June: Ridiculam

Inter causas "auctor nominatim ratio non culpa.”

Ego fuerit faciens multum opus cum SharePoint quaerere nuper et specie KeywordQuery genus, proprietates et modos.

Proventus referre ex Sis posuit super ultraque solitum suspicantur (hic), te addere ad SelectedProperties collectio, ut in:

myKeywordQuery.SelectProperties.Add("Xyzzy");

Et gratias ago proni ad extremum Corey Roth et Ingenti blog post hoc benevolens (http://www.dotnetmafia.com/blogs/dotnettipoftheday/archive/2008/02/19/how-to-use-the-moss-enterprise-search-keywordquery-class.aspx)

In meam, "Xyzzy" est non actu a gesta res.  Cum addita ad SelectedProperties usquam, SharePoint proiecerunt unum ventus exceptiones unquam runtime:

"Auctorem huius rationem culpae non exprimeret."

Praesertim caput meum "r" rationem.  Hoc sonat sicut mihi. NET equivalent of "Non habeo os, et oportet me clamatis."

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Protinus ad carcerem album – Scelerisque vitae VPN Client

Aestate, Ego creavi a "recta ad carcerem" album leo.  #1 in album est Laurencius O'Donnell (nam quod inconvenienter praedicta), Hoc autem modo nulla excedunt :)  Hodie, Im 'consummatio Scelerisque vitae scriptor VPN client album, et quod est in scopum per nares.

Fasciculumque annos multos clientium Scelerisque vitae usus VPN longinquus obvius ut eorum site.  Tunc reverterentur, Creavi virtualis PCs quod in singulis horum clientelam et installed Cisco? Cur?  Scelerisque vitae tuae obserat apparatus quia ita ut vos can pasco ne loci network typographorum, quasi periculosam, nedum utilia Skype, Communicator et «~" clavem.  Sed,  Si niteremur super VM, sed usque non est clausum vestris VM exercitus. 

Ego hodie quoniam ego sum admonitus gloria diebus illis uti Cisco VPN client rursum: * et seras me: * et ego ad uti in minutis.  Mallem blog de quam Cisco VPN client in carcerem meruit magis quam uti ea ...

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Dominica matutina Funny: “Pater, Non Etiam Scitis”

Nos aquilonis New Jersey Galvin scriptor sunt magna fans de politica satura tv. progressio, Cotidie Show hosted by Jon Stewart. I don’t like to get political in my blogging, dicam id quod omnes sine Quotidie Show, Ut bene permanenter perdidit omnes sensus humor in vel de 12/12/2000.

Nos sunt habens prandium in deck mane ultimum septimana et decem anni filius inducit recens episode de Ostendere. Ego fecit comment, "Jon Stewart scit quod melius non fun de me or there will be terrible consequences for Jon Stewart."

Dicens fili paulisper consideranti: "Pater, numerus: He doesn’t even know you."

Sustinui enim a numero duo, sed statuit quod satis et movetur ad deinde subiectum sine exsiliens a pulsu.

Quod dictum esse posset de genere multus magis mileage iocis, but he’s getting too used to me or too mature or both. I need to adjust somehow.

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Dominica Funny: “Suspendisse lacus supponitur esse putabam”

Paulo super tres annos, uxorem et signati mea filius pro a aestate actio, The Midland Park Players. This is a drama group that spends about three or four weeks preparing for a play and then showing it to the parents, friends and relatives. It’s always been done very well.

Nescio si cuivis puero hoc, but my son is extremely reluctant to try new things. Knowing this, we signed him up for the program. We’ve found that it’s best to alert him to these kinds of things early and often. Ita, ut naturam ipsam vinceret invitus, nos ei mane et fecit optimum ut sonus fun, etc. Even with a multi-month advertising campaign, he still wasn’t convinced. We forced him to do, licet, et ut est saepe causa, he had a great time.

Tempus per annum secundum volutabatur, he had once again convinced himself that he didn’t want to participate. Sed, nos signati eum et in nulla hodie, I dropped him off one morning at the high school where they practice. When I went to pick him up after lunch, erat ipsum excitatur, omnes rident et nuntiatum, "Est fabula in Velveteen Rabbit and I want to be the Rabbit". He had spent literally months carrying on (aliquando hysterically) Quomodo noluit habere cum dies et justo Players, he wants to be the lead role in the play. We’ve seen this pattern before.

