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--Paul McNett, Earthling Home |
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We've Released Dabo 0.7, and I'm wearing a red sheet - Nov 16, 2006 20:19
© 2006 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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Dump AT&T and Join Working Assets - May 16, 2006 07:56 AT&T and several other major long distance providers don't take your privacy seriously. Get even and dump them. Join Working Assets, and support groups like Planned Parenthood, Greenpeace, and Amnesty International every time you pay your phone bill. To sign up (easy), just click here. (I'll get $10 off my bill if you sign up after clicking the above link, so thanks for that!) © 2006 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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Dilapidated Leadership? - Apr 24, 2006 15:11
© 2006 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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New Domain for Community Discussion: elranchosanbenito.us - Apr 18, 2006 13:49 After my last blog entry, I've gone on a few bike rides and thought a little about all the implications of having such a huge development go in without much of a fight. While I'm not dead-set against El Rancho San Benito, a lot of questions are raised that really should be explored by the community at large, and not just a few corporate interests, politicians, and reporters. So, this is my announcement for my new web domain http://elranchosanbenito.us. © 2006 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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El Rancho San Benito (DMB Associates) Spam - Apr 14, 2006 17:49 A couple weeks ago, my wife, mother and I got into a heated discussion regarding a proposed housing development that threatens to be approved by county voters and alter our country setting immensely. Basically, either you believe that they will be good for the community or you don't. It isn't that I don't see the economic benefits of having 7,000 new homes built (think 12 years of construction, bringing all kinds of jobs into our recessed county). It's just that all the promises are just that... promises. -> See the El Rancho San Benito Website at http://elranchosanbenito.com Of course they are going to promise the world. A new school or schools, a hospital, low-income housing, etc. etc. That's fine, but I reserve judgement until the point that they've actually delivered. Oh, and since most of the votes for or against DMB's El Rancho San Benito will come from residents of the city of Hollister, perhaps DMB can do something for downtown Hollister? Like funding small businesses or putting up money to speed up the highway 25 bipass? Anyway, that isn't why I'm writing today. During that heated conversation, we went over to the DMB website and I noticed a broken link. Wanting to report the problem, I looked around for a webmaster address and didn't find one. So I went to the 'contact' page and reported the problem there. I never got a response - this is, unfortunately, the norm in the web-age. However, I just received an invitation to an open house that will occur next week at our Vet's building. The invitation came to my email address along with a disclaimer that I received this mail because I signed up for their newsletter. The problem is, I never signed up to get the newsletter, all I did was report an issue with their website. Lie number one. DMB Associates has really made no bones about campaigning for our support and our vote for allowing them to build their monstrous development on some of the most picturesque hills in our region. But their email makes it official, as the email didn't come from DMB Associates at all, but rather from a paid service for sending out, tracking, and reporting on email advertising campaigns. To understand how the tracking works, you can check your email headers and you'll see unique message id's and return paths - this let's DMB Associates know who read the mail and who didn't (your name and email is associated with a given id): From Dorothy's headers: Return-Path: <TheElRanchoSanBenitoTeam-44460I24795983@campaignmonitor.com> From Paul's headers: Return-Path: <TheElRanchoSanBenitoTeam-44460I24795986@campaignmonitor.com> In the message body, you are directed to click on a link to a webpage if you are having trouble reading the email. This message will only be displayed if you are using a plain-text email reader, as opposed to an HTML email reader. This URL is specifically created to know exactly who you are when you click on it: From the email from DMB to Dorothy: http://dmb.cmail1.com/.aspx/e/44460/24795983/ From the email from DMB to Paul: http://dmb.cmail1.com/.aspx/e/44460/24795986/ The thing that really gets me is the use of covert web URL's inside the message body. What I mean here is that the URL text shown isn't the same URL you get sent to by clicking on it. This tactic is used in many email schemes such as emails masquerading as Citibank or PayPal trying to get you to turn over personal information. My email client (Mozilla Thunderbird) even identified this message from DMB Associates as a probable scam. The covert URL is the link the message invites you to click on to view the draft proposal for El Rancho San Benito - available for public comment. Here's the code: <p align="center" style="line-height: 20px;"><font color="#71522F" size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">A draft proposal for El Rancho San Benito <br> is now ready for public review and comment at <br> <a href="http://dmb.cmail1.com/.aspx/l/44460/24795983 /www.elranchosanbenito.com">www.elranchosanbenito.com</a> Community </font><br> Well, that's a mess to look at. But the key thing to notice is that the highlighted text is "www.elranchosanbenito.com" while the URL you are really getting sent to is a license-plated page at "dmb.cmail1.com". In other words, lie number two. And just to show that clicking on that link lets DMB Associates know exactly who you are, here are the license plates for both Dorothy and Paul: Dorothy: http://dmb.cmail1.com/.aspx/l/44460/24795983/www.elranchosanbenito.com Paul: