Tierra Verde

The sticky notes at the front of the page

blue stars for my 3 MPs (no, not my MP3s...)

Blogroll has moved to a new page. It was just too huge (close to 1000 blogs in Bloglines) and helps the page load time tremendously. Blogrolling.com just sucks, and Bloglines has too much. Oh, and I have updated Blogrolling.

Have a nice day!

Tuesday, October 25

The H-1B swindle | InfoWorld | Column | 2005-10-25 | By Ephraim Schwartz  


Ephraim Schwartz:
According to “The Bottom of the Pay Scale: Wages for H-1B Computer Programmers — F.Y. 2004,” a report by Programmers Guild board member John Miano, non-U.S. citizens working in the United States on an H-1B visa are paid “significantly less than their American counterparts.” How much less? “On average, applications for H-1B workers in computer occupations were for wages $13,000 less than Americans in the same occupation and state.”
And it's a wonder that high-tech workers are being fucked?

Let's see, fewer jobs, raises less than the average (which already can be argued that the average raise is less than the rate of inflation), and the government has seen fit to give the corporations exactly what they want, cheap slave labor. I'm impressed. I'm really impressed.

Relevant Link

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/25/2005 12:08:00 PM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

The New Normal? - Computerworld  


Stacy Collett:
IT raises still lagged slightly behind the average of about 3.2% for all U.S. workers as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While the majority of respondents (69%) said their 2004 base salary increased from one year ago, 31% experienced either no change in salary or had their pay cut.
More good news (not!) on the technical job market.

Relevant Link

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/25/2005 11:52:00 AM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

Sunday, October 23

... All Your Base Rhapsody  


... All Your Base Rhapsody

The above link is the All Your Base are Belong to Us, but sung to the tune of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody.

absolutely hilarious!

Head banging, lighter tribute, air guitar. Great!

Relevant Link

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/23/2005 06:58:00 PM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

Saturday, October 22

Exploit code raises Windows worm alarm | Tech News on ZDNet  


Joris Evers:
Computer code has already been written to take advantage of Windows flaws that were disclosed Tuesday, a sign that a worm attack could be near.
Interesting. I believe that this is the exploit that I'm seeing now.

Relevant Link

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/22/2005 01:03:00 AM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

Thursday, October 20

New virus out now?  


This week I have seen some freaky things happen with computers, and I really am starting to suspect a virus, one out in the wild that hasn't been picked up yet.

I started with Deb's computer, which had a rootkit installed at one point. Another friend of hers looked at it, and thought he had cleaned it pretty well. I had a look at it, and scanned, and cleaned, and scanned and cleaned it some more. I knew something was up, as I was still getting popups on the computer, even though Lavasoft's Adaware, Spybot Search & Destroy and Microsoft's AntiSpyware. Usually just the combination of Adaware and Spybot is enough to blow all the crap out of a system. So I have to admit at this point something was installed and running (I couldn't find anything out of the ordinary, except for the FTP, Web and Telnet services that the rootkit had installed and running, which I had shut off) that wasn't showing up in the process list, nor anything that was out of bounds that was being shown in the autoruns program that usually finds everything that starts up. Although I just now checked, and I ran version 7.0, and they are already up to 8.22. Hmmmm. Not good. OK, I updated that program, both on my machine, and on my flash drive. Going to have to update the other machines as well. confused Boy, have I missed out on some changes. Eek!

By the time I finally got back to the machine, with the latest/greatest Microsoft malware removal program and a security scanner program, the machine had gotten hosed. The problem was a corrupted registry. Video was screwed, and as I found out later, I couldn't even install software. She was running Goback, and I noticed as I kept trying to roll back her computer, that at one point, when nobody was actually home, the computer had started to reboot every 10 minutes, reminding me of the Zotob virus. I had the machine spontaneously reboot on me a couple of times, once, just by trying to exit a DOS window screen. Going back as far as I could, I couldn't get a valid copy of the registry. No ERD (which is problematic anyways, since an ERD by that time would have exceeded the size of a floppy). Reinstalling Windows isn't an option, because of Goback (which does something with the MBR), and uninstalling Goback (which I've done before) isn't an option because the registry is corrupted. The only option that I now see is to install Windows on a new hard drive (I've got a 11 gigger that I'm going to use), get Goback installed so that I can get access to the former boot drive (and probably uninstall it while I'm at it), install CD/DVD writer software and copy the data off the courrupted disk onto DVDs, put the original hard drive back the way it was, and reformat and reinstall. The other guy has said something about a corporate version of Windows 2000 having problems, but there is no corporate version of 2000 like there is XP. So I don't know what that's about.

