Well, I did the upgrade to MovableType 4.0 on this site and it seemed to fix just about everything! But somehow all files that are alphabetically lower than index.php got deleted! So I've had to rebuild the entire MovableType site on top of the new WordPress site, so all the links remain. The new is that you can access the WordPress site at http://tongfamily.com and you can access the Movable Type 4.0 site at http://tongfamily.com/mt.index.php. That MT site is now closed for comments.

For about a month, the original MT 3.31 site with all the broken links will remain at richtong.org and then it will go away.

Testing WordPress, Bluehost

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Well, its been ages since I've really touched my hosting (thanks Mark at TQHosting) or my blogging with MovableType 3.3. But last week, my 3.3 installation finally broke with all kinds of strange Perl errors, so it is either upgrade to MovableType 4.0 and do a clean install or figure out what's the latest. So, I just swapped to Wordpress and am giving Bluehost a try.

Instead of 500MB for $10/month which was an amazing deal back three years ago, Bluehost gives an amazing 1.5TB (that's right terabtyes!) or storage and they install Wordpress automatically. Also the cost is basically $95/year ($7/year) and they provide free registration (so you save $7/year for registration too). Quite a deal. It uses the same cpanel setup.

Getting over to richtong.com was a handy domain to mirror tongfamily before I do a full cut over. Upperhost.com seems to liek Bluehost although you can never tell with web site spamming whether these reviews are real or not.

Moving over was straightforward, with the biggest problem my using Textile 2 for text entry, but fortunately, there is a plugin that deals with that and putting things into plugins is super easy with wordpress. You basically put it into the /wp-admin/plugin directory and it detects it automatically. Same with themes, you just fine them and stuff them into the /wp-admin/themes directory.

The biggest problem I have faced is resetting my Scribefire since you have to look in ~/Library/Application/Support/Firefox/Profiles/*.default and look for performancing.* files and delete them.

ChinesePod

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Wow, finally a site that has it all for us lousy Chinese speakers at ChinesePod. I found it via iTunes and it has it all and it is free. For instance, look at the most popular intermediate lessons, it has both an MP3 podcast you can download as well as a PDF with English, pinyin and simplifed chinese. And the vocabulary is pretty useful and real world. Thanks guys!

Wyclef Jean and Keep Holding On

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OMG, I just love Sweetest Girl by Wyclef Jean. it is terrific Hip Hop for those of you who like that kind of stuff. Check out the video

I'm also listening to Avril Lavigne's Keep Holding On

If you are unlucky enough to have your wallet stolen, it isn't the $50 in it, it is that the thief can sell your identity on the internet to just about anyone. So, what can you do about it. First, you can place a 90 day credit alert for free, but of course every thief in the world knows that. So after cancelling all your cards and changing your bank accounts, you need a longer term monitoring system.

These are really expensive for reasons I don't understand. Typically $80-$200 per month for just a database check, but that's the scam for these credit reporting agencies. You need a service that monitors all three agencies, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. Consumer Reports agrees that they aren't really that much protection mainly because if they use your social security number with a different name, the databases don't figure it out immediately and it can take 60 days for someone to report a new account.

Fightidentitytheft.com has a decent review, they appear fairly similar with a $25K reimbursement coverage and monitoring all the scores and also see their credit monitoring review

  1. TrueCredit costs $15/month and monitors all three services and has a good rating. Underneath it is TransUnioin that provides this. You get a report from all three. It also monitors every business day. 5 out of 5 stars, but the most expensive. You do get unlimited access to your credit scores if you need that.
  2. Citi has a $13/month service that covers all three as well. 4 out of 5 stars
  3. Equifax also has a $15 service but you only get FICO and Equifax credit reports. 3 out of 5 stars

Then there are frad alert that comes from services that aren't owned by the big three. They basically layer the continuing 90 day realert for credit monitoring and a few things onto the services listed above:

  1. Debix which is a more comprehensive system. It is not just reporting, it maintains your fraud alerts (you have to manually reactivate every 90 days the fraud alerts for all three services to keep it going). Besides wiping you off of junk mail lists, the main thing it adds is a special number you give all the banks. When they call, you have to type in a PIN to make sure it is really you. So folks pretending to be you can't run any transactions. It is $90 per year so a little cheaper too. What happens is that in your credit report, is the Debix number, then Debix has a find me feature that calls you at any of your numbers to validate this is right. It is definitely the cheapest service. The main knock I'd say is whether this is a legit company, there look like about a dozen sites in a google query on Debix that look phony and are positive reviews of the service, so beware.
  2. Lifelock. I love this gutsy little startup. The president of the company puts his name and social security number on their site to show how safe it is. Like Debix, it sets a fraud alert on everything, they then remove names from credit card application junk lists, then you get the WalletLock which is an operator that will cancel all your cards for you. Otherwise, like Debix it is a layer on top. They do claim they will spend $1M if you are ever the victim, but its hard for me to believe that particular claim. It is mainly a timesaver over the credit agencies and the constant recycling of the 90 day alert is valuable
  3. IdentiyGuard also monitors all three and is $13/month. 4 out of 5 stars. It has a couple of levles, but at $17/month, they claim they do monitoring, and also claim to monitor public records.

