A Rave at the Fool

I posted a post yesterday in the Hidden Gems Stocks We Like board at the Motley Fool. At the time of this journal, it had received 36 recommendations or “recs”. (For those who aren’t on the Fool boards, anyone who reads a message can recommend it. You can only recommend a post once, and you have a limited number of recs a day. The top rec earners are sometimes featured on the Fool Post of the Day or week or something).

At the bottom, I also tagged Tom Gardner’s response, which was enough to make me walk around this morning feeling full of myself. It’s nice to be shamelessly self-confident now and then.

The Post

FootNotes

A while back I wrote some php/mysql code to create a relational database I was thinking about. It was just something I did because “wouldn’t it be neat if…”

Basically, you “footnote” (link, really) from a word in an entry in this database, and create another entry based on that word. Then someone else can create an entry based on a word in your entry. And so on, and so on.

Just a simple, silly idea. It’s implemented at:

FootNotes

in case anybody wants to contribute.

ryanj

Spam Man

So I glanced at the cover of the Wall Street Journal in our breakroom just now, and there’s an article about a many named Orlando Soto who loves to get SPAM. He opens every single piece he gets and often buys stuff because of it, or visits casinos advertised by it, or whatever.

So, basically the article described him as a sample of why SPAM continues, because people like him like it.

And, I thought, is the WSJ trying to get this man killed?

Small Victories that mean nothing

My small victory of the day is that my post regarding the general market valuation on the Fool HG Market Valuation board now has the highest number of recs ever received on this board, 7. Narrowly edging out the previous highest number of recs, 6.

Of course, there have only been 50 posts, since the board is only about a month and a half old.

But still, something to start the morning with, meaningless as it is.

The Case of the Spooky Phone System

Last night Stacey tells me she couldn’t get either the computer in the spare bedroom nor the computer in the basement to get a dial tone, but the kitchen phone worked fine.

I had wired the basement line at the same junction that goes to the bedroom line, so I figured I’d made the connection loose somehow and the wires had fallen out or something. But it hadn’t.

So why would the bedroom and basement jacks not be working where the rest of the jacks in the house did?

Since moving into the house 3 months ago, we had given up DSL for economy. We were back in the dial up business after a 4 year hiatus. When I went out to buy a modem for my machine and installed it, it hyped how you could receive calls while staying on line. It even had answering machine software. I thought, wow, dial-up has come a long way, because once I’d installed it and logged on, we discovered we could place a call out using our only phone, the kitchen phone! No modem noise on the line! (What should have been our first clue is in italics).

The second clue is, I tried calling our house to test out the answering machine software, and it wouldn’t answer the line!

The third clue is that the back bedroom had been an office for the previous owners of the house.

For those of you much quicker on the uptake than I, you’ve realized that there was a second line in the house that had been left active by the previous owners, and had finally been shut off yesterday.

So, dial-up has gotten even suckier, because we can’t use the landline while we’re online, as we thought we could before. *sigh*

But a big thanks to the previous owners, John and Janet Hagye, for giving us 3 months of a free extra line, even though we didn’t know it at the time.