Now a datapoint of one doesn't mean squat. But today, while I had lunch at a Krystal's, a maintenance guy from corporate was having problems with his laptop. I offered to take a look, and his laptop wasn't booting correctly. It was going off about an error in the registry (gee, that sounds familiar) and dumping memory to the hard drive. I tried a couple of different ways to reboot it, and it just wouldn't work. I told him he needed to send it back to Corporate and have them figure out was wrong with it, or at the very least reimage the hard drive (most likely).

Then a co-worker of The_Rose's called. His XP laptop was having the same exact problem. Now, there does seem to be a way to fix this. Microsoft has some KB articles on this (which I'm going to list for archival purposes).

How to recover from a corrupted registry that prevents Windows XP from starting
How to back up, edit, and restore the registry in Windows XP and Windows Server 2003
How to gain access to the System Volume Information folder
Microsoft: Windows XP Pro FAQ - Tek-Tips - Cannot Boot Windows due to Corrupt Registry
How to troubleshoot registry corruption issues

Am I just running into a coincidence of errors, or is there something out there that is wreaking all this havok?

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/20/2005 06:24:00 PM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

» 41K tech jobs eliminated in Q3 2005 | IT Facts | ZDNet.com  


ZDNet Research:
Challenger, Gray & Christmas claim that technology is one of the few areas of the economy that has failed to add jobs consistently over the past 12 months. The pace of job-cutting in the sector through the Q3 2005 is almost 20% ahead of 2004. The report said that technology firms announced 41,439 job cuts in Q3 2005, up 4.3% from 39,720 in Q2 2005. For Q1-Q3 2005, tech job cuts of 140,696 are 18.8% higher than Q1-Q3 2004 total of 118,427 in 2004.
This just isn't good news. Not at all. Certainly not for me personally, and I don't think it's a good thing for the US either. This is an area that should be growing, not shrinking. I'm sorry, but IT has not grown any easier in the past few years. Which really makes one wonder what is going on.

Tags:

Relevant Link

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/20/2005 05:24:00 PM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

Wednesday, October 19

I've been Naired!  


That was the lone message that Garfield left me today on my computer. Evidently somebody got bored and decided to make him smooth like a baby's butt.

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/19/2005 12:42:00 PM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

Wednesday, October 12

Piece of shit software  


And I'm not sure which one is the problem.

Bloglines has pushed into effect hot keys. That's kinda nice, but they interfere with the Firefox search function, there I hit /, and then what I want to find. Afer a view keystrokes, it turns into hot keys, not what I'm trying to search for.

Not good.

So, which is the broken software. Bloglines or Firefox.

I'm not happy with either at the moment.

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/12/2005 10:10:00 PM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

Monday, October 3

Arachnid Monday blogging  


Here's something that I haven't seen yet in 5 years living in Florida.

Banana Spider

That is a close up of a banana spider that had a five foot web in our yard. The actual size of the spider is over 3 inches. My daugher's friend tore part of the web down (I thought it looked like a bird saw it and had themselves dinner).

I have pictures of all five cats to go up Friday.

Permanent link posted by bytehead @ 10/03/2005 07:55:00 PM   Edit this entry 0 comments Links to this post

 

Article Index

The H-1B swindle | InfoWorld | Column | 2005-10-25 | By Ephraim Schwartz
The New Normal? - Computerworld
... All Your Base Rhapsody
Exploit code raises Windows worm alarm | Tech News on ZDNet
New virus out now?
» 41K tech jobs eliminated in Q3 2005 | IT Facts | ZDNet.com
I've been Naired!
Piece of shit software
Arachnid Monday blogging
Copyright © 2003-2008, Bryan Price. Licensed by Creative Commons License: Creative Commons License
Home| This page| Colophon| Disclaimer| Privacy Statement