The National Archives: When Nixon Met Elvis:
“I have done an in-depth study of drug abuse and Communist brainwashing techniques and I am right in the middle of the whole thing where I can and will do the most good.”
Indeed.
The National Archives: When Nixon Met Elvis:
“I have done an in-depth study of drug abuse and Communist brainwashing techniques and I am right in the middle of the whole thing where I can and will do the most good.”
Indeed.
What you are looking at is the Lotus Sport Exige, not to be confused with your typical, run-of-the-mill Exige.
For Blogger users…
Let’s face it. Blogger sucks. You type up a great big entry, click Post, and watch with horror as an error page comes up. You click back, already knowing that your latest blogging masterpiece has dissipated into the ether. After a few times, you start copying and pasting your words into a Word document before posting as a precautionary measure, but Goddammit, it shouldn’t have to be this way.
Unfortunately, the only real way to get around Blogger’s sketchiness is to upgrade to a real blogging solution like Movable Type or WordPress.
However, you can reduce some of the pain and misery of using Blogger by using the w.bloggar blogging client.
w.bloggar works on your computer and lets you save posts as local text files. Just click the save button or ctrl-s before publishing and never again will you lose a post to Blogger’s ineptitude.
For everyone…
It’s a pain in the ass to type in the tags to make things boldface, italicized, underlined, or stricken each and every time. Links and images are also a pain. While the addition of DHTML formatting tools helps a bit, I don’t like to click buttons. I like keyboard shortcuts, and I don’t like learning new ones. I don’t like the focus being taken away by a JavaScript dialog box and being forced to click into the textbox to find my place. I don’t like HTML being dumped at the end of post when I really want it placed where I had my insertion point. I don’t like having to go through multiple steps to add images to my posts.
Fortunately with w.bloggar you can get around all of these little productivity-killing aspects of web-based blogging and focus on what you really want to do: blog.
At first you might wonder about a site called Black Viper’s Web Site. I suppose it’s better than Black Viper’s Home Page or Welcome to Black Viper’s Home Page on the World Wide Web!!!, but I digress.
The biggest problem I have with my Dell Inspiron 600 is that it tends to run hot (check out I8kfanGUI if you have a Dell laptop). Under load, the CPU can often reach up to 50 degrees Celsius before the fan kicks in. Heat can hamper performance and even damage your computer. I got myself a little laptop stand that has two built in fans, and that helps a bit–mostly by drawing heat away from the hard drive and memory compartments.
But I still had problems with the CPU experiencing high loads and thus generating heat. I noticed that there were times when I wasn’t doing anything and yet 85-95% of the CPU would be used by a process called cisvc.exe. According to several sites, this was a Windows service, not Spyware or anything malicious. Of course, that doesn’t mean you necessarily want it running.
That’s where Black Viper comes in. Black Viper’s Service Configurations essentially lists the various Windows processes and services, explains what they do, and makes recommendations on whether you want them disabled or not. I suspected cisvc.exe was a completely useless process, but this confirmed that I could safely turn it off. Go ahead and take a peek at the list; you’d be surprised at the number of stupid things that are running at any given time.
Disclaimer: Using I8kfanGUI to override the automatic controls on your fans or Black Viper’s Service Configurations to muck around with Windows carries with it a small element of risk. Personally I think it’s negligible, but don’t come crying to me if you break something.
I’ve been doing most of my online play at Full Tilt Poker for the last week and have had a pretty good go at it. Out of five days of play (small sample, I know!), I’ve been in the black on four of them. I’m not sure how many hands that represents, but I’ve cleared $44.54 of the bonus, which should give you some indication of how much I’ve played.
While I’ve generally done well, you do often see the same players at the table night after night, and a fair number of them seem tight-weak. This has forced me to do a bit more bluffing and slow-playing. It’s rare that a true live one enters the waters, but tonight a fish sat down at our table and suddenly one third to one half of the players sprang to life, playing weaker cards and raising to get heads-up against this guy. I had the good fortune of being in two pots against this guy that padded my account by about half a buy-in.
So here comes the hand we all wish we had played:
BB has about $30, Fishy Guy has about $25, I’ve got them both covered with $60. BB is a semi-aggressive, somewhat solid player.
I’m on the button with [9c Qc].
SB posts the small blind of $0.25
BB posts the big blind of $0.50
EP posts $0.50
UTG folds
EP checks
MP calls $0.50
MP2 folds
Fishy Guy calls $0.50
CO folds
glyphic calls $0.50
SB calls $0.25
BB checks
The flop is [7s Tc Jc]
SB checks
BB bets $3
EP folds
MP folds
Fishy Guy raises to $10
glyphic has 15 seconds left to act
Damn. I really really want to play my open-ended straight flush draw.
There’s $3.50 + $3 + $10 = $16.50 in the pot. The pot is laying me 1.65:1 and I have 15 outs against top pair/overpair/straight draw/flush draw/two pair/set/made straight.
Hmm… Hmm… If only I had Kc instead of 9c.
If I call and the BB goes all in, that’ll be another $18.80, so I’m potentially going to lose half my stack here. (I forget how much SB had, but he might have been able to do some damage, too)
But I can count on Fishy Guy to call and basically lay me almost 2:1 for my half-stack, right?
Argh.
And I’ve got position.
Oh, but with the pot this big and our relative stack sizes, position isn’t going to help.
glyphic folds
SB folds
BB raises to $28.80, and is all in
Fishy Guy folds
Uncalled bet of $18.80 returned to BB
BB doesn’t show
BB wins the pot ($21.85)
The commentary, by the way, consists of all the things I was thinking, but not necessarily in the order I was thinking them.
I’m pretty sure Fishy Guy had crap. He tended to play bad hands and bet with top pair, no pair, poor draws, etc.
BB, on the other hand, probably didn’t have the nut flush draw or a flopped straight. I’d say two pair or a set is most likely.
So. Good fold? Worth risking half the stack?