This is something that I’ve heard reference to before, but this is the first time I’ve seen a detailed article about it. The Taipei Times has published an article Taiwan Before The Flood about the theory that Taiwan is the lost continent of Mu, also known as Lemuria. The theory goes that catastrophic volcanic activity on Taiwan caused the collapse of a large section of the north east coast of Taiwan which caused a large tsunami which wiped out thriving nearby island civilizations, and the seismic activity caused Taiwan inhabitants to migrate elsewhere. The theory is a bit kooky, but interesting nonetheless.
The Last Day of Summer
We’ve had an unusually late warm season in Taiwan this year. Temperatures have been in the upper 20s celsius except for a couple of chilly days in October. The weather forecast calls for this to be the last warm day of the year though. Starting tomorrow the weather will begin to decline and we should be seeing temperatures ranging from 16-21. That’s still not too bad, but it looks like we’ve finally reached the end of summer.
New Pictures Up
New pictures for October have been posted, including the last part of our US trip.
Remodeling
We’re doing remodeling at home to enlarge the upstairs front bedroom. We’re going to build out where the front covered patio was, taking over about 3/4 of it. The room will also be widened out into the narrow room next to it which will end up being a hallway. We’ll also build in 3 bookcases, one small closet and one large closet. More comments in the slideshows below:
As a comparison:
New Toys
Here’s some of the new toys I’ve got over the last month.
My old GSM cell phone would hold a charge just a bit longer than a day, even after I replaced the battery. I went out and got a Nokia 6021 as a replacement. Basically I was looking for the cheapest one with bluetooth and gprs. It also comes with a color screen and some games and about a billion different cheesy ring tones. The one neat thing it came with is a Lunar Calendar converter application so you can find out when Lunar New Year is, and find out your Lunar Birthday and all that fun stuff. That might only come on phones in Chinese speaking areas though. It does not come with a camera. I really don’t care that I can’t take fuzzy poorly lit pictures with my phone. They also gave me a free Nokia HDW-3 bluetooth headset to go with it. The phone only came with a Chinese manual, but in the back they have a note about getting an English manual. I faxed in my request and got it a couple of days later. Nice.
16X DVD+R media is starting to become plentiful and reasonably priced here, and Dual Layer blanks are also coming down in price, though not enough to use it for everything. So I went out and picked up a BenQ DW1640 burner. Current burners pretty much all support 16X writing on DVD+R and DVD-R media, so the current feature to look for is 8X Dual Layer capability. The newest drives will support that, the older ones top out at 4X. Most DL media is still 2.4X speed though 4X and 6X is available if you look for it, but looking for 8X DL capability will future-proof your drive. It’s unlikely they’ll be able to push specs higher than that, so that’ll probably last you until BluRay or HD-DVD take root. Anyways, it’s been working out quite well and even 16X burns are scanning with low error rates. I tried a DL burn which turned out pretty mediocre quality, but from what I read the Ritek-made 2.4X DL media is not all that great. I’ll be trying some better quality media when I can find some at a reasonable price.
The big new toy though is a replacement for my 4+ year old laptop. My old laptop was finally breaking down and mysteriously throttling back to about 1/5 of regular speed. Since it is only 1ghz processor to begin with, 1/5 of that is pretty painful with modern applications. I had wanted to get something with SXGA+ resolution or better to at least match the old one, but I just couldn’t find the right set of features. The closest was the Acer Ferrari 4005WXMi, but I ultimately decided that the 15.4″ WSXGA+ made the laptop just a bit bigger than I wanted. I finally decided to scale back and settle for WXGA resolution (1280×768 or 1280×800).
This made my choices much easier and much cheaper, and I finally landed on the Acer Aspire 5004WLMi. It comes with 2.0ghz Pentium M, ATI X700 64mb PCI-Express video, 14.1″ 1280×800 LCD, 512mb DDR2-533, 8X DVDRW drive with 2.4X DL, 3xUSB2, Firewire, 5-in-1 memory card reader, gigabit ethernet, wifi b/g, bluetooth, modem, 80mb disk (only 4200rpm though), and XP Home. I bumped up the memory to 1gb (it can go to 2gb), which came to a grand total of about US$1300. That’s about half what I paid for my previous laptop, and this one is way better in everything but screen resolution.
One of the big reasons I went with Acer is because they are a local company. I wanted better warranty service than the hassles I had with my previous Dell. The three big local brands are ASUS, Acer, and BenQ. The ASUS laptops I looked at weren’t all that impressive, and their touchpads seem to be a bit twitchy. Acer is one I’d already been looking at because of the Ferrari laptop I decided to pass over, but all of their computers seemed fairly decent. I’ve had some good experience with BenQ stuff, but their laptops seemed to all be solidly mainstream in features, with few models with the more advanced features I wanted, and not in the right combination. So in the end I went with Acer, though downgraded to a slightly lesser laptop than I’d originally looked at. Acer also gives their laptops a 2 year local warranty instead of 1 year with some other brands. The first year of warranty is international, so I can get it serviced anywhere for the first year.
