MX 518 Gaming Mouse

Earlier on this month Logitech released this sweet new gaming mouse, with features such as:

    • “On-the-fly” sensitivity adjustment to 1,600, 800, and 400-dpi resolution
    • 5.8 mega pixel/second image processing
    • Expanded 16-bit data format supports blazing fast moves with pure precision
    • Advanced gaming software, exclusive to Gaming-Grade™ mice, for up to five custom sensitivity settings
    • Super-slick gaming feet for effortless, precise tracking
    • Contoured grip ensures peak performance and comfort—even in the most intense gaming sessions

This mouse is for serious gamers! As Ian Johnson says in his review; this mouse “will give you a slight edge in games, especially when it comes to precise marksmanship.” In addition to the sweet features, the mouse also comes with a three-year warranty! The technical specs are also pretty sweet:

    • Image Processing: 5.8 mega pixels/second
    • Resolution: 1600-dpi native, adjustable to 400- and 800-dpi
    • Acceleration: 15 g
    • Throughput: 16 bit/axis USB data format, and 125/sec USB report rate

When all is said and done, if you are seriously into your games, and have $49.99 (U.S.) lying around, you will probably appreciate this mouse.

Interesting Links

Seinfeld dictionary: This site contains definitions for terms and phrases used by or on the Jerry Seinfeld show.

Murphy’s Laws: We have all heard of them, and maybe even lived a few of them. This site contains lists of the various laws.

True Facts: A large collection of true useless information. Such as “In 2003, there were 86 days of below-freezing weather in Hell, Michigan.”

High-speed Video Clips: The video clips on this site were taken with a special high speed camera and then played back in super-slow motion, thus allowing you to see some really neat stuff that you would otherwise never see.

French Police Dogs

Holy crap! These dogs are insane! I know police dogs are trained to take people down, but pull them out of a moving vehicle? This is a crazy video. I can’t beleave the French trained these dogs. Damn!

American English

Your Linguistic Profile:

65% General American English
15% Yankee
10% Dixie
10% Upper Midwestern
0% Midwestern

White smoke and bells

A new Pope has been elected. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger of Germany, former Dean of the College of Cardinals, has been raised to the Papacy and has taken the name Pope Benedict XVI. Ratzinger was the heavy favorite heading into Conclave and after three rounds of voting over a two day period was elected to follow in the foot steps of Pope John Paul II as the 265th leader of the Catholic Church. Ratzinger is the first German pope since the 11th century, and has referred to himself as “a simple, humble worker.” After ascending to the balconies of St. Peter’s Basilica, the new Pope addressed the tens of thousands of people filling the square.

“Dear brothers and sisters, after the great Pope John Paul II, the cardinals have elected me — a simple, humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord,” he said. “I entrust myself to your prayers,” the pope said.

“The fact that the Lord can work and act even with insufficient means consoles me, and above all I entrust myself to your prayers,” the new pope said in his first public address. “I entrust myself to your prayers.”

In addition to being the Dean of the College of Cardinals, “Ratzinger served John Paul II since 1981 as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. In that position, he has disciplined church dissidents and upheld church policy against attempts by liberals for reforms.” The future will not be an easy one for the new Pope with “tendencies that he considered dangers to the faith: sects, ideologies like Marxism, liberalism, atheism, agnosticism and relativism — the ideology that there are no absolute truths,” and the actual problems the Church is dealing with; such as “fallout from priest sex-abuse scandals, chronic shortages of priests and nuns, as well as calls for sharper activism against poverty and easing the ban on condoms to help combat AIDS,” the first new Pope of the 21st century will have a lot to contend with. Not to mention that he “also must maintain the global ministry of John Paul, who took 104 international trips in his more than 26-year papacy.”

It will be interesting to see the direction the Church now heads in under the direction of this new Pope, who has been described as “the Vatican’s doctrinal hard-liner.” One thing is clear however, now that there is a new Pope, all eyes will be focused even more on the Vatican, at least for little while.

Black Smoke rises

Black Smoke rose from the Sistine Chapel yesterday as the first day of Conclave ended, to announce to the world “that Cardinals had voted but not yet reached a majority needed to choose a new pope.” So the election process will continue today starting at approximately 1:30 am Eastern time (7:30 am Vatican time).

The timeline for Tuesday’s voting is:

* At 7:30 a.m. local time (1:30 a.m. EDT), the cardinals celebrate Mass in the hotel chapel.
* At 9 a.m. (3 a.m. EDT), they will gather in the Sistine Chapel for initial two rounds of balloting.
* Noon (6 a.m. EDT) is the approximate estimated time of the first smoke signal from the Sistine Chapel. The cardinals are to break for lunch.
* At 4 p.m. (10 a.m. EDT), the cardinals will return to the Sistine Chapel for two rounds of afternoon balloting.
* 7 p.m. (1 p.m. EDT) is the approximate time of a smoke signal after afternoon voting.

Conclave is expected to follow this schedule until the next Pope is elected. “No conclave in the past century has lasted more than five days, and the election that made John Paul II pope in October 1978 took eight ballots over three days.” There are 115 voting cardinals participating in this conclave coming from six continents, all working towards the election of John Paul II successor.

Movie Recommendation

You scored as Sadistic Humour. Congratulations, you scored Sadistic Humour. You find the little things in life to be funny, and have a great sense of humour, whether it’s stupid or dark. You’re probably young, and older people don’t understand why it’s all so fucking hillarious. Either way, check out: Clerks, Mallrats, Napoleon Dynamite, Wayne’s World.

Sadistic Humour
75%
Mindless Action Flick
75%
Sci-Fi/Fantasy
70%
Mindfuck
65%
Romantic Comedy
50%
Drama/Suspense
50%
Artistic
30%

Movie Recommendation.
created with QuizFarm.com

Linux in Gmail

Hack-a-day has a link up to an interesting article about running Linux from within your gmail acount. Basically you use your 2gig (and counting) email account as a virtual drive to run “GmailFS” on. Its a pretty neat idea and way up on the geek meter.

Favicon finally working

For the longest time the favicon (the little icon in the address bar) was not working for some reason. Well the other day I was messing around with some stuff in the back end and it suddenly started working. Not exactly sure what caused it to suddenly work, but there it is. In any event I am happy if finally decided to show up.

No Oil by 2050

MSN Money has an interesting article about the U.S.’s ability to stop using oil by 2050. The article goes on to explain that this could be possible if we just got “back on the efficiency-improvement path we were on when we responded to the first and second OPEC oil price shocks in 1973 and 1979.” The first, and largest, step would be to “make cars, trucks, houses and buildings more energy efficient.”

Amory Lovins, author of “Winning the Oil End Game” states that we could “apply energy efficiency to end our dependence on oil.”

Not just foreign oil, mind you, all oil. In the process, we can revolutionize (and save) our automobile industry, create a million jobs, strengthen our economy, end the flow of oil money that funds terrorism and win enduring national security.

In “Winning the Oil Endgame,” Lovins shows us the path to reduce our oil consumption.

How much? How fast? Think about these figures:

* We could reduce the amount we import from the Persian Gulf by 2015.
* We could use less oil by 2025 than we used in 1970.
* We could import no oil at all by 2040.
* We could use no oil at all by 2050.

A lot of the information supporting this theory, including a copy of the book, can be obtained from Oilendgame.org.

This all sounds like a great idea, but something tells me it would never actually happen due to the large oil companies putting a fit, and then it would become politics. We all know the oil companies spend money on lobbying for Presidents who support their agenda, and at least one of our recent Presidents has ties to oil….