RIP Bubba Head

On Friday, we lost another member of the family--our (nearly) 18 year old cat Toby, a.k.a. Bubba. The name "head" was also used in conjunction with both names (e.g. Toby Head and Bubba Head). The house will certainly be cleaner--no more cat hair and no more clay footprints on the wood floors--but it's certainly emptier. He will be missed.

Toby was often a test subject for the various cameraphones I've had over the years, so I have a lot of pictures of him. I picked out a few of the better ones to put in this gallery.

Roger Waters -- The Wall Live

Just as relevant today as it was in the late 1970s when it came out.

Caution: This Phone Is Not Secure

Found aboard Air Force One at the Museum of Flight in Seattle

Erik Scott's Death - A Father's Statement

Erik Scott's Death - A Father's Statement
8/30/2010

Erik's family would like to keep our class updated on what is occurring in the case of Erik's death.

Below is a statement from Erik's father, William Scott.

Erik Scott's Death

Erik B. Scott, a 1994 U.S. Military Academy at West Point graduate, was shot and killed by three Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (Metro) officers in front of the Summerlin Costco store on 10 July 2010. The shooting is still under investigation, but here are the basic facts, based on numerous eyewitness reports:

Erik was carrying a legally registered concealed firearm, while he and his girlfriend were shopping at Costco. He also had a concealed carry permit in his wallet, issued by the same Metro department that killed him.

When Erik squatted on the floor to verify that three metal water bottles would fit into a soft-sided, zip-up cooler, a Costco employee saw the weapon. Erik's shirt had lifted up, revealing an inside-the-belt holstered pistol tucked into the back of his jeans. A civil interchange ensued, and the employee informed Erik of Costco's policy that guns were not allowed inside company stores -- although there are no signs to that effect posted outside or inside the facility. Erik calmly responded that his gun was legal and that he had a concealed carry weapon (CCW) permit on his person. Like many other Boston Scientific pacemaker sales reps, Erik carried a concealed weapon for personal protection, because reps are required to enter dangerous areas of the city at all hours of the day and night to serve patients fitted with cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators. Contrary to wildly erroneous news reports, we don't believe Erik had a second gun on his person.

via usma1994.com

A simple misunderstanding and over-reaction leads to an innocent man's death. It's stories like these that make people distrust and disrespect the police.

Where's Snoopy?

A Sopwith Pup @ The Museum of Flight

Battlestar Galactica: The Exhibit

I think I need to find a way to get to EMP|SFM when this exhibit is in town…

iTunes + iPhone + PayPal = FAIL

What $7 Buys in the Air

-- Dameon

Vonage, in the Real World

Found in the Grapevine Mills Mall

Single Malt and a Cigar

Macallan 21--old enough to drink--and a Romeo and Juliet cigar. Awesome way to end the evening…

-- Dameon