Saturday, May 05, 2007

Moutain Bike Parts...


I am going to get a new set of pedals for my bike. They are called the Crank Brothers 5050 X Flat Pedals.
The Crank Brothers 5050 X Flat Pedals are an innovative new platform pedal design from Crank Brothers. Features removable, hardened plates on each side and multipl pin locations for easy customization. The Crank Brothers 5050 X Flat Pedals also feature removable plates allow access to the pins from the reverse side while retaining multiple useful pin locations.
The Loose ball bearing spindle is repackable. Innovative removable plates allows total customization of pedal. Sliding removeable plates allow access to traction pins Each pedal has 18 pin placement locations per side, allowing total customization Plates are replaceable and are made out of a heat treated 6061 Aluminum for durability Material (Spindle): CromoThread: 9/16"Weight: 634g


What is your opinion?

Crazy tag lines...

I am a member of www.Slashdot.org. There are some very funny taglines on there. Here are a few of them:

The other night I told my kid "Someday, you'll have children of your own." He said "So will you."

'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'

You moved your mouse. Please restart Windows for changes to take effect.

"I perceive the universe as a single equation, and it is so simple!" - Reginald Barclay

Linux: a more elegant weapon for a more civilized time.

Life was hell, then I discovered Linux...

"Best be the idiot that has learnt, than the genius who won't."

Eat the rich, the poor are tough and stringy



What is your opinion?

Friday, May 04, 2007

RSS Readers

Here is a list of RSS Readers that one can use to subscribe to feeds from this blog or any number of sites that use and have RSS Subscriptions.

RSS Readers
RSS and Atom files provide news updates from a website in a simple form for your computer. You read these files in a program called an aggregator, which collects news from various websites and provides it to you in a simple form. But what aggregator to use? Here are some choices:
Top Picks

Web: feeds.redditCheck all your feeds from any web browser. Plus, vote on items and get recommendations about other feeds you'll like.

Mac OS X: NetNewsWireThis elegant Mac-like aggregator is easy to use and powerful.

Windows: SharpReaderSimple, but gets the job done.

Linux: StrawThe best aggregator for GNOME.

Runners-Up
AmphetaDeskA news aggregator you access through a web browser. (Mac/Win/Linux)
FeedDemonA more complicated aggregator for Windows. (Win)
FeedReaderLike SharpReader, but sporadically updated. (Win)
NewsGatorRead the news from within Microsoft Outlook. (Win)
NewsWatcherBased on Scopeware technology. (Win)
News Is FreeLets you create your own customized news page with feeds from the sites you're interested in. (Web)
NovobotA smart headline viewer and news ticker that can also process almost any website. (Win)
Radio UserLandA full-stregth news-reading application, on your desktop. (Mac/Win)
rss2emailReads RSS feeds and sends each new item to you as an email. (Unix)
dynamicobjects spacesDisplays RSS feeds in an Outlook-like interface. (Mac/Win/Lin)



What is your opinion?

Mack's Survival School...

Mack Hall is a friend of mine, more than that, he was a school teacher of mine in 6th and 7th grades in Kirbyville Texas. This article is reprinted with his premission. He writes a column in the Jasper News Boy and The Beaumont Enterprise news papers.


Mack Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Mack's Survival School

Last summer a fellow from New Jersey paid a survival school $3,175 to force-march, humiliate, starve, dehydrate, and kill him in a Utah desert. The school says they push folks "past those false limits your mind has set for your body."

Well, yes, dead is pretty much past any limits, false or otherwise.

This is from the school's 'net site:

Your destination on a BOSS Field Course is not a physical place; it can't be plotted on a topo map. Somewhere along the many miles of sagebrush flats, red rock canyons, and mesa tops of Southern Utah — somewhere between the thirst, the hunger and the sweat — you'll discover the real destination: yourself. (http://www.boss-inc.com/02front.html)

You'll surely want to travel a few thousand miles and pay a few thousand dollars to put your life in the hands of someone who writes turgid sell-o-babble like that.