(Nostra admiratio, fecit adepto Rabbit munus et erat miris.)

Fast forward a few years. He’s been in Park Players three times now, so he’s something of a veteran. This summer (2008), Players starts up again. Interea, ipse suus tandem persuasum nobis vere doesn’t want to play soccer and he never liked basketball. That left him with no extra-curricular activities for late Winter / early Spring. A client with whom I was working mentioned that his daughter was in a program called Stage Right. Stage right is a slightly more expensive version of Park Players and it’s not in my town, but adjacent to it. Perfect.

The thing to know about that town is that it’s practically another country in terms of wealth. It has a high-frequency train right to Wall Street and NYC in general. It’s just a wealthy place. One of the on-going family discussion themes is whether we should have moved to that town instead of where we live now. It’s a bigger town, eius scholis offerre magis progressio pro haedos, etc. My wife grew up in that town and her parents live there, sic sunt "aduncum in" despite not living there. I personally grew up in different circumstances in Massachusetts, so I don’t have a lot to say about this during family dinner conversation. This isn’t to say that we aren’t very happy where we live. We just know that that town is a level above our town economically.

Stage Right’s next program started too soon for us to launch our normal advertising campaign to overcome my son’s reluctance. This is when he came up with one my personal favorite arguments against doing something: "Veneris noctibus sunt prima noctes somno overs!" Stage Right was going to interfere with his weekend socials.

Die venit, ferimus, et ibi eum cædere, et cetera, Amor naturalis est vivere sed valere eros et accepit eam cum tempus.

Volutpat vestibulum dixisset praeterita et primum uxorem, I think he’s tailoring his discussions very precisely for his audience. She had asked him how Stage Right compares to Midland Park Players. He tells her that "In Park Players, we have teenagers that help us out. There aren’t any in in Stage Right. In Park Players, teenagers make all props. In Stage Right, we have to bring our own props. We have to do everything. And then he twists the knife: "Ego hanc urbem opulentam ponebatur."

Omnibus annis, I never really thought that he was hearing or understanding anything as it related to the "rich town". Autem, vertit ex erat.

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Dominica Funny: “Miror si password est …”

Nuper emit prandium frater (more) and we ended up talking about funny things that we did at our respective colleges. At my alma mater, Mollis College, the academic support IT department had a very inclusive way about it. We were given a LOT of rope and I took advantage of that at times.

Duo meus ventus memorias referre ad meum bonum amicus, Gabe. He had made the terrible mistake of telling people his freshman year that "I’m a freshman, sed mihi Sophomore stantem" debitum ad variis proficiebat collocatione classes ipse erat, etc. Many of us were similarly situated but we didn’t talk about it so much. His senior year, cum introduxit eum ad populum, we’d say "This is Gabe. He’s a Senior, sed habet Sophomore stantem ".

The college had some Sun workstation/servers running X-Window. They had gigantic monitors and the engineers used them for CAD and other boring engineer stuff. We CS people used them to learn programming and, utique, ludere.

Nos non sicut computer-inops veniam ad tantum nostrum ventus quae ad esset ad telnet ad buxum sunt in et currere X-oculus on them. This would pop up a pair of eyes that followed the mouse around on the screen. You could pop up even more and have literally a dozen or more of the X-eye applications running. Conare non clare ridere cum fectum miserum X oculum claudere conatur post X oculum et sub eius flatu murmurans.

We also played X-trek on those boxes. Id, tibi ad download principium, get various dependencies wherever you could find them and build it. I wasn’t a sophisticated C programmer, but I could read header files. I was looking through these and found directives like "#DEFINE MAX_TORPEDO_DISTANCE 10". I played around with that increase range and power for phases and torpedoes, re-aedificavit et tunc perdidit Gabe altera tempore lusimus.

