random bits
We have two programmable thermostats in our house, one for the furnace and one for the AC. (Yeah, so it's up to us to make sure only one is engaged. This is not hard.) The one for the AC is on daylight savings time (sic), and the one for the furnace is not. As I was thinking about this and determining that there's no need to reset the latter, it struck me that "standard" time will soon be only 4.5 months of the year. That doesn't sound like much of a standard to me. A "standard" transmission in a car isn't standard any more either. What other things are still called "standard" even when that's no longer true?
On
the edge of an aphorism by
metahacker rings true to me.
Iron
Chef Programmer by
merle_ made me laugh even though
I've never seen the TV show.
A service that could be useful to some of my readers: DynDNS gives you a domain name that you can then point anywhere else, for free. It's not as good as a full vanity domain, but the price is right and sometimes you just want a path that's better than "obscure.isp.com/users/my_arcane_account_number/public" or the like.
Shavuot is tomorrow night and Friday. This is one of the three festivals, equal in importance to Pesach and Sukkot, though it seems to be less prominent in many people's eyes. (It's one day instead of a week, which is part of it.) A holiday celebrating the giving of the torah is special for me, though, and I'm looking forward to late-night torah study with my rabbi tomorrow night.
I have paid the deposit to go on my rabbi's trip to Israel in December. There's a meeting next week for people interested in the trip; ironically, it conflicts with one session of the ulpan (intensive Hebrew class). Oops. :-) (It sounds like missing the meeting will not be problematic.)

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Yeah, I noticed this in your comments yesterday. Sounds exactly right for me: I want to run webpages on my home machine, so this would be hugely useful. (Assuming that Comcast isn't aggressively scanning packets and filtering out HTTP, which I can't rule out as a possibility.)
BTW, what makes DynDNS really useful isn't the price, it's the fact that it is designed specifically for dynamic IPs. It's for people who are on cablemodems that have neither a clear DNS entry nor a stable IP address, who want to run services. Which is a lot of us...
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Yeah, that too. :-) Most home users don't get static IP, after all.
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I purposely neglected to mention some of your connectivity problems, but they, too, are an example of it that came to mind. So it's good that it resonated. ;)
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