dead computer

It would just figure that my notebook would decide to die. On Thursday afternoon, I left to go pick the kids up from school, and when I returned I found the thing displaying a nice little arrangement of blue and white vertical stripes on the screen. I powered it off, and let it set for 15 seconds, then switched it back on. No display this time. I turned it back off, with the hopes that a few more minutes of rest might be what it needed. Then, while looking down at the casing, just below the keyboard, I noticed a sunken spot. Something had overheated, and melted the case.
I took the thing apart to investigate. No big chore–I had to take it apart a month or so ago to repair the power supply’s jack. Once I disassembled the computer, I found that the graphics processor had overheated. 
I pieced it all back together, and turned it back on, in hopes that the time taken to tear it apart had given everything time to cool down. I switched it on, and it was working fine–or so I thought. When I attempted to log into Windows, I found that the keyboard wasn’t responding, nor was the touchpad. With a little bit of frustration, I took the keyboard off, and reseated the ribbon for the touchpad and the keyboard, and tried it again. No luck. I plugged in an mouse and a keyboard, and still no luck.
So, it would seem that when I left, something happened to fry out the keyboard & mouse controllers, and caused the graphics processor to overheat (or vice-versa).
Now I am, once again, without a computer. 🙁
I went to CompUSA and bought an enclosure for my harddirve, and am accessing all of my information on Diana’s notebook. I also found a nice little notebook bundle at a nearby Wal-Mart that I plan to buy in a few days. The bundle is a leftover from this past Thanksgiving’s sales. So, I’ll end up getting a new notebook, and Diana will get a digital camera and photo-printer out of the deal. Not how I wanted to spend our extra tax-money, but, it works.

a flickr’d Cynthiana

After listening to Coffeebreak this morning, I hit the ‘net to search for any sign of an old Cynthiana business which died out quite some time ago–Pine Villa Restaurant. I hoped that I might find a writing or a story related to the old business, like the writing I found on McKnight’s Restaurant.
I didn’t find anything written about Pine Villa, but what I did find was much better.
I googled “pine villa cynthiana” and found four relevant hits–one being a report related to the leaking gas tanks, another being an obituary, and an image search. The one I explored was a Flickr search.
There are several photos that have been posted on Flickr which help show Cynthiana at her best–as I see her. It made me smile to see that others see Cynthiana the same way, and that they have taken the time to share these images with the world.
To view the Flickr results for Cynthiana as a slideshow, follow the link below:
http://www.flickr.com/search/show/?q=Cynthiana%2C+KY

a flickr'd Cynthiana

After listening to Coffeebreak this morning, I hit the ‘net to search for any sign of an old Cynthiana business which died out quite some time ago–Pine Villa Restaurant. I hoped that I might find a writing or a story related to the old business, like the writing I found on McKnight’s Restaurant.
I didn’t find anything written about Pine Villa, but what I did find was much better.
I googled “pine villa cynthiana” and found four relevant hits–one being a report related to the leaking gas tanks, another being an obituary, and an image search. The one I explored was a Flickr search.
There are several photos that have been posted on Flickr which help show Cynthiana at her best–as I see her. It made me smile to see that others see Cynthiana the same way, and that they have taken the time to share these images with the world.
To view the Flickr results for Cynthiana as a slideshow, follow the link below:
http://www.flickr.com/search/show/?q=Cynthiana%2C+KY

Towns Issue Bills for Police Services (Jeffrey McMurray – Associated Press)

Erlanger, KY is planning on charging people from out of town for the use of police services.

The idea of billing people for these services came from a need to “obtain some funding to keep providing these services that doesn’t come out of the pockets of the people who own a house in Erlanger.”
In reporting the story, the Associated Press found that out of some 343 traffic accidents during this past November and December, only 49 involved at least one Erlanger citizen, in some way. 
Don’t think I’ll be letting Diana drive north…
Article Source:

