• Epic desk

    I had the day off yesterday, so I thought I would put together my new desk. I am pretty happy with it. I don’t have everything setup like I want yet, but got a good start. It’s finally a desk big enough for all my computers, and it’s really high quality too. I bought it here. $557 is a pretty good price for the quality and size of it. I also got the matching file cabinet for $227. Free shipping and no tax makes the deal even sweeter.

    Epic Desk

    Now I guess it’s time to sell my two desks that this one replaced on Craigslist.

  • Flood update

    All dry here, but it’s crazy in our house with all the refugee family members that can’t get to their house. Here is what interstate 29 looked like yesterday.

    Interstate 29

  • Flood season is here again

    Flood season is in full swing. Currently the Red River is at 38.28 ft. Flood stage is 18 ft. It is hopefully going to crest this weekend at 39.5 ft or so. If that happens it will be the third biggest flood in the past 125 years, only 1997 and 2009 were worse. My Wife’s Aunts house is on an island now. She will be staying with us for a week or so until the water goes down.

    The people in this area a great though. We step up and do what it needed to protect our city, and oddly have a fun time doing it. Here are a few videos of springtime in Fargo. Maybe a spring break destination for you in the future?

  • 17 years ago

    nirvana-nevermind-frontToday is the 17 anniversary of Kurt Cobain’s death. Many people don’t understand Nirvana’s music, but to those of us who do, they were my generations Beatles. From the second I inserted the Nevermind cassette I was hooked. It was probably the first album that I could listen to straight through without a bad song and I could listen over and over and never got sick of it. They were my gateway band. I believe everybody who is into underground, less popular music, has a mainstream band that shows them the light and introduces them to the much greater music that doesn’t get radio play.

    After hearing Nevermind, my tastes in music totally changed. No longer was I into the 80s hair metal bands. I would go out of my way to find new music. Back then, before the internet, it was much harder to discover new music. MTV actually played videos back then, but really only played videos I liked for two hours on Sunday nights during 120 Minutes. That’s when I first saw the video for “Rhinoceros” and fell in love with Smashing Pumpkins, I saw “Behind the Sun”, and fell in love with the Chili Peppers, I saw “Undone-The Sweater Song” and fell in love with Weezer. Those are just a few videos that stick out in my head. Those bands would then go on and be huge. Many of my other favorites like Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr. and Pavement would also have moderate success. It always makes me feel good when bands I have been listening to for years suddenly became popular. During the mid 90s bands I liked were getting radio play left and right, not so much anymore, but I don’t care. I listen to what I like, and go out of my way to find it.

    I remember April 8th like it was yesterday. April 8th was the day that Kurt Cobain was discovered dead. He shot himself on the 5th. April 8th was a Friday. I was in college living in a dorm. Usually Fridays were slow days with not many classes. I took advantage of that and did a bunch of errands that day, and never turned the TV on. I went from my errands, to class, then to work. I didn’t hear the news about Kurt Cobain until that evening when I went out with friends. I was shocked when I heard the news, but wasn’t surprised. It was a sad ending to my favorite band that had so much more music to make.

  • Happy April Fool’s Day

    Today it occurred to me that April Fool’s Day is actually Skeptic’s Day. It’s the one day that everybody turns on their Baloney Detector, and actually think skeptically about everything. If only people did this everyday. Once the clock clicks over to April 2nd though, people will stop thinking critically again. People should really think critically everyday about everything.

    I use to hate April Fool’s Day, but I kind of like it now knowing it’s really Skeptic’s Day. April Fool’s Day pranks are pretty easy to detect. The real life charlatans trying to make a buck off of the misinformed are another story. With a little practice and knowledge spotting the snake oil salesmen is pretty easy. Carl Sagan’s The Demon-Haunted World is a great start, and a must read for any critical thinker.

    April Fool’s Day is also the day the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF) gives away their “Pigasus Awards”. The Pigasus Awards—pigasus being flying pigs— are given to the worst promoters of nonsense. Here are this years “winners”:

    These are this year’s “winners.”

    • The Scientist Pigasus Award goes to NASA Engineer Richard B. Hoover, who recently announced for the third time in 14 years that he had found evidence of microscopic life in meteorites. Along with the crackpot Journal of Cosmology—a now-defunct publication founded in 2009 to publish articles advancing the scientifically unsupported idea that life began before the first stars formed and was spread throughout the early universe on meteors—Hoover pitched his warmed-over ideas to Fox News, an outlet not known for their attention to facts. Predictably, Fox News ran with the story, convincing many people that NASA had discovered extraterrestrial life.

    • The Funder Pigasus Award goes to CVS/pharmacy, for their work to support the manufacturers of scam “homeopathic” medications who sell up to $870 million a year in quack remedies to U.S. consumers. Homeopathic remedies contain none of the active ingredient they claim, and homeopathy has been shown to be useless in randomized clinical trials. CVS/pharmacy sells these quack products in thousands of stores across the U.S., right alongside real medicine, with no warning to consumers. Instead of giving their customers the facts about homeopathy, CVS/pharmacy executives are cashing in themselves by offering their own store-brand of the popular homeopathic product oscillococcinum. Oscillococcinum is made by grinding up the liver of a duck, putting none of it onto tiny sugar pills—that’s right,none of it—and then advertising the plain sugar pills as an effective treatment for flu symptoms.

    • The Media Pigasus Award goes to Dr. Mehmet Oz, who has done such a disservice to his TV viewers by promoting quack medical practices that he is now the first person to win a Pigasus two years in a row. Dr. Oz is a Harvard-educated cardiac physician who, through his syndicated TV show, has promoted faith healing, "energy medicine," and other quack theories that have no scientific basis. Oz has appeared on ABC News to give legitimacy to the claims of Brazilian faith healer “John of God,” who uses old carnival tricks to take money from the seriously ill. He’s hosted Ayurvedic guru Yogi Cameron on his show to promote nonsense "tongue examination" as a way of diagnosing health problems. This year, he really went off the deep end. In March 2011, Dr. Oz endorsed "psychic" huckster and past Pigasus winner John Edward, who pretends to talk to dead people. Oz even suggested that bereaved families should visit psychic mediums to receive (faked) messages from their dead relatives as a form of grief counseling.

    • The Performer Pigasus Award—this year for “Best Comeback”—goes to televangelist Peter Popoff. Popoff made millions in the 1980s by pretending to heal the sick and receive information about audience members directly from god. He went bankrupt in 1987 after JREF founder James Randi exposed him for using a secret earpiece to receive information about audience members from his wife. Now he’s back to prey on victims of the economic recession. In paid infomercials on BET, Popoff offers “supernatural debt relief” in exchange for offerings of hundreds or even thousands of dollars. This business is so lucrative that according to recent IRS documents, Popoff took in $23.5 million and paid himself and his immediate family more than $1 million in one year alone.

    • The Refusal to Face Reality Award goes to Andrew Wakefield, the researcher who launched the modern anti-vaccine panic with unfounded statements linking the MMR vaccine with autism that were not borne out by any research, even his own. In 2010, The Lancet retracted his paper on the MMR vaccine, and this year the British medical journal BMJ called Wakefield’s paper an outright fraud, finding “clear evidence of falsification of data” and that “he sought to exploit the ensuing MMR scare for financial gain,” taking more than $674,000 from lawyers who intended to sue vaccine manufacturers. Yet Wakefield continues to ask the public to believe he is the victim. In a recent article in NaturalNews, Wakefield called the American Academy of Pediatrics and The Lancet “instruments of a state that I don’t really want to be associated with.”

    (via randi.org)