Gabe etiam a ingens fan de a TV ostende dicitur Blake scriptor 7. I had never seen it, Sed non dui a libero asseverantes. Who is the superior show. Argumenta nonnumquam calefieri

Unum die, it occurred to me that I could probably guess his UNIX password. I sat down next to him one day and announced in a loud tone, "Ego ad coniecto vestri password nunc, Gabe." "Yeah, ius" was his answer. I then logged in, ingressus eius user id, conversus ad coram, dactylographabam et dixit ex magna, "Miror si scriptor B-L-A-K-E-VII" ? Touch typing has never paid off as handsomely as it did that day.

Proxima septimana (aut mox): More computer room antics from college.

Tu quis ad participes? Leave a comment or email me and I’ll publish them here.

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Dominica Funny: “Cum ego Puerulus”

Ut a parentis, alicubi in linea inveni "cum essem parvulus" trick.

Mea filius, an quatuor aut quinque dies, ludit a Balloon et sicut maxime pueri quod ludere cum Balloons, he popped it. He was very upset. The world had come to an end. I said to him, "Cum erat puer, Me a Balloon et popped et tandem, I got a new balloon." It seemed to help him cope with his loss and led to a fun talk about what it was like when I was a little boy.

That worked well as a consolation technique and I used it a several times over the next period of time. I did get into trouble once when his Monster Rancher 3 creature died. I talked about how my dog, Princeps, had died in a car accident. Hoc tempore, responsum erat, "Autem sentio malum de duo!" I shied away from using the "when I was a little boy" artem consolationem post quod.

Ante mortuus canis incidunt, autem, I had also started to use the technique to convince him to do chores. "Cum essem parvulus, Me ire et adepto diurna ", "Mundare mea locus", "Adepto mammam eius capulus calicem", etc.

Hoc erat pulchellus prospere enim a dum, but he started to increasingly rebel against the tyranny of my childhood. One event, in particulari, marked the end. I told him to bring the garbage cans from curb back to the garage. He argued and I responded, "Cum essem parvulus, I had to take the garbage back to the garage." He responded, "O Yeah! Well when you were a little boy, quod erat BRUTUS!".

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Dominica Funny: “Non educendo”

Retro in circuitu 1998, the company I worked for at the time received some funding to create a new e-commerce product. We had the full gamut of business requirements to meet. It had to be fast, facile finem users, CARNOSUS, Linguam multi-, etc. Sad to say, I probably haven’t had as an ambitious set of work to accomplish since those heady days.

This effort pre-dated Microsoft.NET. Plain vanilla ASP was still somewhat new (or least very unfamiliar to my company). "Brick and mortar" companies were doomed. Doomed! This is to say that it was pioneering work. Not Hadron Collider pioneering work, but for us in our little world, it was pioneering work.

We were crazy busy. We were doing mini POC’s almost every day, figuring out how to maintain state in an inherently stateless medium, figuring out multi-language issues, row-level security. We even had create a vocabulary to define basic terms (I preferred state-persistent but for some reason, the awkward "statefull" won the day).

As we were madly inventing this product, the marketing and sales people were out there trying to sell it. Somehow, they managed to sell it to our nightmare scenario. Even though we were designing and implementing an enterprise solution, we really didn’t expect the first customer to use every last feature we built into the product day zero. This customer needed multi-language, a radically different user interface from the "standard" system but with the same business logic. Multi-language was especially hard in this case, because we always focused on Spanish or French, but in this case, it was Chinese (which is a double-byte character set and required special handling given the technology we used).

Fast forward a few months and I’m on a Northwest airlines flight to Beijing. I’ve been so busy preparing for this trip that I have almost no idea what it’s like to go there. I had read a book once about how an American had been in China for several years and had learned the language. One day he was walking the city and asked some people for directions. The conversation went something this:

  • American: "Could you tell me how to get to [XX] street?"
  • Chinese: "Sorry, we don’t speak English".
  • American: "Oh, well I speak Mandarin." and he asked them again in Chinese, but more clearly (as best he could).
  • Chinese: Very politely, "Sorry, we don’t speak English".

The conversation went on like that for bit and the American gave up in frustration. As he was leaving them he overheard one man speaking to the other, "I could have sworn he was asking for directions to [XX] street."

