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Range Day

May 8, 2012 Leave a comment

During lunch a friend and I went to the indoor shooting range at Doug’s . I brought along my trusty Buckmark and he had his 9mm Springfield XDM.

We blasted away for just over 30 minutes, until the 9mm ammo ran out. One of the things I like best about the .22 is I can buy 500 rounds for $20 and shoot all day with it.

Pics, as they say, or it didn’t happen.

Here’s my Buckmark:

It’s completely stock. I’ve ran about 1000 rounds through it and it works even better than when I first got it. How so? Slide broken in now, even with a good grip I’d get stove pipes now and then, I haven’t for 100 rounds or so at this point.

Here’s the XDM:

 

After getting things set up we merrily started blasting away at the targets. I snapped some picture of my targets with the Buckmark. We were both shooting low with the 9, my friend is going to have to get that adjusted, so I didn’t take pictures of those.

Here’s my first grouping of the day at 20 yards:

Aside from the outlier, I wasn’t displeased.

This is at 30 yards:

Here’s all the way at the end of the range:

Yeah, I suck at that range. At least all 10 rounds found the target. I’m not sure how one ended up in the 10 ring, but I’ll claim it as a really really good shot and disavow any sort of luck was involved. Because it wasn’t. At all. The rest outside of the ring were obviously due to bad luck.

This target I was at 30 yards and 25 yards. You’re going to have to believe me when I say the shots all over the place were at 30 yards but the nice grouping of in the middle were shot at 25 yards.

It was a good day at the range. I still need to get my 10/22 sighted in, I should take that next time. And I need better ear protection. And upgraded iron sights on the Buckmark.

But I swear that’s it!

And a bottle of Slipstream.

Categories: Uncategorized

Best economic speech I’ve ever read

April 27, 2012 Leave a comment
Categories: geek

Android Ice cream sandwich

April 27, 2012 Leave a comment

Sprint pushed out an update to my Nexus and it’s like getting a new phone in some ways. I like it, there have been a number of noticeable improvements to the OS.  Most of the interactions are snappier, I can now move icons around in folders, adding icons to folders works the first time, and the lock screen now has usable music player controls.

The task manager is slow and clunky, however this is a small complaint to the overall improvements.

If you can upgrade to ICS, do it!

Categories: geek

“The Lost Tools of Learning”

March 15, 2012 Leave a comment

This: http://www.gbt.org/text/sayers.html

Sayers presented this in 1947. Rhetorical question for the reader, has the situation improved?

Categories: Uncategorized

A difference between Men and Women

February 29, 2012 Leave a comment

A man will tell you how much something cost. A woman will tell you how much she saved.

Categories: Uncategorized

Wherein I start to understand the Cosmological Argument

February 27, 2012 Leave a comment

Ed Feser’s post here So you think you understand the cosmological argument? drove home, finally, through my thick skull of what the cosmological argument really is. I had, erroneously, thought it boiled down to “Everything has a cause; so the universe has a cause; so God exists.” Hoo boy, was I off in the weeds on that!

Ed: “…[N]one of the best-known proponents of the cosmological argument in the history of philosophy and theology ever gave this stupid argument. Not Plato, not Aristotle, not al-Ghazali, not Maimonides, not Aquinas, not Duns Scotus, not Leibniz, not Samuel Clarke, not Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, not Mortimer Adler, not William Lane Craig, not Richard Swinburne. And not anyone else either, as far as I know.”

Yeah, I felt stupid. But a good stupid, like scales falling from my eyes and bam! The landscape opened up and a great expanse stretched forth. Yes, dur, my mistake, but it was easy to fix.

So what is the cosmological argument at the core?

Ed again: “What defenders of the cosmological argument do say is that what comes into existence has a cause, or that what is contingent has a cause. These claims are as different from ‘Everything has a cause’ as ‘Whatever has color is extended’ is different from ‘Everything is extended.’ Defenders of the cosmological argument also provide arguments for these claims about causation. You may disagree with the claims – though if you think they are falsified by modern physics, you are sorely mistaken – but you cannot justly accuse the defender of the cosmological argument either of saying something manifestly silly or of contradicting himself when he goes on to say that God is uncaused.”

Once that has been established, the next thing to do is examine how if there is a First Cause, this cause isn’t an orderly first thing in a series of things, but rather something that exists that is not contingent, and because of that, doesn’t need to have an explanation because, in principle, it has to be uncaused. Aquinas put forth that the First Cause not only is before all contingent things, at the fundamental base of all contingent existence, it is also what keeps them in existence from moment to moment.

Of course, this doesn’t prove there is a God, it just provides a first stone in a philosophic framework to discuss God. It’s a 2300 year old history, and one I had brushed up against, but clearly had not understood.

Categories: geek

Xubuntu

February 24, 2012 Leave a comment

I installed the Xubuntu packages to give that a try.

I really like it! The interface is simpler, lacks a bunch gee-whizery hooha (which has its place, just not what I want right now) still builds of the awesome Debian apt-get combined with Ubuntu’s more aggressive release schedule.

Highly recommended for those not liking Ubiquity or Gnome 3 and want to try something a little less cluttered.

Categories: geek

Ubuntu Unity

February 17, 2012 Leave a comment

I can’t use it. I don’t a whole lot Linuxing these days, but Unity is just not usable.

The menu bar is confusing, the taskbar is almost usable but not quite, standard metaphors on how things normally work aren’t there, navigating programs has become a chore.

Ugh. I’m going to try XCFE or something, Gnome 3 has made different errors in different areas.