REI Deals

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Hey, if you are buying lots of gear, now's the time to do a few things. First, if you know an REI member, if you sign up this month for $20 fee, you get a 20% off for a non-sale item. So if you've been eyeing something that is $100, now's the time. Also REI Visa let's you save 5% on every non-sale REI purchase. It is also free and gives you a 1% rebate on other purchases. I've been using frequent flier credit cards, but if you have big dollar items, this can make some sense.

Headphones

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After our most recent trip, nearly all of our earbuds have simply died. Usually, the little cable breaks, so what to do if you need a lot of these and they take abuse. Headphones.com has some of the best reviews I've seen. It is how I originally got the Etymotic ER-6i and ER-4p and ER-4s. Sadly, I've lost one ER-6i and two have broken, so what are the best headphones now:

Ten Best Headphones

Most of these aren't practical for travel but the real winner seems to be the Shure SE310. It got 5 out of 5 (The Etymotics ER-4Ps are 4.5 out of 5, so close) and it comes in white. Amazon has them for $200 and the list is $299. While headphones.com has them for $250.

Entry Level

If you can't stand paying more for your headphones than your iPod or you've got kids who will likely rip and destroy them, then try the Sennheiser MX300 which lists for $10 and Amazon has for $9. They don't say it but I'd expect the white MX500 probably works just as well although it is $17 because of the color :_) and because there is a volume control on it. Macworld also likes the MX 500 and it is nice it comes in a little case too. iLounge also liked the MX 500 giving it an A- saying that while they are uncomfortable for long usage, they sound as good as the Apple ones. BTW, if you don't mind, you can get blue MX 500 for $10 from TigerDirect.com

If you want in the ear, so called in-canal headphones, these are a great step up and much less bulky that on the ear headphones, so a budget set would be then try the Jays j-JAYS which are just $50 and do have that snug fit and noise reduction. or the d-JAYS which sound better at $100 and got a 4 out of 5 rating.

Cracking Airport

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Well, this is sure confusing, I'm trying to get an older Snow Base Airport (not the Airport Extreme) to work right. Leopard, Mac OS X 10.5 comes with a new Airport Utility v5.2 to manage the Airport Extreme but not with the older Airports (code named Snow Base). In fact, this utility is really hard to find it is in /Applications/Utility/Airport Utility, but won't find old wifi Airports. Instead, Larry R. says you have to for:

Tiger 10.1

Download the old AirPort Admin Utility Version 4.2. This is impossible to find efficiently on the Apple site, but you get it at http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/airport42formacosx1033.html and you download AirPortSW42.dmg. Then you install it manually. Double click on the .DMG which mounts the file. Click on AirPortSW.pkg and select Show Package Contents. Go to the Contents folder. Double click on Archive.pax.gz which extracts an Archive.pax and an Archive Folder. Inside the Archive foldker look for Applications/Utilities and copy out the AirPort Admin Utility that is there. Don't just copy to the Utilities folder, but rename it to something like "Airport Utility v4.2" This doesn't work with Leopard however

Leopard 10.2

You have to run the Windows version of Admin Utility 4.2 (so you need Parallels) and this seems to work.

iStumbler, MacStumbler and Kismac

Debugging this stuff is easy for me on the PC as I know the tools, but on the Mac, life is different. First, you need iStumbler which is an open source tool that lets you discover what is on your network. Like Network Stumbler in Windows land. iStumbler only works against open networks, while Kismac sees invisible networks and will test encryption of WEP, WPA variety to make sure the passwords are good enough. Macstumbler is an older version if iStumbler from 2003.

God Dag. Kan du saga det igen

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Seems like everyone who skis is Swedish sometimes, so good to know from Speakswedish.co.uk some common phrases. I've no idea how to pronounce it, but "good day Sweden" seems like a good phrase to learn. When I was there, some other good ones are:

SwedishEnglish
jayes
nejno
tack sa mycketthank you very much
ingen orsakyou are welcome
god morgongood morning
god formiddaggood midmorning 11-noon
god middaggood noon time
god eftermiddaggood afternoon
god kvalllgood evening
valkommenwelcome
hejdagoodbye
god nattgoodnight
jag pratar inte svenskaI speak little swedish

Total Eclipse on February 20-21

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Thanks to Sandy, we learned that there was a total eclipse of the moon. What an amazing sight. It was clear and we saw the moon literally go from bright to dark red in 10 minutes and then back again. NASA has a terrific site that explains it and tells you exactly when and what is happening. We were right there at 7:45-7:50 and saw totality. There is even a javascript lunar eclipse explorer application that will help you figure out where the moon is. How cool is that. You can actually go as far as a thousand years from now in 3000AD and see where the eclipse is.

If you missed it and live in North America, you'll have to wait for two more years until 21 Dec 2010 .gov/eclipse/LEplot/LEplot2001/LE2010Dec21T.GIF for the next one.

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