I’ve only had it for a few days, but I’m pretty pleased with it. The lower resolution has ended up being not as bad as I had expected, with perhaps the extra width making up for it. I’ve had a chance to try out Acer’s service already and been fairly impressed. No, not because it was broken! The laptop came with Chinese XP Home installed and only Chinese recovery CDs. I dropped their customer support email asking if I could switch to English CDs and they said no problem. I just needed to go to a local service center and exchange the CDs. The closest service center is near the computer shopping district in Taipei, so it was easy to find. The first time I went in on Friday, I only had to wait a couple of minutes. It turns out that after much searching, they didn’t have the English recovery CDs for my model, but they said they’d have it in a few days and they’d call me. Only about an hour after I got home they called back and said they had a set ready. It was already late so I waited until Saturday to go back. That time there was a 5 person wait, but I only had been sitting a few minutes before someone recognized me from the day before and brought out the CDs for me. I’d actually already reinstalled the system with XP Pro so that I can install the multi-lingual extensions and get real file security as well as the other Pro features, but if I ever want to sell the system or something, it’s nice to have the original config to fall back to.
I haven’t used the bluetooth, memory card, modem, or dvd burner features, but I’ve used pretty much used everything else and it’s all been quite nice. The battery is rated at 3 hours, but with some tweaking I was able to get a power management profile that was still quite usable but allowed 4 hours of battery life. That’s quite a change from my previous laptop which would charitably get a bit more than 90 minutes on a new battery. I need to get GPRS service activated on my cell phone so I can use it remotely, but I’ve already used it on the free wifi at Burger King. It’s really nice having the wifi built in with real antennas in the lid rather than a pcmcia card with the dinky antenna sticking out. Getting a good signal is much more reliable.
This model is only currently available in Asia and Europe, unfortunately for most of you.
Fun, fun new toys.
(This post really freaks out the LJ spell check.)
More Blame
I’ll get around to actually writing something here one of these days. Until then, head over to AssignBlame for my latest two articles:
Possible Solution To Torture Bill Controversy
Vice President Dick Cheney has come out in favor of allowing the CIA to torture foreign prisoners. How about allowing torture in cases of treason as well? Only seems fair.
Stopping Teen Sex By Banning Cancer Vaccine
A new vaccine has been developed which has proven very effective in stopping a virus which claims the lives of 3,700 American women each year, but conservatives are coming out against its use because they say it will promote teen sex. Yes, that translates the way it sounds: stopping pre-marital sex is more important than preventing the spread of deadly disease!
Football Fans Say Wendy’s Fumbled Contest
Another AssignBlame article: Football Fans Say Wendy’s Fumbled Contest
Wendy’s faces a boycott from football fans disappointed with a $1 million prize payout, though the winner is just happy he won.
The Dead Parrot Skit
New article of mine on AssignBlame: The Dead Parrot Skit
Like the famous Monty Python routine, this story involves a dead parrot, the British and some lame excuses. However, this time it’s not a comedy routine. UK officials come under fire after prematurely blaming Taiwan for a parrot which died from bird flu.
Blame the CIA
AssignBlame has published a new article of mine: Cheney aide Scooter Libby blames the CIA.
New York Times and Judy Miller Speak Up
OK, it’s been a while since I’ve said anything about the investigation to find the traitor(s) who revealed Valerie Plame’s identity as a CIA agent. For the most part though, the news of the last month has been a fairly confusing swirl of rumors, so I guess there’s not much to add to that.
Today the New York Times published two notable articles that deserve some reading:
The Miller Case: A Notebook, a Cause, a Jail Cell and a Deal
My Four Hours Testifying in the Federal Grand Jury Room
The first is the Times’ account of what was going on internally at the paper while they were simultaneously trying to prop Miller up as a martyr to press freedom and also trying to contain newsroom resentment that Miller had screwed over their reputation on WMDs. The second is Miller’s own account of her grand jury testimony. While the first article soft-pedals the account a bit, there’s still plenty for the Times to be embarrassed about.
The most glaringly obvious problem with Miller’s account is that on the one hand she claimed that she only had one source to her information about Plame: Scooter Libby. Her deal with the prosecutor to only testify about conversations with Libby was reportedly based on that claim. But then later she claims that an early reference to Valerie Flame (sic) in her notes was not from conversations with Libby. And then on top of that she pulls a Reaganesque defense that she forgot who the source was for those notes, but she’s really really pretty sure it wasn’t Libby.
In any case it is quite a discrepancy to go from one source to two sources, even if she doesn’t remember who the other one was.