A quick browse through the 'puter will dig up dozens of survival (if you survive) schools, each with its catalogue of cliches' appealing to the sort of geek who lives in a basement with his collection of shirtless-guys-wearing-headbands movies.

One school even advertises lessons on how to kill a sheep with a knife, a life-skill we've all desperately wanted to learn in case America is invaded by extremist ewes with blood-lust in their eyes and death on their little hooves.

There are entirely too many, um, men who suffer the pathetic need to join an organization where they will be bullied and humiliated, and where they can do secret handshakes and call each other Brother and Comrade. If your son wants to join a fraternity, ask him why he wants to pay money to some other idiots to strip him naked and beat him up so they'll be his friends.

But I have my own fantasy of a personal training school, one that can whup me into the shape I want. Indeed, I have sketched out a rudimentary curriculum for Mack's Survival School:

1. Sleep deprivation exercise: whenever the alarm sounds off in the morning a crack squad of ninja clock-assassins wearing discount-store camouflage knee-pants made in China will garrot it into silence with a length of piano wire so that you can sleep another hour or two. After all, what's really important in life: food, clothing, and shelter, or self-fulfilment, and, like, oneness with nature and stuff, pushing your personal envelope where no envelope has gone before?

2. Preparing clear fields-of-fire: whenever the yard needs mowing, your comrades will chant "No, it doesn't! No, it doesn't!" over and over, and will flash seductive pictures of reclining chairs before your weary eyes.

3. Man as hunter: intensive sessions on studying menus. Hey, if God meant for you to run down a sheep and cut its throat, He would not have invented restaurants.

4. Finding water in the desert: intensive preparation and practical exercises in asking wait-staff for a glass of water. Advanced course: turning the water-faucet the right way.

5. Staying dry in a thunderstorm: stay in the house.

6. Sleeping dry in a thunderstorm: go to bed. In the house.

7. Protection against predators, human and animal: lock the door. Sleep with a revolver by the bed. Memorize the secret code for 911.

8. Crossing the desert: drive your car.

9. Finding your way across country: stay on the road. Duh.

10. Signalling to your comrades: dial the telephone.

11. Primitive shelters: just wait for the next hurricane and score yourself a blue FEMA tarp.

12. Route hiking: from the couch to the refrigerator and back.

13. Discovering who you really are: look in the mirror.

14. Building a fire: strike a match.

15. Making a difference in the world: go get a job.

Now, then, folks, you'll find yourself and you will survive my course. Now just send me the money.




What is your opinion?

Data Compression Tests

In this day and age of "High-Speed" internet and P2P programs where people can download entire collections of music and pictures, there are many choices in compression. What i mean by this is what program you can use. I am sure that many of use have used WINZIP. Another one is called WINRAR. I use Winrar and 7-zip on my personal computer as with both of those, i can open most any file that i encounter. Here is the link to the article that i read.

Compression Comparison Guide Rev. 2.0

There are many others as you can see on this table.

As you can see, the data compression software that was used to test are a selection of old stalwarts, as well as current popular formats. But instead of just testing them at the default settings, we are going to examine each data compressor at their fastest and best compression settings as well

Here are the data sets that were used in this test.

To obtain an accurate idea of how well each compressor will perform in real world, we have specially created a data compression benchmark. The fileset consists of 10 standard categories covering all the common file types as well as a special category. All categories have a size of at least 200,000,000 bytes. compressed by nature (e.g. MP3, MPEG, JPEG, etc.), we have only one thing to say - when you assume, you make an ass out of u and me. As you will see later, the results of some of the newer compressors will surprise you. They can attain really amazing compression results even with files that are thought to be impossibly hard to compress. We wouldn't have discovered that if we did not test and merely assumed, would we?


Overall, WinRK was the champion at compressing the filesets. It had an average compression rate of 23.2%. It was 9% better at overall compression than its closest rival, SBC Archiver which had an average compression rate of 21.3%. The poorest compressors overall, at default settings, were the trio of WinZip, gzip and ARJ32. They only had average compression rates of about 13%.