What the heck has happened to Linux desktop UIs? I’m almost ready to try something like Stumpwm!

Categories: geek

Regency Romance Ball

February 13, 2012 Leave a comment

I took my wife to the Regency Romance Ball for Valentine’s Day. It was incredible! I rented a frock coat with tails, bought a simple top hat, my wife made her own Empire style dress, and we danced, hung out with friends, had dinner, and danced even more.

Let me back up a bit to explain how we ended up in period costume dancing reels and waltzes.

We’ve been homeschooling our eldest daughter since the end of last year. Aside from our own efforts, we’re part of an awesome co-op group. One of the mothers teaches a Shakespeare class, and she is friends with the Old Glory Vintage Dance Company; they do dances, like reels and quadrilles, from eras like the Regency. As such, they were working together with the Jane Austen Society of North America Utah region to hold a Regency era inspired ball. Our friend told us about the ball, gushed about how fun it was and the dances involved. We quickly signed up. She was kind enough to throw a pre-ball ball for those of us going to the ball, and teach us the dances, so we weren’t totally lost on the night of the ball.

The Old Glory Vintage Dancers instructors taught the ball attendants about 12 dances over the course of the evening. Although my wife and I didn’t dance all of them, we still remembered most of the steps from the pre-ball.

There was a large turn out to the event, the dance floor was filled, and nearly everyone came in period piece clothing of some sort; a few outside the Regency time frame had put together historically accurate clothing from such diverse eras as the Boer War, the Napoleonic Wars’ Russian Infantry, a Colonial era couple, and a American Indian War soldier. Part re-enactment, part love of a bygone era, everyone there added to the enjoyable atmosphere of the evening.

A number of our friends from the co-op were able to attend, it was really nice to spend time with them outside of gravitational pull of the co-op and kids.

A Mr. Knightly was announcing couples as they came in, his voice boomed, he literally didn’t need a microphone to be heard! He also helped with a couple of the events, such as favorite costume, announcing dinner, etc.

My favorite dances are the Windmill quadrille, the Hole in the Wall country dance, Sir Roger de Coverley reel, the Duke of Kent’s Waltz, the Spanish Waltz, and few more whose names I cannot recall. I thoroughly enjoy these style of dances to the modern shaking about. They are more elegant and refined, and the more energetic of the dances, such as de Coverley, still maintain a courtliness about them. Plus, if you aren’t smiling and having a good time at least halfway through the dance, you’re doing it wrong!

The music they played that night usually started out a decent tempo, but I swear the tempo increased over the course of the song until at the end we were throwing ourselves around and flinging the ladies around with vigor.

We’ll be attending next year’s ball, and the Old Glory Vintage Dancers have a number of other balls planned this year; our intention is to attend as many of those as possible throughout the year, whatever the era!

I’m thinking I’m going to need my own frock coat :)

Categories: Uncategorized

The Real Android Blues

February 10, 2012 Leave a comment

Overall I like my Android Nexus Phone. It’s slim, decent battery life, solid construction, nice screen, snappy etc, etc.

But what I don’t like is the Google Music player. I really miss my iPod Touch’s player. Sit back whilst I elucidate my dissatisfaction with a list!

1. Start Google Music. Choose a playlist, any playlist. Make sure you’ve turned on the shuffle function. Listen to a song or two. Hit stop, and do something else with your phone for awhile. I like Cut The Rope. Now, and since I haven’t timed this I’m not sure how long this takes I can’t say if it happens after x number of hours or what, but go back to the music player and hit play. At the end of the song, the player stops. It doesn’t shuffle onto the next song, it just sits there, mute. I have to manually kick off the next song and then all is well. Until I stop listening, then the cycle begins a new, rise and repeat. I’ve tried to play music just off the internal memory storage instead of the Google Music cloud to see if that was the problem. It wasn’t. My anger stirs every time this happens. Oh, sure, the cloud is storing songs, the store is letting you buy songs, but shuffling consistently? Nah, too hard!

2. No lock screen controls. Dunno if this is to avoid incurring the ire of Apple’s legal department or what, but iOS rocks this while the Google Music player doesn’t even try. iOS is figuratively running laps, backward, around the Android, while Android fumbling around on the track, trying to convince me that making another online music story is super important and could I come back later, please? Hands full, major labels need some PR time, k, thanks, bye. Upmteen trillion in ads isn’t quite enough, the Google clearly needs a slice of the music pie. Heck, even Winamp made some sort of half hearted effort to include a locked screen. All that seems to do, however, is let me see the title of song, pause, and unlocked the device twice. Then crash.

3. iTunes is a music and app manager. I like it. I can listen to music, switch to a podcast, and iTunes remembers where I am in which, and picks right up where I left off. A sync with the iPod keeps it up to date, tracks play counts, positions, etc. I haven’t seen anything out there that does all that and syncs with the Android easily. I’d love to be proven wrong.

4. Highspeed scrubbing playback. Google Music doesn’t have it at all. Enough said. Ok, I’ll say more, I use the faster playback during podcasts. I miss being able to do that on the Android.

Google Music plays your mp3′s just fine, in a average sort of way, and it hasn’t crashed on me recently (unlike Winamp for Android) so it works, but it lacks features and the polish that I took for granted in the iOS music player.

One could say that the player doesn’t revolve around me and my tastes. Such a concept is foreign to me, just look a few posts down to see why. Like it or not, modern MP3 players on phones will be measured against the iOS player, failure to match features will continue to result in sneering jackanapes, like myself, to hurl criticism against such improprieties and assaults on common decency.

And yes, I did use a Cowboy Bebop reference.

Categories: geek
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