http://dmb.cmail1.com/.aspx/l/44460/24795986/www.elranchosanbenito.com My DMB license plate is 24795986. Okay, so this license-plate thing is actually a pretty common tactic these days. While I think it is quite underhanded, I can also understand why businesses succumb to the temptation to use them: they provide for great statistics on the success or failure of individual advertising campaigns. The really underhanded (or really ignorant) thing that DMB is doing in their email invitation is hiding the true URL from the displayed URL. Either DMB Associates has no idea what they are doing, or they think we back-country citizens can't think for ourselves and won't notice wool pulled over our eyes. Well, I'm noticing, and I have confidence that a majority of Hollister and San Benito County citizens are noticing too. Whether by design or accident, DMB Associates have already been deceptive. Are we sure we want to wait until they occupy our beautiful countryside before we figure out that they are just another large corporation, that the only community they care about is their small circle of shareholders? Does an infusion of money really bring about community? Think about it. We still have time to say no to this. © 2006 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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Dorothy McNett's Recipes are Back - Mar 28, 2006 15:25 It was sad last year that happycookers.com had to close. Along with the gourmet products you could buy, there was also a popular database of favorite recipes. Well, I've put up a new site for Dorothy (Dorothy is my mom) and have her recipes there, easily searchable, at http://dorothymcnett.com/recipes. Some of my current favorite recipes are: World's Best Fruit Cobbler Basic Pizza Dough Pad Thai Enjoy! © 2006 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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Lions always hit the heights - Aug 04, 2005 22:43 'cause to kill it's always been an easy way out. Saved by the music makers Speed boat to freedom With the beautiful people Bullet holes in your head But you're running out of time And you're running out of freedom Now the animal crackers All set to go flying A branch of cold flames Hangs over your head The only thing you could never burn It's shadow's hanging over you The shadow's never there Explode all over you Your eyes flash bright But no longer have fire Everywhere you turn This world is your shadow With a pretty face You burn so many eyes Swap your dull grey thoughts For fierce demands you can stand up to Don't put yourself down, you'll never win So let's all smash through Through the fear of being real Through the fear of being really you 'cause living it up, it's a big deal It's good for you Tell me why do we always get what we want When we don't want it no more And how do you feel now We still sound so thick 'Still fish around, in waters you know so well The above stanzas are from Tones on Tail, 'Pop', Beggars Banquet 1984, words by Daniel Ash. They are gratuitously copied from the liner notes for the following songs: LIONS WAR PERFORMANCE MOVEMENT OF FEAR GO! REAL LIFE 'Pop' was originally recorded in 1983, but remastered in 1998 and released on the "Everything!" CD, which -go figure- contains everything Tones on Tail released, which adds up to at least 2.5 full albums worth of clear, crisp, experimental/cerebral post-punk pre-electronica not-quite goth with bass, guitar, and drum machine that you have to listen to with headphones to really appreciate. Don't buy it, you'll probably hate it. But I was compelled to praise it. Play Loud. © 2005 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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Our Vacation to Costa Rica, June 2005 - Jul 02, 2005 01:12 What a great trip. We flew from San Francisco to San Salvador, El Salvador, and then to San Jose, Costa Rica. Then we found a small SUV to rent for $50 per day, and we set out for La Fortuna, with a view of Volcano Arenal, which is active and gives a nice light show at night. Lava spews forth as we sip wine at an outdoor patio restaurant. From La Fortuna, we travelled on less and less paved roads with the last 20 km on some of the roughest dirt roads I've ever driven on. Rocks and boulders and potholes, making the drive to Monteverde take 5 hours, made us appreciate the great-by-comparison West Street in Hollister. We had some of the best pizza ever in Santa Elena, while rain poured outside. We eventually decided that we should find a hotel, and settled on Hotel Belmar in Monteverde and were not disappointed. $64 per night got us a room with a spectacular view of the cloud forest in the nice quiet eco-lodge with all the amenities, including an outdoor jacuzzi and comfortable lobby to hang out in and play scrabble while sipping yerba mate. Monteverde is simply an amazing place, and words can't do justice. It rained like crazy, there are no sidewalks, and we walked to dinner every night, arriving with muddy feet to beautiful restaurants with fine wines and excellent cuisine. The birds woke us up at 5am each day but then let us sleep from 6 to 8, and then we'd spend the day zip-touring the canopy, perusing the local art galleries, walking through the cloud forest, touring the coffee plantations, and deciding that we could really live here. From there we drove down to the Pacific coast to Tamarindo, a laid-back surfing, boating and resort community where we were offered on more than one occasion to purchase some "weed", which we of course politely declined but admit to being tempted to. One day we did some SCUBA diving, other days we basically just hung out and relaxed by the beach. Twelve days passed like that. Here are some pictures which I'll be reorganizing into the narrative:
© 2005 Paul McNett [/Personal/CostaRica2005] permanent link |
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TLAI - Jun 13, 2005 09:51 "Think logically, act incrementally." © 2005 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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Aayla Secura Is Hot! - May 04, 2005 21:32
© 2005 Paul McNett [/Personal] permanent link |
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