I had picked up a few bits and pieces of other China-related quasi-information and "helpful advice":

  • A Korean co-worked told me that the I needed to be careful of the Chinese because "they would try to get me drunk and take advantage of you" in the sense of pressuring me into bad business decisions.
  • We were not allowed to drive cars (there was some confusion as to whether this was a custom, a legal requirement or just the client’s rule).
  • There were special rules for going through customs.
  • We were not allowed to use American money for anything.
  • You’re not supposed to leave tips. It’s insulting if you do.

Et tandem, I had relatively fresh memories the Tiananmen massacre. When I was at college, I remember seeing real-time Usenet postings as the world looked on in horror.

In short, I was very nervous. I wasn’t just normal-nervous in the sense that I was delivering a solution that was orders of magnitude more complicated than anything I had ever done before. I was also worried about accidentally breaking a rule that could get me in trouble.

I’m on this 14 hour flight and though it was business class, 14 hours is a damned long time. There are only so many ways to entertain yourself by reading, watching movies or playing with the magnetized cutlery. Even a really good book is hard to read for several hours straight.

Tandem, I started to read the packaging material on a piece of software I was hand-carrying with me to the client, Netscape’s web server. I’m reading the hardware/software requirements, the marketing blurbs, looking at the pretty picture and suddenly, I zero in on the giant "NOT FOR EXPORT" warning, something about 128 bit encryption. I stuffed the box back into my carry bag, warning face-down (as if that would have helped) and tried to keep visions of Midnight Express out of my head.

Respiciens nunc, I should have been worried, if at all, when I left the U.S., cum nihil adversi accidit non 🙂 et intrantes Sinis est etiam considerans est optima et maxime omnium memorabile quae habebat negotium trinus Ego voluntas faciendi.

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Dominica Funny: Custodiens filius tuus in digitos

One of the many joys I take in being the parent of a ten year old boy is finding new ways to make him laugh or think a little differently about questions and things in the world. I’ve used these techniques over the years:

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Detorquere Quaestionibus:

Eius: Quo die est?

Pater: Ante unam diem mercurii.

S: No, what day of the month is it?

D: Oh, it’s 4 days after Jan 25.

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Tickle him and tell him you’ll stop when he stops laughing.

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Go down stairs to the TV room and announce, "It’s good to be the daddy." Igitur, pick him up to get the warm spot on the couch and change the channel to something good, like the Scifi channel.

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Read stories out loud. Insert ridiculous sentences in the middle of the story. My favorite is to add "killing him instantly" when the main characters encounters some minor trouble. Verbigratia, "the knife slipped in his hand, cutting his index finger, killing him instantly." Nothing quite gets your son out of a complacent and passive listening mode as the main character being killed instantly.

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Read stories incorrectly. Read sentences backward. The best part of this is that the first couple of times I did this, my son thought he was helping me out by pointing out that I wasn’t reading the words in the right order. The down side is that he really doesn’t want me to read to him any more.

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Go to Burger King for lunch. My son would eat BK morning, night and day if we let him. When going, tell him, "I know you hate going there, but we simply have no choice." When he tries to explain that he loves BK, talk over him and say things like "We don’t have time to argue about it! We’re going and I don’t want to have a discussion!"

(This reminds me of my favorite Borg joke: "Borger King: We do it our way. Your way is irrelevant." hahaha!)

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Open a book to page 9 and say, "hmm, that’s an odd page".

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Fill the world with arch enemies. "We’re going to run quick over toe 7-11, arch-enemy of 11-7".

"Your aunt lives in Ringwood, arch enemy to the town of Squarewood."

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We drive up to Massachusetts from New Jersey several times a year and it often takes about 5 hours door to door. As we arrive home and pull into the driveway say, "oh, I forgot, we need to make a quick dash to Home Depot."

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When watching a violent episode in a TV show (such as Heroes), tell your son, "some times, at work, I need to destroy my enemies by burning them alive using the powers of my mind. I don’t like doing it, but you gotta do what you gotta do."

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When watching bad horror movies (see "It’s good to be the Daddy" above), ascribe improbable motives to the evil character. Puta, tell your son that the reason Jason is so angry is because he wants some cake and they won’t let him have any.

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Explain phone numbers incorrectly. Instead of telling your son to dial "201-111-2222", tell him it’s "2-011-1-12222".

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What tricks do you use?

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