies of processes), neural net, and hybrids of these, each of which can complement the other in creating reliable systems that use different logic depending on the context of the item they are analyzing.

This discussion really, really makes me want to go back to school and get a doctorate specializing in AI. I feel like such a goober noober discussing this stuff in public, but my gut feeling is that competent, ubiquitous AI will be the catalyst toward improving the human condition around the world.

New PC desk

Just picked up a cheap PC desk ($120) from Fred Meyer, but it actually looks pretty nice! I’ll post pics later. Just finished getting it together, and that is always a pain.

Just picked up a cheap PC desk ($120) from Fred Meyer, but it actually looks pretty nice! I’ll post pics later. Just finished getting it together, and that is always a pain.

Dancing the Tango!

Christy and I arranged a date tonight. We’ve been pretty good about making sure we have a date every single week for the last few years; it’s a tradition I really enjoy. Lately we’ve been looking for more interesting things to do than the traditional dinner or movie thing. Last week Christy suggested we go dancing, so I said let’s do it this week. We did it, and it’s a lot of fun…

I’m working on a special blog with my take on the MPAA and RIAA enforcement actions against P2P users who blatantly violate copyrights, but I have to get a lot of attributions done before I feel like it’s "ready". So I’ll blog about Ballroom Dancing.

Christy and I arranged a date tonight. We’ve been pretty good about making sure we have a date every single week for the last few years; it’s a tradition I really enjoy. Lately we’ve been looking for more interesting things to do than the traditional dinner or movie thing. Last week Christy suggested we go dancing, so I said let’s do it this week. We did it.

We went to the Midvale Somethingorother. They have two buildings, one with a really big dance floor, the other with a smaller one. We showed up at 7:21, in time for the 7:30 lessons. It costs $6 to get into the dance, and an extra $1 if you take the lesson. Great deal. Tonight they spent an hour teaching us a half-dozen Tango moves. Tango is pretty cool. Although you can Tango with someone you’re not married to, you’re close enough that you really probably should know and trust one another very much before attempting it 🙂 The instructor was, apparently, impressed enough with our basic dance ability that he repeatedly suggested to us that we attend his lessons. I suspect, however, that it’s a pretty standard sales pitch line. I mean, at a buck a student, even with the 30-odd people there they are not exactly making a whole lot of bank, you know?

Following the Tango lessons were two-step lessons in the other ballroom. These were quite forgettable, but still fun basic steps that really improved our dancing ability and taught us a few new things about leading. Shortly after the lessons ended, at which point we’d been there about two hours, we went back to the ballroom dance room, danced to “Unchained Melody” performed by a one-man band, then decided to go snag some food and head home.

Taco Time. Fear it. I had the Veggie Burrito, and I can tell I’ll be paying for it in gas all night long…

Anyway, if you have a significant other, I heartily recommend taking him/her dancing with you. Go to the lessons if they have them (most do), and you just may love it.

Foreign Languages Exist to Make Me Laugh

From the keepen-dem-mittengrabben-offen dep’t:

Polly Harris is a woman of many talents. Search and rescue worker, computer game programmer, intensely physical martial artist, and (reserve) police officer. To top it all off, she has a great sense of humor and has become the ad hoc discoverer-of-hilarious-quotes-on-weblogs for a small mailing list I participate in. Read the original article at the National Review (careful, due to one exceptionally-long sentence, the whole page ends up really, really wide), or Mean Mr. Mustard’s excerpt, reprinted here almost in its entirety.

From the keepen-dem-mittengrabben-offen dep’t:

Polly Harris is a woman of many talents. Search and rescue worker, computer game programmer, intensely physical martial artist, and (reserve) police officer. To top it all off, she has a great sense of humor and has become the ad hoc discoverer-of-hilarious-quotes-on-weblogs for a small mailing list I participate in. Read the original article at the National Review (careful, due to one exceptionally-long sentence, the whole page ends up really, really wide), or Mean Mr. Mustard’s excerpt, reprinted here almost in its entirety.


We English-speaking peoples should keep hold of the essential fact about foreign languages: they exist to make us laugh. It is considered exquisitely polite in Thai for a gentleman to end every spoken sentence with the otherwise-meaningless syllable krap. (The equivalent for ladies is ka.) Sawat-di will do for a greeting, but Sawat-di krap is much classier.

“Eyebrows on fire” say the Chinese when they’re in a tearing hurry, and one common Chinese term for “homosexual” is “chicken-rapist” (derived from the position, not from the object of desire). Latin has been making schoolboys snicker since the Middle Ages: as late as the 1970s, British TV ran a sitcom, Up Pompeii, about a Roman family whose elderly patriarch bore the name Ludicrus Sextus.

German has a word for the hollow space behind your knee: kniebeuge, pronounced “k-nee-boy-geh”. German is, in fact, a language rich in hilarity, difficult to speak for long without giggling. The German for “constipated” is verstopft; “rhinitis” is Nasenschleimheit (literally “nose-sliminess”). An excursion is of course an Ausfahrt, while auto exhaust is Auspuff. I even, for reasons I cannot explain, find the German word for “elbow” difficult to utter with a straight face: Ellenbogen. (The large bone of the forearm is the Ellenbogenknochen. See what I mean?) The sound and length of German names is a staple of British comedy: recall Monty Python’s interview with that strangely neglected composer "Johann Gambolputty de von Ausfern- schplenden- schlitter- crasscrenbon- fried- digger- dingle- dangle-dongle- dungle- burstein- von- knacker- thrasher- apple- banger- horowitz- ticolensic- grander- knotty- spelltinkle- grandlich- grumblemeyer- spelterwasser- kurstlich- himbleeisen- bahnwagen- gutenabend- bitte- ein- nurnburger- bratwustle- gernspurten- mitz- weimache- luber- hundsfut- gumberaber- shonedanker- kalbsfleisch- mittler- aucher von Hautkopft of Ulm"?

And of course there that weird business of the verb at the end of the sentence putting is.


Not to be outdone, John’s Olsen’s response to Polly’s reprint of this to the list was short and to the point:

‘Plain old English is fun too. Dad gets a book for a bedtime story, and the kid says: “What did you bring the book that I don’t want to be read to out of up for”‘