However, gzip was the undisputed speed champion. It only took just over 121 seconds to completely process the complete fileset collection which weighed in at over 1.6GB. It was over a third faster than the runner-ups, ARJ32 and WinZip.
The other compressors were pretty slow at their normal compression settings. However, WinRK was extremely slow, compared to the others. It took almost 1.5 hours to compress the entire fileset collection



The compression efficiency rating is a simple way to evaluate the efficiency of each data compressor. This way, we can see which compressor can save the most space in the least time.


Please note that a higher efficiency rating does not mean the compressor is better. It just means the compressor has a better compression-to-speed ratio. A more efficient compressor is, of course, always more desirable than a less efficient one.

The most efficient data compressor for the aggregated results was gzip. Its super-fast compression speed, coupled with its average compression rate allowed it to become the undisputed overall efficiency champion. ARJ32 and WinZip were also very efficient compressors. They were more than twice as efficient as their nearest rivals, StuffIt and bzip2.
The other compressors may have been good at certain files, but overall, they were pretty inefficient. The most inefficient compressors overall was WinRK by a large margin . No matter how good it was at compressing files, its extremely slow compression speed totally killed its efficiency ratings.


Here is the conclusion from the Article:


WinRK was the best compressor in most filesets it encountered. So, it was not surprising that it was the overall compression champion. However, its performance was offset by its abysmally slow performance. Even with a really fast system, it still took ages to compress the filesets. On several occasions, it took more than 18 minutes to compress just 200MB of files. Thanks to this flaw, it had the dubious honour of being the most inefficient compressor as well.
SBC Archiver, which was just slightly poorer than WinRK at compression was much faster at the job. Although it was nowhere near the top of the speed rankings, its faster speed allowed it to attain a moderate efficiency ranking.

WinRAR, which is a favourite of many Internet users, displayed a surprisingly bland performance at default settings. Although it had a pretty good overall compression rate of just under 19%, it was very slow at its default settings. That made it the third most-inefficient compressor. Surprising, isn't it?

In contrast, another perennial favourite, WinZip which had a lower overall compression rate of 13% managed to attain a much higher efficiency rating because it was able to compress the filesets much faster than WinRAR. Quite surprising since many users have abandoned it for WinRAR in view of its rather dated compression algorithm.

StuffIt is a dark horse. It has a pretty good compression rate overall but with an unimpressive compression speed. However, its amazing performance with JPEG files cannot be denied. JPEG files is undeniably StuffIt's forte. No other compressor even comes within a light year of it.
gzip and ARJ32 are both the fastest and the worst compressors of the lot. They have unimpressive overall compression rates but more than make up for it with their tremendous compression speeds. Therefore, it isn't surprising to see them garner the top two spots in compressor efficiency. However, we would still recommend GUI alternatives like WinZip. It is almost as efficient as gzip and ARJ32 and far more user-friendly.

Based on our results, we can only come to one conclusion. If you do not like to change the settings of your data compressors and want a good, fast and user-friendly data compressor, then WinZip is the best one for the job.



What is your opinion?

Childhood Memories...

I saw this the other day while I was reading on the net. When I lived in Kirbyville Texas and attended grade school there, we had a big slide like this on out playground. I remember a kid was on it and the little edges were not totally closed to the slide and when he was going down it, his fingers got caught in between the slide and edge and they got cut. I think that they made some changes to the slide after that, but I can’t remember. Below is a map of Kirbyville Elementary School and also the middle school. The one to the north is the elementary with the playground being to the northeast. I took this image off of Google Maps.
For people that read this site i aperciate it!!


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Emails.

After this weekend, no more emails will be sent out to you.  If you want to read the blog, you will have the address and know where to go to read posts.  The address is http://renigade.blogspot.com
 
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You will need a RSS reader to get this feed or use www.Rojo.com or some other site like that.
 
Thankx for helping me get my site up and running.

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RMSTringer
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