nonsensical ramblings over Cynthiana

I’m upset. My silly little Coffeebreak recorder didn’t work this morning. Well, it worked, but it shut off at the return from the first break. I haven’t figured out why yet. Either something I had something else running in the background which stole CPU cycles or bandwidth; or the stupid connection re-buffered for another reason, causing there to be a fault in recording. That stinks.
So, I set up a back-up task to record the replay at 4:00pm. I listened to this morning’s program, but did so on the way back home from dropping Diana off at work, which means that I really didn’t get a chance to sit down and think along with the program.
In keeping with the theme of government (which was disrupted by Thursday’s program–a break was taken in order to have guests speak on the upcoming “Go Red” events in February), Rick spoke on our poor representation and community involvement. One incident which happened this week, which “didn’t anger” him, but made him “wonder” was the announcement of Clark county receiving funds to assist in building an aquatic center. The big question is, how can Clark county receive state monies to aid in the funding of such a project, while Harrison hasn’t seen anything. Another sticking point is that the senator representing our district has not been so neighborly with us–Rick has not seen Sen. R.J. Palmer in the county but once, that he can recall, whereas previous senators were frequently seen or heard from.
Granted, as Harrison County Magistrate Jerry Dawson noted earlier in the week, Harrison County was rather spoiled in the past by having senators with personal interests in Harrison county–the late Wilson Palmer, for example–but the senator of any district should be more active in efforts in all counties within his district, whether or not he resides there. (Senator R.J. Palmer resides in Clark County)
Is Harrison County getting an unfair deal? Possibly.
Did the same thing happen before, in the opposite direction when we had a senator living here? Did citizens in other counties cry foul when something beneficial happened in our county as opposed to theirs? More than likely.
There is a problem here, though. Our senator hasn’t stopped by as often as the former senators. He needs to look at how he’s spending his time, and show his face, or share his voice more often. This, however isn’t the BIG problem. The BIG problem is our citizenry.
We don’t speak as loud as we should. Before I continue, I should say that I am as guilty of this as those I am taking issue with–I don’t speak out as much as I could. I don’t attend civic meetings. I don’t contact my local, state, or federal representatives. I am not as active in the community as I could be. I moan and cry about how terrible things are, and what different bone-headed decisions and directives our local, state, and federal governments make–but I don’t take any action. That, my friends, is the BIG problem. Our community is filled with people who do the same.
“Has anyone ever said to you that the city is dying?” Rick asked this question on the program this morning, and I do not know fully what he was asking–was he asking the question straight-out? was he trying to spark some thought? was it something he has thought? or was it just a question that suddenly came to mind?
“It’s a dying town,” were a few of the words Diana said, late last week, when she asked me why I was so fond of Cynthiana. I really have no choice but to acknowledge her statement, and try to pick up with weak rebuttals as I look around. We have two industrial parks–one half-occupied, the other has seen only one development. I can think of three, maybe four buildings that had been used for manufacturing/industrial applications which now sit vacant. We have two major parks–one in sad repair, and the other has been sitting idle for five years, waiting to be developed. There are numerous storefronts in the shopping centers and in the downtown area which haven’t been occupied in months, even years.
Cynthiana is dying. And it hurts me to watch her die. And I’m not doing anything to help. I’m only standing at the foot of her bed, amongst all of you, watching her gasp for air.


Snow Advisory – Harrison (Kentucky)

SLEET
AND SNOW NORTHWARD ACROSS CENTRAL KENTUCKY TONIGHT. THE
Wintry MIX WILL CHANGE OVER TO MOSTLY LIGHT SNOW AFTER MIDNIGHT.
THE SNOW WILL ACCUMULATE SOME DURING THE LATE NIGHT HOURS.
KYZ036-037-040>043-047>049-055>057-066-067-171015-
/O.NEW.KLMK.SN.Y.0002.080117T0600Z-080117T1400Z/
SCOTT KY-HARRISON KY-WOODFORD KY-FAYETTE KY-BOURBON KY-
NICHOLAS KY-MERCER KY-JESSAMINE KY-CLARK KY-BOYLE KY-GARRARD KY-
MADISON KY-CASEY KY-LINCOLN KY-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF…GEORGETOWN…CYNTHIANA…VERSAILLES…
LEXINGTON…PARIS…CARLISLE…HARRODSBURG…NICHOLASVILLE…
WINCHESTER…DANVILLE…LANCASTER…RICHMOND…LIBERTY…STANFORD
939 PM EST WED JAN 16 2008
…SNOW ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 1 AM TO 9 AM EST THURSDAY…
A Wintry MIX OF LIGHT RAIN…SLEET AND SNOW WILL CHANGE OVER TO
MOSTLY LIGHT SNOW AFTER MIDNIGHT. SNOW ACCUMULATION AROUND
AN INCH IS LIKELY BY MORNING. AS TEMPERATURES FALL A LITTLE BELOW
FREEZING…ROADWAYS AND WALKWAYS WILL LIKELY BE HAZARDOUS DURING THE
LATE NIGHT AND EARLY MORNING HOURS.
TEMPERATURES WILL RISE ABOVE FREEZING BY 9 AM CST.
ICY PATCHES WILL FIRST DEVELOP ON BRIDGES AND OVERPASSES. MOTORISTS
SHOULD USE EXTRA CAUTION.
$$
AB
Issuing Weather Forecast Office Homepage

Spay and neuter your vehicles…

Dvorak Uncensored reports that a Virginia Senator is proposing a law to ban male genitalia replicas (rubber testicles) designed to ornament and dangle from the bumpers and hitches of trucks/SUVs…