Some recent thoughts and sites I've come up with and across. Everything on 11/26/04 and before was all entered on 11/26/04 from ClipCache Plus from XRayz Software.
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Sunday Roundup
Friday, September 11, 2009
Long Island Archaeology: A Public Symposium On Recent Research
September 26, 2009
1-5 p.m.
Wang Center
Room 301
Stony Brook University
Come hear professional archaeologists speak about recent excavations and research on Long Island. Presentations will discuss both prehistoric and historical archaeology and include a screening of the film The Sugar Connection: Holland, Barbados, Shelter Island.
THIS EVENT IS FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.
Presenters:
Daniel E. Mazeau, Daria E. Merwin, James Moore, Gaynell Stone, Christopher Matthews, Jenna Wallace Coplin, Allison Manfra, and David Bernstein.
Sponsors:
Institute for Long Island Archaeology, Stony Brook University, Society for the Preservation of Long Island Antiquities, Center for Public Archaeology, Homeland Foundation & Hofstra University
For more information please contact:
Allison Manfra
(631) 632-7618
or
Chris Matthews
(516) 463-4093
Newsvine - 10 Worst Computer Viruses of All Time
I use the German Avira AntiVir software but I have had since 1983, a fair share of problems some I'm not sure if it would take a forensic analysis of why the disks crashed and locked, suspected CMOS viri, perhaps (Wikipedia "CMOS" entry).
Newsvine - 10 Worst Computer Viruses of All Time
Monday, September 07, 2009
A Message for Labor Day
Why don't we start with a national identification card, which could also be used to record work that is done, and safeguard elections from fraud. I think it was tried in Mexico's elections way back in 1990s, provided by an American company. I come from the Bronx from where Edgar Allen Poe was from and who may have been used, drugged and voted a number of times, drugged by thugs, employed by unscrupulous politicians in Baltimore, MD before he perished, according to one theory.
Perhaps labor records could be stored by using the card, to compare submitted records of employment for federal unemployment insurance. Today employers take "advantage" by not having to pay into it I'm told if under $600. A number of jobs and you may have been employed but nothing adds up, or as I experienced two weeks before the end of a year, the prior three quarters were used to determine unemployment benefit (laid off), even if you've been knocking yourself out in the fourth quarter. It might inspire better compliance with labor regulations.
I also think it might be the first step in a nationwide health care system, since social security cards are not accepted as ID, nor should they. It could have a biometric signature to assure that there's no fraud in its use.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost
Sunday, September 06, 2009
'William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe" is Great History
My favorite case he handled was the native American who unknowingly courted an East German spy. They were going to hang him during the end of the "Cold War" stationed as he was in what was West Germany today the unified country of Germany.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost
Friday, September 04, 2009
Musicians File Bankruptcy List | NoiseAddicts music and audio blog
georgejmyersjr
August 27th, 2009 @9:18 am
I saw Johnny Paycheck 30 years ago at the Choctaw Pow-wow, near Philadelphia, Mississippi, where those terrible civil rights TV shots of dogs and water hoses were used on people. He shortly thereafter was in a bar and a weapon misfired he was carrying and the judge refused to accept his plea which included huge expenses taking care of his deathly ill wife and put him in jail, a case of bad judgment, in my opinion. No longer touring he probably went bankrupt from the incarceration and the notoriety which is a shame he was a “good” guy trying to keep people off “bar-stool mountain”. Iron Eyes Cody was there too, had just lost his wife, the daughter of New York State’s famous archaeologist, Arthur C. Parker. I wonder if “Iron Eyes” was from there, some Italian looks French, early French settlers are still represented in the Choctaw traditional dress. They had a Choctaw beauty pageant, too. They were making truck wiring harnesses for GMC on the reservation. Keep on truckin’